MA'ARIV 12/3/98 via IMRA
--Article by Nadav Haetzni:
Not only has a Palestinian land law come into being, but a Palestinian
law on weapons is also now in effect, according to which it is permissible for the
Palestinian Authority to manufacture weapons and accord its citizens the right to bear
arms. Both of these laws are part of a new stage in the Palestinian struggle against
Israel.
Brigadier-General Uri Shoham, the Chief Military Prosecutor: "This is
a serious violation of the agreements with the Palestinians." Attorney Tewfiq
Abu-Ghazzaleh, Chairman of the Palestinian Legal Sub-committee:
"There is no declaration of war here, although I would understand someone thinking
that there was. If it were up to me, perhaps I would not submit this law."
Palestinian Justice Minister Freih Abu-Medein declined to comment.
A few days after the signing ceremony at Wye River, Justice Minister Tzahi Hanegbi
wrote to the Prime Minister, and called his attention to a new Palestinian law, which was,
at that time, in the final stages of enactment.
It is called the "Law on Foreign Ownership of Real Estate in Palestine,"
which was recently brought into law in secret in Gaza, and a copy of which was received by
chance by the Justice Ministry.
This law amounts -- according to jurists -- to a declaration of war on the State of
Israel.
Justice Minister Hanegbi made it clear to the Prime Minister that the new law severely
infringes on Israeli citizens' and authorities' land acquisition rights of Israeli
citizens and organisations, from both sides of the Green Line, and complete contravenes
the instructions of the agreements with the Palestinians, including the Wye Agreement.
According to the new law, revealed here for the first time, any Israeli citizen or
institution, certainly any settler or the IDF, holding land in "Palestine", is
harming Palestinian "national security".
Together with this, any Palestinian who aids, in any way, the acquisition or possession
of land by an Israeli -- is guilty of treason.
The land will pass automatically to the treasury of the Palestinian state, and the
judgment on the Israeli holding the land or the Palestinian selling it -- death.
A few months before the enactment of the land law, senior Justice Ministry and IDF
officials brought an additional Palestinian law to the Prime Minister's attention.
This was the "Firearms and Ammunition Law", which was also passed in secret
and signed by "Rais" Arafat last May. According to Chief Military Prosecutor
Brigadier-General Uri Shoham, and Central Command Legal Adviser Colonel Shlomo Politis,
this law too constitutes a serious infringement of the agreements with the Palestinians.
It gives legitimacy to the Palestinian Authority itself, to manufacture weapons and
permit citizens to bear arms. All this is seen by the State of Israel as constituting a
serious security threat, violates the agreement between the sides, and demonstrates
aggressive intentions.
The two laws, on land and on weapons, constitute a single unit of land and fire, and
constitute a new and additional stage in the Palestinian struggle against Israel.
Despite numerous attempts by political and professional elements to bring this to the
attention of the Prime Minister, both before and after the Wye Agreement, Netanyahu has
done nothing.
It seems, however, from the Justice Minister's sharp words, that he will soon lead the
issue of hostile Palestinian legislation to a serious crisis with the Palestinians.
But these two new laws do not represent the whole picture. For a long time, senior
figures in the Justice Ministry and the IDF have been climbing the walls with anger and
frustration at Palestinian behavior in the legal sphere.
According to unambiguous articles in the Oslo Accords, which were ratified in the Wye
Agreement, the Palestinians are required to submit all legislative initiatives to Israel
via a special legal committee, in order to enable Israel to examine whether the proposed
legislation is in keeping with the agreements.
The laws are supposed to be submitted to the legal committee prior to their enactment,
so that it would be possible to change or cancel them, before they become law.
Precisely because of this, the Palestinians have not, until today, submitted even one
law to Israel. In fact, they are carrying out, by means of legislation, a war against
Israel. Countless requests by senior Justice Ministry officials to their Palestinian
counterparts, asking them to comply with the agreements and submit the laws which have
been enacted or are in the process of being enacted, have simply been ignored.
Copies of laws which have reached the Israeli side were obtained by intelligence, or as
a result of the monitoring of internet sites and newspapers.
This "legal war", which has been completely ignored by the media, is causing
much anger and frustration on the part of the legal officials, who are required to
coordinate with the Palestinian Authority. They constantly send letters and memoranda to
politicians, but with no real result.
The "Foreign Ownership of Real Estate in Palestine" law, revealed here for
the first time, marks a new high in this legal war. In its English version, the law is
only two pages long, but this was enough to set off all the warning lights among top
Justice Ministry officials.
The law, which, as far is known, has already passed through all the legislative
processes, defines as "occupiers" the "Israeli occupying authority and its
civil and military institutions, settlements and whomever is under their authority."
It states that "any actions conducted by or being conducted by the occupying
authority (Israel) on Palestinian real estate are considered absolutely null and
void." The law contains no definition of what Palestinian land is, so that according
to the accepted Palestinian view, the law also applies to land in Tel Aviv, Acre and
Haifa, and certainly that in Jerusalem and in Judea and Samaria."
The law also prohibits "all persons who are not Arab Palestinians, whether they
are persons real or artificial, to possess any real estate in Palestine or to obtain any
material right, by any reason of ownership ..."
However, while regarding citizens of countries "with which there is
reciprocity" the Palestinian "Council of Ministers" may permit the holding
of real estate, a special article in the law states that regarding "occupiers,"
that is the government and citizens of Israel, the Council of Ministers has no authority
to permit the holding of real estate. Such land would be confiscated immediately by the
Palestinian authorities.
Of course, the law prohibits brokerage efforts, sales or approval of transactions to
foreigners and "occupiers" from being carried out, and states that "Any
Palestinian who violates the terms of this law has committed the crime of high
treason," and will be punished accordingly.
A foreigner who violates the law "has committed harm to national security"
and will be punished accordingly. The punishment for treason and harming national security
is death. Thus, Israelis and Palestinians are to march together from the land registry to
the gallows.
So far as is known, the bill has secretly passed through all of the required
legislative procedures and was even approved by Yasser Arafat. As stated above, not a word
of this was reported to Israel.
By chance, the draft legislation reached senior officials at the Justice Ministry last
September, including attorney Jean-Claude Nidam, who is responsible for contact with the
Palestinian Authority at the ministry. They were shocked and appealed to the highest
echelon of the judicial system, with a demand for action.
They clarified that "the orders of the aforementioned law severely damage the real
estate rights of the country's citizens and institutions."
They also asserted that "the Interim Agreement clearly states that there will be
no harm to these rights, and a number of articles explicitly determine that the
(Palestinian) Council is obligated to honor the existing rights." Therefore, they
stated that, "there is a clear contradiction between the law and the agreement."
They demanded that the Palestinians be informed that the law lacks any validity and is
void, and that the lessons from the very fact of its legislation be learned.
Senior jurists both in and outside the civil service point to the even more severe
implications than those about which the official documents speak. "This is a racist
law, which, if it were legislated by a friendly country such as Britain, we would
interpret as a declaration of war against us, and which would cause an immediate severing
of relations with it," says a senior jurist in the civil service.
"We must understand the meaning of the legislation. This law states that any
Israeli who owns land in a place that the Palestinians determine is Palestine, certainly
in the settlements and in Jerusalem, will be sentenced to death. The same holds true for
the Israeli government. This is an intolerable law that harms the very ability to continue
coming into contact with whoever legislated the law."...
On 6 July, the legal adviser to the IDF Central Command and the Civil Administration,
Col. Shlomo Politis, wrote a letter to OC Central Command. He warned against another new
Palestinian law which had just been legislated. This is the "Palestinian Firearms and
Ammunition Law," which was approved in an order by Yasser Arafat this past May, and
which received nearly no exposure.
The law permits the Palestinian Authority to manufacture weapons and to issue licenses
to carry all sorts of weapons. The position of the Israeli jurists regarding it is
unanimous. Col. Politis' opinion later received further backing from Chief Military
Prosecutor Brig. Gen. Uri Shoham. Both view the law as a direct violation of the Oslo
Accords.
According to Col. Politis, "The first part of the law, which deals mainly with
licensing and carrying weapons by Palestinians, contravenes the orders of the Interim
Agreement, since the law authorizes the 'minister of interior' to give a weapons permit
for pistols and rifles."
This "contravenes what is stated in the agreement's security appendix, according
to which the Palestinian Police would be permitted to issue licenses only for
pistols."
However, it seems that an even more severe aspect of the law is expressed in its second
section, which deals with the manufacture and import of weapons. This section, states
legal adviser Politis, constitutes "a violation of the Interim Agreement orders which
prohibit the possibility of the manufacture and import of weapons and ammunition."
"In the agreement's security appendix," he states, "it even says that
the Palestinian Police have an obligation to prevent the manufacture of weapons in the PA
areas."
The illegal legislation of this law was brought to the Prime Minister's attention early
last August. The issue was even raised a number of times with Netanyahu and in the cabinet
by the Justice Minister, but without any result.
As was said, there is no disagreement between the jurists regarding the meaning of the
law, but the truth is that one does not need to be a legal expert to understand the full
severity of the matter:
the PA is giving itself the imprimatur to manufacture, import and issue licenses for
weapons and ammunition, despite the fact that this imprimatur contravenes both the spirit
and the letter of its agreements with the State of Israel, and despite the fact that it is
clear to it that manufacturing and licensing weapons constitute a clear and flagrant
threat to Israel.
"There is nothing in our legislation which violates the agreements," claims
Attorney Tewfiq Abu-Ghazzaleh, the Palestinian Chairman of the Legal Sub-Committee, the
committee was supposed to deal with legal issues arising between the two sides.
"I am not claiming that the Israelis are lying in the serious accusations which
they are making against us, but there is a misunderstanding here. Regarding the law on
weapons, we are trying to create order from the scorched earth situation which existed
here when we arrived
Regarding the land law, I would need to check if it has indeed already been published
in the official gazette and come into force. If it were up to me, perhaps I would not
submit this law, but it has been done to show that we are in control on the ground.
There is no declaration of war here, although I would understand someone thinking that
there was. I hope that things will be different in the future."
"In general," says Attorney Abu-Ghazzaleh, "I can understand the
frustration of the Israeli side. I agree with them, there is a problem, but I hope that it
will soon be solved.
If it depended on me, it would have been solved already, but we need to create a
structure and get organized, especially in the West Bank. We need means and people, I hope
that it will happen, I am still waiting to hear from our Justice Minister."
The Justice Ministry and the security establishment have become used to answers of this
kind over the last few years. There they claim that Abu-Ghazzaleh's bosses are
deliberately sending him to dole out promises, but in practice are making sure that these
promises have no cover, or indeed that in the field, the precise opposite will happen.
By the way, Palestinian Justice Minister Freih Abu- Medein declined to be interviewed
for this article, despite repeated calls to his office and his home, and promises that he
would, "call back."
Abu-Ghazzaleh's basic embarrassment derives from the committee that he heads. The Oslo
Accords established a joint legal committee, headed by the two sides' justice ministers --
Tzahi Hanegbi and Freih Abu-Medein. It set up a sub-committee headed by Justice Ministry
Director- General Nili Arad, and Attorney Tewfiq Abu-Ghazzaleh.
Palestinian legislation, like all other legal issues, was supposed to be submitted to
this committee. But for years now, the Palestinians have prevented the convening of the
committee.
This is hardly a great surprise, and in the Justice Ministry, they say that "This
is the only committee in which they are supposed to give and not receive, and therefore,
they are making sure that it does not convene or function."...