Israel pushes a law to punish those responsible for October 7th with the death penalty
The new legislation would create a military court in Jerusalem and allow for the retroactive application of the death penalty
The Israeli government is accelerating the processing of one of the most exceptional legal initiatives in its recent history: a special legal framework to try those responsible for the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023, with the possibility of imposing the death penalty. The legislation, dubbed the law for the prosecution of participants in the events of the October 7 massacre, has achieved unusual political consensus between the government and the opposition. It has been promoted by the Israeli Minister of Justice, Yariv Levin, and sponsored by MKs Simcha Rothman, a member of the governing coalition, and Yulia Malinovsky, from the opposition. The law advanced this Monday in its second and third readings in the Israeli Parliament. Late Monday, the vote had not yet taken place, but various sources took it for granted that it would have the necessary support to move forward. "It will be approved. It has overwhelming support," sources from the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI) tell l'ARA.The legal text foresees the creation of a special military tribunal in Jerusalem to begin trying at least 300 attackers captured in Israel after the October 7 assault. For the last two and a half years, Israeli authorities have held these detainees in various detention centers while debating which legal framework would allow them to be prosecuted.An 'ad hoc' law
The law is created to judge crimes committed between October 7 and 10, 2023, and will classify murders, rapes, kidnappings, looting, and other crimes as “crimes against the Jewish people”, “crimes against humanity”, and “war crimes”. It also includes offenses committed later against hostages transferred to Gaza, including those who died during captivity. To be able to impose death sentences, the tribunal will rely on existing laws in Israel, such as the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide Law of 1950, offenses against state sovereignty, or the Anti-Terrorism Law approved in 2016. This would allow the death penalty to be applied not only for murders but also for rapes and genocide offenses.Although the tribunal will be located in Jerusalem, proceedings will be divided according to the attack scenarios, such as the Nova Festival or the communities in southern Israel, like Nir Oz. Each case will have three judges, and in the event of a death sentence, the appeal would be automatic before a tribunal presided over by a former Israeli Supreme Court judge. The accused will have the right to legal representation by lawyers licensed in Israel or the West Bank. If an accused does not have their own defense, the tribunal will assign them a lawyer, and the Israeli state will attempt to subsequently recover the cost of the defense by deducting it from funds transferred to the Palestinian Authority.Retroactive character
One of the most controversial features is the public dimension of the proceedings. The main hearings, such as the opening of the trial, the reading of the charges, the verdicts, and the sentences, will be broadcast live via a specific website. Added to this is another problematic point: the retroactive nature of the law. Unlike the law passed in March, which already expanded Israel's possibility of imposing the death penalty for terrorist offenses with fatalities, this law against participants in the October 7 attacks allows for the investigation and prosecution of acts prior to the approval of the legal framework.Although Minister Yariv Levin, the main proponent of the initiative, has assured that the trials will meet “all international standards” and will achieve “international recognition and trust, especially from the United States”, various Israeli human rights organizations have expressed concern about the content of the legal text.The Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) stated in declarations to ARA that despite the Ministry of Justice's efforts to preserve certain procedural guarantees, “this is not a standard criminal proceeding.” The entity particularly warns about the elimination of the requirement for unanimity in military courts to impose the death penalty, meaning a majority of judges will be sufficient to issue it.Along the same lines, organizations such as the legal center for the rights of the Arab minority in Israel Adalah, the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI), and the organization that provides legal assistance and defends the rights of Palestinians, HaMoked, have gone further in their criticism. In a joint report, they warn that the new legislation places Israel “in direct opposition to the international trend towards the abolition of the death penalty” and could violate international law obligations, including the prohibition of cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishments.According to these entities, the text grants judges broad discretion to deviate from ordinary procedural guarantees. They also warn that the exceptional system for appointing magistrates and the risk of political influence could compromise the standards of a fair trial. The complaint further adds that the public broadcast of proceedings could turn them into “spectacle trials” and erode the presumption of innocence, by exposing defendants publicly before a final sentence is reached.Israel has only executed one person since its founding: Adolf Eichmann, convicted of genocide and crimes against humanity for his role in the Holocaust in 1962. In 1988, Israeli courts also sentenced John Demjanjuk to death for crimes committed in Nazi camps, but the Supreme Court later overturned the sentence.