Contents
Preface
Chapter 1- Three years of Israeli curfew policy at a glance
- 1. Patterns
- 2. Legality and Rationale
- 2.1 Curfew and International Law
- 2.2 Israeli Strategy
- Chapter 1 - Endnotes
Chapter 2 - Curfew: The experience of two refugee camps.
- 1. Summary of Major Findings
- 2. Curfew Patterns
- 3. Life under Curfew
- 3.1 The Enforcement of Curfew
- 3.2 Cut-off of Basic Supplies and Services
- 3.3 Campaign of Terror
- 3.4 Passing Time under Curfew
- 3.5 Psychological Trauma
- 4. Attack on Community infrastructure
- 4.1 Endangering Health
- 4.2 Blocking Educational Development
- 4.3 Shutting Down the Economy
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter 2 - Endnotes
Chapter 3 - The war curfew
- 1. Summary of Major Findings
- 2. Curfew Calendar
- 2.1 The First Stage
- 2.2 The Second Stage
- 2.3 The Third Stage
- 3. The Paralysis of Civil Society Operations
- 4. Economic Collapse
- 4.1 Breakdown by Stage
- Stage 1: economic shut-down
- Stage 2: constriction of supply and demand
- Stage 3: unemployment and escalation of punitive measures
- 4.2 Breakdown by Sector
- Agriculture
- Industry
- Other sectors
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter 3 - Endnotes
Appendices
- Appendix A: List of Acronyms Used in Report
- Appendix B: Charts of Curfew Trends - Dec 1987 through
Dec 1990
- Appendix Bl: Locations with Highest Curfew Frequency
Annually
- Appendix B2: Curfew Incidents by year
- Appendix B3: Gaza Strip Curfew Incidents by Community
Type
- Appendix B4: West Bank Curfew Incidents by Community
Type
- Appendix B5: Curfew Incidents - Camp v. Non-Camp
- Appendix B6: Person-Days Under Curfew - Camp v. Non-Camp
- Appendix B7: West Bank and Gaza Strip Curfew Incidents
- Appendix B8: West Bank Curfew Incidents by Area
- Appendix B9: West Bank Person-Days Under Curfew by Area
- Appendix C: Lists of Military Measures During "War
Curfew
- Appendix Cl: Palestinians Killed by Israeli Army and
Settlers
- Appendix C2: Houses Demolished or Sealed by Israeli Military
- Appendix C3: Trees Uprooted by Israeli Military
- Appendix C4: Palestinian Land Confiscated
- Appendix C5: School Closures by Military Order
Preface
From 9 December 1987, when the Palestinian uprising broke
out, until 31 December 1990 every Palestinian living in the occupied territories
had spent an average of approximately ten weeks under in-house curfew.
The Israeli military authorities imposed round-the-clock curfew on Palestinian
communities more than 7,800 times in this three-year period. Many communities
were subject to curfews of a week or more in length; some curfews lasted
more than a month. The purpose of this report is to explore the reality
of curfew as it is experienced by the 134,431 people who are imprisoned
in their homes by curfew on any given day in the occupied territories.
This exploration is pursued at two levels: The report offers an inside
look at the immediate and personal experience of a curfewed community,
while also examining the wider ramifications of Israel's curfew policy.
The report is divided into three major sections. A short
introductory section, Chapter 1, examines the Israeli policy of curfew
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip during the first three years of the uprising.
In this chapter, the frequent use of curfews is discussed and general curfew
patterns are summarised. Israeli curfew policy is then briefly analysed
In light of international law and Israel's political objectives. Information
In this section is drawn primarily from the Palestinian press and supplemented
by reports from local and international human rights and development organisations
as well as JMCC's own field research.
Chapter 2 is based on an in-depth survey of the curfew
experience in two refugee camps during the first three years of the uprising.
The survey offers a unique insight into the personal experience of camp
residents under curfew --what it means to be forcefully confined to your
home 24 hours a day for days on end, isolated from the outside world and
without access to essential supplies and services, while armed forces patrol
the neighbourhood streets and periodically break into your home. It shows
the complete paralysis which strikes all aspects of camp life, from work
to study to worship to play, as a result of the collective imprisorunent
of an entire community. It further documents the campaign of terror which
incarcerated populations are regularly subjected to during curfew, including
systematic army brutality and the frequent, arbitrary implementation of
numerous punitive and isolatory measures. In addition to describing the
experiences of individuals under curfew, the survey documents the comprehensive
damage sustained by the community as a result of curfew.
In the midst of completing the analysis of the survey
data and preparing the original report for publication, Israeli military
authorities announced an open-ended blanket curfew over the entire occupied
territories.* This curfew, officially imposed for "security reasons"
at the outbreak of war in the Persian Gulf, lasted in various forms for
nearly two months--longer than the war itself. The curfew was the longest
of its kind since Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967
and has had catastrophic consequences for the occupied territories. The
"war curfew",** itself a dramatic extension of Israel's curfew
policy over the previous three years, indicates that Israel is prepared
to escalate its use of curfew --even during current international peace
efforts in the region. Due to the serious implications of this curfew,
a separate section has been added to the original report as Chapter 3.
This section provides a preliminary account and analysis of the blanket
"war curfew". Information presented in this section is gathered
from the local press and from reports by local and international organisations.
In addition, the report includes a number of appendices
which provide detailed graphs of curfew patterns throughout the uprising
(Appendix B) and detailed documentation of military measures which accompanied
the "war curfew" in particular (Appendix C).
* The only exception to the blanket curfew was East Jerusalem.
Israel annexed East Jerusalem following the 1967 war and therefore does
not recognise it as part of the occupied territories, despite international
consensus to the contrary. Nonetheless, throughout the blanket curfew a
number of East Jerusalem communities were subject to curfew for varying
lengths of time.
**The term war curfew, which has commonly been
used to refer to the blanket curfew imposed on 17 January, is actually
misleading; not only did the curfew outlast the war, the nature of the
curfew and the additional measures implemented by Israel during the curfew
belie Israeli claims that it was imposed for reasons necessitated by the
outbreak of the war.