Israel has demolished the homes of Palestinians suspected or convicted of attacks against Israelis since 1967. This extreme sanction is implemented pursuant to Regulation 119 of the Defense (Emergency) Regulations, which date back to the British Mandate. The Regulation allows the military to demolish a home based solely on suspicions that an offense had been committed. Israel claims demolitions...
House demolitions are a cruel measure that defies international law, which prohibits collective punishment. It also contravenes a fundamental tenet of Israeli law, whereby no person is punished for actions other than their own. House demolitions do not replace criminal punishment but come as an addition to it, and its principle victims are not the alleged offenders, who are often killed in the act or arrested, tried and jailed, but the people living in the demolished home.
Punitive house demolitions are usually carried out as a full or partial destruction of a building using explosives or mechanical equipment, or alternatively, a full or partial sealing of the building with concrete. Sealing with concrete is equivalent to demolition since it is irreversible. This measure is generally used when demolishing the residential unit of the perpetrator and their family is structurally unfeasible without damaging other parts of the building where other families live. Confiscating and sealing the openings of a structure in a manner that can be reversed in the future is another, less severe and rarer measure.
Over the years, hundreds of petitions have been submitted to the High Court of Justice (HCJ) in an attempt to prevent house demolitions following attacks, most of them by HaMoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual. More often than not, the HCJ declines to intervene in the military’s decision and refrains from stopping demolitions. Its decisions focus on questions such as proportionality - for instance, is a full demolition the appropriate measure or should a partial demolition or sealing be considered? The court rarely addresses the difficult constitutional, moral and practical questions the policy raises.
This timeline exposes the arbitrary changes Israel has made to its house demolition policy, as if the OPT were a testing ground for deterrence and punishment methods, where Palestinians’ human rights are nothing more than a pawn in the hands of the military. HaMoked laments the fact that the HCJ serves as a fig leaf for Israel’s actions and gives its seal of approval to the harm inflicted on residents of the OPT and the violation of international law.