PALESTINIAN GROUPS FIGHT DISSENT WITH TORTURE.
Rights watchdog critical of brutal tactics
RAM ALLAH, PALESTINIAN TERRITORY• Security forces of the rival Palestinian governments routinely use torture and arbitrary arrests, among other tactics, to quash dissent by peaceful activists and political opponents, Human Rights Watch said Tuesday.
The charges came in a new report released by the New York-based watchdog, following a two-year investigation that included interviews with nearly 150 people, many of them ex-detainees.
It accused both the Western-backed Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and the Islamic militant Hamas in Gaza of using “machineries of repression” to stifle criticism.
Human Rights Watch also said the systematic use of torture could amount to a crime against humanity under the United Nations’ Convention against Torture, and called on countries that provide funding to Palestinian law enforcement to suspend their assistance.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s government joined the convention after Palestine was accepted as a non-member state at the UN.
“Palestinian authorities have gained only limited power in the West Bank and Gaza, but yet, where they have autonomy, they have developed parallel police states,” said Tom Porteous, deputy program director at Human Rights Watch. “Calls by Palestinian officials to safeguard Palestinian rights ring hollow as they crush dissent.”
According to HRW, the Palestinian leaderships in the West Bank and Gaza engage in similar tactics, in most cases without holding anyone to account.
Among the alleged abuses: whipping people’s feet, forcing detainees into painful stress positions, hoisting up people’s arms behind their backs with rope and coercing suspects into granting access to their mobile phones and social media accounts.
The group’s director for Israel and the Palestinian territories, Omar Shakir, told a news conference Monday that the Palestinian Authority detained 220 Palestinians without charge or trial for their social media posts, including 65 university students and two journalists.
He claimed Hamas authorities in Gaza have detained over 45 people for their social media activity.
“These numbers do not speak to the scale which both authorities have gone to in order to shut down dissent,” Shakir said.
Both Hamas and the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority denied the accusations.