Ref: 102/2008
Date: 13 November 2008
Time: 12:10 GMT
Military Court in Bethlehem
Sentences a Palestinian to Death; PCHR Calls upon Palestinian President
Not to Approve the Sentence, and for Abolition of Death Penalty in
Palestinian Law
On Wednesday, 12 November 2008, the Military Court in
Bethlehem sentenced Ayman Ahmed 'Awwad Daghamgha, 24, a member of the
Palestinian General Intelligence Service, from al-'Arroub refugee camp
north of Hebron, to death by firing squad. The trial was administered by
a panel of 3 judges (Chief Justice Fares Douda; Judge Fadi Hijazi; and
Judges Ahmed Jaddou'). It was held in the headquarters of the Military
Court in Bethlehem. Representatives of the prosecution, Major Ibrahim
Abu Saleh and First Lieutenant Akram 'Arar, and the defendant's lawyer,
Khalil al-Heeh, were present in the trial.
The court convicted Daghamgha of treason in violation of
article 131/A of the Palestinian Revolutionary Penal Code of 1979, and
sentenced him in consensus to death, a sentence that needs the
Palestinian President's approval and which can be appealed against. The
bill of indictment presented against the defendant states that he
started to collaborate with the Israeli intelligence service when he was
working in a gas station in "Kfar Etzion" settlement, south of
Bethlehem, in 1999. Since then, he had monitored stone throwers and
students and provided information to the Israeli intelligence in
exchange of little money. Later, he joined the Palestinian Naval Police
in the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) before he moved to the
General Intelligence Service. He started to monitor Palestinian
resistance cells and to provide information on them to the Israeli
intelligence. Such information allowed the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF)
to extra-judicially execute Jad 'Atallah Salem and Ahmed Is'haq Hamamda,
members of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades (an armed wing of Fatah
movement) on 8 March 2008. He also cooperated with IOF in arresting a
number of Palestinians.
It is worth noting that the Revolutionary Penal Code of
Palestine Liberation Organization is unconstitutional in the PNA, as it
has not been presented to nor approved by the legislature. PCHR has
repeatedly called for its abolition as it violates international
standards of fair trial and does not include fair and independent
mechanisms for appealing against court sentences.
Taking this latest sentence
into account, a total of seven death sentences have been issued by
Palestinian courts since the beginning of 2008. Two of the sentences
have been issued in
the Gaza Strip and five
ones in the West Bank. Most of these death sentences have been issued by
military courts.
On 24 January, 2008, the
Military Court in Gaza sentenced Yasser Sa’id Zanoun, 41, to death.
On 6 April, the Military Court in Jenin sentenced Tha’er Mahmoud
Ramailat, 23, to death.
On 28 April, the Hebron Military Court sentenced ‘Emad Mahmoud Sa’ed,
25, to death.
On 15 July, the Military Court in Jenin sentenced Wa’el Sa’id Sa’ed,
27, and Mohammed Sa’ed Sa’ed, 44, to death. On 20 July, the Military
Court in Gaza sentenced thirty five year old Eyad Ahmed Sukkar, 35, from
Gaza City, to death.
On 29 October 2008, the
Gaza Court of Cassation, headed by Judge ‘Abdul Ra’ouf al-Halabi, Head
of the Higher Justice Council, supported the death sentences by hanging
issued by the Court of Appeal on 14 June 2005 against 4 Palestinians.
The defendants are: Eihab Diab Abu al-‘Amrain, 28; Rami Sa’id Juha, 28;
'Abdul Fattah Mohammed Sammour, 26; and Sa’id Jameel Zuhod, 22.
None of these sentences has
yet been carried out, as the implementation of death sentences in the
PNA controlled areas requires the Palestinian President's ratification
according to the Palestinian Basic Law.
PCHR is extremely concerned
over the continued application of the death penalty in the PNA
controlled areas, and therefore:
1)
Calls upon the PNA to
announce an immediate moratorium on the use of this form of punishment,
which violates international human rights standards and instruments,
especially the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), the
Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (1966), and the UN Convention
against Torture (1984).
2)
Calls upon Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas not to ratify these cruel and inhumane
sentences, and to prevent their implementation.
3)
Reiterates that abolishing
the death penalty does imply leniency towards dangerous criminals, who
must be subjected to punishment that acts as a deterrent, but also
maintains human dignity.
4)
Calls upon the PNA to
review all legislation relative to the death penalty, especially Law No.
74 (1936) that remains effective in the Gaza Strip, and the Jordanian
Penal Code No. 16 (1960) that remains effective in the West Bank, and to
enact a unified penal code that conforms to the spirit of international
human rights instruments, especially those pertaining to the abolition
of the death penalty.