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Military trial for Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash continues

Status: 
Trial postponed
About the situation

On 28 May 2018, the Israeli Ofer Military Court in the Occupied Palestinian Territories postponed the trial of Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash to 30 July 2018.

On 21 December, prominent human rights defenders Mr Issa Amro and Mr Farid Al-Atrash will appear before the Israeli Ofer Military Court in the Occupied Palestinian Territory after delays in their trial by Israeli authorities. 

Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash are facing numerous charges brought against them by Israeli Court for their work as human rights defenders. 

About Farid Al-Atrash

Farid al AtrashFarid Al-Atrash is a Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender in Hebron. He is chairman of the Independent Commission for Human Rights in Bethlehem and part of the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee (PSCC), a group which engages in community-based non-violent resistance of various forms, including strikes, protests, and legal campaigns. The PSCC also supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign. The Committee aims to document and expose violations of international law and injustice against families in areas of conflict under Israeli occupation, and to coordinate between various villages involved in struggles against the Wall, ethnic cleansing, settler expansion, and various aspects of Israeli Occupation.

20 December 2016
Military trial for human rights defenders Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash continues

UPDATE: On 28 May 2018, the Israeli Ofer Military Court in the Occupied Palestinian Territories postponed the trial of Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash to 30 July 2018.

On 21 December, prominent human rights defenders Mr Issa Amro and Mr Farid Al-Atrash will appear before the Israeli Ofer Military Court in the Occupied Palestinian Territory after delays in their trial by Israeli authorities. 

Issa Amro is a prominent human rights defender and founding member of many non-violent organisations in Hebron who work peacefully against Israeli occupation of the West Bank. Amongst these organisations are the Hebron branch of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), the Arab Non-Violence Network, Youth against Settlements and the Hebron Defenders. Farid Al-Atrash is a Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender in Hebron. He is chairman of the Independent Commission for Human Rights in Bethlehem and part of the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee (PSCC), a group which engages in community-based non-violent resistance of various forms, including strikes, protests, and legal campaigns. The PSCC also supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. The Committee aims to document and expose violations of international law and justice against families under Israeli occupation, and to coordinate between various villages involved in the struggles against the Wall, ethnic cleaning, settler expansion, and various aspects of Israeli Occupation.

On 21 December, Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash will appear before the Israeli Ofer Military Court in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Issa Amro is currently facing 18 spurious charges which were presented on 7 June 2016 and range from accusations of assault to participation in peaceful marches without obtaining a permit. In one fabricated charge, for example, Issa Amro was accused of breaking an Israeli settler's camera during a protest on 20 March 2013. However, in that particular incident, the defender had already been placed in detention at the time of the protest and could not have been responsible for breaking the camera.  Farid Al-Atrash is also facing fabricated charges, which accuse him of assaulting Israeli soldiers following his participation in a peaceful protest organised by Palestinians in Hebron on 26 February. In a statement, endorsed by several independent United Nations (UN) human rights experts, the persecution of Palestinian human rights defenders was condemned and the case of Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash was specifically addressed. In relation to Issa Amro’s case, the UN Special Rapporteurs noted that the trial against the human rights defender is part of a “...concerted pattern of harassment and intimidation by the Israeli authorities aimed at inhibiting his work as a human rights defender.”

Both human rights defenders last appeared before Ofer Military Court on 23 November 2016 when their trial was delayed. Several State representatives, representatives from the UN and other international NGO representatives were present at the hearing in solidarity and support of the human rights defenders.

Front Line Defenders condemns the continued judicial harassment against Issa Amro and Farid Al-Atrash and urges Israeli authorities to immediately drop all charges against them and guarantee in all circumstances that human rights defenders in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are able to carry out their legitimate human rights activities without fear of reprisals and free of all restrictions, including judicial harassment.

4 March 2016
Charging and detention of human rights defenders Mr Farid Al-Atrash and Mr Issa Amro

On 1 March 2016, human rights defender Mr Farid Al-Atrash was released from detention on bail, having been detained for 5 days following peaceful protests calling for the opening of Shudada Street in Hebron. He is now facing charges of participating in an illegal demonstration and attacking soldiers. On the same date, human rights defender Mr Issa Amro was also released, having been arrested on 29 February 2016. The human rights defender faces charges of organising illegal protests. Both human rights defenders deny the accusations against them.

Issa Amro was released on 1 March 2016, having been arrested by Israeli soldiers on 29 February outside his house in Tel Rumeida while speaking to a tour group from Breaking the Silence, an organisation of veteran combatants from the Israeli military dedicated to exposing the reality of everyday life in the Occupied Territories. He was blindfolded, handcuffed and taken to Gush Etzion prison. Once at the station, he was accused of organising an illegal protest calling for the opening of Shudada Street, which was closed down by Israeli authorities following the Ibrahimi Mosque Massacre in 1994, and using social media to incite violence against Israel and the Israeli Army. He was warned to expect a summons to court upon being released the following day.

Farid Al-Atrash was released on 1 March 2016, on bail of 1,500 shekels (approximately €350). On 29 February 2016, the Ofer Israeli Military Court had ordered the extension of his detention period until 3 March 2016, at an urgent hearing requested by the Independent Commission for Human Rights. On 28 February 2016, the human rights defender had been transferred by Israeli police into the custody of the military prosecution, where he was held until his release. The charges against him are connected to a peaceful protest which took place on 26 February 2016, in the context of the annual protest to open Shuhada Street in the occupied West Bank district of Hebron, and to commemorate the Ibrahimi Mosque Massacre, which occurred in late February 1994. Farid Al-Atrash was arrested by Israeli Occupation Forces during the protest, along with several other demonstrators. The protest itself was violently suppressed by Israeli forces, who directly targeted demonstrators and journalists by firing tear gas, physically assaulting them and throwing stun grenades. Farid Al-Atrash, who was holding a sign reading 'Free Free Palestine' when he was arrested, was beaten before being taken to the Jaabara police station in the Kiryat Arba’ settlement.

The peaceful march took place in Hebron to commemorate the Ibrahimi Mosque Massacre, a deadly attack by an extremist Israeli settler during prayer time, which occurred in late February 1994 and resulted in the deaths of 29 people and injuries to more than 100 from live bullets. The Israeli authorities subsequently closed down the area surrounding the mosque, including Shuhada Street and the Tel Rumeida area of the Old City of Hebron in the occupied West Bank. The area has been designated as a closed military zone by the Israeli army and banned to the public, apart from Israeli settlers and Palestinian residents. Under Israeli military law, any demonstrations in the West Bank are illegal, whether non-violent or not.