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Case Law

Case Law includes national and international jurisprudential decisions. Administrative bodies and tribunals are included.
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Tashuma Noga Desta et al. v. The Knesset et al.

For related decisions see Adam and others v. The Knesset and others (7146/12); Doe and others v. Ministry of Interior and others (1192/13); Tahangas and others v. Ministry of Interior (1247/13) & Eitan – Israeli Immigration Policy Center et al. v. The Israeli Government et al. These decisions deal with Amendments 3, 4 and 5 to the Law for the Prevention of Infiltration taken by the Supreme Court in its capacity as the High Court of Justice.

10 August 2015 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Topic(s): Freedom of movement - Immigration Detention - Non-refoulement | Countries: Israel

Eitan – Israeli Immigration Policy Center et al. v. The Israeli Government et al.

For related decisions see Tashuma Noga Desta et al. v. The Knesset et al. & Adam and others v. The Knesset and others (7146/12); Doe and others v. Ministry of Interior and others (1192/13); Tahangas and others v. Ministry of Interior (1247/13). These decisions deal with Amendments 3, 4 and 5 to the Law for the Prevention of Infiltration taken by the Supreme Court in its capacity as the High Court of Justice.

22 September 2014 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Topic(s): Access to procedures - Immigration Detention | Countries: Israel

Adam and others v. The Knesset and others (7146/12); Doe and others v. Ministry of Interior and others (1192/13); Tahangas and others v. Ministry of Interior (1247/13)

For related decisions see Tashuma Noga Desta et al. v. The Knesset et al. & Eitan – Israeli Immigration Policy Center et al. v. The Israeli Government et al. These decisions deal with Amendments 3, 4 and 5 to the Law for the Prevention of Infiltration taken by the Supreme Court in its capacity as the High Court of Justice.

16 September 2013 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Topic(s): Access to procedures - Asylum-seekers - Border controls - Effective remedy - Freedom of movement - Non-refoulement - Refugees - Rejection at border - Right to seek asylum - Rule of law / Due process / Procedural fairness | Countries: Israel

Siamon Woldu v. Minister of Interior

18 April 2013 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Countries: Eritrea - Israel

Mara'abe v. The Prime Minister of Israel

The Supreme Court Sitting as the High Court of Justice. The Supreme Court of Israel ("the Court"), sitting as a High Court of Justice, unanimously issued an order absolute, which requires the state to reconsider "the various alternatives for the separation fence route at Alfei Menashe, while examining security alternatives which injure the fabric of life of the residents of the villages of the enclave to a lesser extent." This judgment concerns the legality of the wall or barrier* in the area of Alfei Menashe, an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, located 4 km from the Green Line. According to Israel, the separation fence, which surrounds five Palestinian villages, was built to prevent terrorist infiltration into the State of Israel. The villagers received permanent resident cards, which allow them to enter the enclave. Palestinians who are not residents of the villages have to obtain permits in order to enter the area. The petitioners, who are residents of the villages within the enclave, challenge the legality of the wall, arguing that the military commander is not authorized to order the construction of such a barrier. The petitioners base their claim on the Advisory Opinion: Legal Consequences Of The Construction Of A Wall In The Occupied Palestinian Territory ("the Advisory Opinion") rendered by the International Court of Justice ("the ICJ"). The petitioners also challenged the validity of the wall under The Beit Sourik Case rendered by the Supreme Court of Israel, because it does not meet the proportionality test established in that case. The Respondents contend that "the military commander is authorized to erect a separation fence, as ruled in The Beit Sourik Case," and that the ICJ Advisory Opinion is not of relevance because it was decided on facts other than those established in The Beit Sourik Case. The Court reiterated its findings in The Beit Sourik Case, in which it held that a "military commander is not authorized to order the construction of the separation fence if his reasons are political." The Court further stated that in order to erect such a wall, taking possession of land belonging to Palestinians is necessary. According to the Regulations Concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land ("the Hague Regulations") and the Geneva (IV) Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War 1949, the taking of possession must be for "needs of the army of occupation", and is only allowed if it is "absolutely necessary by military operation." The Court concluded that the military commander's authority entails actions taken in order to ensure public order and security, and also comprises actions aimed at protection of Israeli settlers. In its Advisory Opinion, the ICJ held that the right to self-defense under Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations did not have any relevance to the case, because the attacks did not derive from another State. The ICJ also noted that the attacks originated within the territory occupied by Israel, where it exercises control. The Court found the ICJ ruling "hard to come to terms with," and stated that it did not need to "thoroughly examine" the issue, as it held that "regulation 43 of the Hague Regulations authorizes the military commander to take all necessary action to preserve security." The Court then compared the Advisory Opinion to The Beit Sourik Case, and concluded that the ICJ, too, had held that the "harm to the Palestinian residents would not violate international law if the harm was caused as a result of military necessity, national security requirements, or public order." According to the Court, the difference in result "stems from the difference in the factual basis laid before the court. The security-military necessity is mentioned only most minimally in the sources upon which the ICJ based its opinion." Moreover, the Court stated that the ICJ considered the "entire route" of the wall, whereas The Beit Sourik decision only pertained to a part of it. The Court then came to the question of what effect the Advisory Opinion would have "on the future approach of the Supreme Court on the question of the legality of the separation fence according to international law as determined in The Beit Sourik Case?" It answered this question as follows: [T]he Supreme Court of Israel shall give the full appropriate weight to the norms of international law, as developed and interpreted by the ICJ in its Advisory Opinion. However, the ICJ's conclusion, based upon a factual basis different than the one before us, is not res judicata, and does not obligate the Supreme Court of Israel to rule that each and every segment of the fence violates international law. The Israeli Court shall continue to examine each of the segments of the fence, as they are brought for its decision and according to its customary model of proceedings; it shall ask itself, regarding each and every segment, whether it represents a proportional balance between the security-military need and the rights of the local population." With respect to the existing route of the wall around Alfei Menashe, the Court found that the military commander had the authority to erect the wall, since the building of the wall was merely motivated by a "security consideration", and not by political reasons. The petitioners' request that the wall be built on the Green Line was rejected due to the security-military considerations laid out by the Respondents. The Court stated: "[A]ny route of the fence must take into account the need to provide security for the?residents of Alfei Menashe." The Court then had to decide whether the military commander had exercised his authority proportionately. With respect to the existing route of the wall the Court determined that "the details of an alternative route have not been examined, in order to ensure security with a lesser injury to the residents of the village." For this reason, the route of the fence did not meet the proportionality test, and the Respondent must reconsider the existing route.

15 September 2005 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Countries: Israel

Beit Sourik Village Council v. The Government of Israel

The Supreme Court of Israel ordered that the route of sections of a wall in the area of Judea and Samaria ("the West Bank") be changed in order to avoid unnecessary hardship to the local Palestinian population. President A. Barak delivered the opinion of the Court. Israel, as noted by the Court, has been holding the West Bank in belligerent occupation since 1967. Israel began a political process with the PLO in 1993 at which time it signed agreements to transfer control of parts of the area to the Palestinian Authority. Negotiations continued, talks were held at Camp David in the United States, and these talks failed in July 2000. According to the numbers presented by Israel to the Court, more than 8200 attacks on Israeli civilians were carried out in the West Bank area following the failure of the Camp David talks (from September 2000 to April 2004). In response to these attacks, Israel carried out several military operations and began plans for erecting a wall to prevent terrorist infiltration. The location of this wall that now passes through areas west of Jerusalem is the subject of the dispute between the parties, and is approximately 40 kilometers long. Parts of the wall are being erected on land that is privately owned. Once this private land is seized, an order of compensation is in principle to be made to the landowners. The petitioners in this case are landowners and the village councils affected by the land seizure orders. The petitioners challenged the legality of the seizure orders in relation to lands located west and northwest of Jerusalem. The claimed that such orders violated both Israeli administrative law and international law. They challenged both the authority of the Israeli military to erect such a wall and the manner in which it has been erected. In particular, the petitioners claimed that the wall passes over many miles of agricultural lands that have been cultivated for generations, that the wall disrupts the lives of 35,000 village residents, blocking access to roads, schools and emergency hospital services. Members of the Council for Peace and Security joined as amici curiae and proposed a route for the wall that would result in less disruption to villages such as those of the petitioners'. The Court noted that the authority of Israel's military commander is established in the Regulations Concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land, The Hague, 18 October 1907 ("the Hague Regulations") It also noted that the Geneva (IV) Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War 1949 ("Geneva Convention IV") provides sets forth the legal framework for the question of the military commander's authority to build this wall. The petitioners argued that the construction of the wall was motivated by political rather than security concerns, and therefore in violation of the principle that occupation of land should only take place out of military necessity. The Court disagreed with the petitioners, finding that the wall was being built out of military necessity due to security concerns. The Court observed that it could not substitute its judgment for that of the military, and that "[a]ll we can determine is whether a reasonable military commander would have set out the route as this military commander did." However, the Court noted that even when done out of military necessity, the wall must take into account the needs of the local population. The Court found that the "relationship between the injury to the local inhabitants and the security benefit from the construction of the separation fence along the route, as determined by the military commander, is not proportionate. The route undermines the delicate balance between the obligation of the military commander to preserve security and his obligation to provide for the needs of the local inhabitants. ... Here are the facts: more than 13,000 farmers (falahin) are cut off from thousands of dunams of their land and from tens of thousands of trees which are their livelihood, and which are located on the other side of the separation fence. No attempt was made to seek out and provide them with substitute land, despite our oft repeated proposals on that matter. ... The route of the separation fence severely violates their right of property and their freedom of movement. Their livelihood is severely impaired. The difficult reality of life from which they have suffered (due, for example, to high unemployment in that area) will only become more severe." The Court found that the injuries were not proportionate, and that they could be substantially decreased by an alternate route, either the route proposed by the experts of the Council for Peace and Security, or another route designed by the military commander. In sum, the Court upheld all petitions except for one, and found that 30 km of the 40 km wall in question resulted in disproportionate injury to the local population.

30 May 2004 | Judicial Body: Israel: Supreme Court | Topic(s): Terrorism | Countries: Israel

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