-Caveat Lector-

Discrimination in Israeli Law

Wednesday, June 12 2002 @ 06:42 PM GMT

The Declaration of Independence in 1948 defined Israel as both a
Jewish and democratic state, committed to the "ingathering of the
exiles," and to guaranteeing equality to all its citizens. Yet
insofar as Israel defines itself as Jewish, it overrides and
compromises the extent to which it can be democratic.

Article 26

"All Persons are equal before the law and are entitled without any
discrimination to the equal protection of the law. In this respect
the law shall prohibit any discrimination and guarantee to all
persons equal and effective protection against discrimination on any
grounds such as race, colour, sex, language, political or other
opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status."
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)

Discrimination in Israeli Law

Despite Israel's ratification of the ICCPR and its guarantee to
protect all of its citizens against discrimination, Palestinian Arab
citizens in Israel are discriminated against in a variety of forms
and denied equal individual rights because of their national
belonging. Though this discrimination is politically motivated, the
Israeli legal system is part of this political context. As well as
offering limited provisions for equality or political participation
to members of the Palestinian Arab minority, the law in Israel
subjects them to three types of discrimination: direct discimination
against non-Jews within the law itself, indirect discrimination
through "neutral" laws and criteria which apply principally to
Palestinians, and institutional discrimination through a legal
framework that facilitates a systematic pattern of privileges(1).

The "Jewish and Democratic State"

The Declaration of Independence in 1948 defined Israel as both a
Jewish and democratic state, committed to the "ingathering of the
exiles," and to guaranteeing equality to all its citizens. Yet
insofar as Israel defines itself as Jewish, it overrides and
compromises the extent to which it can be democratic.

Israel as a Jewish state has been legally defined as resting on three
minimum conditions: where Jews form the majority, where Jews are
entitled to special treatment and preferential laws, and where a
reciprocal relationship exists between Israel and the Jewish people
in the diaspora. Yet in all these conditions, the Palestinian Arab
minority is both excluded and hence discriminated against: by
privileging Jews, the state treats others as second-class citizens.

Constitutional Equality

Israel does not have a formal constitution, but has drawn up a series
of Basic Laws that form a constitution in evolution. Prior to 1992,
none of these Basic Laws guaranteed any basic rights. However, in
1992 the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom was passed (2) which
subsequently authorised courts to overturn Knesset laws that were
contrary to the right to dignity, life, freedom, privacy, property
and the right to leave and enter the country.

Specifically, however, it did not include the right to equality.
Further, section 1A of the law states that it aims to anchor "the
values of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state."
Given the lack of an explicit law that constitutionally protects
equality for all citizens, this emphasis on the Jewishness of the
State again compromised the equal rights protection for the
Palestinian Arab minority.

Political Participation

Palestinian Arabs rights to run for elections to the Israeli
parliament, the Knesset, are also limited by their acceptance of the
notion of the Jewish state. These limits are expressed in the Law of
Political Parties (1992) and, in particular, the amendment of section
7A(1) of the Basic Law: The Knesset which prevents candidates from
participating in the elections if their platform suggests the "denial
of the existence of the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish
people." Under this section a party platform that challenges the
Jewish character of the state, that for example calls for full and
complete equality between Jews and Arabs in a state for all its
citizens, can be disqualified, as lists have been in the past.(4) The
law demands that Palestinian Arab citizens may not challenge the
state's Zionist identity.

Direct Discrimination

There are two main examples of laws that discriminate against
Palestinian Arabs by directly distinguishing between Jews and non-
Jews:

Citizenship Rights & the Law of Return: National identity is the main
factor in deciding the acquisition of citizenship in Israel. The Law
of Return grants every Jew the right to immigrate to Israel. The
Nationality Law automatically grants citizenship to all Jews who have
done so, and also to their spouses, children,s grandchildren, and all
their spouses. This privilege is for Jews only. Palestinian Arabs can
only get citizenship by birth, residence (after meeting a cumulative
list of conditions) or naturalisation.

Special Status of Jewish Organisations: As a result of the World
Zionist Organisation- Jewish Agency Law, the Jewish National Fund,
Jewish Agency, and World Zionist Organisation have special
constitutional status in Israel and are known as quasi-governmental
bodies. They are Jewish organisations which explicitly aim to benefit
Jews only, but have authority for certain governmental functions,
including developing the land and housing projects and settlements.
Their activities are co-ordinated with the government and are given
tax benefits, and they have a lot of influence on decision-making
boards (particularly in agriculture and land use).
Demonstrating council workers unpaid for 4 months.

The Palestinian Arab minority is excluded entirely from these
functions as either beneficiaries or participants. Further no
government organisations perform the same functions for non-Jews.
Consequently, Palestinian Arab needs are systematically disregarded.

Indirect Discrimination

More widespread is the use of "non-discriminatory" criteria in
statutes that lead to differences in the treatment of Jews and the
Palestinian Arab minority:

Military Service: Many government preferences and benefits in Israel
are conditioned on performing military service. Whilst military
service is technically compulsory for all citizens, by discretion the
vast majority (90%) of Palestinian Arabs are not required to serve;
whereas the majority of Jews do. As a consequence, they do not
receive the wide range of benefits, including larger mortgages,
partial exemptions from course fees, and preferences for public
employment and housing. The discriminatory factor is that in many
cases the link between the benefit offered and the requirment for
military service is tenuous, often as in employment opportunities,
and that government offices provide benefits beyond what is
legislated. The most celebrated example of this was the level of
state child benefits, which until 1997 were conditioned on military
service, rather than more obvious socio-economic factors.

The impression that this is a mechanism for privileging Jews is borne
out by the fact that Jewish Yeshiva students, who like Arab citizens
do not serve, are granted the benefits anyway, a policy which has
been upheld by the courts.(6)

Place of Living: The government categorises the country into
different zones and awards different statuses and benefits to
different towns. For instance, it denotes certain areas national
development areas, which then makes them eligible to receive benefits
including special tax incentives for industry, educational
programmes, and housing incentives. These areas are supposed to be
determined according to socio-economic criteria. Yet the zones are
drawn to include a disproportionate number of Jewish localities
rather than Palestinian Arab ones.

For example, in the 1998 classification, out of the 429 localities
accorded Development Area A status, only 4 were Arab, despite the
fact that Arab towns and villages are consistently at the bottom of
the socio-economic scale. The zoning was used to exclude the vast
majority of the Palestinian Arab minority from these benefits.

Institutional Discrimination

The Palestinian Arab minority in Israel is discriminated against by
the aspects of the legal system which allow the government to adopt
discriminatory policies, or the discretionary power that can be used
by officials to maintain a systematic pattern of preferences.

Budgets & Resource Allocation

The Budget Law, which governs state funds, does not specify what
proportion should be earmarked for minorities; the decision lies with
officials' discretion. Due to their lack of representation in
government offices, Palestinian Arabs receive substantially less
funding for e.g. local government budgets (usually 50% less), and
have less resources allocated for welfare budgets, school facilities
or other education programmes. Often this discrepancy is justified by
the government running projects in cooperation with the Jewish
Agency, thus necessitating only Jewish beneficiaries. (7)

Uneven Implementation of the Law: There are three ways in which the
implementation of the law adversely affects the Palestinian Arab
minority:

1) Positive statutes that the State is expected to enforce or
services that the State is required to provide can simply not be
implemented in Palestinian Arab communities, such as the Compulsory
Education Law, and the provision of truant officers or counsellors,
despite the fact that Arab students form 75% of those who drop out of
school throughout the whole country.

2)Laws that apply to both Jews and Arabs can be selectively or
predominantly implemented on Palestinian Arabs, such as land
confiscation laws or house demolitions.

3)Laws can be implemented with different criteria for Jews and Arabs,
such as criteria for family assistance in education programmes or
production quotas for agricultural production. Often differences in
quotas are maintained due to a lack of Arab representation in
decision- making authorities.

The judicial review of this institutional discrimination is limited.
To date, there is not one court case where the Supreme Court has
accepted a case of discrimination against the Palestinian Arab
minority and ruled to protect its rights. It usually accepts the
claim of the State that its policies serve national priorities and
thus are not discriminatory, or that different treatment between Jews
and Arabs is legitimate, as they are different groups.(8) Even when
historical discrimination is admitted, the court will not rule to
close the gaps, arguing that responsibility lies with the decision-
making of the executive.(9)

Recommendations for Action

Israel should undertake a review of all its legislation, beginning
with the laws detailed in this factsheet, to ensure that they are
consistent with its obligations under Article 26 of the ICCPR, and
offer effective protection from discrimination to all citizens.

In particular, Israel should draft a basic law that explicitly
entrenchesthe right to equality.

Beyond legislation, Israel ought to conduct a thorough reappraisal of
the policies of its ministries so as to eradicate a pattern of
institutional discrimination against the Palestinian Arab minority,
and provide equality in terms of budgetary allocations.

Most importantly, Israel must find the political will to achieve
change and work towards full equality for all its citizens.

Further Information:

D. Kretzmer, The Legal Status of the Arabs in Israel (Westview Press,
1990)

Adalah, Legal Violations of Arab Minority Rights in Israel (Adalah,
1998)

HRA & F. McKay, The Social, Economic & Cultural Rights of Minorities:
The Palestinian Arab Citizens of Israel (HRA, 1998)

Notes:

1. For a similar schematic analysis see Kretzmer, The Legal Status of
the Arabs in Israel (Westview Press, 1990) p. 48
2. In 1992 the Basic Law: Freedom of Occupation was similarly passed.
3. Forward to The Arabs in Israel, cited in Adalah, Legal Violations
of Arab Minority Rights in Israel (Adalah, 1998) p. 9
4. For example, El-Ard v. District Commissioner, 18 PD II 340 & Sabri
Jiryis v. District Commissioner, 18 PD IV 673, Yerdor v. Central
Elections Committee, 19 PD III 365, Neiman v. Chairman of the Central
Elections Committee, 39 PD II 233. It is true that since this
ammendment came into effect no lists have been disqualified under
section 7A(1), however the legal power still remains there to do so.
5. Kretzmer pp. 42-43
6. For example, Wattad v. Minister of Finance, 38 PD III 113
7. For example, the Shahar education programmes offered to weak and
disadvantaged students, in which a third of Jewish students have
participated, were not until 1998 offered in any Arab communities.
8. For example, Wattad, or Bourkan v. Minister of Finance 32 PD II
800, Agbariah v. Minister of Education 45 PD 222
9. For example, The Local Council of Daliyat El-Carmel et al v. Prime
Minister (unpublished), cited in Adalah p. 25


HRA - The Arab Association for Human Rights Mary's Well Street - PO
Box 215 - 16101 Nazareth - Israel. Tel: 06-6561923 - Fax: 06-6564934
- E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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