Bill on ‘Executing Prisoners’ Passes Preliminary Knesset Vote

Negev desert prison, which houses Palestinian detainees. (File)
Negev desert prison, which houses Palestinian detainees. (File)
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Bill on ‘Executing Prisoners’ Passes Preliminary Knesset Vote

Negev desert prison, which houses Palestinian detainees. (File)
Negev desert prison, which houses Palestinian detainees. (File)

The Knesset on Wednesday advanced a bill to impose the death penalty on Palestinian captives, approving it in its preliminary reading.

The primary legislation stipulates that courts will be able to impose the death penalty on those who have committed a nationalistically motivated murder of an Israeli.

According to the proposed bill, a mandatory death penalty would be imposed on intentional acts causing the death of an Israeli citizen “with the objective of harming Israel and uprooting the Jewish people from the country”.

The bill - approved 55-9 - was submitted by MK Limor Son Har Melech from the Otzma Yehudit party.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the government “will continue to operate in all ways… to deter terrorists.”

Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara was set to oppose the law on the grounds that it poses significant constitutional difficulties and goes against Israel’s declarations on the matter in international forums and against the international trend of limiting the use of the death sentence.

A joint statement by Netanyahu and Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said that the initial bill advanced Sunday stipulates that “courts will be able to impose a death penalty on those who committed a nationalistically motivated murder offense against a citizen of Israel.”

The bill will later be discussed by the high-level security cabinet.

Adalah, a human rights and legal center in Israel, condemned the bill for exclusively targeting Palestinians.

Voting on the bill could exacerbate the tension in Israeli prisons.

The Israeli prisons suppression units attacked on Wednesday the departments of captives in Negev prison.

The Commission of Detainees' and Ex-Detainees' Affairs said that the Israeli forces attacked the captives and used excessive force against them.

Tension prevails in the Negev prison following an attempt by the Israeli Prison Administration to impose new sanctions on the captives, according to the Commission.

In the same context, the Palestinian Prisoners' Club also spoke about the current tension in the Negev prison.

The inmates have been on a strike for two weeks as a form of objection against Ben Gvir's steps including the transfer of inmates between prisons, and depriving them of privileges.



The War in Gaza Has Taken a Devastating Toll on Kids, Says UN Humanitarian Chief

A displaced Palestinian child fleeing Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, walks on Gaza's main Salah al-Din road on the outskirts of Gaza City, on November 5, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
A displaced Palestinian child fleeing Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, walks on Gaza's main Salah al-Din road on the outskirts of Gaza City, on November 5, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
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The War in Gaza Has Taken a Devastating Toll on Kids, Says UN Humanitarian Chief

A displaced Palestinian child fleeing Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, walks on Gaza's main Salah al-Din road on the outskirts of Gaza City, on November 5, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
A displaced Palestinian child fleeing Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, walks on Gaza's main Salah al-Din road on the outskirts of Gaza City, on November 5, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)

The war in Gaza has seen children killed, starved, frozen to death, orphaned and separated from their families, the UN humanitarian chief says.

“A generation has been traumatized,” Tom Fletcher told a UN Security Council meeting called by Russia on Thursday about the war's impact on Gaza's youngest residents.

"Conservative estimates indicate that over 17,000 children are without their families in Gaza,” he said.

In his video briefing from Stockholm, Fletcher did not give any figures on the number of children killed. But he said, “Some died before their first breath – perishing with their mothers in childbirth.”

An estimated 150,000 pregnant women and new mothers are also “in desperate need of health services,” Fletcher said.

He said a million kids in Gaza need mental health and psycho-social support for depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts, according to the UN children’s agency, UNICEF.

Gaza's Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between combatants and civilians, says over 47,000 Palestinians have been killed, more than half of them women and children, reported The Associated Press.

Israel blames civilian casualties on Hamas, saying militants operate in residential areas.