http://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/middle-east/5804-unicefs-translation-of-torture-to-ill-treatment

UNICEF's translation of torture to 'ill-treatment'
Ramona Wadi
Tuesday, 23 April 2013 11:00

[image: "Despite knowledge of torture practices and the incorporation of
torture under Israeli law on the pretext of dealing with 'terrorists,'
Israel represents itself as dedicated to safeguarding human rights..."]

"Despite knowledge of torture practices and the incorporation of torture
under Israeli law on the pretext of dealing with 'terrorists,' Israel
represents itself as dedicated to safeguarding human rights..."
UNICEF's report, Children in Israeli Military Detention, Observations and
Recommendations, detailing the condition of Palestinian children detained
in Israel's military jails fails to address torture as a modus operandi,
relying instead on euphemisms such as "ill treatment" or "duress" to
describe solitary confinement, beatings and threats of sexual violence.
While admitting the "widespread, systematic and institutionalised process,"
the report malfunctions on several issues. It refuses to acknowledge the
correct term for torture. There is also the expectation of adherence to
applicable international law in the case of Israel. The recommendations "to
improve the protection of children within the system" can be interpreted as
a safeguard for Israel as opposed to protection for minors whose rights
have been violated relentlessly by the occupation.

The press release regarding this report was also mired in inconsistencies,
according to a report in The Australian, reproduced in part by Mondoweiss.
Journalists were not allowed to film the press conference with the
exception of the initial five minutes, during which UNICEF's Jerusalem
chief Jean Gough uttered words of praise for Israel's "dialogue about the
system under which Palestinian children from the age of 12 are tried by
Israeli soldiers, while Jewish children in the neighbouring settlements are
tried before civilian courts." Journalists reported that once the filmed
introductory phase was over a different scenario unfolded during which
UNICEF officials admitted to Israeli human rights abuse against Palestinian
children in detention. However, it seems as if self-censorship or pressure
from Israel - in order for the occupation to garner a favourable image in
the media - might have been pivotal factors that were not limited to the
conference, considering the manner in which the actual reference to torture
was eliminated from the report.

The report gives an overview of the rights of the child in accordance with
international law, correctly deeming the prohibition against torture as
absolute. However, one must question the motive behind downplaying these
atrocities to a statement of "ill treatment." UNICEF's report documents the
human rights violations happening throughout the years, including the
arrests occurring between midnight and dawn, the blindfolds and plastic
ties to restrain children's movement, deprivation of food, water, toilet
facilities and medical care, physical violence and threats to obtain
coerced confessions and eliminating the right to defence by prohibiting
legal advice, denying family visits and transferring detained children to
jails beyond the occupied territories. In view of this dehumanisation, the
report further isolates the Palestinian narrative by asserting a
generalisation of torture with regard to specific legal framework and
failing to apply a rigid stance when faced with actual torture practices.
This misrepresentation is aided by international organisations and
governments whose collaboration with Israel runs deeper than their alleged
commitment to safeguarding human rights.

Israel may boast of attributions which serve to conceal the true nature of
the colonial occupation, bolstered by the fact that human rights have
become a constant chant in Israeli and international rhetoric, albeit
misplaced. Despite knowledge of torture practices and the incorporation of
torture under Israeli law on the pretext of dealing with 'terrorists,'
Israel represents itself as dedicated to safeguarding human rights by
manipulating rhetoric. Israel's constant emphasis on security has become
one exhausted metaphor, yet it still serves to align international official
discourse with its actions. A discussion of how Israel has mangled the
concept of universal human rights and manipulated its definition to suit
the purposes of the occupier population should be necessary in order to
dispel unfounded sympathy with Israel. By failing to address this
discrepancy, international organisations, including the UN and its
affiliates, have splintered Palestinian memory and isolated the collective
experience from legal measures which have made it possible for Israel to
persist in its illegal occupation. Thus the expectation of Israel adhering
to international law is merged into the misleading, constructed stereotype
of a country which violates human rights only as a last resort, making the
consequences sound trivial as opposed to methodical oppression.

UNICEF's recommendations are detached from the ramifications of colonial
occupation. Primarily, the recommendations are not a condemnation resulting
in consequences for Israel. Rather, they are "intended to assist Israeli
officials to adopt a series of practical safeguards that would improve the
protection of children under military detention and prevent practices that
breach the absolute prohibition against torture and cruelty, inhuman or
degrading treatment. Some of these safeguards would also assist the
authorities in dispelling any false allegations of wrongdoing." Israel is
also described as having "legitimate security concerns and its duty to
protect from violence its citizens and other persons under its jurisdiction
or de facto control." By regurgitating Israel's own discourse regarding
security, UNICEF has distanced itself from the nature of Palestinian
resistance against colonial and racist domination, which is deemed
legitimate according to international law. The right to self-determination
is enshrined within international law, yet UNICEF's slant in the report
favours Israel's security concerns over the tangible security concerns of
Palestinians who have endured decades of dispossession, exile, war and
massacres in the name of Zionist ideology.

The essence of Israeli dominance is supported by apartheid practices,
therefore any recommendations which would result in the disruption and
weakening of the power structure would be disregarded. It is difficult to
comprehend how these recommendations are expected to change the lives of
Palestinian children in Israeli jails when not even UN resolutions are
binding, let alone reports written in a manner which inadvertently exhibits
solidarity with soldiers involved in torture and interrogation. It is
evident that diplomacy fails to further the cause of the oppressed, yet the
use of language by a human rights organisation which fragments resistance
into an isolated trait epitomised by the detention of Palestinian children
for "throwing stones" at vehicles creates a reverberation of indignation.
Faced with such distorted concern, it seems as if the threat of solitary
confinement for Palestinians looms further than the borders of physical
incarceration in Israeli jails.

------------------------------------

<http://972mag.com/detained-testimonies-from-palestinian-children-imprisoned-by-israel/69526/>
Testimonies from Palestinian children imprisoned by
Israel<http://972mag.com/detained-testimonies-from-palestinian-children-imprisoned-by-israel/69526/>Samar
Hazboun <http://972mag.com/author/972blog/>

http://972mag.com/detained-testimonies-from-palestinian-children-imprisoned-by-israel/69526/



----------------------

http://972mag.com/report-samer-issawi-accepts-deal-to-end-hunger-strike/69841/
Report: Samer Issawi accepts deal to end his hunger strike

*After staging an intermittent hunger strike for some nine months, hunger
striking Palestinian prisoner Samer Issawi has reportedly agreed to start
eating again, pending the signing of a deal later in the day. The deal
would see him released to his home in Jerusalem in eight months.*
<http://972mag.com/photos-street-exhibition-confronts-israelis-on-palestinian-prisoners-day/69488/samer-issawis-court-hearing-jerusalem-19-2-2013/>

Palestinian hunger striker Samer Issawi is taken to his court hearing in
the Magistrate Court in Jerusalem, February 19, 2013. (Photo by: Oren Ziv/
Activestills.org)

Palestinian hunger striking prisoner Samer Issawi has agreed to end his
hunger strike, and will be released to his home Jerusalem in eight months’
time, Reuters 
reported<http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCABRE93L19B20130422?sp=true>
late
Monday night.

The details of the deal were not immediately clear, but Issawi has insisted
all along that he would not agree to be exiled, like other released
prisoners have. Read more background:
here<http://972mag.com/hunger-striker-samer-issawi-is-another-victim-of-an-unjust-legal-system/66476/>
, 
here<http://972mag.com/doctors-fear-palestinian-hunger-strikers-life-in-immediate-danger/68883/>
 and 
here<http://972mag.com/as-palestinian-hunger-strikes-come-to-a-head-world-begins-to-take-notice/66264/>
.
[image: Demonstration in support of Samer Issawi this week in East
Jerusalem (Oren Ziv /
Activestills)]<http://972mag.com/palestinian-cartoonist-detained-for-a-month-as-prisoner-protests-grow/67621/oren-3/>

Demonstration in support of Samer Issawi in East Jerusalem last month (Oren
Ziv / Activestills)

*Updated:*

Samer Issawi was released as part of the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange in
October, 2011, having served 10 years of a 30-year sentence. He began his
hunger strike nine months later, shortly after the IDF re-arrested him in
the summer of 2012.

In February, the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court sentenced him to eight months
in prison for violating the terms of his release, with credit for time
served. According to that conviction and sentencing, he was to be released
on March 6. However, he still faced the re-sentencing hearings in military
court.
<http://972mag.com/from-protest-villages-to-hunger-strikes-a-week-in-photos-january-31-february-6/65543/03-8445514588_333e169e26_c/>

Activists in Jaffa have been holding daily protests in solidarity with
Samer Issawi, a Palestinian on hunger strike held in an Israeli medical
detention center, February 4, 2013. (Photo by: Shiraz
Grinbaum/Activestills.org)

Issawi announced this week that he would boycott the military court
proceedings against him and that he refused to recognize the legitimacy of
the courts.

Issawi’s lawyer, Jawad Boulous, told
*Haaretz*<http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/palestinian-prisoner-to-end-hunger-strike-in-return-for-early-release-1.517004>
that
the agreement will see him serve a total of 18 months (from his arrest in
July).

The full details of the deal were expected to be announced later Tuesday, Maan
reported. <http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=588455>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

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