Low-Hanging Fruit: Human Rights Watch and Palestinian Child Laborers

By Published On: April 14, 2015

hrw.report.png

“Israel’s a sort of low-hanging fruit” a Human Rights Watch (HRW) board member acknowledged in an illuminating 2010 interview, and the organization’s latest report “Ripe For Abuse: Palestinian Child Labor in Israeli Agricultural Settlements in the West Bank” exemplifies HRW’s skewed and distorted treatment of Israel.

Take, for example, the report’s accompanying publicity video, which got picked up by the Sydney Morning Herald. In the video, HRW researcher Bill Van Esveld claims that Palestinian children “have no option to work on Palestinian farms. Most of them don’t exist anymore.”

But this claim is belied by the facts. The Palestinian date sector has enjoyed significant growth in recent years. According to a report published by Paltrade and the Ministry of National Economy, among others (“The State of Palestine National Export Strategy 2014-2018”):

Palestinian fresh fruit exports have grown at a rate of 52%, compared to global import growth of 21% over the same time period.

The main fruit exports from the State of Palestine are nuts, dates, grapes, strawberries and almonds. The bulk of export growth for the sector has been driven by a rise of exports of dates. Palestinian exports of dates have risen from US$324,000 in 2007 to US$1.2 million in 2010, reflecting an absolute growth of over 250%.

Indeed, Nakheel Palestine for Agricultural Investment, located in the Jordan Valley, “cultivates a total of six Date Palm farms in Jericho, on the Palestinian side of the Jordan Valley, with a total number of 20,000 trees stretched along an area of 3000 Dunums.”

CAMERA has asked HRW to correct Van Esveld’s erroneous assertions that Palestinian children have no choice but to work in Israeli settlements and that “most” Palestinian farms “don’t exist anymore” and to explain why Palestinian children would choose to work in Israeli settlement farms when Palestinian farms are situated nearby.

In fact, our colleagues at UK Media Watch, a CAMERA affiliate, note that David Elhayani, head of the Jordan Valley regional council, denied HRW’s allegations, insisting tha “there were no children among the 6,000 Palestinians” employed by the regional council And they further point out that the photo used on the cover of the HRW report to illustrate the alleged illegal use of child labor by Israeli settlement farms in the Jordan Valley is actually a Reuters photograph by Mohamad Torokman, taken in 2010, that illlustrates work at a Palestinian farm, and not an Israeli settlement.

April 15 Updates: “UK Media Watch prompts correction to Human Rights Watch photo illustrating child labor report” and “UK Media Watch prompts correction to misleading photo illustrating HRW child labor report

We expose the anti-Israel lies so you don't have to. But we can't do it without your help. Join the fight -- Donate now
Tell the World – Share Now!

More from SNAPSHOTS

  • AFP Wrong on Western Wall

    August 3, 2017

    In a series of captions earlier this week regarding the observance of Tisha B'Av, a Jewish day of mourning marking the destruction of the First and Second Temples as well as other catastrophes that fell [...]

  • Jordan Confirms Attack on Guard, Reuters Conceals

    August 2, 2017

    Jordanian officials agree with Israeli officials that Jordanian carpenter Mohammed Jawawdah attacked Israeli embassy guard Ziv Moyal with a screwdriver before Moyal shot him dead. But Reuters refuses to report the Jordanian confirmation. In story [...]

  • From Palestine to Gaza Area Settlements, Journey Into Times Coverage

    August 1, 2017

    Aug. 7 Update: New York Times "Journeys" Corrects on Gaza Area "Settlements" In an illuminating and ironic gem, The New York Times markets its "Journeys" tour to Israel and the West Bank as follows: On [...]

  • Half of Foreign Aid to Palestinian Authority Goes to Terrorists, Media Shrugs

    July 31, 2017

    The new budget for the Palestinian Authority (PA) increases aid to imprisoned terrorists and their families by 13 percent, according to a July 19, 2017 report by Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), a non-profit organization that [...]

  • The Washington Post Details Al-Aqsa Incitement

    July 28, 2017

    A Washington Post report by Jerusalem bureau chief William Booth provided readers with a look at Palestinian anti-Jewish violence and incitement (“A young Palestinian vowed to die a martyr, then stabbed 3 members of an [...]

  • Insulting Apology from Islamic Center of Davis

    July 27, 2017

    “If the sermon was misconstrued, we sincerely apologize to anyone offended. We will continue our commitment to interfaith and community harmony.” That’s the dishonest, cowardly, meaningless, and insulting apology offered by the Islamic Center of [...]

  • Israel Dismantles Security Measures, But Palestinian Leaders Continue to Encourage Riots

    July 26, 2017

  • Former Peace Negotiator Acknowledges Mistakes

    July 18, 2017

    Aaron David Miller A former American Arab-Israeli peace negotiator, Aaron David Miller, acknowledged that the U.S. “overlooked” negative Palestinian behavior in its attempts to fashion a two-state solution. Miller, a former U.S. State Department employee [...]

  • The Washington Post Notes Growing Hamas-Fatah Tensions

    July 18, 2017

    Mohammad Dahlan A July 13, 2017 Washington Post report (“Abbas increases Gazans’ pain in feud with Hamas”) highlighted growing tensions between Hamas, the U.S.-designated terror group that rules the Gaza Strip, and Fatah, the movement [...]

  • Wall Street Journal Wrong on the Wall

    July 18, 2017

    The Wall Street Journal is the latest media outlet to err on the Western Wall, misidentifying it as Judaism's holiest site. The July 14 article by Nancy Shekter-Porat ("Israeli Police Officers Shot Dead in Jerusalem [...]