The Israeli High Court of Justice building in Jerusalem.
In a recent judgment handed down on
6 August 2008 by the Israeli High Court of Justice (HCJ), in the case of HCJ
5093/06 Association for Eretz Israel (Kedumim) Elon Moreh v State of Israel
the HCJ extended the judicial arm of the occupation beyond the Israeli military
court system and into the national Israeli civilian court system by
manipulatively twisting the Oslo Accords.
The case arrived to the HCJ following
an appeal of the Jerusalem District Court, ruling that the Palestinian
Authority (PA) is a body possessing sufficient sovereign status, such that it
cannot be sued in civil proceedings under national Israeli law. This ruling
further confirms the fact that the local laws in the occupied Palestinian territories
remain intact under the most fundamental principle of the law of occupation
under international humanitarian law, found in Article 43 of the Hague
Regulations 1907 (i.e. also known as the 'life continues as normally as
possible' principle), acknowledging even indirectly the considerable legitimacy
of an autonomous governing body over Palestine.
The HCJ reversed this judgment by
upholding that the District Court did not have jurisdiction to decide on the
question of the sovereignty of the PA, whilst noting that this is a matter for
the Israeli Foreign Minister to decide on a case-by-case basis. In its ruling,
the HCJ recalled that the PA does not comply with the traditional public international
law prerequisite for the definition of a State.
Confirming the Non-Sovereignty of
the Palestinian Authority
This HCJ decision manages to boldly
reject any claim to sovereignty, however partial, of the governing bodies of
the Palestinian Authority, thereby also sustaining in practice the claims of
many human rights and humanitarian organizations which attest to the
unquestionable control of Israel
over the administration of all areas of the occupied Palestinian territories,
both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, including those areas and institutions Israel claims
to have transferred to the PA following the Oslo Accords).
Without any reference to specific
sources of public international law—the sovereignty of a State under the
Westphalian doctrine, the principle of non-intervention
or any other relevant international legal instrument governing the situation in
Palestine under the Israeli Belligerent Occupation—the Israeli High Court
confirmed that the question of whether the PA is or is not immune to the
executive or judicial jurisdiction of Israeli authorities should be treated as
a “factual-political” matter to be handled by the relevant executive bodies,
namely the Israeli Foreign Ministry. Nonetheless, the Court does note that the
conclusions arrived at by the Ministry should be done in consideration of the
fact that the PA does not comply with the prerequisites for the
attainment of statehood in international law (para. 12 of the judgment).
A Unilateral Implementation of Oslo
In conclusion to the arguments used
in its judgment, the High Court decided to return the case to the District
Court while commanding the latter to reconsider the issues at hand in light of
the position paper on the question of the sovereignty of the PA that would be
presented to it by the Israeli Foreign Minister (para. 13 of the judgment). On
the whole, it can be deduced that the Supreme Court accepted that these issues
can and should remain in the hands of the Israeli judiciary and resolved in
coordination and consultation with the relevant executive branch officials.
Following the 1995 Interim
Agreements between Israel
and the PA, the enforcement of judgments in Areas A of the West
Bank is mutual and should be enforced by each one of the
parties as though the judgments were handed down by their own judicial bodies (para.
2 of the judgment). Although PA refusal to enforce a ruling of an Israeli
judicial authority provided the basis for the original petition, it does not
and should not, according to Judge Okon of the District Court, mean that the
Israeli judicial authorities can allow admission of lawsuits against the PA for
failing to comply with its legal obligations under the Oslo Accords. If this is
so then the opposite would also be possible, and Israeli would be swamped with lawsuits
coming from the Israeli courts.
Filing the suit in this particular
case is the Association for Eretz Israel,
a registered charity under the Charities law in Israel
that promotes the acquisition of land in the West Bank
by Jews. After acquiring a number of plots in Areas A of the West Bank—territories
that are, following the Oslo Accords, purportedly under the exclusive
administration of the PA—the Association for Eretz Israel filed a suit against
the PA for failing to return the money it had paid for the land.
Notably, this acquisition of land
was not only illegal as the land had belonged to private individuals as well as
to the PA itself in parts, but was also illegal under the law of occupation in international
humanitarian and international human rights law, which very arguably view such
instances as expropriations of private property and land, as well as the clear exploitation
of the desperate situation of the occupied population, that relies heavily on
the Israeli Belligerent Occupant for all of its most basic daily needs.
More so, the Oslo Accords have
created a factual situation where since the mid-90's the PA was seen to be the
chief and only administrator of Area A land in the West Bank. Academics such as
Dajani have argued extensively that the PA's consistent participation in the
peace negotiations and other diplomatic processes has given it recognition as
the official representative of the Palestinian people and a de facto statal authority for all
international political and even legal purposes.
A Powerless and Even More Penniless
Palestinian Authority
There are roughly 150 legal cases currently
pending in Israeli courts against the PA, mainly as part of compensation claims
from families of victims of attacks. The aforementioned HCJ decision means that
for this purpose, the PA would be forced to produce any payments provided for in
judgements of these lawsuits, as the awards are enforced through the Israeli
civilian court system. What it means in practice, however, is that the money
provided in taxes by the PA to the Israeli Belligerent Occupant will be
delivered directly into the hands of the claiming victims as immediate relief.
Such a perceived Israeli victory
should remind one of the current utter disregard of the Israeli military and
other authorities from meeting its statal and individual responsibilities in
the very same situation in cases of deaths caused to Palestinians victims of Israeli
army and settler violence, house demolitions, expropriation of private and
public property by the Belligerent Occupant and the settler populations (violating
Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention), whose presence in the West Bank is
being maintained and protected in a determined and unremitting manner by the Israeli
military forces. In all such cases, the State of Israel has continuously
managed to sweep its responsibility out of the way and utterly disregard its
obligations under international law.
A Similar Perception of the English
Courts
The question of jurisdictional extent
has recently come up not only in the Palestine/Israel context but also in the
English courts, which have been swamped by judicial disputes lodged between
Russian oligarchs who fled from President Putin’s iron-fisted administration in
Russia and now reside in the UK. The English High Court recently upheld that it
can and should have jurisdiction in cases where there is clear, and as it
happened to be in the particular case, overwhelming evidence to evince that justice
(and a fair trial) would not be delivered in the natural forum.
Judicial imperialism is unquestionably one of the most self-justificatory ways
to legitimize and normalize a present-day reality that may or may not
necessarily comply with applicable legal frameworks—this pertains to both the
Russian and the Palestinian scenario.
The most interesting aspect of the
English Court’s judgment in the case of Cherney v Depripaska
was that although Justice Clarke remarked boldly that the admittance of
jurisdiction by the English Court does not mean that a fair trial can never be
obtained in the Russian judicial system (para. 248 of the High Court's
judgment); nevertheless, the risk inherent for a lack of a fair trial is
sufficient to make England the forum for the case (para. 264).
Notably, although the judgment of
the English High Court seeks to restrict its own precedent-setting effect to a
very limited number of cases, where the publicity of the figures involved and
the subject matter tried would be scrutinized in deciding the supremacy of the
English jurisdiction over the natural forum, this has the unquestionable effect
of considerably widening the English judicial arm, a doctrine that can be
expected to resurface in similar claims in the future.
Intrusive or Inclusive?
The decision of the Israeli HCJ
could be interpreted and perceived in a number of ways, and I suggest that two
of these implications be considered in light of the above.
First, the possibility that the
extension of the judicial arm of the Occupant's powers over the Palestinian
Authority and Areas A of the West Bank is paradoxical in the sense that it
contradicts the Israeli claims that have, since the Oslo Accords, constantly confirmed
that Area A land has been handed over completely to the PA. In other words, the
inclusion of Area A territory in the scope of the Israeli administration
extends the Israeli authorities’ obligations towards the PA and the Palestinian
people presently under its governance and potential control.
What has been termed as the “puppet show” of the Israeli authorities by a
number of human rights groups, is now being confirmed a reality through this
judgment, in which the Israeli courts solidify a precedent that gives way for
the executive branch to assert authority over PA affairs whenever and to
whatever extent it deems necessary.
A second possible interpretation of
these judicial proceedings is that the legitimization of such an extension in
the context of the occupied Palestinian territories is counter-productive to
the Israeli position, which has aimed to both evade responsibility and comply
with Oslo, conveniently and selectively
invoking its provisions in relation to Israel’s self-defined needs.
The inclusive interpretation equally legitimizes Israel’s assertion of its military judicial arm
in the West Bank and beyond.
At the end of the day, what matters is the end result: All of the West Bank is under the full control of the Israeli authorities,
whilst the role of the PA is to serve Israeli interests, with no authority or
decision-making power of its own.
Unprecedented Enforcement of Foreign Judgments
Recently, on 2 September 2008, the District Court in Jerusalem (Case No. 4318/05) confirmed the possibility of enforcing American judgments that oblige the PA to compensate families of victims of the 1996 terror attacks with 116 million dollars. This was marked as an unprecedented decision of the Israeli courts, upheld despite the overwhelming legitimacy of the argumentation presented by the PA’s attorney, Adv. Yossi Arnon. The PA submitted that such precedent cannot stand as it violates its territorial sovereignty, and because it involves a compensation claim of a unique and exceptional type. They further held that the enforcement of a foreign judgment of this kind will indisputably have draconian consequences in the public, political, defense, and economic spheres for Israel and its citizens.
The PA's appeal in this case was rejected outright. The PA was furthermore obliged to pay the attorney's costs and fees in the sum of one million shekels, due to the expensive nature of the judicial process. The Ongar and Dasberg families are now legally entitled to the moneys of the PA that were confiscated from banks in Ramallah a while back.
Valentina Azarov is a Legal Researcher at Hamoked: Center for the Defence
of the Individual.
The opinions expressed in this piece are the author’s own and should not be
attributed to Hamoked.
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