Title: PHR-I Praesentation
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2Physicians for Human Rights-Israel
- Physicians for Human Rights-Israel
(PHR-Israel) was founded in 1988 with the aim of
striving to promote medical human rights in
Israel and in the territories under its effective
control. The basic values of PHR-Israel are human
dignity, protection of bodily and mental
integrity, and promotion of the right to health
and medical care. - These values guide the association's activities
and campaigns. We believe that it is our duty to
be fully informed of human rights violations, to
disseminate this information and to struggle
against such violations and for the right to
health, for individuals and for the community.
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4Major Projects
- Occupied Territories
- Migrant Workers (Foreign Workers)
- Prisoners and Detainees
- Right to Health of Residents of Israel
- Unrecognized Bedouin Negev Villages
5Occupied Territories
- Since 1967 the Palestinian population in the Gaza
Strip, West Bank and East Jerusalem has lived
under Israeli occupation. The State of Israel, as
the occupying power, is obligated to respect,
protect and realize the right to health for all
residents of the Occupied Territories.
6Restrictions on Freedom of Movement
7Closure, Curfew, Blockade, Roadblock
8Ramifications
- Red Crescent ambulances evacuate only 30 of the
patients directly from their homes. The rest are
required to reach the roadblocks on their own. - Until September 2000 95 of women gave birth in
hospitals. - Since September 2000 50 of women give birth in
hospitals. - Since September 2000 a rise of 500 in the
number of stillbirths in the rural regions.
9Attacks on Ambulances
Red Crescent ambulance in Jenin which was shot in
April 2002. As a result of the shooting Dr.
Sliman Khalil, Director of the Palestine Red
Crescent Society in Jenin, was killed.
10Physicians for Human Rights-Israel Protest,
Tel-Aviv
11The Mobile Clinic
12Goals
- Primary care to patients who cannot access
medical care. - Exposing the situation to the medical team,
thereby passing on the information to the Israeli
public. Re-humanization of Palestinian society in
the eyes of the Israeli public. - A gesture of solidarity with the Palestinian
population. - Cooperation between Israeli and Palestinian
physicians. - Protest against the government's policies of
closure and occupation. - Resistance to the governments attempts to lock
Israeli human rights activists out of the
Occupied Territories. - Use of the information gathered during mobile
clinics for advocacy and campaigns.
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14Migrant Workers
15Overview
- In 21st-century Israel, hundreds of thousands of
people live without rights and without access to
the Israeli public healthcare system. This
includes migrant children and adults, with or
without work permits, women trapped in the sex
industry, asylum seekers, refugees and others.
All arrived in Israel mainly in order to find a
livelihood, and some have lived in Israel for
many years, gradually becoming part of Israeli
society and economy.
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17Refugees and Asylum Seekers
- In 2001, when the world celebrated the jubilee of
the signing of the Refugees Convention, Israel
began to take the first steps towards
implementing the convention. Israel has done
very little over the years to protect migrant
people who were persecuted because of their race,
religion, nationality or political stand. For
years, Israel refrained from establishing a
system for recognition of refugees. As a result,
many remained stateless for extended periods.
Many came to PHR-Israel requesting medical
treatment, with a background of extreme distress
and severe human rights violations.
18The Open Clinic
- The Open Clinic was founded in 1998, with the
goal of offering primary and secondary medical
care to migrant workers. It is run by volunteers,
and opens 3 evenings a week for general care, one
evening for gynecology, and one morning for
pediatrics. Since the clinic was founded, over
10,000 patient files have been opened.
19Prisoners and Detainees
20- The State of Israel holds thousands of people in
custody. These prisoners and detainees are held
by the police, army or Prisons Service, who are
responsible for their welfare. The fact that
these people's freedom has been taken from them
cannot justify denial of their right to receive
adequate medical care and decent living
conditions.
21Main Problems
- Numerous cases of medical neglect isolation of
prisoners for extended periods holding mentally
ill patients in regular jailing facilities
overcrowding poor sanitation conditions
shackling of sick prisoners to hospital beds
torture during interrogations.
22Doctors' Participation in Torture of Palestinian
Detainees under Interrogation
23Police Detention Center Inspections
- For the past 6 years, Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel has been visiting and inspecting
police detention centers. These visits lead to
identification and publicizing of fundamental
problems, and ultimately to improvements. The
Israel Prisons Service and the IDF do not allow
independent inspections of their facilities.
24Health Rights of Residents of Israel
25- The National Health Insurance law, passed in
1994, was intended to guarantee equal health
services for all. Despite good intentions, the
law and its implementation suffer from several
faults many services are not included in the
free range of services provided under the law
(e.g., in-patient nursing care, mental
healthcare, dental care) The range of services
is being eroded since the Finance Ministry
prevents updates and does not transfer all
payments to the HMOs private healthcare has
crept into the public and state medical
institutions.
26Hotline
- Physicians for Human Rights-Israel and the Adva
Center for Social Justice run a joint hotline to
handle applications from residents insured by the
National Health Insurance law. The hotline
responds to questions regarding a range of issues
and problems relating to rights under the law
and to the definition of the law.
27- Palestinians citizens of Israel suffer from
ongoing systematic discrimination, expressed,
inter alia, by the level and scope of medical
services that are available, or not available, in
Arab communities, e.g., a lack of national EMS
centers and various language-related medical
services (mental health, speech therapy)
discrimination regarding budgets allotted to
hospitals in Nazareth, and more.
28Unrecognized Bedouin Villages in the Negev
29- Even prior to the State of Israel there were many
Bedouin villages in the Negev desert in the south
of Israel. Today, there are 46 villages which are
not "recognized" by the State, and they are home
to about 76,000 people - all citizens of Israel.
This "un-recognition" leads to a lack of
infrastructure and basic services (such as
connections to the electricity and water
networks, sewage systems and waste disposal)
leading to health hazards and infectious disease
as well as a lack of proper access routes to
the villages, limited emergency services, and
substandard primary healthcare facilities.
30www.phr.org.il