Adalah - The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel | |
Type: | Non-profit NGO |
Location: | Haifa, Israel (Headquarters), Beersheba (Field Office)[1] |
Area Served: | Israel and the Palestinian Territories |
Focus: | Human rights, Arab citizens of Israel, Minority rights, Civil and political rights, Economic, social and cultural rights, Prisoners' rights, Land and planning rights[2] |
Method: | Impact litigation, legal consultation, international advocacy, education, training, publication, media outreach[3] |
Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel (Hebrew: עדאלה - המרכז המשפטי לזכויות המיעוט הערבי בישראל; Arabic: عدالة - المركز القانوني لحماية حقوق الأقلية العربية في اسرائيل) is a human rights organization and legal center.
Adalah's goals are "achieving individual and collective rights of the Arab-Palestinian minority in Israel" and protecting "the human rights of Palestinians living under occupation, based on international humanitarian law and international human rights law".[4]
The organization was founded in November 1996; it is non-partisan and not-for-profit. Adalah's founder and General Director is lawyer Hassan Jabareen. Adalah means Justice in the Arabic language.
Adalah attempts to influence Israeli public discourse through media outreach and campaigning. Adalah regularly participates in Israeli and international academic conferences.[5]
Historian Ilan Pappe describes Adalah's philosophy as "that the personal autonomy of the individual was a right that had to be fiercely protected, and that this right included also the collective rights of the group to which the individual belonged."[6]
Many of Adalah's cases involve first-time legal challenges and affect Arab citizens as a collective group. Adalah's legal advocacy focuses on appealing to the Israeli Supreme Court. Between 1996 and 2000, it brought over twenty cases before the court dealing with equality for Arab citizens, including language rights cases, budgets of the Ministry of Religious Affairs, health and education in the unrecognized Arab Bedouin villages in Israel.[6]
Adalah's legal department is divided into three units: Land and Planning; Economic, Social, and Cultural; and Civil and Political (including Criminal Justice and the Occupied Palestinian Territory).
Adalah's international advocacy work focuses on United Nations human rights bodies, European Union bodies, embassies/foreign diplomats based in Israel, and cooperating with international human rights organizations and networks.
Adalah has conducted regular interventions to UN Committees in its reviews of Israel's compliance with human rights conventions.
Adalah and its partners played a leading role in the passing of an EU Parliament Resolution on 5 July 2012 condemning Israel's practice of forced displacement against Palestinian Arabs in the Occupied Territory (West Bank and East Jerusalem) and in the Naqab (Negev) in Israel.
See main article: Or Commission and October 2000 events. In October 2000, Israeli security forces used live ammunition and rubber-coated bullets against Palestinian Arab citizens at demonstrations, killing 13 people. A Commission of Inquiry was established and Adalah represented the family members of the 13 Palestinian citizens of Israel killed by the police, and the Arab political leaders who received warnings from the commission.
The Or Commission found that there was no justification whatsoever for the excessive use of lethal forced that caused the deaths of 13 Palestinian citizens of Israel. It found that in October 2000 snipers were used to disperse demonstrations for the first time since 1948, and that this sniper fire, which led to the death and injury of citizens, was illegal and certainly not grounded in the internal regulations of the police governing the use of live fire. Similarly, the Or Commission determined that the firing of rubber-coated steel bullets, which produced fatal results, was also contrary to the internal police.[7]
By the 1990s, there were about 45 Arab Bedouin villages in the Naqab (Negev) that were not officially recognized by the state, even though many of these villages had existed before the state's establishment or residents were moved there by the state itself during the 1950s. Because of their "unrecognized" status, these villages do not receive basic services such as water, healthcare, schools, safe roads and others.
In December 1997, Adalah represented 12 of the largest unrecognized villages in the Negev "in a demand for the establishment of basic medical clinics", where mothers and children seeking treatment had to travel long distances with no public transportation in order to access a health facility. The Bedouin villages in the Naqab have the highest rate of infant mortality in the country as well as the lowest level of immunization.[8]
By the mid-2000s ten of the 45 villages were accepted by the state as being "in the process of recognition". However, the state has not provided full services entailed by that recognition and Adalah continues to pressure the government to fulfill its commitments to these villages.
See main article: Prawer plan. Stopping the implementation of the "Law for the Regulation of Bedouin Settlement in the Negev" (the "Prawer plan") is a legislative focus of Adalah. According to human rights groups, the Plan will oversee the demolitions of 35 unrecognized Bedouin villages in the Naqab and the forced relocation of 40,000–70,000 Bedouin citizens to recognized townships.[9]
Adalah is representing several villages before the courts to challenge their eviction and demolition orders, including the villages of Umm el-Hieran and Atir, which are to be destroyed to build a Jewish town and a forest on their locations respectively. Adalah regularly submits petitions and letters in partnership with other NGOs and civil society groups, such as the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, Bimkom, the Negev Co-Existence Forum, and the Regional Council of Unrecognized Villages.
Among others, Adalah is currently involved in the following legal cases: