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New bill aims to toughen maximum penalty for ‎terrorists

by  Gideon Allon
Published on  05-24-2018 00:00
Last modified: 05-24-2018 00:00
New bill aims to toughen maximum penalty for ‎terrorists

A new bill aims to toughen the maximum sentence courts can hand down to terrorists

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A new legislative proposal seeks to toughen the ‎maximum sentences the courts are permitted to impose on ‎‎terrorists convicted of murder or ‎attempted murder by lifting the maximum restriction in such cases.

Under Israeli law, the crime of attempted murder is ‎punishable by a sentence of up to 20 years in ‎criminal cases and up to 25 years in terrorism-related ‎cases. While the sentencing policy of criminal courts in ‎Israel allows the courts, in exceptionally egregious cases, ‎to extend the maximum penalty under the law and ‎even double it, this does not apply to terrorism ‎cases. ‎

This means that, for example, a terrorist who was ‎convicted of attempted murder could be sentenced to ‎‎20 or 25 years in prison, but the court is barred from giving a sentence of 40 years, regardless of ‎the severity of the crime. ‎

The same applies to terrorists convicted of murder, ‎a crime for which the maximum sentence is 30 years. In Israel, a life sentence is 30 years.

Likud MK Amir Ohana, who sponsored the bill as an ‎amendment to Israel's Counterterrorism Law, said Wednesday that the move was inspired ‎by a 2017 attack on Niv Gil Nehemiah, who was ‎critically wounded when he was stabbed multiple ‎times by a Palestinian teenager in a supermarket in ‎the central Israeli city of Yavne.‎

The terrorist, 19-year old Ismail Ibrahim Ismail Abu ‎Aram from the West Bank town of Yatta, near Hebron, ‎was indicted for attempted murder and if convicted, could face up to 25 years in jail. ‎

The case, Ohana said, "Highlighted the limitations ‎of the Counterterrorism Law, which states that the ‎most serious crimes, such as murder and attempted ‎murder, are punishable by a penalty that is almost identical to the penalty that can be ‎imposed in ordinary criminal cases."‎

‎"The war on terror requires more powerful ‎instruments," he continued. "The current situation is absurd, which ‎is why I am promoting this bill. This is an ‎important amendment designed to expand the toolbox ‎available to Israel in the war on ‎terror."

Nehemiah's attorney, Yossi Ezra, welcomed the ‎initiative, saying, "The current situation is absurd ‎and the legislator should rectify it and facilitate ‎a real war on terror."

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