The lecture was organized in cooperation between the Iol and the Palestinian
Legislative Council. The lecturer started by giving a general idea about the legislative
process in Palestine, and the constitutional framework and relevant political events
before and after Oslo. He browsed a package of Palestinian laws (tourism, criminal
procedures, environment, investment, public meetings) and the PLC standing order
and explained the main problems regarding these laws and the reasons why it
contradicted the basic law, for example: The laws that are replaced by new ones are
not automatically cancelled. Both investment laws of 1996 and 1998 are in-effect at
the same time, some laws are amended by presidential decree, some laws established
prior to the Basic Law are based on the standing orders of the PLC, and new laws
replaced others that were implemented either in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip
without referring to the geographic origin of replaced laws. The lecture was followed
by questions that focused on the need for a plan to review and amend the Palestinian
laws to be consistence with the basic law, the status of laws published before the basic
law, and the need for real constitutional court.
A number of PNA legal advisors, lawyers and interested people attended the
encounter. The total was 25 participants.