HCJ
3239/02
1.
Iad Ashak Mahmud Marab
2.
Ahsan Abed Al Ftah Id Dahdul
3.
Weesam Abed Al Ftah Id Dahdul
4.
Center for the Defense of the
Individual founded by Dr. Lota Salzberger
5.
B’tselem—The Israeli Information Center
of Human Rights in the Occupied Territories
6.
The Association for Human Rights in Israel
7.
Physicians for Human Rights
8.
Adalah—The Legal Center for Arab
Minority Rights in Israel
9.
Kanon—The Palestinian Organization for the Protection of
Human and Environmental Rights
10.
Public Committee Against Torture
v.
1.
IDF Commander in the West Bank
2.
Judea and Samaria Brigade Headquarters
The
Supreme Court Sitting as the High Court of Justice
[April
18 2002, July 28 2002]
Before President A.
Barak, Justice D. Dorner
and Justice I. Englard
For the petitioner —Lila Margalit
For the respondent —Anar Hellman
Judgment
President A. Barak
The Facts
1. Since September 2002, Palestinians have
carried out many terrorist attacks against Israelis, both in Judea and Samaria
as well as in Israel. The defense forces
have been fighting this terrorism. To
destroy the terrorist infrastructure, the Israeli government decided to carry
out an extensive operation, Operation Defensive Wall. As part of this operation, which was
initiated at the end of March 2002, the IDF forces entered various areas of
Judea and Samaria. Their intention was
to detain wanted persons as well as members of several terrorist
organizations. As of May 5, 2002, about
7000 persons had been detained in the context of this operation. Among those detained were persons who were
not associated with terrorism; some of these persons were released after a
short period of time. Initial screening
was done in temporary facilities which were set up at brigade
headquarters. Those who were not
released after this screening were moved to the detention facility in Ofer Camp. The
investigation continued and many more were released. A number of the detainees were then moved to
the detention facility in Kziot. As of May 15, 2002, of the 7000 persons who
had been detained since the start of Operation Defensive Wall, about 1600
remained in detention.
2. The detentions were initially carried out
under the regular criminal detention laws of the area, under the Defense
Regulations Order (Judea and Samaria) (Number 378)-1970 [hereinafter Order
378]. It soon became clear that Order
378 did not provide a suitable framework for screening thousands of persons
detained within a number of days. Thus,
on May 5, 2002, respondent no. 1 promulgated a special order: Detention in Time
of Warfare (Temporary Order) (Judean and Samaria) (Number 1500)-2002
[hereinafter Order 1500].
3. Order 1500 established a special framework
regarding detention during warfare. The
order applied to a “detainee,” which was defined as follows:
Detainee —one who has been detained, since March 29,
2002, in the context of military operations in the area and the circumstances
of his detention raise the suspicion that he endangers or may be a danger to
the security of the area, the IDF, or the public.
The principal innovation of
Order 1500 may be found in section 2(a):
Notwithstanding sections 78(a)-78(d) of the Defense
Regulations Order (Judea and Samaria) (Number 378)-1970 [hereinafter the Defense
Regulations Order], an officer will have the authority to order, in writing,
that a detainee be held in detention, for up to 18 days [hereinafter the
detention period].
Under
this section, officers are authorized to order the detention of a detainee for
a period of 18 days, and a judicial detention order is not required. In order to continue holding a detainee
beyond 18 days, however, a judge must be approached. Section 2(d) of Order 1500 relates explicitly
to this matter:
Continuing to hold a detainee in detention for
investigative purposes, beyond the detention period, will be done under the
authority of a detention order issued by a judge, in accordance with section
78(f) of the Defense Regulations Order.
During
the first 18 day period of detention, detainees have no option to be heard by a
judge. This is due to the fact that
under section 78(i) of Order 378, a judge’s authority to order the release of
detainees is limited to those detained who have been detainees in accordance
with those specific sections. However, the
detainees in question were not detained under these regulations, but rather
under the terms of Order 1500, which explicitly grants authority to detain “[n]otwithstanding sections 78(a)-78(d)” of Order 378. In this specific regard, Order 1500 differs
from Order 378 in two ways. First, an officer has the authority to order
the detention of a detainee for a period of 18 days himself, and need not
obtain a judicial order. Second, during that detention period, there is no
judicial review of the detention order. Of course, an officer has the authority
to release the detainee before the detention period has passed. See Order
1500, § 2(c).
Order
1500 also differs from Order 378 is a second manner. Under Order 1500, “a
detainee shall not meet a lawyer during the detention period.” See Order
1500, § 3(a). However, “meeting between a detainee and his lawyer after the
detention period may only be prevented by the authorities in accordance with
section 78C(c)(2) of the Defense Regulations Order.” See Order 1500, §
3(b). Thus, after the 18 day detention
period has passed, meetings with lawyers shall be allowed, unless disallowed by
the standard procedures of Order 378.
Under this law, the relevant authority may, in a written decision,
prevent a meeting between a detainee and his lawyer for an additional period of
15 days, if it has been convinced that such is necessary for the security of
the area or for the benefit of the investigation.
Finally,
Order 1500 adds that “a detainee shall be given the opportunity to raise claims
opposing his detention within eight days.” See Order 1500, § 2(b). As such, during the first eight days of his detention,
a detainee may be held without being given the opportunity to be heard. Order 1500, which was issued on April 5, 2002,
was to be valid for two months.
4. As we have seen, Order 1500 states that in
order to hold a detainee for a period which exceeds the 18 day detention
period, a judge must be approached. This judge proceeds under the provisions of
the standard detention law. See Order 1500, § 2(3) of Order 1500. It
became clear, however, that there are many detainees who have been screened,
yet have not been brought before a judge, despite the fact that their 18-day
detention period has passed. To rectify
this situation, an additional order was issued on May 1, 2002: Detention in
Time of Warfare (Temporary Order) (Amendment) (Judea and Samaria) (Number 1502)-2002
(hereinafter Order 1502). This order
provided that section 2(d) of Order 1500 shall be marked subsection (1), after
which shall be inserted subsection (2), which would provide that:
(2) Any person who has been
detained under sub-section (1) for a period which exceeds the detention period,
whose detention is necessary for further investigation, and who has not been
brought before a judge in accordance with sub-section (d)(2), shall be brought
before one as soon as possible, and, in any event, no later than May 10, 2002.
A detainee who has not been
brought before a judge within this period of time shall be released, unless
there stands a cause for his detention under any other law.
Order
1502 also provided that its provisions would remain in effect until May 10,
2002.
5. Aside from
Order 378, which is concerned with criminal detention, and Order 1500 (as amendment
by Order 1502), which is concerned with detention during times of warfare, and which
was specially issued within the context of Operation Defensive Wall, there also
exists defense regulations which apply to the area and deal with administrative
detention. The main order in this regard
is the Administrative Detentions Order (Temporary Order) (Judea and Samaria)
(Number 1226)-1988 [hereinafter Order 1226].
This order has undergone numerous amendments. After the issue and amendment of Order 1500,
Order 1226 was amended accordingly.
Issues concerning these orders do not stand before us.
6. To conclude
this review of the relevant defense regulations, it should be noted that Order
1500 was to remain in effect for a period of two months. See Order 1500,
§ 5. As this expiration date approached, the order was extended by Order: Detention
in Time of Warfare (Temporary Order) (Amendment Number 2) (Judean and Samaria)
(Number 1505)-2002 [hereinafter Order 1505].
This subsequent order made a number of significant changes in Order
1500. First, the definition of “detainee” was modified. The new definition was set in section 2:
Detainee—one who has been detained in the context of the
war against terrorism in the area, while the circumstances of his detention
raise the suspicion that he endangers or may endanger the security of the area,
IDF security, or the public security.
Second, the period of detention without judicial
review was shortened. The 18-day period
set by Order 1500 was replaced with a 12-day detention period. Third, a
detainee could only be prevented from meeting with his lawyer for a period of
“four days from his detention.” See Order 1500 4(a). Furthermore, it provided that if the investigators
wished to prevent such a meeting after the four-day detention period, they must
act in accordance with section 78C(c) of Order 378. Thus, the “head of the investigation” may
first be appealed to. The head of the investigation, if he is of the opinion
that such is necessary for the security of the area or for the benefit of the
investigation, he may, in a written decision, order that the detainee be
prevented from meeting with his lawyer for a period of up to 15 days from the
day of his detention. After these periods have elapsed, such a meeting may be
prevented for an additional 15 days.
7. Order 1505
was to expire on April 9, 2002. Its
validity was extended until January 4, 2003 in Order: Detention in Time of
Warfare (Temporary Order) (Amendment Number 3) (Judea and Samaria) (Number
1512)-2002 [hereinafter Order 1512].
Petitioners’ Arguments
8. Petitioners
argued in their original petition that Order 1500 is illegal. It allows for mass detentions without the individual
examination of each case, without clear grounds for detention, and without judicial
review. It unlawfully prevents meetings
between a detainee and a lawyer for a period of 18 days, without allowing for
judicial review of this decision. It
unlawfully permits detention for a period of 8 days without allowing the
detainee's claims to be heard. Petitioners
claim that arrangement is in conflict with the Basic Law: Human Dignity and
Liberty. The petitioners apply these
general claims to the specific cases of petitioners 1-3.
9. We received
additional briefs from the petitioners after the issue of Order 1502. In these briefs, petitioners argued that Order
1500 and Order 1502 are unlawful, as they are in conflict with international
humanitarian law and human rights law.
In this regard, the petitioners rely upon the Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights-1966 and the Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War-1949.
The petitioners claim that international law recognizes only two types
of detentions: regular “criminal” detention and preventive detention
(internment). According to the
petitioners, Order 1500 creates a third type of detention: prolonged mass
detention for the purpose of screening the detainees. This third type is not recognized by
international law and is unlawful.
Lawful detention, whether “regular,” “preventive,” or “administrative,”
must be based on individual reasons related to a specific person. Order 1500
and Order 1502, petitioners argue, allow for collective detention. In summarizing their arguments, the
petitioners note that “Order 1500 severely violates fundamental basic human
rights. It allows for arbitrary detention,
precludes judicial review over decisions regarding detention and isolates those
detained under the order from the outside world for a prolonged period of time.”
10. In
additional oral arguments which were heard after the issue of Order 1505 on May
5, 2002, petitioners asserted that their claims apply to Order 1505 as well. They
claim that the three orders unlawfully violate freedom, due process and the
principle of proportionality.
The State’s Response
11. In the state’s
original response to the petition, on May 5, 2002, it noted that the
Palestinian terrorists had based themselves in population centers. In carrying out their activities, they did
not hesitate to use women and children, sometimes dressed in civilian garb, and
often carried concealed explosives on their bodies. Under these circumstances, it was often impossible
to distinguish, in real-time and during combat situations, between members of
terrorist organizations and innocent civilians. As such, persons who were found
at sites of terrorist activity or combat, under circumstances which raised the
suspicion of their involvement in these activities, were detained. About 7000 persons were so detained between
the initiation of the operation and this suit.
As a result, it was decided that the standard detention laws—which are
concerned with policing activities, and not with combat situations—did not
provide a suitable framework for the need to detain a large number of persons
whose identities were often unknown. Respondents added that many of the
detainees were released, and, as of May 5, 2002—the date the response was submitted—about
1,600 persons remained in detention.
12. Regarding Order
1500, the state asserted in its response that due to the large number of detainees
and limited resources, the initial process of investigation and screening under
Order 1500 could last up to 18 days.
Occasionally, the process could last for over 18 days. Order 1502 was issued to provide a legal
framework for this situation. Respondents further claimed that Order 1500, as
well as Order 1502, accord with the international laws of warfare and
detention, specifically article 43 of the Hague Convention Regarding the Laws
and Customs of War on Land-1907 and the Geneva Convention relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War-1949.
In addition, the state claimed that the temporary prevention
of meetings with a lawyer is lawful. The
state argues that while military activities continue—especially while IDF
forces find themselves in hostile territory, in an attempt to uproot the
terrorist infrastructure—it is unthinkable that their lives should be
endangered due to the possibility that messages may be passed from the
detention facilities to the outside world. This is especially true when the
screening processes are unfinished and it is unclear which of the detainees
will remain in detention, whether criminal or administrative, when the
screening is concluded. Finally, the
respondents assert that regardless of whether the Basic Law: Human Dignity and
Liberty applies to the orders in question, Order 150, as well as Order 1502, are in
accordance with the limitations clause of the Basic Law. See Basic Law:
Human Dignity and Liberty, § 8.
13. On June 11,
2002, in additional briefs, the respondents drew attention to Order 1505, which
was issued on April 6, 2002. This order
limited the detention period from 18 to 12 days. The period during which meetings with a
lawyer could be prevented was shortened from 18 days to 4 days. The respondents assert that these changes
became possible due to the easing of military activities in the area. Nevertheless, the respondents are of the
opinion that due to the current state of affairs in the area, such as the war
against terrorism—which places an unprecedented and prolonged burden on the
security and investigatory authorities—and the large number of detainees being
held, which is substantially higher than the amount of persons detained before
Operation Defensive Wall, it is practically impossible to be satisfied with the
standard detention framework of Order 378.
With regard to the prevention of meetings with a
lawyer, the respondents assert that under the current circumstances and
considering the amount of persons currently being detained, it is possible to
restrict the prevention period to four days. Further, respondents claim that
the amendment of Order 1500 does not change the fact that the original text of Order
1500 was also reasonable and proportionate under the circumstances. The amendment promulgated under Order 1505
only entered the realm of possibility as a result of the decreased number of
detainees and changes in the nature of the military activities. Respondents add that Order 1500 does not to
allow for mass detentions in the absence of any individual basis for
detention. They assert that Order 1500
also requires individualized grounds, based on individual circumstances and
suspicion. As such, Order 1500 should
not be characterized as a third type of detention, aside from and in addition
to criminal and administrative detention.
Moreover, according to the respondents, Order 1500 is not administrative
detention. It is a type of detention
intended to allow for initial clarification and criminal investigation. The respondents analyze the laws of warfare
and conclude that Orders 1500, 1502 and 1505 are legal under those laws.
14. In the additional
oral pleadings which were conducted on July 28, 2002—during which Order 1505
was already effective—the respondents reiterated their claim that Order 1500,
as well as Order 1505, do not create a third type of detention. According to respondents, they provide for a
regular form of criminal detention, in accordance with the special
circumstances of warfare.
15. In
approaching the task of writing our judgment, it became clear that no order
nisi had been issued under this petition.
We asked the parties whether they would be willing to continue as if
such an order had been issued. Petitioners, of course, agreed; respondents
objected. Under these circumstances, we
issued an order nisi on December 15, 2002, ordering the respondents to
submit their final response within 10 days.
The petitioners were given ten additional days to respond to the
respondents’ response. We added that the judicial panel would decide whether
additional oral pleadings would be necessary.
16. After a
number of continuances, we received an affidavit in response from respondent
no. 1 on January 13, 2002. In this
affidavit, the respondent explained the reason behind the issuance of Order
1512, see supra par. 7. He informed us that terrorist activities
persist and the IDF is responding with military operations. For example,
between September and the end of December 2002, approximately 1,600 terrorist
attacks were carried out. During this
period, 84 citizens and residents were killed.
Over 400 citizens and residents were wounded. About 2,050 persons suspected of terrorist
activity were detained in Judea and Samaria.
Consequently, respondent 1 decided to extend Order 1500—as it had been
extended in Order 1505—for an additional period of time in Order: Detention in
Time of Warfare (Temporary Order) (Amendment Number 4) (Judea and Samaria)
(Number 1518)-2003 [hereinafter Order 1518], after concluding that security
reasons demanded such an extension. The
extension is valid until April 5, 2003.
17. Aside from extending the validity of the
amended Order 1500, Order 1518 also makes two significant modifications. First,
it specifies that meetings between a detainee and his lawyer will be prevented
for a period of “two days from the day of his detention.” See Order
1518, § 3. As was mentioned, previously,
such meetings could be prevented for a maximum of four days. Second, the
detainee was given the opportunity to voice his claims “no later than within
four days of his detention.” See Order 1518, § 2. As noted, under Order 1500—and similarly
under Orders 1505 and 1512—a detainee could be held for a period of eight days
without being given the opportunity to voice his claims before the detaining
authority. Respondent 1 asserted that
these amendments had been made after consultation “and not without hesitation.”
It was reemphasized that the General Security Service, which is responsible for
investigating detainees suspected of terrorist activities, could not have
prepared for the dramatic increase in the number of detainees since operation
Defensive Wall in March 2002. Respondent
asserted that, even today, the logistical constraints of investigations demand
that a detainee not be permitted to meet with his lawyer for a period of
forty-eight hours and that there be guidelines regarding the length of the
“screening process." He emphasized that these guidelines are reasonable
and proportionate. Respondent noted that
the war against terrorism demands professional and specialized skills, and is
not akin to regular police investigation.
The process of training General Security Service investigators is
exceptionally lengthy. Consequently, it
was practically impossible to prepare for the increase in terror which began in
March 2002, and which continues today.
Respondent repeated that merely investing financial resources would not
solve this problem. In conclusion,
respondent requested that, if the information offered does not suffice to
reject this petition, we hear, ex parte,
from the General Security Service itself, a detailed description of the
objective constraints which required the issuance of Order 1500. These restraints also required that the
amended order be extended for an additional period. The respondents assert that Order 1500 cannot
be deemed illegal before we hear this classified data.
The Issues Raised
18. An examination of this petition indicates that
petitioners have raised four issues. First,
petitioners contest the authority to detain.
The petitioners claim that Orders 1500, 1502, 1505, 1512, and 1518
unlawfully create a new type of detention—the orders allow mass detention and
free the authorities examining each case individually. Second, petitioners
contest the lack of any possibility of judicial intervention. The petitioners claim that the detention
period without possibility of judicial intervention—18 days under Order 1500, and
12 days under Orders 1505, 1512, and 1518—lacks proportion and, as such, is illegal. Third, petitioners contest the prevention of
meetings with lawyers—such meetings can be for a period of 18 days under Order
1500, 4 days under Order 1505, and two days under Order 1518. Petitioners claim that such prevention lacks
proportion and, as such, is illegal. Fourth, petitioners contest the fact that detainees
cannot voice their claims before the detaining authority. Petitioners cannot
voice their claims for a period of eight days under Order 1500, 1505, and 1512,
and for a period of four days under Order 1518.
Petitioners claim that this order is illegal. We shall deal with each of these claims,
beginning with the first.
The Authority to Detain
for the Purpose of Investigation
19. Detention for the purpose of investigation
infringes the liberty of the detainee.
Occasionally, in order to prevent the disruption of investigatory
proceedings or to ensure public peace and safety, such detention is
unavoidable. A delicate balance must be
struck between the liberty of the individual, who enjoys the presumption of
innocence, and between public peace and safety.
Such is the case with regard to the internal balance within the state—between
the citizen and his state—and such is the case with regard to the external
balance outside the state—between a state that is engaged in war, and between persons
detained during that war. Such is the
case with regard to this balance in time of peace, and such is the case with
regard to this balance in time of war.
Thus, the general provision of Article 9.1 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (1966), which provides:
Everyone has the right to liberty and security of
person. No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention
The prohibition is
not against detention, but rather against arbitrary detention. The various laws which apply to this matter,
whether they concern times of peace or times of war, are intended to establish
the proper balance by which the detention will no longer be arbitrary.
20. This approach accords with Israeli Law. Man’s inherent liberty is at the foundation of
the Jewish and democratic values of the State of Israel. “Personal liberty is a primary constitutional
right, and from a practical point of view, is a condition for the realization
of other fundamental rights." HCJ 6055/95
Tzemach v. Minister of Defense, at 261 (Zamir, J.)
Nevertheless, this is not an absolute right. It may be restricted. A person may be detained for investigative
purposes—in order to prevent the disruption of an investigation or to prevent a
danger to the public presented by the detainee—where the proper balance between
the liberty of the individual and public interest justifies the denial of that
right. The balance demands that the
detaining authority possess an evidentiary basis sufficient to establish suspicion
against the individual detainee. Such is
the case with regard to “regular” criminal detention, whether for investigative
purposes or until the end of the proceedings. See sections 13, 21 and 23 of the Criminal Procedure (Enforcement
Authorities- Detentions) Law-1996. Such
is the case with regard to administrative detention. See section 2 of the Emergency Powers (Detentions) Law-1979, and HCJ
Citrin v. IDF Commander in Judea and Samaria (unreported
case); HCJ 1361/91 Masalem v. IDF Commander in Gaza Strip, at 444,
456; HCJ 554/81 Branasa v. GOC Central Command, at 247, 250; HCJ 814/88 Nassrallah v. IDF Commander in the West Bank, at
265, 271; HCJ 7015/0 Ajuri v. IDF Commander in the West Bank, at
352, 371.
Moreover, it must always be kept in mind
that detention without the establishment of criminal responsibility should only
occur in unique and exceptional cases.
The general rule is one of liberty
Detention is the exception. The general rule is one of freedom. Confinement is an exception. See
Crim.App. 2316/95 Ganimat v. State of Israel, at 649.
There is no authority to detain arbitrarily. There is no need, in the context of this
petition, to decide to what extent these principles apply to internal Israeli
law regarding detention in the area. It
suffices to state that we are convinced that internal Israeli law corresponds
to international law in this matter.
Furthermore, the fundamental principles of Israeli administrative law
apply to the commander in the area. See HCJ Jamit Askhan Al-Maalmon
v. IDF Commander in Judea and Samaria.
The fundamental principles which are most important to the matter at
hand are those regarding the duty of each public authority to act reasonably
and proportionately, while properly balancing between individual liberty and
public necessity.
21. International law adopts a similar approach
concerning occupation in times of war.
On the one hand, the liberty of each resident of occupied territory is,
of course, recognized. On the other
hand, international law also recognizes the duty and power of the occupying
state, acting through the military commander, to preserve public peace and
safety; see Article 43 of the Annex
to the Hague Convention Regulations Respecting The Laws and Customs of War on
Land-1907 [hereinafter Hague Regulations]. In this framework, the military
commander has the authority to promulgate security legislation intended to
allow the occupying state to fulfill its function of preserving the peace,
protecting the security of the occupying state, and the security of its
soldiers. See Article 64 of the Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War-1949 [hereinafter the Fourth Geneva
Convention]. Consequently, the military
commander has the authority to detain any person suspect of committing criminal
offences, and any person he considers harmful to the security of the area. He may also set regulations concerning
detention for investigative purposes—as in the matter at hand—or administrative
detention—which is not our interest in this petition. Vice-President M. Shamgar,
in HCJ 102/82 Tzemel v. Minister of Defense, at 369, stated
in this regard:
Among the authority of a warring party
is the power to detain hostile agents who endanger its security due to the
nature of their activities… Whoever endangers the security of the forces of the
warring party may be imprisoned.
True, the Fourth
Geneva Convention contains no specific article regarding the authority of the
commander to order detentions for investigative purposes. However, this authority can be derived from the
law in the area and is included in the
general authority of the commander of the area to preserve peace and
security. This law may be changed by security
legislation under certain circumstances.
Such legislation must reflect the necessary balance between security
needs and the liberty of the individual in the territory. An expression of this delicate balance may be
found in Article 27 of the Fourth Geneva Convention:
Protected persons are entitled, in all circumstances,
to respect for their persons, their honour, their
family rights, their religious convictions and practices, and their manners and
customs. They shall at all times be humanely treated, and shall be protected
especially against all acts of violence or threats thereof and against insults
and public curiosity… However, the
Parties to the conflict may take such measures of control and security in
regard to protected persons as may be necessary as a result of the war.
Moreover, Article 78
of the Fourth Geneva Convention provides that residents of the area may, at
most, be subjected to interment or assigned residence. This appears to allow for the possibility of
detention for the purpose of investigating an offence against security
legislation. We would reach this same conclusion if we were to examine this
from the perspective of international human rights law. International law, of course, recognizes the
authority to detain for investigative purposes, and demands that this authority
be balanced properly against the liberty of the individual. Thus, regular criminal detention is
acceptable, while arbitrary detention is unacceptable. Orders such as Orders
378 and 1226 were issued with this in mind.
22. The petitioners argued that Order 1500, as
well as Orders 1502, 1505, 1512, and 1518, establish a new type of detention,
aside from standard criminal detention and administrative detention. Petitioners assert that his new type of
detention allows for detention without cause, and should thus be
nullified. Indeed, we accept that the
law which applies to the area recognizes only two types of detention: detention
for the purpose of criminal investigation, as in Order 378, and administrative
detention, as in Order 1226. There
exists no authority to carry out detentions without “cause for detention." In Tzemel, Vice-President
Shamgar expressed as much after quoting the
provisions of Article 78 of the Fourth Geneva Convention:
The discussed Article allows for the
imprisonment of persons, who, due to their behavior or personal data, must be
detained for definitive defense reasons.
As is our custom, we hold that every case of detention must be the
result of a decision which weighs the interests and data regarding the person
who is being considered for detention.
Tzemel at 375. Detentions which are not based upon the
suspicion that the detainee endangers, or may be a danger to public peace and
security, are arbitrary. The military
commander does not have the authority to order such detentions. See
Prosecutor v. Delalic, Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia, IT-96-21. Compare also section 7(1) of the Guidelines
of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on Human Rights and the
Fight Against Terrorism: “A person suspected of terrorist activities may only
be arrested if there are suspicions." With this in mind, we turn to Order
1500.
23. Under Order 1500, an order may be given to
hold a detainee in detention . Order
1500 defines a “detainee” as follows:
Detainee—one who has been detained, since March 29,
2002, during warfare in the area and the circumstances of his detention raise
the suspicion that he endangers or may be a danger to the security of the area,
the IDF or the public.
A similar provision exists in Order
1505:
Detainee—one who has been detained in the area during
anti-terrorism activities, while the circumstances of his detention raise the
suspicion that he endangers or may be a danger to the security of the area, IDF
security or the public.
From these
provisions, we find that under Order 1500 as well as Order 1505—and similarly under
Orders 1512 and 1518—detention may only be carried out where there is a “cause
for detention." The cause required
is that the circumstances of the detention raise the suspicion that the
detainee endangers or may be a danger to security. Thus, a person should not be detained merely
because he has been detained during warfare; a person should not be detained
merely because he is located in a house or village wherein other detainees are
located. The circumstances of his
detention must be such that they raise the suspicion that he—he individually
and no one else—presents a danger to security.
Such a suspicion may be raised because he was detained in an area of
warfare while he was actively fighting or carrying out terrorist activities, or
because he is suspect of being involved in warfare or terrorism.
Of course, the
evidentiary basis for the establishment of this suspicion varies from one
matter to another. When shots are fired
at the defense forces from a house, any person located in the house with the
ability to shoot may be suspect of endangering security. This basis may be established against a
single person or a group of persons.
However, this does not mean that Orders 1500, 1505, 1512 or 1518 allow
for “mass detentions," just as detaining a group of demonstrators for the
purpose of investigation, when one of the demonstrators has shot at police
officers, does not constitute mass detention.
The only detention authority set in these orders is the authority to
detain where there exists an individual cause for detention against a specific
detainee. It is insignificant whether
that cause applies to an isolated individual or if it exists with regard to that
individual as part of a large group. The
size of the group has no bearing.
Rather, what matters is the existence of circumstances which raise the
suspicion that the individual detainee presents a danger to security. Thus, for example, petitioner 1 was detained,
as there is information that he is active in the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, a terrorist organization. He recruited people for the
terrorist organization. Petitioner 2 was
detained because he is active in the Tanzim. Petitioner 3 was detained because he is a
member of the Tanzim military. Thus, an individual cause for detention
existed with regard to each of the individual petitioners.
24. Thus, the amended Order 1500 is included in
the category of detention for investigative purposes. It is intended to prevent the disruption of
investigative proceedings due to the flight of a detainee whose circumstances of
detention raise the suspicion that he is a danger to security. The difference between this detention and
regular criminal detention lies only in the circumstances under which they are
carried out. Detention on the authority
of the amended Order 1500 is carried out under circumstances of warfare,
whereas regular criminal detention is carried out in cases controlled by the
police. In both cases, we are dealing
with individual detention based on an evidentiary basis that raises individual
suspicion against the detainee. For
these reasons, we reject the petitioners’ first claim.
Detention Without
Judicial Intervention
25. Petitioners’ second claim relates to the
detention period. The claim does not
concentrate on the length of the period per se, since the length of the
period is determined by the needs of the investigation. The claim focuses on
the period between the detention and the first instance of judicial
intervention. Under Order 1500, this period lasts 18 days; the petitioners
claim that this period is excessive.
Moreover, they claim that there are a number of detainees who have yet
to be brought before a judge despite the fact that the 18-day period has
passed. In order to rectify this
situation Order 1502 was issued, under which such detainee are to be brought
before a judge as soon as possible and no later than 10.5.2002, see supra,
para. 12. The
petitioners claim that, under the authority of this latter order, some
detainees were held for a period of 42 days without judicial intervention. The petitioners also assert that Order 1505,
under which the detention order may prevent judicial intervention for a period
of 12 days, is also illegal, as the period specified there is also excessive. This period remains valid unders
Order 1512 and Order 1518.
26. Judicial intervention with regard to
detention orders is essential. As Justice
I. Zamir correctly noted:
Judicial review is the line of defense
for liberty, and it must be preserved beyond all else.
HCJ 2320/98 El-Amla v. IDF Commander in Judea and Samaria, at 350.
Judicial intervention
stands before arbitrariness; it is essential to the principle of rule of
law. See
Brogan v. United Kingdom (1988) EHRR
117, 134. It guarantees the preservation
of the delicate balance between individual liberty and public safety, a balance
which lies at the base of the laws of detention. See
AMA 10/94 Anon. v. Minister of Defense,
at 105. Internal Israeli law has
established clear laws in this regard.
In “regular” criminal detention, the detainee is to be brought before a
judge within 24 hours. See section 29(a) of the Criminal
Procedure (Enforcement Powers-Detentions) Law-1996. In this case, the order is issued by the judge
himself. In “administrative” detention,
the detention order is to be brought before the president of the district court
within 48 hours. See section 4 (a) of the Emergency Powers (Detentions)
Law-1979. The decision of district court
president is an integral part of the development of the administrative
detention order. See AMA 2/86 Anon. v. Minister of Defense, at 515.
Similarly, in
detaining an “unlawful combatant," the detainee is to be brought before a
justice of the district court within 14 days of the issuance of the
imprisonment order by the Chief of Staff.
See section 5 of the Imprisonment
of Unlawful Combatants Law-2002. With
regard to the detention of military soldiers, section 237A of the Military
Justice Law-1955 provided that the detainee is to be brought before a military
justice within 96 hours. We reviewed this provision, and concluded that it was
unconstitutional, as it unlawfully infringed upon personal liberty, and was not
proportionate. See Tzemach. Subsequent
to our judgment, the law was amended, and it now provides that in detaining a
military soldier under the Military Justice Law, the detainee is to be brought
before a judge within 48 hours. What is
the law with regard to detentions carried out in the area?
27. International law does not specify the number
of days during which a detainee may be held without judicial intervention. Instead, it provides a general principle,
which is to be applied to the circumstances of each and every case. This general principle, which pervades
international law, is that the question of detention is to be brought promptly
before a judge or other official with judiciary authority. See
F. Jacobs and R. White, The European
Convention on Human Rights 89 (2nd ed., 1996). Thus, for example, Article 9.3 of the
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights-1966 provides:
Anyone arrested or
detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly before a judge or other
officer authorized by the law to exercise judicial power.
This provision is
perceived as part of customary international law. See
N. Rodley, The
Treatment of Prisoners Under International Law 340 (2nd ed.,
1999). A similar provision may be found
in the Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons Under Any Form of
Detention or Imprisonment, which was ratified by the UN General Assembly in
1988 (hereinafter the Principles of Protection from Detention or
Imprisonment). Principle 1.11 provides:
A person shall not be kept in detention
without being given an effective opportunity to be heard promptly by a judicial
or other authority.
According to the
interpretation of the UN Human Rights Committee “[D]elays
must not exceed a few days." See Report of the Human Rights Committee,
GAOR, 37th Session, Supplement No. 40 (1982), quoted by Rodley, Id., at
335. On a similar note, Article 5(3) of
the European Convention for the Protection of human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms-1950 provides:
Everyone arrested or detained in accordance
with the provisions of paragraph 1(C) of this Article shall be brought promptly
before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial power.
In one of the cases
in which the European Court of Human Rights interpreted this provision, Brogan v. United Kingdom, EHRR 117, 134
(1988), it stated:
The degree of flexibility attaching to
the notion "promptness" is limited, even if the attendant
circumstances can never be ignored for the purposes of the assessment under
paragraph 3. Whereas promptness is to be
assessed in each case according to its special features, the significance to be
attached to those features can never be taken to the point of impairing the
very essence of the right guaranteed by Article 5(3), that is the point of effectively
negating the State’s obligation to ensure a prompt release or a prompt
appearance before a judicial authority.
In that case, the
British authorities had been holding a number of detainees, who had been
detained with regard to terrorist activities in Northern Ireland. They were released after four days and six
hours, without having been brought before a judge. The European court determined that in so
doing, England had violated its duty to bring the detainees before a judge
promptly. A number of additional cases
were similarly decided. See McGoff v.
Sweden, 8 EHRR 246 (1984); De Jong v. Netherlands, 8 EHRR 20 (1984); Duinhoff v. Netherlands, 13 EHRR 478 (1984); Koster v. Netherlands, 14 EHRR 196 (1991); Aksoy v. Turkey, 23 EHRR 553 (1986) See
also Human Rights Law and Practice 121-22 (Lester and Pannik
eds.,1999).
28. Article 27 of the Geneva Convention Relative
to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War [hereinafter the Fourth
Geneva Convention] includes a general provision under which:
Protected persons are entitled, in all
circumstances, to respect for their persons, their honour,
their family rights, their religious convictions and practices, and their
manners and customs. They shall at all times be humanely treated, and shall be
protected especially against all acts of violence or threats thereof and
against insults and public curiosity.
The Fourth Geneva
Convention does not include provisions which specify set detention periods or
occasions for judicial intervention with regard to detention. It only includes provisions concerning
administrative detention (internment).
The first provision, Article 43, which applies to detentions carried out
by the occupying state, provides:
Any protected person who has been
interned or placed in assigned residence shall be entitled to have such action
reconsidered as soon as possible by an appropriate court or administrative
board designated by the Detaining Power for that purpose.
The second provision, Article 78, which
applies to detentions carried out in the occupied territory, provides:
Decisions regarding such assigned
residence or internment shall be made according to a regular procedure to be
prescribed by the Occupying Power in accordance with the provisions of the
present Convention. This procedure shall include the right of appeal for the
parties concerned. Appeals shall be decided with the least possible delay.
There are no additional provisions which
relate to this matter, or to the issue of judicial intervention into detention
which is not administrative.
29. Finally, there is security legislation
relating to “regular” criminal detention and administrative detention, in the
area. With regard to “regular” criminal
detention, Order 378 provides that a police officer, who has reasonable reason
to believe that a crime has been committed, has the authority to issues a
detention order for a period of up to 18 days, see section 78(3). Following the recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry into the Methods of
Investigation of the General Security Service Regarding Hostile Terrorist
Activity (Landau Commission),
Order 378 was amended, and the detention period without judicial intervention
was reduced to 8 days. In a petition
submitted in this matter, the Court held that “at this time, there is no room
for this Court to intervene to reduce the maximum period of detention permitted
before bringing persons detained in the territories before a military judge." HCJ 2307/00 Natsha v. IDF Commander in the West Bank (unreported case case).
With regard to
administrative detention in the area, such detentions were initially carried
out under the Emergency Defense Regulations, which apply to the area. Later on, provisions regarding administrative
detention were included in the Defense Regulations Order (Judea and Samaria)
(Number 378)-1970. Under these
provisions, if a person was detained on the authority of an administrative
order, he was to be brought before a judge within 96 hours, see section
87B(a). These provisions were suspended
by Order 1226. This Order provided that
any person who had been administratively detained would be brought before a judge
within 8 days. With the issuance of
Order 1500, this was changed, and this provision was substituted by one which
provided that an administrative detainee should be brought before a judge
within 18 days. With the issuance of
Order 1505, Order 1226 was once again amended, and it provided that if an
administrative detention order was issued against a person who had been
formerly being detained under Order 1500, his case was to be brought for
judicial review within 10 days of his detention.
30. Against this normative background, which
demands prompt judicial review of detention orders, the question again arises whether
the arrangement established in Order 1500—under which a person may be detained
for a period of 18 days without having been brought before a judge—is legal. Similarly, is the arrangement established in
Order 1505 legal? This arrangement—which was unaffected by Order 1512 or Order
1518—provided that a person may be detained for a period of 12 days without
having being brought before a judge. In
answering these questions, the special circumstances of the detention must be
taken into account. “Regular” police
detention is not the same as detention carried out “during warfare in the area,”
Order 1500, or “during anti-terrorism operations” Order 1505. It should not be demanded that the initial
investigation be performed under conditions of warfare, nor should it be
demanded that a judge accompany the fighting forces. We accept that there is room to postpone the
beginning of the investigation, and naturally also the judicial
intervention. These may be postponed
until after detainees are taken out of the battlefield to a place where the
initial investigation and judicial intervention can be carried out
properly. Thus, the issue at hand rests
upon the question: where a detainee is in a detention facility which allows for
carrying out the initial investigation, what is the timeframe available to investigators
for carrying out the initial investigation without judicial intervention?
31. In this regard, the respondents claim before
us that it was necessary to allow the investigating officials 18 days—and after
Order 1505, 12 days—to carry out “initial screening activities, before the
detainee’s case is brought before the examination of a judge." This was due to the large number of persons
being investigated, and constraints on the number of professional
investigators. In their response, the respondents emphasized that “during the
warfare operations, thousands of people were apprehended by the IDF forces,
under circumstances which raised the suspicion that they were involved in terrorist
activities and warfare. The object of Order
1500 was to allow the "screening" and identification of unlawful
combatants who were involved in terrorist activities. This activity was necessary due to the fact
that the terrorists had been carrying out their activities in Palestinian
populations centers, without bearing any symbols that would identify them as
members of combating forces and distinguish them from the civilian population,
in utter violation of the laws of warfare.” See para.
51 of the response brief from May 15, 2002.
The respondents added that it is pointless to bring detainees before a judge,
when they have not yet been identified, and the investigative material against
them has not yet undergone the necessary processing. This initial investigation, performed prior
to bringing the detainee before the judge, is difficult and often demands
considerable time. This is due, among
other reasons, to “the lack of cooperation on the part of those being
investigated and their attempts to hide their identities, their hostility towards
the investigating authorities due to nationalistic and ideological views, the
inability to predetermine the time and place of the detentions, the fact that
most of the investigations are based on confidential intelligence information
which cannot be revealed to the person being investigated, and the difficulty
of reaching potential witnesses.” See para. 62
of the response brief from June 11, 2002.
32. The respondents thus claim that the
investigating authorities must be allowed the time necessary for the completion
of the initial investigation. This will,
of course, not exceed a period of 18 days, under Order 1500, or 12 days, under
Order 1505, as it was amended in Orders 1512 and 1518. In this timeframe, all those detainees
against whom there is insufficient evidence will be released. Only those detainees, whose initial
investigation has been completed, such that the investigation is ready for
judicial examination, will remain in detention.
In our opinion, this approach is in conflict
with the fundamentals of both international and Israeli law. This approach is
not based on the presumption that investigating authorities should be provided
with the minimal time necessary for the completion of the investigation, and
that only when such time has passed is there room for judicial review. The accepted approach is that judicial review
is an integral part of the detention process.
Judicial review is not “external” to the detention. It is an inseparable part of the development
of the detention itself. At the basis of
this approach lies a constitutional perspective which considers judicial review
of detention proceedings essential for the protection of individual
liberty. Thus, the detainee need not
“appeal” his detention before a judge.
Appearing before a judge is an “internal” part of the dentition
process. The judge does not ask
himself whether a reasonable police officer would have been permitted to carry
out the detention. The judge asks
himself whether, in his opinion, there are sufficient investigative materials
to support the continuation of the detention.
Indeed, the laws
regarding detention for investigative purposes focus mainly on judicial
decisions. In a “natural” state of
affairs, the initial detention is performed on the authority of a judicial
order. See H. Zandberg, Interpretation of the Detentions Law 148 (2001). Of course, this
state of affairs does not apply to the circumstances at hand. It is natural that the initial detention not
be carried out on the authority of a judicial order. It is natural that the beginning of the
initial investigation in the facility be performed within the context of the
amended Order 1500. Judicial review will
naturally come later. Even so,
everything possible should be done to ensure prompt judicial review. Indeed, the laws of detention for
investigative purposes are primarily laws which guide the judge as to under
what circumstances he should allow the detention of a person and under what
circumstances he should order the detainee’s release. Judicial detention is the norm, while
detention by one who is not a judge is the exception. This exception applies to the matter at hand,
since naturally, the initial detention is done without a judicial order. Nevertheless, everything possible should be
done to rapidly pass the investigation over to the regular track, placing the
detention in the hands of a judge and not an investigator. Indeed, the authority to detain as set by
Order 1500, as well as the detention authority under Orders 1505, 1512, and 1518,
is not unique. This detention authority
is part of the regular policing authority, see para.
24. Otherwise it could not be conferred upon an authorized officer. This nature of the detention authority
affects its implementation. Like every
detention authority, it must be passed over to the regular track of judicial
intervention as quickly as possible.
33. Of course, such judicial intervention takes
the circumstances of the case into account.
In evaluating the detention for investigative purposes, the judge does
not ask himself whether there exists prima facie evidence of the
detainee’s guilt. That is not the
standard which needs to be tested. At
this primary stage, there must be reasonable suspicion that the detainee
committed a security crime and reasonable reason to presume that his release
will disturb security or the investigation.
Regarding this reasonable suspicion, Justice M. Cheshin
stated:
"Reasonable suspicion" will
exist even if it is not supported by "prima facie evidence for proving
guilt," where there is evidence which connects the suspect to the crime at
hand to a reasonable extent that justifies, in the balancing of the interests
on each side, allowing the police the opportunity to continue and complete the
investigation.
VCA 6350/97 Rosenstien v. State of Israel (unreported case); VCA 157/02 Tzinman v.
State of Israel (unreported case).
Indeed, the judge may
often learn of the existence of reasonable suspicion from the circumstances of
the detention themselves, which raise the suspicion that the individual
detainee presents a danger to the security of the area, see the definition of detainee in Orders
1500 and 1505. The judge will review the
circumstances and examine whether they raise reasonable suspicion that the
crime has been committed. He will, of
course, consider additional materials submitted to him. He will inquire into the intended course of
investigation and the difficulties of the investigation—whether they be the
lack of manpower or difficulties in the investigation itself—in order to be
convinced that the investigators are truly in need of additional time for their
investigation. All these will ensure
that the decision regarding the continuation of the detention, even if it is
only based upon initial investigative materials, will not be made by the
investigating authority, but rather by a judicial official. This is the object which lays at the base of
both the international and Israeli regulation of detention for investigative purposes.
It is possible, that in the end, the judge
will decide to allow the continuation of the detention, as would an authorized
officer. This is irrelevant, since the
judge’s intervention is intended to guarantee that only the proper
considerations be taken into account, and that the entire matter be examined
from a judicial perspective. This is the
minimum required by both the international and Israeli legal frameworks. President Shamgar,
in HCJ 253/88 Sajadia v. Minister of Defense, at 819-820, expressed
the same in reference to judicial review over administrative detention, which also
applies to the matter at hand:
It would be proper for the authorities
to act effectively to reduce the period of time between the detention and the
submission of the appeal, and the judicial review.
Of course, this does
not mean that the judicial review should be superficial. On the contrary, “it is highly significant
that a judge thoroughly examine the material, and ensure that every piece of
evidence connected to the matter at hand be submitted to him. Judges should
never allow quantity to affect either quality or the extent of the judicial
examination." President Shamgar in Sajadia, at 820. In
exercising his discretion, in each and every case, the judge will balance
security needs, on the one hand, and individual liberty, on the other. He will keep in mind President Shamgar’s words in Sajadia, at 821, which were said with reference to
administrative detention, but apply to our case as well:
Depriving one of his liberty, without
the decision of a judicial authority, is a severe step, which the law only
allows for in circumstances which demand that such be done for overwhelming reasons
of security. Proper discretion, which
must be exercised in issuing the order, must relate to the question of whether
each concrete decision regarding detention reflects the proper balance between
security needs—which have no other reasonable solution—and the fundamental tendency to respect man’s liberty.
34. With this in mind, we are of the opinion that
detention periods of 18 days, under Order 1500, and 12 days, under Orders 1505,
1512 and 1518, exceed appropriate limits.
This detention period was intended to allow for initial
investigation. However, that is not its
proper function. According to the
normative framework, soon after the authorized officer carries out the initial detention,
the case should be transferred to the track of judicial intervention. The case should not wait for the completion
of the initial or other investigation before it is brought before a judge. The need to complete the initial
investigation will be presented before the judge himself, and he will decide
whether there exists reasonable suspicion of the detainee’s involvement to
justify the continuation of his detention.
Thus, Order 1500, as well as Orders 1505, 1512, and 1518, unlawfully
infringes upon the judge’s authority, thus infringing upon the detainee’s
liberty, which the international and Israeli legal frameworks are intended to
protect.
35. How can this problem be resolved? We doubt that it would be suitable to
substitute the periods of detention without judicial intervention set in Order
1500 and the amended Order 1505 with a shorter predetermined detention
period. As we have seen, everything
rests upon the changing circumstances, which are not always foreseeable. It seems, that due to the unique
circumstances before us, the approach adopted by international law, which
avoids prescribing set periods and instead requires that a judge be approached
promptly, is justified. In any case,
this is a matter for the respondents and not for us. Of course, presumably, this means that it
will be necessary to substantially enlarge the staff of judges who will deal
with detention. It was not argued before
us that there is a lack of such judges.
In any case, even if the claim had been raised before us, we would have
rejected it and quoted President Shamgar’s words in Sajadia, at 821:
What are the practical implications of what
has been said? If there are a large
number of detainees, it will be necessary to increase the number of judges.
Difficulty in organizing such an arrangement, which will increase the number of
judges who are called to service in order that a detainee’s appeal be heard
promptly and effectively, cannot justify the length of the period during which
the detainee is held before his case has been judicially reviewed. The current emergency conditions undoubtedly
demanded large-scale deployment of forces to deal with the riots occurring in
Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip, and the matter at hand—the establishment of
a special facility in Kziot—is an example of this
deployment of forces. However, by the
same standards, effort and resources must be invested into the protection of
the detainees’ rights, and the scope of judicial review should be
broadened. If the large number of
appeals so demands, ten or more judges may be called upon to simultaneously
review the cases, and not only the smaller number of judges who are currently treating
these matters. Such is the case—aside
from the differences which stem from the nature of the matter—with regard to
prosecutors as well. The number of
prosecutors may also be increased, due to the need to hasten the appeal
proceedings and the preparations thus involved.
Notably, under
international law, judicial intervention may be carried out by a judge or by
any other public officer authorized by law to exercise judicial power. This public officer must be independent of
the investigators and prosecutors. He
must be free of any bias. He must be
authorized to order the release of the detainee. See
Ireland v. United Kingdom, 2
EHRR 25 (1978); Schiesser v. Switzerland, 2 EHRR 417 (1979).
36. Thus, we hold the 18-day detention period without
judicial oversight under Order 1500, and the 12-day detention period without
judicial oversight under Orders 1505, 1512, and 1518, to be null and void. They will be substituted by a different
period, to be set by the respondents. To
this end, the respondents should be allowed to consider the matter. Therefore, we hold that this declaration of
nullification will be effective six months from the date at which this judgment
is given. Compare Tzemach, at 284. We have considered respondents’ request to
present us with classified information.
We are of the opinion that such is neither appropriate nor
desirable. We hope that the half-year
suspension will allow for the reorganization required by both international and
internal law.
Preventing Meetings
with a Lawyer
37. Order 378 distinguishes between a “regular”
criminal detainee and a detainee suspect of committing a crime set out in security
legislation, with regard to the issue of meeting with a lawyer. In the case of the former, the detainee is
allowed to meet and consult with his lawyer, see section 78B(a). The meeting may only be prevented if the
detainee is currently under investigation or subject to other activities
connected to the investigation, and even then the delay is only for “a number
of hours.” See section 78B(d).
The prevention may be extended for reasons security for up to 96 hours
from the time of detention. This is not
so in the latter case, of one suspected of a security crime. In this case, the head of the investigation
may order that the detainee be prohibited from meeting with a lawyer for a
period of 15 days from the day of his detention, if the head of the
investigation is of the opinion that such is necessary for the security of the
area or for the benefit of the investigation. See section 78C(c). An approving authority may order that the
detainee not be allowed to meet with a lawyer for an additional 15 days, if it
is convinced that such is necessary for the security of the area or the benefit
of the investigation.
38. Order 1500 altered the arrangement set out in
Order 378. Section 3 of Order 1500
provides:
(a) Despite that which is stated in
sections 78(b) and 78(c) of the Defense Regulations Order, a detainee shall not
meet with a lawyer during the detention period.
(b) At the end of the detention
period, a meeting between a detainee and a lawyer shall only be prevented on
the order of an approving authority, in accordance with section 78C(c)(2) of
the Defense Regulations Order.
Thus, Order 1500 substituted the 15-day
detention period set by Order 378, during which a detainee was prevented from
meeting with a lawyer, with an 18-day prevention period. After these 18 days, we return to Order 378,
and an approving authority may order that the detainee not be allowed to meet
with a lawyer for a period of up to 15 days.
39. Order 1505 modified this arrangement. It included two new provisions. First, the
original period of preventing the meeting with a lawyer was shortened to four
days, see section 4 (a). Second, at the end of those four days, the head
of the investigation may order that the detainee not be allowed to meet with
his lawyer for an additional period of up to 15 days, if the head of the
investigation is of the opinion that such is necessary for the security of the
area or the benefit of the investigation.
Afterwards, returning to the regular track, an approving authority may
order that the detainee not be allowed to meet with a lawyer for an additional
period of up to 15 days. Thus, the
arrangement set in Order 1500, which allowed for the prevention of a meeting
between a detainee and a lawyer for a period of 33 days inclusive—18 days on
the authority of the Order itself and an additional 15 days on the authority of
the decision of an approving authority—was substituted by a new arrangement
which allowed for the prevention of a meeting between a detainee and a lawyer
for a period of 34 days inclusive—4 days on the authority of the Order itself,
15 days on the authority of the decision of the head of the investigation and
an additional 15 days on the authority of the decision of an approving
authority.
40. Another change occurred in this regard with
the issue of Order 1518, which further reduced the initial period, during which
a meeting with a lawyer could be prevented, to two days, see section
3. Thus, the period for preventing a meeting,
which had formerly been 34 days under Order 1505—4 days on the authority of the
Order itself, 15 days on the authority of the decision of the head of the
investigation and an additional 15 days on the authority of the decision of an
approving authority, was now 32 days.
41. Are the arrangements set out in Orders 1500,
1505 or 1518 in accord with international law?
Upon inspecting international law, one finds that the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights-1966 does not include an explicit
provision referring to this matter. The
provision which most closely relates to this matter may be found in Article
14.3 of the Covenant, which applies to any person who has been criminally
charged. It provides, in this regard,
that the accused must be guaranteed a facility in which he can prepare his
defense with an attorney, see sub-section (b), and that in court, he will
be defended by an attorney, sub-section (d).
A more explicit provision may be found in the Principles of Protection
from Detention or Imprisonment. Principle
18.1 provides that:
A detained or imprisoned person shall be
entitled to communicate and consult with his legal counsel.
This principle has an exception which is
significant to the matter at hand. Under
Principle 18.3:
The right of a detained or imprisoned
person to be visited by and to consult and communicate, without delay or
censorship and in full confidentiality, with his legal counsel may not be
suspended or restricted save in exceptional circumstances, to be specified by
law or lawful regulations, when it is considered indispensable by a judicial or
other authority in order to maintain security and good order.
42. The Fourth Geneva Convention does not include
any explicit provision regarding meetings with a lawyer. There is, of course, the general provision in
Article 27 of the Convention, quoted above in para.
28, which protects the dignity and liberty of the residents of the territory,
but which, at the same time, provides that the hostile state may take necessary
security measures. Aside from this
general provision, the provision most closely related to this matter may be
found in Article 113 of the Convention:
The Detaining Powers shall provide all
reasonable facilities for the transmission, through the Protecting Power or the
Central Agency provided in Article 140, or as otherwise required, of wills,
powers of attorney, letters of authority, or any other documents intended for
internees or dispatched by them.
In all cases the Detaining Powers shall
facilitate the execution and authentication in due legal form of such documents
on behalf of internees, in particular by allowing them to consult a lawyer.
This right is subject
to security arrangements. Pictet expressed this in noting:
It was important, however, that these
facilities for the transmission of documents should not serve as a pretext for
the giving of information for subversive purposes; hence the wording "all
reasonable facilities," which enables suspicious correspondence to be
eliminated.
See J. S. Pictet, Commentary: IV
Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War
471-472. In summarizing this issue, Vice-President Shamgar,
in Tzemel,
at 377, noted:
That which is stated in Article 113 and
in the interpretation of the Red Cross International Committee, which was
subsequently published, indicates that the defense considerations of the
detaining power are legitimate considerations.
Another provision of
the Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 72, which relates to a detainee who has
been criminally charged, provides:
Accused persons shall have the right to
present evidence necessary to their defence and may,
in particular, call witnesses. They
shall have the right to be assisted by a qualified advocate or counsel of their
own choice, who shall be able to visit them freely and shall enjoy the
necessary facilities for preparing the defence.
43. Thus, under both Israeli and international
law, the principle that meetings between detainees and attorneys should
generally be permitted constitutes the normative framework in which the
legality of the arrangement should be examined.
This stems from every person’s right to personal liberty. See HCJ
3412/91 Sophian v. Commander of the IDF
Forces in the Gaza Strip, at 847; HCJ 6302/92 Rumhiah v. Israeli Police Department, at 212. Nevertheless, such rights are
not absolute. In Sophian, at 848, Vice-President
M. Elon correctly noted:
The right to meet with a lawyer, like
other fundamental rights, is not an absolute right, but rather a relative
right, and it should be balanced against other rights and interests.
Thus, a meeting between a
detainee and a lawyer may be prevented if significant security considerations
justify the prevention of the meeting. I
expressed this in Rumhiah,
at 213:
Preventing a meeting between a detainee
and his lawyer is a serious injury to the detainee’s right. Such an injury is tolerable only when it is
demanded by security and essential for the benefit of the investigation. Regarding the benefit of the investigation—which
is the respondents’ claim in the matter before us—it is essential to find that
allowing the meeting between the detainee and the lawyer will frustrate the
investigation. It was correctly noted stated
that “it is insufficient that it would be more comfortable, beneficial or
desirable”; HCJ 128/84, at 27. It must
be shown that such is necessary and essential to the investigation.
International law
does not prescribe set maximum periods during which meetings may be
prevented. These should be inferred from
the specific circumstances, according to tests of reasonability and
proportionality. A similar approach has
been adopted in the Guidelines of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe on Human Rights and the Fight Against Terrorism. These Guidelines provide:
The imperative of fight against
terrorism may nevertheless justify certain restrictions to the right of defence, in particular with regard to the arrangements for
access to and contact with counsel.
44. It may be
inferred from this that the detainee should not be allowed to meet with his
lawyer so long as the warfare continues.
This Court recently stated as much:
It is inconceivable that the respondent
should allow meetings with persons during warfare or close to it, when there
exists a suspicion that they endanger or may be a danger to the security of the
area, the security of the IDF forces, or the security of the lawyers. This remains the case until conditions
develop as to allow for the consideration of the individual circumstances of
each and every detainee.
HCJ 2901/02 The Center for the
Defense of the Individual founded by Dr. Lota Salzbereger v. IDF Commander in the West Bank
(unreported case).
What is the law where
the detainee is already in an organized detention facility, and conditions
which allow for the consideration of the individual circumstances of each and
every detainee have developed?
45. Our answer is that the standard rule in this
situation should be that the fundamental right of meeting with a lawyer should
be realized. However, significant
security considerations may prevent this.
Thus, for example, the respondent noted in his response that a meeting
with a lawyer may be prevented where there is suspicion that “the lives of the
combat forces will be endangered due to opportunities to pass messages out of
the facility.” See para. 54 of the response brief
from 5.5.2002. We are in agreement with
this. There is also room to prevent a
meeting when it may damage or disrupt the investigation. It should be emphasized, however, that
advancing the investigation is not a sufficient reason to prevent the
meeting. “The focus is on the damage
that may be caused to national security if the meeting with the lawyer is not
prevented." HCJ 4965/94 Kahalani v. Minister of Police (unreported case)
(Goldberg, J.). Thus, “it is
insufficient that it is comfortable, beneficial or desirable to prevent a
meeting with a layer. The expression ‘is required’ indicates that there must be
an element of necessity which connects the decision to the reasons it is based
upon." HCJ 128/84 Hazan v. Meir, at 27 (Shamgar, P.) With this in mind, we are of the opinion that
there are no flaws in the arrangements set in Orders 1500, 1505, and Order 1518
regarding the prevention of meetings with lawyers.
46. Before concluding this matter, we wish to
relate to one of the petitioners’ claims.
The claim is that, by preventing meetings with lawyers on the authority
of Order 1500, 1505, or 1518, the detainees remain incommunicado for a period
of 18 days, under Order 1500, 4 days, under Order 1505, or two days, under
Order 1518. We reject this claim. Even if meetings with lawyers are prevented,
this does not justify the claim that the detainee is isolated from the outside
world. It is sufficient to note that
when the detainees are moved to the detention facility, which occurs within 48
hours of their detention during warfare, they have the right to be visited by
the Red Cross, and their families are informed of their whereabouts. At any
time, they may appeal to the High Court of Justice in a petition against their
detention. See section 15(d)(1) of the Basic Law: The Judiciary. Not only may the detainee himself appeal to
the Court, but his family may also do so. Furthermore, under our approach to
the issue of standing, any person or organization interested in the fate of the
detainee may also do so. Indeed, the
petition before was submitted by, among others, seven associations or
organizations that deal with human rights.
Their claims were heard and the issue of standing was not even raised in
these proceedings. Under these
circumstances, it cannot be said that those detained on the authority of Order
1500, a fortiori those detained on the authority of Order 1505, and
certainly not those who were detained on the authority of Order 1518, are in a
state of isolation from the outside world.
Detention Without
Investigation
47. Section 2(b) of Order 1500
provides:
The detainee shall be given the opportunity
to voice his claims within eight days of his detention.
This provision
remains valid under Order 1505. Section
2 of Order 1518 shortens this period of detention without investigation to four
days. The petitioners claim that the
provision itself is illegal. They assert
that it constitutes an excessive violation of the detainee's liberty. It undermines the right to liberty and denies
due process. It may lead to mistaken or
arbitrary detrainments. Conversely, the respondents claim that the significance
of the provision is that it compels the investigators to question the detainee
within eight days, in order to make an initial investigation of his identity
and hear his account of his detention.
This period cannot be shortened due to the large number of detainees, on
the one hand, and the constraints limiting the number of professional
investigators, on the other. It was
noted before us that the investigating officials have limited capabilities, and
they are not equipped to deal with such a large number of detainees in a more compact
schedule.
48. We accept that investigations should not be
performed during warfare or during military operations, nor can the detainee’s
account be heard during this time. The
investigation can only begin when the detainee, against whom there stands an
individual cause for detention, is brought to a detention facility which allows
for investigation. Moreover, we also accept
that at a location which holds large number of detainees, some time may pass
before it is possible to organize for initial investigations. This, of course, must be done promptly. It is especially important to begin the
investigation rapidly at this initial stage, since simple facts such as age,
circumstances of detention and identity, which may determine whether the
detention should be continued, may become clear at this stage. Of course, often this initial investigation
is insufficient, and the investigation must continue. All of this must be done promptly.
Respondents are of course aware of
this. Their argument is simple: there is
a lack of professional investigators.
Unfortunately, this explanation is unsatisfactory. Security needs, on the one hand, and the
liberty of the individual on the other, all lead to the need to increase the number
of investigators. This is especially
true during these difficult times in which we are plagued by terrorism, and
even more so when it was expected that the number of detainees would rise due
to Operation Defensive Wall. Regarding
the considerations of individual liberty that justify such an increase, Justice
Dorner has stated:
Fundamental rights essentially have a
social price. The preservation of man’s fundamental rights is not only the concern
of the individual, but of all of society, and it shapes society’s image.
Ganimat, at 645. In a similar spirit, Justice Zamir, in Tzemach, at 281, has noted:
A society is measured, among other
things, by the relative weight it attributes to personal liberty. This weight must express itself not only in pleasant
remarks and legal literature, but also in the budget. The protection of human rights often has its
price. Society must be ready to pay a
price to protect human rights.
Such is the case in the matter at
hand. A society which desires both security
and individual liberty must pay the price.
The mere lack of investigators cannot justify neglecting to
investigate. Everything possible should
be done to increase the number of investigators. This will guarantee both security and
individual liberty. Furthermore, the
beginning of the investigation is also affected by our holding that the
arrangements according to which a detainee may be held for 18 days without
being brought before a judge, under Order 1500, and for 12 days, under Order
1505, 1512, and 1518, to be illegal. Now,
the detainee’s own appeal to a judge will require that the investigation be
carried out sooner.
49.
We conclude, from this, that the provisions of section 2(b) of Order
1500 and section 2 of Order 1518 are invalid.
The respondents must decide on a substitute arrangement. For this reason, we suspend our declaration
that section 2(b) of Order 1500 and section 2 of Order 1518 are void. It will
become valid only after six months pass from the date of this judgment. Compare
Tzemach, at
284. Here too, we considered the
respondents’ request to present us with confidential information, see supra
para. 36, and here too we are of the opinion that
such is neither appropriate nor desirable.
This suspension period should be utilized for reorganization, which
should be in accord with international and Israeli law.
The petition is denied in part, with
regard to the authority to detain provided in Orders 1500, 1505, 1512 and 1518,
and with regard to the prevention of meetings between detainees and lawyers.
The petition is granted in part in the sense that we declare the provision of
section 2(a) of Order 1500, as later amended by Order 1505 and extended by
Orders 1512 and 1518, the provision of section 2(b) of Order 1500 and the
provision of section 2 of Order 1518 to be null and void. This declaration of nullification will become
effective six months after the day on which this judgment is given.
Justice D. Dorner
I agree.
Justice I. Englard
I agree .
Decided
as stated in the opinion of President A. Barak.
5.2.2003