5 Rights Groups Urge Israel to Inoculate Palestinian Prisoners against COVID-19

Palestinian prisoners at Gilboa prison. (AFP file)
Palestinian prisoners at Gilboa prison. (AFP file)
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5 Rights Groups Urge Israel to Inoculate Palestinian Prisoners against COVID-19

Palestinian prisoners at Gilboa prison. (AFP file)
Palestinian prisoners at Gilboa prison. (AFP file)

Five human rights organizations in Israel submitted a petition to the Israeli Supreme Court to force Minister of Public Security Amir Ohana to vaccinate Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails against COVID-19.

The mover was made after he had decreed that the detainees would not receive the vaccine.

The joint petition was signed by the Adalah Legal Center, Association for Civil Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Center for the Defense of the Individual, and Rabbis for Human Rights.

The organizations demanded that the court order the Israel Prison Service (IPS) to inoculate all prisoners against COVID-19, especially those over the age of 60.

It demanded that the Prison Service prohibit opting to vaccinate Israeli detainees over Palestinian political prisoners.

The petition also included a medical report issued by the Association of Public Health Physicians of the Israeli Medical Association asserting that prisoners must be treated as a captive population.

“In the context of COVID-19, this is considered an at-risk population, both due to preexisting health issues and to the overcrowded conditions that increase the risk of infection and mortality.”

Ohana's decision against vaccinating Palestinian prisoners was also criticized by Israel’s attorney general Avichai Mandelblit, who said the minister does not have the authority to make such an order.

Ohana retorted, explaining that all the agencies that are part of the Ministry of Public Security fall under his jurisdiction and he will be held accountable before the public, stressing that he will not change his position.

Adalah described the decision as “racist”, saying it violates the basic and medical rights of prisoners and defies international laws and conventions, which Israel signed and is bound to implement.

The organization noted this was not the first time Israeli authorities have violated prisoner rights during the coronavirus outbreak.

In its letter to Ohana and IPS acting director Asher Vaknin, Adalah demanded that they revoke the decision to prevent Palestinian prisoners from being vaccinated.

Adalah stressed that the new orders violate Israeli Health Ministry instructions and professional medical ethics, which guarantee equal treatment for all.

It condemned the distinction between criminal prisoners and Palestinian prisoners, saying it is neither professional nor objective, especially that this is a dangerous virus and excluding prisoners violates the principle of equality and the right to life.



Arab Foreign Ministers Call for Immediate Ceasefire in Gaza

Italian Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Antonio Tajani attends the opening session of the Rome Med 2024, Mediterranean Dialogues conference in Rome, Italy, 25 November 2024. (EPA)
Italian Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Antonio Tajani attends the opening session of the Rome Med 2024, Mediterranean Dialogues conference in Rome, Italy, 25 November 2024. (EPA)
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Arab Foreign Ministers Call for Immediate Ceasefire in Gaza

Italian Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Antonio Tajani attends the opening session of the Rome Med 2024, Mediterranean Dialogues conference in Rome, Italy, 25 November 2024. (EPA)
Italian Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Antonio Tajani attends the opening session of the Rome Med 2024, Mediterranean Dialogues conference in Rome, Italy, 25 November 2024. (EPA)

Several Arab foreign ministers, gathering in Rome on the sidelines of the Group of Seven meeting, are calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon and the provision of humanitarian aid to Palestinians.

The ministers of Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates, and the secretary general of the League of Arab States, all participated in a Rome conference before joining G7 foreign minsters later in the day in nearby Fiuggi.

“Gaza is now a graveyard for children, a graveyard for human values, a graveyard for international law,” said Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi.

The Mideast conflict was the top agenda item Monday for the G7, amid reported progress on a possible ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah. Israel’s ambassador to the US said a deal could be reached within days.

“We all hope and pray that this ceasefire will be realized because the absence of it will mean more destruction, and more and more animosity, and more dehumanization, and more hatred, and more bitterness which will doom the future of the region to more conflict and more killing and more destruction,” Safadi said.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty reaffirmed that Cairo would host a ministerial-level conference next Monday on mobilizing international aid for Gaza.

In remarks to the “Mediterranean Dialogues” conference, he called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon, the release of hostages, provision of humanitarian aid for Palestinians and the initiation of “a serious and genuine political process” to create a Palestinian state.