In the early hours of last Thursday, Palestinian security services arrested Nizar Banat.
Two hours after his arrest, Banat was dead.
Banat was an outspoken political activist and critic of the Palestinian Authority (PA). He was also a candidate on the Freedom and Dignity List for the Palestinian Legislative Council elections by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in May. His body bore the signs of. Banat is survived by his wife and four children.
The PA ratified the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment in 2014. Seven years later, and as the past week has demonstrated, the PA has not committed to ending and ill-treatment.
Banat's murder is just the latest and most brutal action by the Palestinian security services that have attempted to silence political criticism after the elections and Israel's attack on Gaza in May. At recent West Bank protests with Banat, Palestinian security services harassed and dispersed demonstrators in a show of force the UN described as 'worrying'.
After Israel agreed to a ceasefire with Hamas on May 21, the Israeli military launched across the occupied West Bank, including members. The Palestinian security services did not intervene, and likely coordinated with their Israeli counterparts in the arrests.
In Jerusalem's Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan neighbourhoods, Israeli settlers have continued to harass the Palestinian families facing eviction. In addition, outspoken activists in both neighbourhoods, Mohammed and Muna al-Kurd, Zuheir al-Rajabi, and Iyad Abu Snineh, as well as Al Jazeera correspondents . Although they were released, these were obvious cases of police harassment and intimidation. Inside Israel, the police 1,500 Palestinian citizens of Israel.
The PA and the Fatah movement, both led by Mahmoud Abbas, have attempted to counter after the ceasefire was reached. Palestinian security services conducted their of Palestinians criticising the PA's inaction over Gaza, Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan, as well as the cancelled elections.
are based on a state of emergency declared by Abbas in a on 5 March, 2020 related to the Covid-19 pandemic. Even though human rights organisations have that Abbas stop extending the state of emergency, the practice continues.
Among those and released by the PA was activist Issa Amro. A few weeks ago, Amro was one of several Palestinian civil society leaders who met with the US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken in the West Bank. Amro has been an outspoken activist against the Israeli occupation and a critic of the PA's corruption and collaboration with Israel. He has been by Israel and the PA for his activism.
Like Amro, Banat was previously a target of PA harassment. Before he was killed, Banat a deal between the PA and Israel to distribute one million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine to Palestinians in the West Bank. The deal after it was determined that the doses Israel was providing at the end of June.
One of the key figures in the vaccine deal was Hussein al-Sheikh. In his role as head of the PA's General Authority of Civil Affairs, al-Sheikh is responsible for coordinating with Israel. Banat al-Sheikh on social media and it likely contributed to his arrest.
Banat is the most recent and prominent Palestinian subjected to arrest and torture by the Palestinian security services, but he is by no means not the first. Since the 1993 Oslo Accords and the creation of the PA and its security services, there have been of abuse, torture, murder, human rights violations, and corruption.
A by Lawyers for Justice, a Palestinian non-governmental organisation, a few days before Banat's death detailed the PA's manipulation of the March 2020 state of emergency edict for the Covid-19 pandemic to violate the rule of law.
The security services account for nearly 20 percent of the PA's budget which amounts to its . Unlike other PA employees, security salaries are paid in full.
In 2018, President Trump cut funding to the PA in order to pressure Abbas into accepting his "Deal of the Century." But the lack of funding did not prevent continued abuses by the security services. With US funding restored by President Joe Biden and Abbas desperate to remain in power, the security services have been unleashed to preserve the status quo.
The US State Department has it was "deeply disturbed" by Banat's death. Similarly, the EU mission in Palestine has expressed its shock. Both the State Department and have called for an investigation into the matter. But as with their empty criticisms of Israel, it is unlikely these statements will lead to any substantive change. After all, they all but supported Abbas's cancelling of elections in order to prevent a Hamas victory. As they fund the PA's security services and endorse Abbas's authoritarian policies, they share the blame for Banat's murder as they do for the persistence of Israel's occupation.
Another likely successor to Abbas, and competitor to al-Sheikh, is Majed Faraj, the Palestinian intelligence chief.
Faraj maintains ties to the intelligence services of the US, Egypt, the Arab Gulf states, and Israel. Even after Abbas publicly claimed he was no longer speaking to the Trump administration, Faraj was involved with direct talks with US and Israeli intelligence.
Last week, he was in for discussions on keeping the West Bank calm after the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel. This will likely mean the use of more and critics, not less.
For over 27 years, the PA's security services have relied on the same tools as the Israelis to maintain power. Like Israel, they deny the basic rights of the Palestinian people. From muzzling opposition, to cancelling and manipulating elections, to torture and assassination, it is becoming difficult to distinguish one oppressor from another.
Dalal Yassine is a Non-Resident Fellow with the Jerusalem Fund/Palestine Center in Washington, DC.
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The views in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Jerusalem Fund and Palestine Center.
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