Statement on designation of six Palestinian organizations as “terrorist groups”

CPT joins in this global concern and calls on world governments to immediately remove the umbrella of impunity under which the Israeli occupation has flourished.
Facebook
Twitter
Email
WhatsApp
Print
an image of a person wearing white with a white scarf on their head, holding a Palestinian flag gestures towards three Israeli soldiers in full riot gear with helmets and masks.
CPT condemns Israel's designation of Palestinian rights organizations as "terrorist groups."

CPT condemns Israel’s designation of six prominent Palestinian Human Rights Organizations as “Terrorist Groups” with the intention to criminalize those exposing human rights violations stemming from the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

While the international community fails to hold Israel accountable, Israel continues to take bolder steps towards completely silencing Palestinian existence.

The six organizations targeted were involved in direct support, community development, and exposing human rights abuses. They are:

Addameer
Al-Haq
Defence for Children International-Palestine
The Bisan Center for Research and Development
Union of Agricultural Work Committees
Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees

Consequently, Israel’s Ministry of Defence regards all organizational activities as illegal, permitting Israeli forces to close offices, seize assets and sensitive human rights files, stop funding sources, and imprison staff members, advisors and supporters.

This move to criminalize organizational reporting and public denouncement of human rights abuses by labelling the organizations “terrorists” is an affront to human rights work worldwide. The scope of this action and the precedent it sets without receiving diplomatic pushback causes deep concern throughout the global human rights community.

CPT joins in this global concern and calls on world governments to immediately remove the umbrella of impunity under which the Israeli occupation has flourished. CPT stands in solidarity with Palestinian human rights organizations and those demanding an immediate end to the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

Subscribe to the Friday Bulletin

Get Ryan’s thoughts and the entire bulletin every Friday in your inbox, and don’t miss out on news from the teams, a list of what we’re reading and information on ways to take action.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Read More Stories

flag flies over building in sunlight

Fragile peace

Earlier this year, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party – the PKK – announced it would disband, bringing to a close a decades-long armed struggle against the

Welcome to Checkpoint 160

In August, CPT Reservist Maggie Hindley returned to Al Khalil/Hebron after a few years. She reunited with those she’d met before, and reflects on the changes in their daily lives after two years of war in Gaza.

A damaged house

A cold peace: a ceasefire without demobilization

Seven months on from the PKK’s unilateral ceasefire, bombardments and attacks by the Turkish Armed Forces in Iraqi Kurdistan seem to have ceased. But the increasing military presence by both actors makes the situation appear fragile.

Skip to content