Terrorism and human rights: Shawan Jabarin, human rights organization director and Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terrorist activist, recently visited France to participate in the anti-Israeli campaign.

Shawan Jabarin, director of a human rights organization and a terrorist activist in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine

Shawan Jabarin, director of a human rights organization and a terrorist activist in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine

Invitation to a meeting in Paris attended by Shawan Jabarin and held under the aegis of French human rights and pro-Palestinian organizations

Invitation to a meeting in Paris attended by Shawan Jabarin and held under the aegis of French human rights and pro-Palestinian organizations

Abu Sami (third from left) at the meeting in Toulouse; to his left is the PFLP poster (Ladepeche.fr website, December 9, 2012).

Abu Sami (third from left) at the meeting in Toulouse; to his left is the PFLP poster (Ladepeche.fr website, December 9, 2012).

Abu Sami, PFLP activist, identified as Omar Shhadeh, editor of the organization's weekly Al-Hadef, as he appears on the organization's website.

Abu Sami, PFLP activist, identified as Omar Shhadeh, editor of the organization's weekly Al-Hadef, as he appears on the organization's website.


Overview

1. On February 1, 2013, Shawan Jabarin, who heads the Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq,[1] paid a visit to France. For several years the Israeli judicial authorities prevented him from leaving the country. The visit was part of the anti-Israeli campaign being waged by his organization in France, and was held under the aegis of several human rights and pro-Palestinian organizations, among them the Ligue des Droits de l'Homme (HDH), a French human rights NGO establish in 1898; ACAT-France (a French organization which opposes capital punishment); the France-Palestine Solidarity Association; Amnesty International; and La Plateforme des ONG françaises pour la Palestine, a French umbrella network of pro-Palestinian NGOs. During his stay in France Jabarin reportedly met with French diplomats and members of Parliament (whose identities are unknown to us).

2. Interviewed by the French Arabic-language TV channel France 24, Jabarin spoke about a variety of topics:

1) Palestine's participation in the International Criminal Court (ICC) – Jabarin complained that while every European country that wanted to join the European Union was also required to join the ICC, Palestine was not allowed to join. That meant, he said, that despite the fact that the Palestinians suffered from a "violation of their rights" and "crimes," the ICC could not provide them with a defense. He demanded that the French support Palestinian membership in the ICC, or at least not oppose it.

2)Boycotting Israeli goods – Jabarin claimed that according to international law, goods manufactured in the settlements could not be marketed because that encouraged what he called the "crime of the settlements."

3) Stopping administrative detentions – Jabarin claimed that members of the French Parliament had promised him they would relay the matter of administrative detentions to the French foreign minister so that he could exert pressure on Israel to cancel the policy of administrative detentions and to release the imprisoned Hamas activists of the Palestinian Legislative Council.

4)Imposing sanctions on Israel – Any political process in which France was involved had to be based on international law and not on the principle of direct negotiations. Jabarin asked France to turn words into action and impose sanctions on Israel.

Shawan Jabarin

3. Shawan Rateb Abdallah Jabarin was born in the village of Sayeir, in the Hebron district, in 1960. He is a lawyer by training and began his activity in Al-Haq in 2006 as a field worker; since then has been its General Director. Jabarin was an operative in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), the notorious terrorist organization founded by George Habash which has been involved in international terrorism, including plane hijackings and mass murder attacks. As a student at Beir Zeit University he belonged to a PFLP student cell. He was later involved in recruiting operatives for training outside Israel, for which he was imprisoned in Israel for nine months.

4. In February 2011 was chosen to join the Human Rights Watch's advisory committee.[2] He is also on the board of an NGO called the Union of Health Committees, which provides medical services in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip and establishes medical centers (according to unverified information, the Union of Health Committees is affiliated with the PFLP).

5. In 2009 Shawan Jabarin was not permitted by the Israeli authorities to go to Holland for an award given to individuals or institutions fighting for democracy and against discrimination, tyranny and racism. Jabarin appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court four times but his appeals were denied for reasons of security. At the time the Court's decision resulted in a campaign of anti-Israeli propaganda from many human rights organizations. In February 2012 the order was temporarily lifted and he was permitted to go to Geneva to participate in a UN conference (HRW website, March 2, 2012).

6. The following are paragraphs from the Israeli Supreme Court decision (Case 1520/09, March 10, 2009), relating to the Shawan Jabarin's double identity as a terrorist operative and an activist in an organization identifying itself as a human rights organization (ITIC translation from Hebrew to English, ITIC emphases throughout):

1) "This is not the first time the appellant has appealed regarding his desire to leave the country. During previous appeals as well as during this one the Court examined classified material presented by the security authorities. All previous appeals were rejected. On June 6, 2007, the Court found that "[t]he appellant is apparently a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, some of his time spent in directing a human rights organization, and some as an activist in an organization which has no qualms regarding murder and attempted murder, which have no relation whatsoever to rights, quite the opposite, which reject the most basic right of all, without which there are no other rights, that is, the right to life…" On July 7, 2008, the Court found that "there is reliable information that the appellant is a senior activist in the Popular Front terrorist organization.

2) "Today the appellant again seeks to leave the country for the purpose of receiving an award from an organization in Holland. His representative requested that in making our decision we take into consideration the need to achieve a proper balance between the concerns voiced by the security authorities – and regarding which the appellant's representative does not have sufficient information because of the privilege protecting the factual material on the one hand – and the basic right of the appellant to freedom of movement on the other. The overall position of the security authorities, in the appellant's opinion, is a violation of international humanitarian law and international human rights law. The appellant claims that what must be taken into consideration is the increased right to movement which those who defend human rights should be allowed to enjoy.

3) "…To that end we met in chambers twice, and at each meeting we held thorough, comprehensive deliberations, examining the possibility to provide an immediate answer for security constraints. We found that the material indicating the appellant's involvement in the activities of terrorist groups is genuine and authoritative. Moreover, additional negative material regarding the appellant came to light after his previous appeal was rejected. This negative foundation confirms the position of the security authorities, according to which preventing the appellant from leaving the country was in punishment for his forbidden activity, but rather the result of relevant security considerations. Thus the Court has not found a way to intervene in the decision given not to permit the appellant to leave the country."

PFLP Involvement in Political, Legal and Humanitarian Activities

7. The PFLP is a notorious terrorist organization which has been involved in hijacking planes and mass-murder terrorist attacks. The organization combined deadly terrorist attacks with ties with radical groups around the globe, adopting Marxist-Leninist ideology mixed with Palestinian nationalism. The PFLP is designated as a terrorist organization by both the United States and the European Union. In recent years its activists have become involved in Palestinian human rights organizations operating in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip, and they also participate in the campaign to delegitimize Israel, including anti-Israeli lawfare.

8. In addition to Jabarin's visit to France, another PFLP activist visited the country in December 2012, invited by EuroPalestine.[3] It was reported that a senior PFLP activist nicknamed Abu Sami, who also edits the PFLP's Ramallah-based organ Al-Hadaf visited France. An ITIC examination discovered that the operative Abu Sami is apparently Omar Shhadeh, who lives in Ramallah and is a member of the PFLP's political bureau and edits its journal. The examination also revealed that on December 12, 2012, Omar Shhadeh participated a rally held in Paris to mark the 45th anniversary of the PFLP's founding. He gave a speech calling for extending the BDS campaign against of Israel and for trying senior Israelis in international courts (Dunia al-Watan, December 12, 2012).[4]

PFLP Involvement in Political, Legal and  Humanitarian Activities
Left: Abu Sami, PFLP activist, identified as Omar Shhadeh, editor of the organization's weekly Al-Hadef, as he appears on the organization's website. Right: Abu Sami (third from left) at the meeting in Toulouse; to his left is the PFLP poster (Ladepeche.fr website, December 9, 2012).

9. On December 27, 2012, a delegation of about 100 activists organized by EuroPalestine entered the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing. According to the members of the delegation (who aimed their arrival to coincide with the fourth anniversary of Operation Cast Lead) they came to break the so-called "illegal siege of the Gaza Strip." Before their departure for the Gaza Strip they campaigned in a number of cities in France, primarily to collect donations and contributions for the Gazans. As part of the campaign dozens of letters were sent to French President Hollande demanding the imposition of sanctions against Israel (EuroPalestine website, December 17, 2012).

10. The delegation, headed by Olivia Zemor, held a display near the border fence (keeping a low profile and without provocation), and promised to promote Hamas' political agenda in French public opinion and in French and international legal forums. The delegation was accompanied by other networks involved in the campaign to delegitimize Israel, including nine members of an anti-Israeli network called Freedom Flotilla Italia, which is active in the project to send flotillas to the Gaza Strip.

11. The network's activists were received in the Gaza Strip by officials of the de-facto Hamas administration. They also met with senior figures in the PFLP and with representatives of other terrorist organizations. In our assessment the meetings were not random but rather another manifestation of the relations between them.

[1] See the Appendix for further information about the organization.
[2] Shawan Jabarin's appointment to the HRW's advisory committee was criticized at the time, including by people within the organization. However, HRW stressed his "contributions to human-rights causes" (Thedailybeast.com website, February 17, 2011).
[3] EuroPalestine is an anti-Israeli French organization headed by Olivia Zemor, a French Jewish activist affiliated with the radical left. The organization has been behind two attempts to fly anti-Israeli activists to Israel's Ben-Gurion international airport (July 2011, April 2012) and one attempt to send them into Israel overland through the Allenby Bridge (auf 2012).
[4] For further information see the December 31, 2012 bulletin “The French Anti-Israeli organization EuroPalestine sent a delegation to the Gaza Strip hosted by the Hamas administration.”