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    AP Exclusive: Palestinians face steep court fees

    GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Dozens of Palestinians who lost relatives in an Israeli military offensive in Gaza three years ago have been forced to put their compensation claims on hold, saying Israel has placed near-impossible barriers to proceeding with their cases.

    Israeli restrictions prevent Gazans from entering Israel to testify, undergo medical exams or meet with their lawyers. But the biggest obstacle, the victims say, are steep court fees that can reach tens of thousands of dollars.

    "The victim must pay for justice," said Gaza resident Mohammed Abdel-Dayim, whose son and three nephews were killed during a military assault. "Israel should be ashamed."

    Israel says the fees prevent frivolous lawsuits. They say they are imposed on many foreigners — not just Palestinians — because they don't have local assets that the state could seize to cover legal fees and other court costs.

    But Palestinians say the costs are part of a strategy to protect Israeli soldiers. If the fees aren't reduced, lawyers representing Palestinians say they will have to drop most cases.

    Abdel-Dayim is suing Israel over the deaths of four relatives: His son was a volunteer medic who died when Israeli tank fire struck the ambulance he was driving. Three nephews were killed the next day when Israeli shelling struck a mourning tent where the family was grieving.

    An Israeli court asked Abdel-Dayim to post $22,000 in court fees, or just over $5,000 per victim. His annual income is under $6,000.

    About 1,000 Gazans have prepared cases seeking compensation, mostly alleging wrongful deaths during Israel's offensive in the territory, according to their lawyers.

    Some 1,400 Gazans were killed during the three-week Israeli operation, including hundreds of civilians. Israel launched the offensive in December 2008 in response to heavy Palestinian rocket fire. Thirteen Israelis also died in the fighting.

    Israel says Gaza's Hamas rulers are responsible for the civilian casualties, claiming the militant group endangered civilians by firing rockets from near schools and residential areas.

    In civil suits in Israel, the losing party must pay legal fees and court costs of the winning side. Because foreign nationals could bolt without paying, Israeli courts often demand a security deposit. The money is returned to plaintiffs who win their cases.

    The sum of the guarantee is left to individual judges.

    For example, in July, Judge Nehama Munitz of the District Court in the northern city of Nazareth demanded a $5,500 deposit from each of 42 Gazan plaintiffs in a case involving the bombing of the Abdel-Dayim mourning tent, according to legal documents. Mohammed Abdel-Dayim's share was $22,000.

    She said the fees are justified by the expensive and time-consuming investigative process, and dismissed claims of a financial barrier.

    "The plaintiffs did not prove that they are unable to afford the expense of the court guarantee, and/or did not claim this in their brief," she wrote in a court document obtained by The Associated Press.

    Tameem Younis, a lawyer representing the families, is now appealing. If the fees aren't reduced, "we will have to cancel the claims," he said.

    Iyad Alami of the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights, which takes on many cases, said they have raised money for some of the most important petitions, including a planned case where some two dozen members of the Samouni clan were killed after fleeing to what they thought was a safe house.

    Nitzan Eyal, a spokeswoman for Israel's courts system, said the fees are set based on the chances of success.

    "The lower the chances of the claim, the higher the justification for charging the plaintiff a court deposit to ensure the legal expenses of the defendant," she said.

    Israelis, in contrast, typically don't have to pay up front because the courts can put liens on their properties. Likewise, families of victims from friendly nations often don't pay.

    Hussein Abu Hussein, attorney for the American parents of Rachel Corrie, who was killed in Gaza in 2003 when she was run over by a military bulldozer, did not pay a deposit in their civil suit against Israel. He said it was waived because the U.S. and Israel enforce each others' court rulings.

    Israel and the Palestinians have no such understanding.

    Michael Karayanni, a law professor at Israel's Hebrew University, said the legal fees appeared excessive, given the impoverished circumstances of many Gazans. Some 40 percent of Gaza's 1.5 million residents live on less than $2 a day, according to U.N. figures.

    "The Supreme Court has said in one of its judgments that the court needs to be sensitive to the financial abilities of the plaintiff, but I don't think from what I've seen that there is any kind of a serious attempt to have the costs be proportional to the plaintiff's ability," Karayanni said.

    Israelis point out the practice of seeking upfront guarantees is also accepted in Europe. In the Netherlands, for instance, plaintiffs must pay 800 euros to 1,400 euros depending on the size of the claim. But the Dutch system lowers the fee to just 71 euros for indigent or low-income plaintiffs.

    Karayanni said in Israel, only in rare cases have plaintiffs successfully appealed to reduce the fees.

    In general, Israel says the system is fair to Palestinians.

    "The fact that Palestinians who are not citizens of Israel routinely petition Israeli courts demonstrates more than anything else the stature of our courts," said government spokesman Mark Regev.

    In the last two years, Palestinians won about $6 million in damages from the state, according to the Israeli Justice Ministry.

    In August, Israel's Defense Minister settled a case related to the Gaza offensive out of court, paying about $137,000 to the family of a mother and daughter who were shot dead while waving white flags.

    In the Iraq war, by contrast, Iraqis cannot claim civil damages from the U.S. under a 2008 agreement. In Afghanistan, the U.S. offers compensation to citizens when their property is damaged, but it's unclear whether they can claim damages for deaths or injuries caused by the U.S.-led military alliance.

    There are no known cases of Israelis suing in Palestinian Authority courts for damages, said Palestinian spokesman Ghassan Khatib.

    There is hardly any reason to test the system that way: Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, an Israeli lawyer who represents victims of Palestinian violence, said some 150 cases against the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority were pending in Israeli courts.

    The Palestinian government defends itself in these cases, and so far, there have been no rulings against the authority, Darshan-Leitner said.

    She said Israelis had also successfully sued Gaza's rulers, the militant Islamic group Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings. But it has been impossible to recover damages.

    In other cases, Israelis have turned to U.S. courts, either because of joint American citizenship or under "crimes against humanity" laws. The Palestinian Authority has reached settlements in at least two cases, Darshan-Leitner said.

    For most Gazans, just getting to the courtroom is a challenge.

    Under restrictions imposed in 2002 at the height of violence between Palestinians and Israel, Palestinians have 60 days following an incident to file an initial letter of complaint with the Defense Ministry. After that, they have two years to take those claims to court.

    Gazans are allowed into Israel only in rare cases, such as medical emergencies, and the state does not allow video testimony from Gaza, said Israeli attorney Michael Sfard, who frequently represents Palestinians in Israeli courts.

    Israelis are also banned from entering Gaza, which means lawyers cannot meet clients and state doctors cannot give certified medical exams to verify claims.

    The Israeli Arab advocacy group Adalah has filed a petition to allow Gazans entry permits to Israel for their legal proceedings. A court ruling is expected in the next few months."It's impossible to conduct a trial at all under these circumstances," said Sfard.

    ___

    Cheslow reported from Jerusalem. Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Lara Jakes in Baghdad, Deb Riechmann in Kabul and Mike Corder at The Hague also contributed to this report.

     
    • Charles Martel  •  Sacramento, United States  •  3 mths ago
      Hey "Native" I would like to know about your perspectives on the murder of Fogel family, and that Cristian woman, and that Italian guy, and those slotered on freeway....and a school bus....
      Tell us please...
    • pileofshiite  •  Bergenfield, United States  •  3 mths ago
      the 'palestinians' are whining again about being "victims"..they always start an agression, get thei azzes kicked, and then run to the UN shedding tears..typical LIARS..
    • Jamil Baroody  •  3 mths ago
      Native Jewish victims are not even permitted access to Arab courts regardless of fees.
      MIDDLE EAST REAL NATIVES LIBERATION FROM ISLAM AND ARABS ORGANIZATION
    • Ahmed Doggy Style  •  Hialeah, United States  •  3 mths ago
      I would like to know who can the Israelis sue over all the suicide bombings and rocket fire? Is there any justice there, or that's not important?
    • Chloe  •  3 mths ago
      palestinians voted for hamASS who's only goal is to destroy Israel. they voted to live in a war zone, and that's exactly what they got.
    • Marc  •  Brooklyn, United States  •  3 mths ago
      Shekel Trader, Israel didn't "steal" anything from the Arabs to rebuild the ancestral Jewish homeland. Jewish sovereignty over Palestine was limited, by the legal government, to only that area where Jews constituted a supermajority of the population, and even there, non-Jews had property rights, voting rights, and religious freedom; thus, the establishment of Israel took nothing from anybody.

      The Arab response was to wage a war to ethnic-cleanse Palestine of Jews, and even today, when offered a reasonable peace settlement, the Arabs turn it down. They still cling to the myth that Russians, Poles, and Kharzars stole Arab land, although it's been established, beyond a reasonable doubt, that this was simply not the case.
    • Larry  •  Chicago, United States  •  3 mths ago
      @democracy

      Still here spewing your tired slogans and buzzwords. You even have a cute nickname for me (don't worry, I see what you did there.)

      Unfortunately for you, your drivel does not actually constitute an argument. You are simpleton that is incapable of having an intelligent argument with some.

      With people like you on their side, it is no mystery why the Palestinians have achieved so little since the term 'Palestinian' came into vogue following the 1967 Six Day War.
    • Temujin  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  3 mths ago
      i wonder if the plaintiffs yelled at the rocket squads to move away from their neighborhood.....
      or brought them shwarma. these people take NO responsibility for their actions.
    • dan  •  3 mths ago
      and reading yahoo news and other bull on the internet doesnt make you a scholar on Israel and the Middle East so stop talking :)
    • Jamil Baroody  •  3 mths ago
      Arabs foreign to the Middle East are natives of Hejaz, period. Hejaz is a tiny corner of Arabia. 1400 years ago the Middle East was populated by many other native groups. Arabs spread out of insignificant Hejaz, exterminated most native groups, others reduced by 90% or more and settled illegally in their place. Arabs are foreign occupiers in 95% of Middle East.
    • Marc  •  Brooklyn, United States  •  3 mths ago
      Native, at the time of the creation of Israel, private property rights were never an issue. The issue was the Arab refusal to accept the Jewish ancestral connection and the right of Jews to govern themselves in a partition with a supermajority Jewish population.

      The Arabs have turned down all peace offers not because of property issues (money can always take care of that) but rather they want to reserve the right to demographically change Israel to a majority Muslim nation. Even Abbas' proposal to the UN retains the right to demand that Israel allow the 250,000 or so surviving Arabs who fled in 1948, along with their spouses and descendants (up to 5,000,000 people), to settle in Israel and be given citizenship.
    • Not Visibile to Everyone  •  3 mths ago
      Oh, of course - because none of the "Palestinians " ever did ANYTHING that made Israel fire BACK (oops - cant say that - too truthful for Jew-haters to hear that Israel has been constantly attacked - or that even the UN has said, openly, that Israel is NOT responsible for deaths caused by terrorists using women & children as sandbags!! But I digress!)!

      These suits should have been dismissed before they were ever brought - & not just because Israel *warns people when she has to shoot back* - how many other nations do that? NONE! Even the US has sent soldiers to take lessons from the IDF in MINIMIZING civilian casualties because, in non-media-brainwashed circles, she is an acknowledged world leader in that area.
    • pileofshiite  •  Bergenfield, United States  •  3 mths ago
      the arab press (AP) posts the picture of the killed kid..killed by accident...how about the pics of innocent Israeli children, murdered in cold blood by terrorists?
      And, what happened to the arab terrorists who were hiding behind his back in his own house??
      The story is half-truth..which makes it LIES. Typical of the arab press.
    • me  •  3 mths ago
      What did they actually expect when they voted for Hamas, chocolates and flowers in exchange for crude missiles and suicide bombers? Geez, hate Jews all you like, but look at the facts...
    • borrelian  •  3 mths ago
      If Jews fought like arabs then there would be no survivors and no lawsuits.
    • Temujin  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  3 mths ago
      "From 1948 until the early 1970s, 800,000–1,000,000 Jews left, fled, or were expelled from their homes in Arab countries; 260,000 of them reached Israel between 1948 and 1951; and 600,000 by 1972.[1][2][3] Lebanon was the only Arab country to see an increase in its Jewish population after 1948, which was due to an influx of refugees from other Arab countries.[4] However, by the 1970s the Jewish community of Lebanon too dwindled due to hostilities of the Lebanese Civil War. By 2002 Jews from Arab countries and their descendants constituted almost half of Israel's population.[3]".........i wanted to be as fair as possible, and not include the ones that left in fear.
    • Temujin  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  3 mths ago
      i just noticed the Satan avatar........LOL. Sha'atan was an Islamic devil, Mr. Squiggly Line
    • Pook  •  Makkah, Saudi Arabia  •  3 mths ago
      Democracy is a demented mohammedan full of doo.
    • Temujin  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  3 mths ago
      the US too, Native........an oligarchy. sad, but true. but a representative oligarchy, still beats the stuffin' out of Sharia. England, France, Russia......all oligarchies.
    • Temujin  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  3 mths ago
      you are a knuckle-head.......i LUV ya!!!
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