Please Wait...

Loyal to the Pledge

Palestinians Groups Warn of Knesset ‘Execution Bill’ Escalation

Palestinians Groups Warn of Knesset ‘Execution Bill’ Escalation
folder_openPalestine access_time 2 days ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

The Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoners' Society [PPS] warned that the "Israeli" Knesset's advancement of an execution bill marks a dangerous escalation in the occupation's crimes against Palestinian detainees.

In a joint statement, the two institutions condemned the so-called "National Security Committee's" approval of the draft “legislation”, which now heads for a first reading. 

They said the move was no surprise given the unprecedented brutality of the occupation since the genocidal war on Gaza began.

The statement noted that for decades, the occupation has pursued "slow execution" policies inside prisons, depriving detainees of medical care and basic rights. These measures, it said, have intensified since October 2023, making this period the deadliest in the history of the Palestinian Captive Movement.

Recent data show the scale of these violations. As of September 2025, over 11,100 Palestinians are held in official prison facilities, the highest number since the Second Intifada. This excludes thousands more in military camps and detention centers. Since October 2023, "Israel" has detained more than 19,000 Palestinians from the West Bank and Al-Quds, including women and children, while around 15,000 have been arrested in Gaza.

Human rights groups have documented widespread torture, including beatings, waterboarding, sexual violence, and deliberate starvation. At least 77 Palestinians have lost their lives in custody between October 2023 and August 2025, many due to medical neglect and abuse.

The statement stressed that despite international law banning the death penalty, the occupation seeks to codify it, treating itself as above accountability. Dozens of detainees have already been martyred since the war, and the new law seeks to entrench this reality.

The death penalty proposal is not new. Far-right Police Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir revived it in 2022, and the Knesset approved a preliminary reading in 2023. The “legislation”, part of coalition agreements with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “Likud” party, would impose capital punishment on Palestinians "convicted" of killing "Israelis", even in cases labeled as negligence.

The institutions warned that this draft “law” adds to a repressive legal system targeting Palestinians for decades, with detainees suffering the harshest impact. They described it as a further attempt to provide a false “legal” cover for what is already a systematic policy of extrajudicial execution.