Home Archive 13/February/2017 03:53 PM

Rights group says Israeli police intimidate Arab school children seeking to protest

HAIFA, February 13, 2017 (WAFA) - Israeli police are illegally threatening and intimidating Palestinian Arab school children in an effort to deter them from participating in street protests, the rights group, Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, said in a press release on Monday.

Adalah sent a letter on January 24 to Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit, Israeli Police Commissioner Roni Alsheikh and Amos Ya‘akov, commander of the Israeli police‘s Coastal District, demanding that they order officers not to threaten or intimidate Arab school children.

On that same day, Palestinian Arab school children protested in Haifa against the state’s policy of home demolitions in Arab communities. In the days leading up to the protest, police attempted to prevent it from taking place using illegal means, said Adalah.

Plain-clothed police officers paid visits to local Arab school principals in an effort to pressure them to stop students participating in the protest. Officers also summoned school principals to a Haifa police station to discuss the protest.

In addition, police sent Whatsapp messages in Arabic to individual school children telling them – falsely – that the protest was illegal and that there would be clashes with police in case they went forward with it.

In the letter, Adalah Attorney Mohammad Bassam stressed the illegality of these police tactics, which amount to intimidation.

“Police operations regarding this protest dramatically exceeded the boundaries of authority granted to police by the law. The facts of the case demonstrate that the police force is prepared to employ even illegal means to deter Arab schoolchildren from exercising their right to freedom of political expression,” Attorney Bassam explained.

“It is patently illegal for police to summon school principals to a police station in order to pressure them to order their teachers and students not to participate in a protest. It is not within the authorized role of a school principal, or any other figure in an educational institution, to prevent, , warn, or punish students seeking to exercise their civil rights outside the schoolyard or regular school hours,” he said.

Adalah also emphasized that claims made by police that the protest was illegal were false.

“The protest did not require a permit as it was a gathering (as opposed to a march) at which no political speeches were made… Again, contrary to repeated police interpretations, the chanting of slogans during a protest does not count as a speech that would… – were a series of other conditions also simultaneously met – require a police permit,” said Attorney Bassam.

Israeli police responded to Adalah’s letter on 5 February 2017, stating that “Police are authorized to appeal to relevant figures [school principals] in the event that it believes an event might take place that could endanger the public, including the protesters themselves.”

Adalah stated in response that, “It is unclear on what information police based their assumption that any element of the demonstration might endanger public safety, or that the demonstration was illegal. According to this logic, the police would be authorized to prevent any form of student protest on the pretext of maintaining public order. We therefore believe that, in this case, police acted to prevent legitimate protest using illegitimate means, thereby exceeding the bounds of its authority.”

M.K.

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