
As we’ve reported, Israel has passed a law which will permit them to execute Palestinian prisoners. In response to this, Katharina Amanda Adler created a petition on the Parliament website. Should this petition hit 100,000 signatures, it will be considered for a debate in Parliament. Currently, it’s fast approaching that target:

You can sign the petition here.
Drop the law
The petition contains the following message:
The UK Government must act urgently to urge the Israeli Government to stop the proposed law which would permit the execution of Palestinian Prisoners, past, present and future.
We believe that such a law would constitute complete violation of the Geneva Convention and International Human Rights Law. UN experts have called for these proposals to be dropped.
We call on the UK Government apply considerable and substantial political pressure and the leverage of its international obligations to prevent the Israeli Government from passing this law.
Novara’s Rivkah Brown highlighted the following:
But what’s interesting about this bill is that it proposes lowering the evidential threshold for prosecution. Read this chilling paragraph (from https://t.co/2S1o0UKwE0) pic.twitter.com/hYgbYee1t8
— Rivkah Brown (@rivkahbrown) April 1, 2026
Now, how did we get to the point where it was acceptable to say that an Israeli court might “deviate from the rules of evidence” when trying 7 October prisoners? Well, military courts have been bending the rules of evidence for some time, hence their 95%+ conviction rate.
But this bill’s evidence-bending has a much more specific context. Since 7 October, pro/Israeli academic and legal groups have been creating a body of literature claiming that 7 October is unlike any other conflict situation, because so much evidence was destroyed.
This, they say, means the rules of evidence should be suspended. But the absence or destruction of forensic evidence is always a problem in conflict situations, not just 7 October. This is Jewish-Israeli exceptionalism extended into the legal sphere.
Israeli politicians celebrated the passing of the law in the most obscene fashion imaginable:
BREAKING:
Israel’s parliament has officially passed a law imposing the death penalty by hanging for Palestinian detainees.
At least 10,000 Palestinian prisoners could be at risk of execution. pic.twitter.com/XPn84ATiGJ
— Current Report (@Currentreport1) March 30, 2026
Israel just passed the death penalty law against Palestinians & non-Jews only. This is how the deputy head of Israel’s parliament celebrated with her settler husband celebrated recently. pic.twitter.com/DvCkNKypgA
— Muhammad Shehada (@muhammadshehad2) March 30, 2026
Israel — Call it what it is
The UK’s Green Party are among those calling out the new law:
Israel’s new law imposing the death penalty on Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks is a dangerous development of its apartheid system.
It is discriminatory, racist, and cruel.
Expressions of concern are not enough. The Labour government must act to end Israel’s impunity. pic.twitter.com/R9ICMuXFAN
— The Green Party (@TheGreenParty) March 31, 2026
With the Greens out-performing Labour in the polls now, this could put pressure on Keir Starmer to actually do something for once.
And remember, you can sign the petition here.
Featured image via The Cradle
By Willem Moore
From Canary via This RSS Feed.



Israel just passed the death penalty law against Palestinians & non-Jews only. This is how the deputy head of Israel’s parliament celebrated with her settler husband celebrated recently.