East Mediterranean Team
Amnesty International, International Secretariat
Peter Benenson House, 1 Easton Street
London WC1X 0DW
United Kingdom
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Tel: +44 (0)20 7413 5500
Fax: +44 (0)20 7413 5719
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
URGENT ACTION
PUBLIC
AI Index: MDE 15/033/2008
14 August 2008
UA 226/08
Freedom of movement/Right to education denied
ISRAEL/
400 Palestinian students
OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES
(OPT)/
EGYPT
Some 400 Palestinian students
may lose their university places and scholarships unless the Israeli authorities
allow them to leave the Gaza Strip before the new academic year, which
starts in the next few weeks.
The students have enrolled
to study subjects including law, sciences, business and medicine. At least
37 of the students have university places and scholarships in Europe and
North America, while hundreds of others are due to travel to universities
in countries in the Middle East and elsewhere. Several of these
students have been denied permission to leave Gaza since last year.
Certain fields of study are
limited or not available at Gaza’s universities, especially at post-graduate
level. This is notably the case for sciences, as Gaza’s universities lack
the resources for advanced research and the Israeli authorities restrict
the import of necessary equipment and material. By denying students permission
to pursue their studies abroad, the Israeli authorities are ultimately
denying the Palestinian community the benefit of their future contribution.
The Israeli authorities’
refusal to allow these students to leave Gaza to pursue their studies in
universities abroad violates their right to education, which is set out
in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR),
to which Israel is a state party. The ICESCR stipulates that: “The States
Parties to the present Covenant recognize the right of everyone to education.
They agree that education shall be directed to the full development of
the human personality and the sense of its dignity, and shall strengthen
the respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms…” (Article 13.1).
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The 1.5 million Palestinian
inhabitants of Gaza cannot leave without a permit from the Israeli army.
Since June 2007 Israel has tightened its blockade of Gaza and imposed a
travel ban on the entire population. Bar few exceptions, permits to leave
Gaza are denied. Even critically ill patients in need of life-saving treatment
which is not available in Gaza’s hospitals are often refused passage out
of Gaza (see UA 11/08, MDE 15/001/2008, 14 January 2008, and follow-ups).
The Rafah border crossing
between Gaza and Egypt – the only gate to the outside world for the inhabitants
of Gaza - was ordered closed by Israel June 2007 and remains closed. In
some exceptional cases Israel has allowed Egypt to partially open the Rafah
border crossing for some patients or others to leave or to return to Gaza.
In recent weeks some 20 students were allowed to leave Gaza via the Erez
crossing into Israel. However the overwhelming majority of the students
remain trapped in Gaza.
The Israeli blockade on Gaza,
including the stringent restrictions imposed on the movement of people
and goods to and from Gaza, constitutes a form of collective punishment
– a practice which is expressly forbidden by international law. In this
case, it is students seeking to advance their education by studying abroad
who are being targeted for collective punishment.
RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please
send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in English or your own language:
To the Israeli authorities:
- calling on them to immediately
allow some 400 students to leave Gaza to pursue their studies in universities
abroad, and to guarantee that they will be able to return to Gaza.
Working to protect human rights worldwide
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