Foreign Office minister says he has
raised concerns about treatment of Palestinian children in Israeli detention.
The British government has raised concerns about Israel's treatment of Palestinian minors arrested and interrogated for stone-throwing and other crimes, highlighted in an article in the Guardian.
Burt told
the Guardian he had "raised concerns about the treatment of Palestinian
children in Israeli detention. I urged the Israeli government to address these
concerns."
Burt was
also asked in the House of Commons last week about the issue of solitary
confinement for Palestinian minors. Labour MP Sandra Osborne called on the
government to condemn the practice and demand the release of 106 children
detained in the Israeli military prison system.
In response,
Burt referred to an earlier statement in which he said the practice of
shackling children was wrong. Minors are routinely shackled throughout court
hearings in the Israeli military justice system.
Osborne told
the Guardian Israel's treatment of Palestinian minors was "unjustified in
the context of human rights". She
had been appalled and distressed on visits to the Israeli military juvenile
court at Ofer, near Jerusalem. "No civilised democracy should treat
children in that way," she said.
The Israeli
human rights group B'Tselem said the state should apply the same protection to
Palestinian minors in detention that it allows to Israeli children.
B'Tselem
confirmed that descriptions given to the Guardian by Palestinian juveniles of
arrest, detention and interrogation under the military justice system were
consistent with testimonies it had collected although mostly with over-18s.
"We
have also seen long periods of solitary confinement in a small cell, with
lights on 24 hours a day, with detainees unable to follow time and disconnected
to the rest of the world," said B'Tselem spokeswoman Sarit Michaeli.
"We have testimonies of detainees cuffed in painful positions while under
interrogation and sometimes left for long periods.
"Throughout
the military justice process, the rights of suspects are violated."
B'Tselem, she said, took issue with the claim by Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev that detainees alleging mistreatment would have complaints dealt with fairly. "This is disingenuous at best," she said.
A
B'Tselem study
last year showed that out of more than 700 complaints of abuse by
Israeli Security Agency (ISA) interrogators brought between 2001 and 2011, none
resulted in a criminal investigation.
The
complaints were examined by an official of the ISA. "It is not surprising
that in most cases the inspector determines that the complaint is not true,"
said B'Tselem.
In a few
cases, the inspector found abuse had taken place but the file was closed
without the state attorney's office ordering a criminal investigation. B'Tselem
said this "transmits a message to … the potential complainants that the chances
of measures being taken against the persons responsible is zero".
Regev
insisted anyone who had a complaint that an Israeli official had acted in an
improper fashion should bring the information to the Israeli authorities and
civil courts. "It will be thoroughly investigated," he said.
He added:
"Minors deserve special attention, special consideration … The test of a
democracy is how you treat people incarcerated, people in jail, and especially
so with minors."
B'Tselem
said the provisions of Israeli youth law should formally be applied to
Palestinian minors. Night-time arrests in military operations should cease;
interrogations should be video-taped; minors should be questioned in the
presence of a parent or lawyer; they should have their rights clearly read to
them; and proper options for remand should be put in place.
Unicef, the
UN agency for children, also raised concerns following the Guardian's article.
Children had the "right to protection against violence and abuse," it
said in a statement. Unicef was "monitoring the arrest and detention of
children and is currently in dialogue with the Israeli authorities to improve
the protection of child detainees … All children, at all times, must be treated
with dignity and respect, in accordance with the convention on the rights of
the child."
In the first
11 months of last year, 222 cases of stone-throwers were brought before the
military court, according to a letter sent by the Israeli foreign ministry to
Lady Scotland, who visited the Ofer court last autumn, and is writing a report
on her findings.
The period
from indictment to the conclusion of proceedings had dropped to an average of
92.5 days in 2011 from 167 days in 2007, the letter said.
It pointed
out that "many crimes carried out by minors in [the West Bank] are of a
violent ideological nature and pose a clear and imminent threat to the public …
Despite the unique dilemmas in the dealing with minor suspects in [the West
Bank], Israel makes significant efforts to provide for just and fair treatment
throughout the entire military legal process in accordance with international
standards."
Human rights
organisations say Israel's treatment of Palestinian minors breaches the
international convention on the rights of the child and the fourth Geneva
convention.
source
: http://www.guardian.co.uk