#Justice4Halabi: A Day at the Israeli High Court of Justice
Yesterday, I attended a hearing at the Israeli High Court of Justice as an attorney for Mohammad Halabi, since he is being represented by my law office in Jerusalem. The hearing was also attended by more than fifteen diplomats from the United States, the European Union, the United Nations, and several other countries, as well as supporters from multiple NGOs, including Save the Children.
As a reminder, Palestinian prisoner and humanitarian Mohammed Halabi, former head of World Vision Gaza, was wrongly imprisoned on blatantly false charges of redirecting millions of dollars of aid money for the people of Gaza to Hamas. Halabi has been kept in prison for nearly six years, despite there not being any physical evidence for the charges against him. FOSNA has been advocating the need for all of us to come together as a community to demand that Israel free Halabi from Israeli imprisonment and put an end to this case once and for all. Thanks to you, we obtained over 2,220 signatures demanding his release on the petition below. We also implemented a phone and letter campaign to the Israeli authorities.
Under Israeli law, a criminal trial wherein a defendant is incarcerated should be completed within nine months of his or her arrest. Beyond that, the prosecution needs to petition the High Court for a three month extension. Typically, the High Court does not get into the details of a case but only the reasons for the delay. A delay is usually granted once or twice. In addition, the High Court is free to refuse an extension and order the defendant to be released on bail, held under house arrest, given an electronic ankle bracelet for monitoring, etc., while the trial continues.
In the case of Halabi, the State has repeatedly requested and received extensions and has refused to consider his release on bail. Today’s hearing was the twenty-third (yes, the twenty-third!!) such a request for extension. The result is that Halabi has been in jail, without bail or conviction, for almost 6 years now.
Maher Hanna, the attorney from our office overseeing the case, was scathing in his presentation. He said that although the Supreme Court would not normally look into the specifics of the underlying trial, limiting itself only to the charge sheet, the court cannot ignore the facts of this specific case and needs to consider its substance. In fact, the charges listed in the charge sheet have long been superseded, for the State no longer maintains them. The State no longer maintains the bulk of the charges against Halabi. All testimony has been concluded, and there is no reason for any more delays. Hanna challenged the Court to at least read the summations of the case, but the judge refused.
Nonetheless, Hanna managed to slip into his presentation a few substantive points:
The chief interrogator has stated under oath that he never investigated the evidence against Halabi, because it was too voluminous. He had access to all the files and computers of World Vision Gaza, but could not point to any evidence.
The claim that Halabi mapped out the location of the Eretz crossings in 2010, on behalf of Hamas, is disproven by the Israeli records presented to the court showing that Halabi had not even been to the Eretz checkpoint between 2006 and the end of 2011.
The state repeatedly offered Halabi the opportunity to plead guilty in exchange for a three-year (later four-year) term, but Halabi steadfastly refused and has insisted on his innocence.
World Vision no longer operates in Gaza, so there is no danger of Halabi diverting any of its money to anybody if he is released. Anyway, even the state of Israel is now openly allowing Qatari funds to go to Hamas.
The hearings, including all evidence as well as summations, ended months ago. Yet, still there is no verdict and no indication as to when the judge will issue his verdict (though he had hinted that it would take him months to prepare his verdict.)
In the end, the High Court judge stated he would speak to the District Court judge and ask when he expected to give his verdict, before deciding on this extension. Maher Hanna thinks this is a positive development and is cautiously optimistic that we may at least come to see an end to interminable delays.
Halabi, who attended the hearing by Zoom, had a rare opportunity as the judge left the room to greet all the diplomats and supporters, sharing a brief word with them before the court police cut off the connection. Halabi thanked the diplomats, telling them he is doing all this so that the important humanitarian work of several organizations, like World Vision and others, could continue in Gaza.
To read an interview by FOSNA with Attorney Maher Hanna on the absurdities of the case against Halabi, follow the link below:
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#JouneyWithJonathan #KeepingUpWithKuttab #Beyond2States #KuttabInPalestine
Our Executive Director, Jonathan Kuttab, has been very busy these last couple weeks as he travels throughout Palestine. In addition to connecting in person with the leaders of Sabeel Jerusalem, Jonathan has been promoting the new Arabic and Hebrew versions of his book, "Beyond the Two-State Solution." He has visited the Tent of Nations, Al-Haq, Kairos Palestine, Bethlehem Bible College, Holy Land Trust, the Synod of Palestinian Evangelicals, Sheikh Jarrah, and will be visiting numerous other persons and organizations active in the Holy Land. We hope that this trip can help change the conversation on Palestine/Israel, and that we can face the new reality: one where the two-state solution is unfortunately no longer on the table. We will continue sharing about his trip in the coming days and weeks. Daily updates are available on our various social media outlets.
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Kumi Now! Connecting activists around the world every Tuesday with the organizations working on the ground in Palestine and Israel to bring a just and lasting peace based on international law and nonviolence.
Week 7: Discriminatory Policies towards the Palestinian People. Whereas all Palestinians living across Palestine in 1947 had the same basic citizenship and travel rights, they now have incredibly different statuses, rights, and restrictions based on where they ended up in the patchwork after the Nakba. A number of Israeli policies and laws have served to divide Palestinians under Israeli control (as citizens and as an occupied population) into a number of categories, with different rights and restrictions for each.
Palestinian Innovators Series: Vera Baboun. This is a time to get to know the first female mayor of Bethlehem. Now retired, she offers a unique and honest look at the situation facing Palestine.
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