Israel Passes Law for Special Tribunal on October 7 Attack Suspects

Israel's parliament has approved a law to establish a special military tribunal for Palestinians suspected of involvement in the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led attack. The tribunal is authorized to impose the death penalty, a sentence not carried out in Israel since 1962, sparking widespread criticism from rights groups like Adalah. Critics argue the law denies basic procedural protections and creates a discriminatory legal framework that disproportionately targets Palestinians. The October 7 attack killed about 1,200 people in Israel and triggered a massive Israeli military operation in Gaza that has killed over 72,000 people.

Key Points: Israel Law: Special Tribunal for Hamas Attack Suspects

  • Israel passes law for special military tribunal for October 7 attack suspects
  • Tribunal authorized to impose death penalty, not used since 1962
  • Rights groups criticize law as denying fair trial and potentially war crime
  • Law seen as disproportionately targeting Palestinians over Israelis
2 min read

Israel passes law to establish special tribunal for suspects of October 7 Hamas attack

Israel's parliament approves a special military tribunal for October 7 attack suspects, allowing death penalty, sparking rights group criticism.

"The bill denies suspects the basic procedural protections essential to a fair trial - Adalah"

Tel Aviv, May 12

Israel's parliament has approved a law to establish a special military tribunal for Palestinians suspected of involvement in the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023.

The tribunal is authorised to impose the death penalty, a sentence that has not been carried out in Israel since 1962.

The law has drawn widespread criticism from rights groups. "The bill denies suspects the basic procedural protections essential to a fair trial," Adalah, a legal group for Arab minority rights in Israel, said in a statement on Monday (local time).

It added that any resulting death sentence would constitute "an arbitrary deprivation of life, absolutely prohibited under international law and potentially a war crime."

The new law follows legislation approved in late March that made the death penalty a default punishment for Palestinians convicted of deadly attacks, reports Xinhua news agency.

The legislation, passed on March 30, drew sharp international criticism, with opponents describing it as discriminatory and unconstitutional. Critics argue that the law creates a differential legal framework based on identity and raises serious human rights concerns.

Under the new law, the death penalty would apply to Israelis convicted of murder only if the act was committed with the intent of "ending Israel's existence", a clause that critics say effectively ensures that the punishment will disproportionately target Palestinians while excluding Jewish Israelis accused of similar offences.

The law also mandates that executions be carried out within 90 days of sentencing, allowing only limited grounds for delay and providing no provision for clemency.

Courts retain the option to impose life imprisonment instead, but only under undefined "special circumstances".

The October 7 attack killed about 1,200 people in Israel, with over 250 hostages kidnapped, according to Israeli figures. It triggered the massive Israeli military operation across Gaza that left the Palestinian enclave in ruins and killed at least 72,737 people, according to Gaza-based health authorities.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
I understand the emotional aftermath of October 7, but this law feels like it's designed to punish rather than achieve justice. No clemency provisions? That's medieval. India has its own challenges with terrorism, but at least our judicial system retains some checks and balances. This will only deepen the cycle of violence.
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Siddharth J
As an Indian, I'm shocked by this. We've seen what happens when legal systems become tools for vengeance rather than justice. This special tribunal is basically a state-sponsored execution mechanism. International law exists for a reason - to prevent exactly these kinds of arbitrary deprivations of life. Shameful stuff from Israel.
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Rohit L
I'm trying to see both sides here. Yes, the October 7 attack was horrific and demands accountability. But creating a separate tier of justice for one ethnicity? That's textbook apartheid. If a Jewish Israeli commits murder with non-political intent, they get life at worst. A Palestinian gets death? What justice is that? 😔
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Shreya B
The hypocrisy is staggering. Israel claims to be the only democracy in the Middle East, yet passes laws that would make authoritarian regimes blush. As someone from India where we've fought hard for secularism and equal treatment, this law goes against every principle of democratic governance. The 90-day execution timeline with no clemency is barbaric.
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Karthik V
This is what happens when security concerns override all sense of humanity. India deals with terrorism too, but we don't create separate courts for Kashmiris or Sikhs accused of attacks. This differential treatment is the definition of discrimination. International community needs to call this out strongly

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