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Al-Haq

Al-Haq
الحـــق
Founded 1979
Type Non-profit
Location
Area served
Palestinian territories
Key people
Lily Feidy (Chairperson)
Amin Thalji (Vice Chairperson)
Shawan Jabarin (Director)
Ghassan Abdullah (Treasurer)
Slogan DEFENDING HUMAN RIGHTS IN PALESTINE SINCE 1979
Website www.alhaq.org

Al-Haq is an independent Palestinian human-rights organization founded in 1979 and based in Ramallah in the West Bank. It monitors and documents human-rights violations by all parties to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, issuing reports on its findings and producing detailed legal studies.

Al-Haq has been an affiliate of the Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists for over 20 years and is a member of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), Habitat International Coalition and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT). It also is part of the Executive Committee of the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network (EMHRN) and of the Steering Committee of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organizations' Network (PNGO).

Al-Haq was established in 1979 by a group of Palestinian lawyers. According to Al-Haq, it was one of the first human rights organizations set up in the Arab world.

During its early years, Al-Haq was largely limited to analyzing Israel's legal status as an Occupying Power in the West Bank including East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, as well as the structures put in place by its governmental authorities in the OPT. Al-Haq would produce some of the early studies trying to apply humanitarian law to the Israeli occupation. Al-Haq reported that these studies "were essential in shaping the debate on what laws and regulations are applicable in the OPT." It was during this period that Al-Haq established its Legal Unit, which helps advance its positions in conjunction with the Legal Research Unit.

By 1986, it had started taking on projects involving human rights issues of specific concerns, like women’s and labour rights. It was this work that helped Al-Haq to earn international recognition.

Middle East analyst Mouin Rabbani noted that, from its outset, Al-Haq has been as involved with understanding its environment as it has been with pursuing changes. The need for an organization like this stemmed from both the “incomprehensible” judicial system in the Occupied Territories and its "arbitrary implementation". Rabbani also said that in "an accurate reflection of these concerns, legal research, as opposed to human rights monitoring and intervention as narrowly understood, assumed pride of place during al-Haq's formative period," and Al-Haq still defines itself as both a human rights and legal research organization.


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