• 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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    -18 months ago

    Nobody is trading them for anything stop calling them hostages. Call them detainees. As usual the claim you’ve made against Israel is wildly exaggerated.

    They couldn’t play nice in the neighborhood without helping trying to blow anything up so they don’t get to play outside with their friends.

    My highschool had more students than Israel has administrative detainees. For some years, my middle school even had more. Seems about right. Hamas is (was) 20,000~ strong, obviously they enjoy massive public support and aid.

    There’s more important considerations than 3,600 detainees. Most of them are very temporary, based on levels of suspicion and probable cause, on emerging intelligence and progressing investigation. Do you really think most of them aren’t accomplices or coconspirators? Some of them are going to be hopeless cases who will probably never see the sun again. Oh no, how will I sleep at night?! Easily and restfully. What keeps me up is the thought that so many of my compatriots in the West have been force fed these wild exaggerations, day in, day out, since day one, and that because the news got too sad for too many, the world will sit back and let Iran park a proxy state owned by terrorists right on Israel’s border. Not going to happen though, so, zzzzz.

    • @OccamsTeapot
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      38 months ago

      Nobody is trading them for anything stop calling them hostages. Call them detainees. As usual the claim you’ve made against Israel is wildly exaggerated.

      We can break down the terminology issue.

      We have people who are not charged with any crime (ie innocent), who are taken against their will and held in captivity until their captor either decides to let them go or somebody breaks them out.

      We could call it anything we want. “Innocent people held by someone/an organisation against their will.” Both the Israelis taken on October 7th and the Palestinians held without charge are “Innocent people held by someone/an organisation against their will.” The same thing has happened to them.

      So do we call them all hostages or all detainees?

      They couldn’t play nice in the neighborhood without helping trying to blow anything up so they don’t get to play outside with their friends.

      You’re a lawyer, right? Is this a fair description of someone who is not charged with a crime?

      • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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        08 months ago

        That’s an insightful, direct question. Truly appreciate it.

        We’re speaking of people held without charge under administrative detention. It falls short of rote internment only by the fact that it’s intended to and generally is reasonably temporary. Read your own article. It’s like a revolving door.

        There is no fairly analogous type of criminal detention. The closest is custodial arrest, but that’s way more temporary in scope; charges are either filed or not in western criminal procedure usually within hours, commonly known as “48-hour hold,” with a process for a longer hold if there’s a component of irreparable harm, that’s commonly known as a “72-hour” hole. After charge, the accused have a right, at least where I am, to a probable cause and bail hearing, and maybe to post bond, and then the accused is released pending trial.

        These folks aren’t accused, they are suspects albeit still being investigated, but there’s enough suspicion to justify holding them longer than what would be typical in the usual criminal setting, i.e., a 72 hour hold, given the potential for irreparable harm if the suspect gets released without charges and goes back to the suspected criminal enterprise, which in this case is international terrorism, hostage taking, rocket attacks, and mass shooting. Most of them though aren’t being wrongfully detained. It really sucks. As someone who very early did a 180 on a career of prosecuting cases, and have since only ever defended the accused, I hate what this administrative detention means to well-founded, hard-won notions of fairness and justice. But it doesn’t break humanity. I know there’s no justice for those wrongly caught up in it. That doesn’t make it unjustified.

        My state pays wrongful incarcerees restitution by a statutory formula; locking up innocent people is inevitable, so we account for it. If Gaza had diplomatic status and would get out from under the utter tyranny of Hamas, nice things like that could exist, instead of just surviving on charity. I believe the good will of the western world will endeavor to indemnify the inevitable victims of such inherent unfairness. Not going to negotiate with terrorists on it, that’s for sure. When a state collapses after all its institutions are coopted by violent extremists and criminals, this is roughly what reconstruction looks like, right? It’s scène à faire. We both agree it’s offensive to behold.

        I’m rooting for democracy.

        PayWall WaPo: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/05/01/israel-gaza-detainees-high-court/

        Archived at https://archive.ph/txOw5

        Paragraph three is what I’m citing for the proposition that Israel is redeemable. Their government has a Supreme Court and in it exists a right of habeas corpus. The detainees you are talking about are, in a significant way, having their day in court right now. Even the detainees at Gitmo, except maybe one or two stateless souls no-one will take, got their day via habeas corpus.

        • @OccamsTeapot
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          18 months ago

          We’re speaking of people held without charge under administrative detention. It falls short of rote internment only by the fact that it’s intended to and generally is reasonably temporary. Read your own article. It’s like a revolving door.

          Yeah I did read it. It’s often for longer than 6 months and even longer than a year, I even saved this graph to show you…

          Since 2017 there has generally been 200+ in for longer than 6 months, sometimes much more. Each order lasts up to 6 months so it’s not so short, in fact Hamas’ hostages released in the cease fire a while back had been there much less time. I don’t think that makes it OK in either case. Like the hostages still there now are like the Palestinians who’ve had their detention extended once.

          These folks aren’t accused, they are suspects albeit still being investigated, but there’s enough suspicion to justify holding them longer than what would be typical in the usual criminal setting

          Except this evidence isn’t shared so how do we know this? Imo if there’s no charge and you hold someone for a long time (over 48 hour seems reasonable) then these people are simply hostages. Like if Hamas said that the current hostages are suspected of aiding the IDF in “criminal” activity and provided no details would that be acceptable to you? It would not be to me.

          I hate what this administrative detention means to well-founded, hard-won notions of fairness and justice

          Absolutely, as everyone should.

          I know there’s no justice for those wrongly caught up in it. That doesn’t make it unjustified.

          I mean by definition it kind of does make it unjustified. Nobody, Israel and Hamas both included, has the right to keep people captive without charge. An opaque military justice system and evidence-free accusations don’t make what Israel is doing in any way justified.

          Paragraph three is what I’m citing for the proposition that Israel is redeemable. Their government has a Supreme Court and in it exists a right of habeas corpus.

          Absolutely it is redeemable if it releases the “Innocent people held against their will” immediately and gives restitution as you said. Until that day this is functionally identical to what Hamas did, imo.

          Interesting article, thanks for sharing! Whst happens to these people disgusts me, truly.