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B. Participation in the work of the Committee<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
15.\t<\/span>As in previous years, the Committee reconfirmed that all States Members of the United Nations and Permanent Observers to the United Nations desiring to participate in the work of the Committee as observers were welcome to do so. Accordingly, in a letter dated 15 March 1993, the Chairman of the Committee so informed the Secretary-General, who subsequently transmitted the letter, on 26 March 1993, to the States Members of the United Nations and members of the specialized agencies, and to intergovernmental organizations. In accordance with established practice, the Committee also invited Palestine, represented by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), to participate in the work of the Committee as an observer, to attend all its meetings and to make observations and proposals for consideration by the Committee.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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16.\t<\/span>In 1993, the Committee again welcomed as observers all the States and organizations that had participated in its work in the preceding year. 6<\/u>\/<\/p><\/div>\n\n
C. Re-establishment of the Working Group<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
17.\t<\/span>At its 195th meeting, the Committee re-established its Working Group in order to assist in the preparation and expedition of the work of the Committee, on the understanding that any Committee member or observer could participate in its deliberations. 7<\/u>\/ The Working Group was constituted as before under the chairmanship of Mr. Victor Camilleri and later Mr. Joseph Cassar. Mrs. Mitra Visisht (India) was elected Vice-Chairman of the Working Group.<\/p><\/div>\n\n
IV. ACTION TAKEN BY THE COMMITTEE<\/p><\/div>\n
<\/p>\n
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A. Action taken in accordance with General Assembly<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
resolution 47\/64 A<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n
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1. Review of the situation relating to the question of Palestine<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
and efforts to implement the recommendations of the Committee<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
18.\t<\/span>In accordance with its mandate, the Committee continued to keep under review the situation relating to the question of Palestine and to exert all efforts to promote the implementation of its recommendations as repeatedly endorsed by the General Assembly.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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19.\t<\/span>In response to urgent developments affecting the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, the Chairman of the Committee, on a number of occasions, brought such developments to the attention of the Secretary-General and the President of the Security Council, urging appropriate action in keeping with United Nations resolutions (see paras. 32-38 below).<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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20.\t<\/span>Assisted by the Division for Palestinian Rights, the Committee continued to monitor the situation in the occupied Palestinian territory, including Jerusalem, through the media, the reports of United Nations organs and organizations, as well as through information collected by Governments, non-governmental organizations, individual experts from Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory who participated in meetings held under the auspices of the Committee and other sources.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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21.\t<\/span>The Committee noted with serious concern that the situation in the occupied Palestinian territory, including Jerusalem, which had been previously reported as grave and volatile, continued to deteriorate alarmingly during the period under review. The reports reaching the Committee left no doubt that the continuation of the occupation, buttressed by armed force, increasingly endangered the very fabric of the Palestinian society and of its livelihood, and resulted in grave human rights violations. In that regard, the Committee welcomed the appointment by the Commission on Human Rights of a Special Rapporteur mandated to investigate Israel's violations of the principles and bases of international law, international humanitarian law and the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949, in the occupied Palestinian territory.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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22.\t<\/span>Reports reaching the Committee detailed the continuation in the reporting period of harsh repressive measures by the occupation forces and armed settlers, despite the hopes initially engendered by the continuation of the peace process and the election of a new Government in Israel in 1992. The Committee was greatly concerned that the number of Palestinians killed through actions of the armed forces or their agents had risen sharply in the year under review, following attacks in which Israelis had been killed. Since the beginning of the intifadah<\/u> the total number of Palestinian casualties by shooting, beating or tear gas had risen to 1,240 by August 1993, and the total number injured to an estimated 130,000. Approximately one fourth of the fatalities continued to be children under 16.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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23.\t<\/span>The Committee also noted with concern that approximately 14,000 Palestinian political prisoners were still being held in Israeli prisons and detention camps, many of them in administrative detention without having been brought to trial. There continued to be reports of inhuman conditions in the jails and mistreatment of prisoners, including beatings and torture. The Committee noted with alarm that 14 Palestinians had died in custody since the beginning of the intifadah<\/u>, six of them in Gaza Central Prison.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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24.\t<\/span>The Committee noted reports that in the period under review there had been an intensification of the previous Government's campaign to pursue persons declared as "wanted" by the authorities, primarily through increased harassment of their families; an increased use of large-scale military operations which utilize excessive force; the use of Military Order No. 1076, issued in April 1992, which permits a seven-year prison term without trial for failure to respond to a summons; and the widespread use of undercover units which have engaged in extra-judicial killings. Military assaults against the homes of fugitives, using large-calibre machine-gun ammunition, anti-tank missiles and dynamite took place in February and April 1993 in the Gaza Strip, rendering hundreds of Palestinians homeless. The Committee deplored the fact that in early October 1993, after the signing of the Declaration of Principles, another similar attack took place, in which the homes of another 18 families in the Gaza Strip were destroyed. Human rights organizations reported that from the beginning of the intifadah<\/u> to August 1993, over 2,400 homes had been demolished or sealed, over 166,000 trees uprooted, and curfews had been imposed in over 12,000 instances.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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25.\t<\/span>The Committee has been extremely concerned by the deportation, on 17 December 1992, of over 400 Palestinian civilians from the occupied Palestinian territory, including Jerusalem. In a statement adopted on 21 January 1993, the Committee strongly condemned this action by the occupying Power as contrary to the Fourth Geneva Convention and numerous Security Council resolutions. Having taken note of the fact that the Israeli Government allowed some of the deportees to return to their homes, the Committee remains of the view that Israel has yet to implement Security Council resolution <\/span>799 (1992)<\/a> in its entirety.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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26.\t<\/span>The Committee was also alarmed by the fact that in July 1993 the persistent Israeli air, navy and ground artillery assaults against vast areas in Lebanon caused the displacement of and high number of casualties and suffering among the Palestinians living in refugee camps of Beddawi and Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon, and Ein el-Hilweh, Mieh Mieh and Rashidieh in southern Lebanon.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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27.\t<\/span>The Committee noted that the settlement activity in the occupied Palestinian territory, including Jerusalem, had continued. In an important policy change, the Government had made an effort to prioritize settlement objectives with respect to some areas in the occupied territory. Construction in the critical region of Greater Jerusalem, however, proceeded apace, with ambitious plans considered by the Government to link the city centre with the southern bloc of settlements. It was reported that among those plans is the completion of construction of the Jerusalem-Efrat highway, an estimated $42 million project, intended to link the Jerusalem suburb of Gilo with the Etzion bloc of settlements and benefit the economic development of the so-called "bedroom suburbs" of Jerusalem. In this regard, the Committee reaffirmed that the settlement policies and practices of the occupying Power are in violation of article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention and resolutions of the Security Council, which have declared the settlements illegal and have called for an end to such activities.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n
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28.\t<\/span>Further, the Committee noted with concern that the closure, in March 1993, of the West Bank, including Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip had a particularly negative effect on the Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, who became almost totally isolated and deprived of any freedom of movement. This measure has also divided the occupied Palestinian territory into four parts, separating the southern and northern parts of the West Bank and isolating the Gaza Strip and Jerusalem. In some areas, road blocks have created enclaves, depriving the Palestinians living in them of access to their families, places of work, schools, medical care facilities, places of worship in Jerusalem and utility services.<\/p><\/div>\n