Israel mandates death penalty for Palestinians convicted of deadly attacks
Change
Israel passed a law requiring execution by hanging within 90 days of conviction (postponable up to 180 days) for Palestinians convicted in Israel's military courts of carrying out deadly attacks deemed acts of terrorism.
Why it matters
The law creates a legal presumption that narrows sentencing options in eligible military-court cases, reducing judges' ability to impose non-capital punishments. Defence lawyers and court administrators will face compressed procedural timelines and must adapt to a statutory sentencing framework that accelerates finalisation of eligible cases.
Implications
- — Defense counsel representing Palestinians in Israel's military courts must file appeals and seek statutory postponements promptly to use the 180-day delay window; failure to act risks executions proceeding under the new law.
- — Military prosecutors in Israel's military courts must assemble and present evidence proving the attacker's intent to 'negate the existence of the state of Israel' when seeking the death penalty, because executions are authorised only where that statutory intent threshold is met.
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