GAZA, August 31, 2009, (WAFA)- Al Mezan Center for Human Rights in Gaza and Adalah submitted a petition to the Supreme Court of Israel against the freeze of National Insurance disability payments to around 700 beneficiaries living in the Gaza Strip from the beginning of 2009.
The halt of the payments followed a decision made by the Bank of Israel to stop all business with all banks in
The petition was filed on behalf of six individuals who have stopped receiving their disability payments, together with organizations Physicians for Human Rights-Israel, Sawt el-Amel (The Laborer's Voice), and Kav LaOved (Worker's Hotline). In the petition, Adalah Attorney Sawsan Zaher relied on six affidavits from workers affected by the decision gathered by Al Mezan.
The petition followed lengthy correspondence between Adalah and the Bank of Israel, the National Insurance Institute (NII), the Prime Minister and various other government ministers, who have all attempted to shirk from responsibility for the problem. The various addresses claimed that the NII was searching for alternative ways of transferring the payments to beneficiaries in consultation with the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Army and the Palestinian National Authority. However, in the eight months since the problem began, the NII has not found a solution.
The petitioners emphasized that these workers were injured during the course of their work inside
One of the petitioners is 58-year-old Mr. Sharif Qarmout, who is married and has three children. In 1979, while working in construction in the area of Rishon Letzion, he fell six storeys from a building. He sustained serious injuries to his back and was completely paralyzed. After being injured, Mr. Qarmout approached a special committee within the NII. After undergoing numerous tests he was diagnosed as 100% disabled and awarded disability payments. Mr. Qarmout, who was insured with the Clalit Health Services Fund, is also entitled to a wheel chair every three years, along with several types of medicine. However, the health fund stopped providing these benefits at the beginning of 2009. Since then, Mr. Qarmout has been unable to support himself and his family, since the payments were their only source of income. He has further been unable to purchase the medicines he needs, which cost over 1,000 shekels per month.