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Adalah’s News

 

The Israeli Supreme Court and the COVID-19 Emergency

 

18 August 2021

Adalah published “The Israeli Supreme Court and the COVID-19 Emergency” this week, a comprehensive report that analyzes Court decisions in 88 cases brought during the first wave of the crisis. The report provides essential background and analysis for lawyers, jurists and decision-makers working globally. It holds particular pertinence for those interested in COVID-19, human rights, rule of law and the balance of power between the executive branch, legislature and judiciary during a public health emergency. The report is especially timely given the current resurgence of the virus and possible reinstitution by governments of myriad restrictions on our daily lives and freedoms.

From the outset of the coronavirus outbreak, and in response to perceived dangers that it posed, the Israeli government decreed, and justified with relative ease, emergency regulations and exceptional measures touching on all aspects of life. In issuing 39 emergency regulations, many of which resulted in serious violations of human rights, especially for Palestinians, the government relied on the pre-existing, security-based, “state of emergency”, which has remained in place since 1948.

The current Adalah report analyses the different and newly, emergent legal questions brought before the Supreme Court, and how the Court dealt with these issues. It also examines the extent of the Supreme Court intervention in response to petitioners who sought relief from the Court in challenges to the government’s issuance of emergency regulations during the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in Israel. While the report explores the Court's decision-making during a health emergency, it also shows the Court’s failure to protect human rights. In the period between January to August 2020, Palestinian citizens of Israel (PCI), Palestinians in the OPT, and other vulnerable groups, submitted numerous petitions to the Supreme Court in response to heightened violations of their human rights, including in the realms of health, education, employment and economic rights, and more. Adalah stands among the leading human rights organizations in Israel that have challenged the government’s exercise of sweeping powers, including with respect to the government’s issuance of COVID-19 emergency regulations.

The report shows an overall unwillingness by the Supreme Court to intervene to protect human rights and prohibit governmental rulemaking undertaken without parliamentary (Knesset) oversight. The Court rejected or dismissed almost all of the 88 petitions filed before it, used a variety of avoidance strategies, very rarely issued an order nisi (order to show cause), and ordered only one temporary injunction.
Read the full report

International Symposium: COVID-19 and Courts: A Global Trend of Judicial Deference?

The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) hosted on 22 July 2021 a live online symposium on the Courts’ role during the COVID-19 pandemic. Adalah Attorney Myssana Morany, principal author of our report, “The Israeli Supreme Court and the COVID-19 Emergency”, participated in the panel discussion and presented the report’s main findings. Lawyers from Colombia, South Africa, Nepal, and India also participated in this comparative law symposium.

Case Analysis: The Coronavirus Law - How the Israeli Supreme Court Missed the Point

On 4 April 2021, the Israeli Supreme Court upheld sweeping powers granted to the Israeli government by the "Coronavirus Law". However, the Court cancelled certain protest restrictions imposed under the law. Adalah and ACRI petitioned to challenge the law following its enactment by the Knesset in July 2020. The law granted the government all-inclusive powers - similar to the emergency regulations decreed by the government prior to the law's enactment - violating citizens’ individual rights and liberties, and authorizing the government to declare a state of emergency without parliamentary oversight.

Read the case comment by Adalah Attorney Fady Khoury

The World Justice Project named Adalah one of six winners in the World Justice Challenge 2021

Adalah won in the category of Fundamental Rights and Non-Discrimination for its COVID-19 Project: Demanding Equal Treatment and Non-Discrimination for the Arab Minority through the Israeli Legal System.

Read about Adalah’s work and the work of all of the winners.

Adalah's report to the UN detailing Israel’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its negative impact on human rights, July 2020

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Adalah: The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel · 94 Yaffa Street · PO Box 8921 · Haifa 31090 · Israel