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by Bassam Tawil • October 30,
2018 at 5:00 am
- While
Hamas has been violating international laws by denying visits
or any communication with the Israelis it holds captive,
Palestinian terrorists in Israeli prisons continue to enjoy
basic rights, including meeting with an attorney, receiving
medical treatment, religious rights, basic living conditions
(such as hot water, showers and sanitation), proper
ventilation and electric infrastructure.
- The
families of the Palestinian terrorists held in Israeli prisons
know where their sons are. They also know that their sons
receive proper medical treatment and while away their days
reading, exercising and watching TV. But the Israelis held by
Hamas can only dream of seeing daylight as they languish in
captivity.
- The
proposed Israeli law is a temporary measure, aimed at forcing
Hamas to release information about the Israelis held in the
Gaza Strip. There would be no need for the law were Hamas
prepared to honor international and humanitarian conventions
and allow visits by the Red Cross and other international agencies
to the Israelis it is holding.

While
Hamas has been violating international laws by denying visits or
any communication with the Israelis it holds captive, Palestinian
terrorists in Israeli prisons continue to enjoy many rights,
including family visitations. Pictured: Masked Palestinian
terrorists in Kalandia, near Jerusalem. (Photo by Ilia
Yefimovich/Getty Images)
Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist group that rules
the Gaza Strip, does not like a bill making its way through
Israel's Knesset that would prevent visits by family members of
terrorists in Israeli prisons. The bill, sponsored by MK Oren Hazan
(Likud), would prevent such visits to terrorists who are members of
groups that hold Israeli prisoners and deny them visits.
"Because Israel is an advanced democracy
committed to human rights conventions to which the terrorist
organizations are not committed, an intolerable situation results.
The terrorist organizations, as a strategy, kidnap and hold Israeli
citizens without regard for their conditions and without allowing
them visits, which seriously harms the morale and the national
strength of the State of Israel," the bill's explanatory notes
say.
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