On 23 November 2009, after 61 days of detention for the purpose of
interrogation by Israeli Security Agency officers, human rights
defender Mohammad Othman received his first administrative detention
order. The administrative detention order is set for a three month
period, during which time Mohammad will be held without charge or
trial. The judicial review of the order is scheduled to take place on
25 November at the Military Court of Administrative Detainees in Ofer
Military Base, near the West Bank city of Ramallah.
The administrative detention order against Mohammad comes just one
day after a hearing on 22 November 2009 at the Military Court of
Appeals ended Mohammad’s interrogation period. In the Appeals Court
hearing, the judge decided to release Mohammad because no measurable
progress had been made during the two months he had been held in
interrogation, no external evidence had been brought to the attention
of the court and the military prosecution had been unable to formulate
substantiated allegations or charges against him. The Appeals Court
judge thus accepted Addameer’s appeal against the seventh extension of
Mohammad’s detention, which had taken place five days earlier. At the
same time, the judge ordered Mohammad’s release on 10,000 NIS bail
(about $2,500 USD) and with the conditions that he not travel outside
the occupied Palestinian territory, and that he regularly reports to
the Israeli police. However, the military judge also gave the military
prosecutor 24 hours to issue an administrative detention order against
Mohammad, and remanded Mohammad to detention during this period. At
6:30 p.m. on 23 November 2009, Addameer confirmed with the Israeli
Security Agency that an administrative detention order had been issued
against Mohammad, and that he would not be released.
Mohammad Othman, a long-time human rights defender and activist with
the “Grassroots Stop the Wall Campaign”, was arrested at the Allenby
Bridge Crossing between Jordan and the West Bank. On the day of his
arrest, 22 September 2009, Mohammad was on his way back to Ramallah
from an advocacy tour in Norway where he had been engaged in a number
of speaking events.
Addameer is alarmed by reports from Mohammad that he was repeatedly
threatened with administrative detention during his two-month long
interrogation period. Addameer believes that with these repeated
threats, the Israeli interrogation police aimed to coerce Mohammad into
giving a false confession to crimes he did not commit. Most recently,
on 19 November, after Mohammad was transferred back to Kishon detention
center from Ohalei Keidar prison in Beersheba where he had been held in
a so-called “collaborators’ cell”, he was told by one of the Israeli
interrogators that his detention would not be extended again and that
he would be placed under administrative detention if he failed to
confess. Addameer therefore contends that Mohammad’s arrest and
administrative detention are completely arbitrary and are a prime
example of Israel’s use of administrative detention as a substitute for
prosecution, rather than as a preventative measure allowed by
international humanitarian law for “imperative reasons of security” or
“if the security of the Detaining Power makes it absolutely necessary”
(Fourth Geneva Convention, Articles 42 and 78).
Further, Addameer reiterates the position that Mohammad’s arrest
constitutes a violation of a number of international human rights
instruments, in particular the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders.
Considering that, sixty days after Mohammad’s arrest Israeli
authorities have been unable to cite any legitimate suspicions or
allegations to justify his detention, and that the Court of Appeals
judge directed that Mohammad should be released, Addameer believes that
Mohammad is being detained administratively as a punishment for his
human rights activism. In addition, there is reason to believe that the
Israeli military authorities use Mohammad’s continuous detention as an
example to deter other activists, including those active against the
occupation and the Annexation Wall in particular, from continuing their
human rights work.
BACKGROUND ON ADMINISTRATIVE DETENTION
Administrative detention is a procedure that allows the Israeli
military to hold detainees indefinitely on secret evidence without
charging them or allowing them to stand trial. In the occupied
Palestinian West Bank, the Israeli army is authorized to issue
administrative detention orders against Palestinian civilians on the
basis of Military Order 1591. This order empowers military commanders
to detain an individual for up to six months renewable periods if they
have “reasonable grounds to presume that the security of the area or
public security require the detention.” On or just before the expiry
date, the detention order is frequently renewed. This process can be
continued indefinitely.
There is no explicit limit to the maximum amount of time an
individual may be administratively detained, leaving room for
indefinite legal detention. The grounds on which someone can be
detained under Military Order 1591 are also unclear, leaving it up to
the military commanders to decide what constitutes “public security”
and “security of the area”. Detainees subject to administrative
detention orders are rarely informed of the reasons for their
detention; neither are their lawyers. At the judicial review of a
detention order, which is held in a closed hearing before a military
judge, the judge can uphold, cancel or shorten the order. In most
cases, however, administrative detention orders are confirmed for the
same periods as those requested by the military commander. Although the
detainee can appeal the decision at the judicial review, in practice,
the vast majority of appeals are rejected.
For more information about administrative detention and Addameer’s
Campaign to Stop Administrative Detention please visit our website:
www.addameer.info. For more information about Mohammad’s arrest, please
refer to previous statements and updates on the case issued by Addameer
and “Stop the Wall”, or directly contact:
Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association
Tel: +972 (0)2 296 0446 / (0)2 297 0136
Email: info@addameer.ps
Website: www.addameer.info
Addameer