Israel passes law mandating death penalty for Palestinians convicted of lethal attacks on Israelis.
The Israeli parliament approved a new bill establishing the mandatory use of capital punishment against Palestinian prisoners found guilty of murdering or committing other deadly acts in their country, effectively creating what officials call an automatic "default sentence." Human rights organizations have strongly criticized this legislative move as particularly severe given that Palestinians convicted under existing laws already face execution.
Key Points
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1Israel passed legislation making hanging by execution (death penalty) mandatory and a default sentence specifically for Palestinians convicted of deadly terrorist acts.
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2The law was described as 'historic' far-right leader Itamar Ben-Gvir, marking the culmination over years-long advocacy against Palestinian detainees while critics note it may not apply to Jewish extremists in similar cases. The bill stipulates that death will be imposed on a person who kills with intent to deny Israel's existence.
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3International human rights organizations and world leaders condemned the move as discriminatory legislation violating international law, describing 'dangerous escalation' of violence.
Developments
Israel's Knesset passed legislation amending both civil law for settlers and military law to apply Palestinians in an expansion of capital punishment. The new rules mandate death sentences with no appeal or judicial discretion, a move critics warn will disproportionately target Palestinian civilians while reversing Israel's 60-year hiatus from executions.
Israel has passed a law making hanging by default for Palestinian citizens convicted in military courts under specific nationalistic offenses, though it excludes Jewish citizens and does not apply retroactively to current prisoners. The legislation includes no right to clemency or alternative life imprisonment options while taking effect within 30 days of the vote's passage on October 29th (implied by context).