Demonstrators gather outside the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) office to protest an Israeli law proposing the death penalty for Palestinian prisoners in Hebron, West Bank, Palestine on April 2, 2026. [Wisam Hashlamoun - Anadolu Agency )
A law can sometimes reveal more than a thousand speeches ever could. Israel’s newly passed ‘Death Penalty for Terrorists’ statute does precisely that. It is not merely a legislative shift; it is a structural declaration about whose life is protected, whose is conditional, and whose is extinguishable.  In the charged aftermath of 7 October 2023, grief and fear have undeniably reshaped Israeli politics. Yet this law, approved by the Knesset in March 2026 by a 62–48 vote, moves beyond the realm of security response and into something far more enduring: the codification of a dual legal order that treats Palestinians not as subjects of law, but as objects of it. The statute mandates hanging as the default punishment for Palestinians […]

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