>> Read the full position paper
Bill for State-National Commission of Inquiry Into 7 October 2023 Massacre-2025, promoted by the government via MK Ariel Kellner, is intended for one purpose only: to fend off a decree absolute on the pending petition filed with the Supreme Court by Zulat for Equality and Human Rights and 86 former MKs.
In a decision unprecedented since the creation of the state, the Supreme Court issued an order nisi requiring the government to establish a state commission of inquiry. The government is required to respond by 4 January 2026 and show cause why the order nisi should not become a decree absolute. The bill is being advanced as part of this effort but it is doomed to fail, given that the Supreme Court has already ruled that of all possible investigative mechanisms, a state commission of inquiry is the only body qualified to investigate the events of October 7. It thus follows that the Supreme Court will not permit the creation of a political-parliamentary commission that deviates from the required principles of independence, neutrality, and professionalism.
The position paper shows that the bill is fundamentally flawed: it changes the rules of the game retroactively, is advanced amid a severe conflict of interest on the part of actors who are themselves meant to be investigated, is based on a political rather than professional appointment mechanism, poses minimal qualification requirements for commission members, includes provisions that are bound to paralyze the investigative process, and violates the balance set in the Commissions of Inquiry Law between determining the commission’s composition and defining the subjects of investigation. For all these reasons, the bill does not represent a legitimate alternative to a state commission of inquiry, but is rather an attempt to circumvent judicial review and evade public accountability.
>> Listen: An interview with Adv. Dafna Holtz-Lechner on the petition, Galei Zahal