Israel: Lift ‘ludicrous’ restrictions on whistleblower Vanunu decade after release
Mordechai Vanunu has been sent an invitation to speak to members of the United Kingdom’s Houses of Parliament. See it below and ask your MP to sign it. And see our posting earlier this month Whistle-blowers for peace and sign the petition there as well.
Amnestly International published this update on the case on 16 April 2014:
Ten years after serving a full sentence for his revelations to the press about Israel’s nuclear weapons programme, Mordechai Vanunu still faces severe restrictions that arbitrarily infringe on his freedom of movement, expression and association, said Amnesty International.
The former nuclear technician served an 18-year-prison sentence, the first 11 years of which were in solitary confinement, for disclosing information to journalists about Israel’s nuclear arsenal during the 1980s.
Since his release in 2004, renewable military orders, have placed Mordechai Vanunu under police supervision. Among other things, he is banned from leaving the country and participating in internet chats. He must also seek permission to communicate with any foreign nationals, including journalists.
“The authorities’ continued punishment of Mordechai Vanunu appears to be purely vindictive. The government’s arguments that these severe restrictions are necessary for national security are ludicrous,” said Avner Gidron, Senior Policy Adviser at Amnesty International.
Israeli officials claim that restricting Mordechai Vanunu’s freedom is necessary to prevent him from divulging further secrets about Israel’s nuclear programme. He has, however, repeatedly stated that he revealed all he knew about Israel’s nuclear arsenal in 1986 and that he has no further information. He and his lawyers have also pointed out that the information he had at the time of his imprisonment has now long been in the public domain and is about 30 years out of date.
“The restrictions on Mordechai Vanunu are arbitrary, unnecessary and have no grounds in international law. The continuing restrictions on his liberty have placed a severe strain on his mental and physical health and should immediately be lifted,” said Avner Gidron.
Amnesty International is calling on the Israeli authorities to allow Mordechai Vanunu to leave the country if he wishes, and to allow him to exercise his rights to freedom of movement, association and expression while in Israel.
Last December, following an appeal by his lawyer, the High Court of Justice upheld the restrictions imposed by the Ministry of Interior on Mordechai Vanunu, which prevent him from leaving Israel, and ban him from entering a consulate or embassy or coming with 500 meters of international borders, border passages, harbours or airports. And they upheld the requirement that he seek permission before contacting foreign nationals. The current restrictions, which are due for renewal in May 2014, should be lifted immediately.
Mordechai Vanunu is a former technician at Israel’s nuclear plant near the southern town of Dimona. He revealed details of the country’s nuclear arsenal to the British newspaper, The Sunday Times, in 1986. He was abducted by Israeli secret service (Mossad) agents in Italy on 30 September 1986 and secretly taken to Israel. He was tried and sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment.
In May 2010 he was imprisoned for a second time following his release, for three months, after being convicted of breaching his restrictions by speaking to foreigners and attempting to attend Christmas Mass in Bethlehem. Amnesty International adopted him as a prisoner of conscience. He was held for 11 weeks under harsh conditions in solitary confinement in Ayalon Prison near Ramle in central Israel, in a special unit for dangerous prisoners and was able to leave his cell for only one hour every day. The prison authorities said they decided to place him there in order to protect him from attacks from other inmates.
The restrictions he has been subjected to since 2004 are not parole restrictions since Mordechai Vanunu served his full sentence. They are arbitrary and contrary to Israel’s obligations under international law, particularly the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which prohibits arbitrary interference in the rights to freedom of movement, freedom of expression and freedom of association and protects individuals from being punished again for the same offence.
Mordechai Vanunu had been previously held by Israel in solitary confinement for 11 years from 1986 in conditions that Amnesty International at the time called cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.
Dear fellow British subjects. You have MPs. For once, MPs can do something useful. (In a limited way.)
You have heard of Mordechai Vanunu. He was the Israeli anti-nuclear whistleblower. Israel released him from prison after he served his full 18-year sentence (11 of which in solitary), for the “treason” of revealing to the press solid evidence that Israel’s nuclear “research” was in fact building a nuclear arsenal. Anyway. That was 28 years ago. Now, he is still under severe restrictions which prevent him, among many other things, from leaving Israel, which he wished to do. His rights to freedom of expression, association and movement are violated.
British MPs are inviting him to speak in the UK Parliament in June 2014. The invitation will serve to put pressure on Israel to lift the travel ban, and at the very least will attract media attention to it. For the invitation to be powerful, it needs to be supported by a cross-party number of MPs. Check if yours has signed it, and if not, it might just be that s/he hasn’t heard that it is circulating for signatures. Please inform them of it and ask them to sign as this could really make a difference.
Mordechai Vanunu could actually get out, finally, and start his life again.
Contact details for your MP here or here.
Yours,
Nancy Hawker
This is the text of the invitation:
To Mordechai Vanunu
April 2014
Invitation to speak to members of the United Kingdom’s Houses of Parliament
To mark the tenth anniversary of Mr Mordechai Vanunu’s release from prison and the imposition of restrictions on his freedom, it gives us great pleasure to invite Mr Vanunu to the UK to meet with Members of both Houses of Parliament.
The signatories of this letter are from all political parties, representing hundreds of thousands of British constituents, and would be honoured to receive Mr Vanunu to speak about his experience as an anti-nuclear whistle-blower.
On 5 October 1986 the Sunday Times published his report on nuclear weapons that he deemed to be harmful to humanity. As a result, Mr Vanunu was arrested and subsequently tried in Israel, where he served an 18 year sentence, 11 of those years being spent in solitary confinement.
The treatment of Mr Vanunu while in custody raised concerns which were voiced in both houses of the British parliament. Since his release, the restrictions placed on Mr Vanunu curtailing his freedom of movement, expression, and assembly have been the subject of Early Day Motions and Parliamentary Questions in the House of Commons.
We trust that Mr Vanunu will be able to accept this invitation and look forward to welcoming him as guest and speaker in June 2014.
Signatories:
Peter Bottomley
Jeremy Corbyn
Jonathan Edwards
Grahame Morris
Chris Williamson
John McDonnell
Mike Wood
Kelvin Hopkins
Linda Riordan
Sandra Osborne
Glenda Jackson
Nik Dakin
Mark Durkin
Ian Lavery
Yasmin Quereshi
Paul Flynn
Martin Caton
Lord Judd
Dale Campbell Savours
Ann Clwyd
Diane Abbott
Caroline Lucas
Martin Horwood
Elfyn Llwyd
Roger Godsiff
R Burden
K Hoey
Andy Slaughter
Crispin Blunt
Andrew George
Jack Straw
Baroness Jenny Tongue