Israel court orders expulsion of Human Rights Watch director

Published April 17, 2019
Human Rights Watch's Israel and Palestine director, Omar Shakir has till May 1 to leave the country. — Photo courtesy @OmarSShakir
Human Rights Watch's Israel and Palestine director, Omar Shakir has till May 1 to leave the country. — Photo courtesy @OmarSShakir

An Israeli court ordered the deportation of Human Rights Watch's local director on Tuesday and ordered him to leave the country within two weeks.

The Jerusalem District Court rejected an appeal by Omar Shakir to remain in the country, citing his ongoing support of boycotts of Israel during his time in Israel.

Israel enacted a law in 2017 barring entry to any foreigner who “knowingly issues a public call for boycotting Israel.” Tuesday's ruling was the first time the law was applied to someone already residing in the country.

Shakir, a US citizen, has worked as the New York-based group's Israel and Palestine director since October 2016.

Israel's interior minister ordered Shakir's deportation in May 2018, calling him a “boycott activist.”

The court said that Shakir “continues his actions publicly to advance a boycott against Israel, but it's not on the stages at conferences or in university panels, rather through disseminating his calls to advance boycott primarily through his Twitter account and by other means.”

It cited Shakir's support on Twitter for AirBnb's decision to remove postings from Israeli settlements in the West Bank as an example.

AirBnb later backtracked on that decision.

Human Rights Watch said neither the organisation nor Shakir promotes Israel boycotts, but has called for companies to cease operations in West Bank settlements because they “inherently benefit from and contribute to serious violations of international humanitarian law.”

Israel captured the West Bank, along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war. Palestinians seek these territories for a future state. Most of the international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law.

The court upheld the law applying to boycotts of “areas under (Israel's) control,” namely the West Bank, not just of Israel proper.

Human Rights Watch said in a statement that the court's ruling “threatens the ability of all Human Rights Watch staff members to access both Israel and the West Bank”.

Read next: Depriving Palestinians of residence will amount to 'war crimes', HRW warns Israel

Human Rights Watch said in a statement that the court determined that the group's “research and advocacy calling for businesses to stop facilitating abuses in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank constitutes a call for boycott”.

“The decision sends the chilling message that those who criticise the involvement of businesses in serious abuses in Israeli settlements risk being barred from Israel and the Israeli-occupied West Bank,” said Tom Porteous, deputy programme director at Human Rights Watch.

The court ordered that Shakir has until May 1 to leave the country.

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