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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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05 May 2010 By Stephen Lendman
The Public Committee Against
Torture in Israel (PACTI - stoptorture.org) calls
"torture and ill treatment of any kind....incompatible
with" moral democratic values. It "advocates for all
persons" in Israel and Occupied Palestine to protect
them from abusive treatment of all kinds.
In June 2008, its report titled,
"No Defense: Soldier Violence against Palestinian
Detainees" is just as relevant today, perhaps more so
given Israel's intensified violence and abuse in Gaza
and the West Bank in the past year.
PACTI interviewed detainees and
participating soldiers, included media reports, IDF
provided information, and comments of political
figures regarding these practices.
Observed was a phenomenon dating
back decades, and, of course, remains ongoing today.
Hence, the report's relevance and need to discuss it.
Especially since September 2000 (the beginning of the
second Intifada), "the number of arrests has been
unprecedented. Thousands of Palestinians are arrested
each year....and are executed by a large number of
combat units in the Israeli military."
Violent arrests followed by
torture and ill treatment are commonplace. For
decades, Israeli soldiers have abused Palestinian
detainees "on a routine basis." Recognizing and
exposing it is key to stopping it.
Ill Treatment
in Arrests
Force is routinely used even for
those posing no threat. It begins during and after
arrests, in transit, and at military bases and
installations, prior to being transfered to a
detention facility.
Detainees are beaten,
blindfolded, and painfully shackled for hours, a
practice often causing permanent injury. In response
to PACTI requests, an IDF spokesperson cited no
regulations, guidelines, procedures, or orders
relating to the process. Order 9810, not applicable to
all arrest stages, merely says:
"only metal shackles are to be
used (and) tightening (them) should be undertaken in
such a manner as to prevent injury to the detainee
(particularly to blood vessels)."
As a result, abuses occur
routinely, including violence and threats. Typical are
severe beatings while shackled and blindfolded, enough
to cause serious injuries. They begin at arrest and
continue during transport with detainees forced to
sit, lie, or be thrown on vehicle floors.
Soldiers commonly put their feet
on detainee bodies and/or heads, creating enough
friction to cause abrasions and injuries. Commanders
are there to observe it.
Before imprisonment, detainees
are often held in makeshift detention facilities on
military bases where abuse continues. One prisoner
said he was taken to a concrete yard, handcuffed to a
concrete pole, made to sit on the ground, and be
beaten on the face every 30 or 60 minutes.
Abuse, ill treatment, and
humiliation continue through each stage of the
process. For Nidal Shataya, it was especially
egregious as he explained:
"....After the soldiers searched
the house and the entire building, they arrested me
and my brothers....They put us into a military jeep
using force and violence and shoves. They shouted at
us and cursed us....They put us on the floor of the
jeep, handcuffed and blindfolded. (They) were taking
us to Hawara base to the south of Nablus, where we
were interrogated by Intelligence officers....The
soldiers beat us while we were waiting in the outer
yard. Every soldier that walked past would beat and
curse us. We were not allowed to lean or to sleep.
At the Hawara military
checkpoint....they put us on the floor in a small,
dirty room next to the checkpoint. The soldiers
handcuffed us very tightly and blindfolded us. My
hands and eyes hurt a lot and we could not...stand
this situation any longer....
Then the soldiers came and
started to beat us with their army boots and their
weapons. The beatings were repeated three times," at
first for about 15 minutes, the second the same time,
and the third for over 10 minutes, "continuously and
without any interruption....Then the Israeli soldiers
dragged and pulled us along the road to the other side
of the checkpoint....and threw us on the road there.
There were taxi drivers there who called for an
ambulance and they took us to the hospital, almost
unconscious...."
Use of Dogs
After September 2000, their use
increased - at checkpoints, on military bases, and
accompanying soldiers, especially during arrests.
According to one soldier:
"Today, the dogs in the unit are
trained for one of five capabilities: Assault,
identification of explosives, scouting, weapons and
ammunitions searches, or rescue and release."
PACTI attorney Yaara Kalmanovich
wrote Israel's Judge Advocate General saying:
"The....graver aspect is the
phenomenon of deliberate ill treatment with the means
of dogs. These cases....are shocking and they must be
quickly and effectively eliminated. (In addition), the
mere contact with the dogs may be terrifying and
humiliating. According to Islam, the dog is an impure
animal, and accordingly many Muslims feel humiliated
and dishonored whenever a dog is close to their person
or touches them....The soldiers should be required to
keep the dogs in such a manner that they will not come
into contact with the detainees whenever there is no
tangible operational need for this."
In response, the military denied
the allegation, stonewalled, and lied, claiming the
opposite of what, in fact, happens. Soldier
testimonies confirm it, saying dogs are trained and
used specifically for assault and do it - not for a
potential threat, but on the assumption that
Palestinian detainees are offenders, whether or not
true. As a result, highly aggressive dogs cause
serious injuries. Unless muzzled, they present a clear
and present danger, even to their handlers, and
detainees report being terrified and bitten.
Mistreating
Children
Soldiers treat them like adults,
the Israeli penal code allowing it in defiance of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, other
international laws, and Israeli law (nominally)
affording minors special protection. It prohibits
injuring or psychologically harming them, and
obligates anyone witnessing mistreatment to report
it.
International law protects all
civilians from violence and threats thereof, and
requires occupiers to treat them humanely, especially
children.
According to Protocol I to Fourth
Geneva: "Children shall be the object of special
respect and shall be protected against any form of
indecent assault. The Parties to the conflict shall
provide them with the care and aid they require,
whether because of their age or for any other
reason."
However, soldiers exploit
children's weaknesses and regularly abuse them, at
times seriously enough to require hospitalization.
Like adults, they're handcuffed, blindfolded and
beaten, including with rifle butts and boots.
"Accordingly, the ill treatment
of minor Palestinian detainees constitutes the most
extreme manifestation of a broader phenomenon whereby
the various state authorities that implement the
occupation routinely treat minor detainees as adults,
ignoring the legal and human obligations to ensure
special safeguarding and protection for those who have
not yet reached the age of eighteen."
Military procedures make no
distinction between adults and children, some as young
as 12 or younger. Grave consequences thus happen
regularly as part of Israel's systematic pattern of
ill treatment and abuse.
Systematic
Detainee Abuse and Mistreatment
A 2007 joint B'Tselem-Hamoked
Center for the Defence of the Individual report
titled, "Absolute Prohibition: The Torture and
Ill-Treatment of Palestinian Detainees" confirmed
PACTI's findings through victim testimonies. It said
Israel disregards international law and its own
throughout the arrest, transport, interrogation, and
imprisonment process. Abuses range from "softening up"
to torture. Common ones includes:
-- "Isolation from the outside
world - prohibition on meetings between detainees and
their attorneys or ICRC representatives;"
-- psychological pressure,
including in "putrid, stifling" solitary confinement;
-- sleep deprivation and
inadequate and poor food;
-- painfully binding hands and
feet to a chair in the "shabah" position;
-- other forms of torture,
including severe beatings;
-- threats and intimidation,
including against family members;
-- use of informants to extract
information, whether or not true; and
-- routine "cover up and
whitewashing" of grievous crimes; rarely are abusive
practices investigated; most are dismissed, and almost
never are abusers punished.
Further, Israel's
arrest-interrogation-imprisonment process "is
significantly aided by the HCJ (High Court of
Justice), which serves as a rubber stamp on orders
which regulate isolation" and subsequent abuse, half
or more of the time causing one or more injuries, at
times serious.
According to (retired) Col. Gadi
Amir, part of the process is "the dehumanization of
the enemy, (that he, or she, is regarded as) an
object" to be treated any way we wish. As a result,
"we have become jaded and phenomena that we once
considered horrifying we now seem to have become
accustomed to...."
Yet the IDF won't acknowledge it,
and by so doing "encourages and reinforces" abuse and
degrading treatment, despite clear international and
Israeli law prohibitions, binding at all times, under
all circumstances, with no allowed exceptions.
Ill Treatment
After Arrest Under Israeli Law
Under Israeli military law, "ill
treatment" is an offense, prohibiting beating and
other forms of abuse with offenders liable to three
years imprisonment if charged and convicted. Under
"aggravating circumstances," it's seven years.
Soldiers are legally responsible
for detainees in their custody, and according to
Israel's Military Court of Appeals:
"The discrepancy of powers and
status between the person wielding control and
authority and the person lacking the ability to resist
leaves the victim defenseless against the abuse of the
power held by the person in authority."
Yet the court has yet to address
the minimum threshold beyond which ill treatment
occurs as distinguished from the lesser offense of
assault. In fact, however, abusive ill treatment
happens whenever soldiers use violence or humiliating
tactics against defenseless shackled, blindfolded
detainees.
In all cases PACTI examined, ill
treatment, assault or "assault in aggravating
circumstances" occurred, in violation of articles 378
- 382 in Israel's penal code. Other offenses are also
common, including injury, battery, forcible extortion,
and ill treatment of a minor. Some violate military
law, others civil or both.
"In any case, however, violence
by soldiers against shackled detainees is a criminal
phenomenon penalized under an entire system of
offenses in Israeli criminal law."
Crime and
Punishment
Despite Israeli law, military
judges rarely act or go easy on offending soldiers,
and compared to civil courts they're lax, regardless
of how serious the offense. Yet the Military Court of
Appeals ruled that commanders are responsible for
preventing detainee ill treatment, especially if he
ordered the abuse.
Yet, like US military law, a
soldier who disobeys an illegal order isn't culpable.
In fact, under paragraph 498 of the US Army Field
Manual (FM) 27-10, any person, military or civilian,
who commits a crime (even if ordered by a superior)
under US or international law, is responsible for it
and may be punished. It's the same under Israeli law,
but enforced under neither, except in America to
charge low level recruits to absolve their
commanders.
In Israel, there is "no
disagreement as to the clear illegality of an order to
harm persons not involved in combat, or removed, and
the obligation not to obey such an order." The
standard for commanders is even higher, given their
position of authority and reluctance of subordinates
to disobey fearing punishment.
Failure to
Enforce - Military Investigatory Bodies
Israel's Military Justice Code
establishes three interrogation authorities - an
examining officer, the Military Police Investigation
Unit (MIU), and an investigative judge.
They're explicitly separate from
debriefings by those involved in investigating
incidents, including by commanders. Material from them
is to go only to the military advocate general (MAG)
or his representative. The latter then decides whether
a debriefing offense was committed and if an
investigation is warranted. If so, a summary of
findings "shall not be transferred to a person
undertaking a criminal investigation in accordance
with the law." Nor "shall it indicate suspicion
against any person involved in the incident."
An examining officer or
investigative judge is charged with handling the case,
the latter only if deaths are involved. The former may
be a senior adjudicating military officer, another one
appointed by him, or a MAG-designated military police
person.
The examining officer may then
hear witnesses, review evidence, and arrest suspects.
He only decides whether to recommend prosecution, not
order it himself. The MAG decides whether or not to
proceed further. In practice, however, MIU army
officers handle most ill treatment examinations, not
trained lawyers familiar with the law.
The process of soldiers judging
others in the ranks taints the whole process,
especially the way Israel goes about it, taking care
of its own. A clear conflict of interest delivers
injustice.
Troublesome
Forms of Investigation
They rarely happen, and when they
do are effectively whitewashed, given that examining
officers rely on operational debriefings supplied by
the offending forces or their commanders. As a result,
they're tainted and wholly unreliable. It shows up in
how few are charged, let alone convicted of serious
offenses, including torture and killings.
According to Law Professor
Mordechai Kremnitzer:
"....There are two problems with
the operational debriefing. Firstly, the person who
undertakes it is not a professional investigator, with
all due respect to the military commander. (In
addition), when people have acted unlawfully, they
have a natural motivation not to admit this, to deny
it, to tell incorrect stories, and to back up each
other's incorrect stories."
As a result, cases are closed for
"lack of evidence," suppressed, and to absolve
offenders, and it happens regularly.
Prosecutions,
Convictions, and Punishment - Soldiers and Commanders
Based on IDF Spokesperson
supplied figures, investigations of ill treatment
rarely happen, and almost never lead to prosecutions
or convictions. Out of hundreds of them launched, a
mere handful of indictments followed, amounting to
about two per year since September 2000. Of those,
acquittals were common, and hand slaps (like 10 days
imprisonment) followed convictions most often.
Also, practically never are
commanders charged or prosecuted even when they issued
direct orders. In rare instances, they face
disciplinary hearings, in others, demotion. No senior
commanders have been prosecuted for the offenses of
their subordinates. In these cases, command
responsibility "is an extremely restricted concept,"
an alien one.
B'Tselem explained that many
complaints are closed "due to various defects during
the processing of the case. (For example), months pass
between the submission of the complaint and the
transfer of the case to the MIU for
investigation....The conclusion from all this is that
the system does not attach the necessary importance to
investigating cases of violence by security force
personnel against Palestinian residents and ensuring
that justice is meted out to those responsible. This
conveys a lenient message to those in the field that
such actions are not regarded as severe."
Even after beginning,
investigations can drag out for months, so long, in
fact, that those involved often complete their
military service and leave.
Further, as long as the IDF
investigates and prosecutes its own, justice is
virtually impossible, unlike in civil courts. A
possible solution is ending military involvement, so
far not considered. Yet Human Rights Watch suggested
that:
"a consensus is emerging in
international law that military personnel should not
be tried in military courts in cases when the victims
are civilians, and that military jurisdiction systems
should relate solely to offenses of a clearly military
nature."
In December 2007, Yediot Ahronoth,
Israel's most widely circulated newspaper, published a
survey showing widespread soldier abuse during
inspections at checkpoints alone. According to one
soldier interviewed:
"When you deny thousands of
people a day freedom of movement, it is impossible to
do it in a nice way."
Yet the security establishment
denies it and claims abuses there are exceptions,
localized, and unusual, and military courts often
quote a ruling declaring that "the basic rules of
human morality and human dignity guide the Israel
Defense Force," despite clear evidence of the opposite
- "inconsistent with the testimonies and reports from
the field, which leave no doubt that the phenomenon
(is) widespread."
Steps for change include ending
denial, exposing falsified evidence, obeying the law,
and holding abusers accountable. Yet "the military
does not make proper preparations for arrest
operations; refrains from imposing responsibility on
commanders for the ill treatment of detainees; and is
extremely disinclined to launch investigations (to)
indict soldiers suspected of abusing Palestinian
detainees."
Civilian authorities are part of
the coverup and denial, the Defense Ministry ignoring
abuse and holding no one accountable. Crimes against
Palestinians "are not considered worthy
of....attention." The topic is unaddressed in the
Knesset.
"A review of Knesset Protocols
(from) January 2006 through April 2008 reveal(ed) that
no discussions took place in the plenum of the Knesset
regarding the ill treatment by soldiers of
Palestinians in general, or Palestinians in
particular."
In addition, no legislative
action occurred, and the Knesset Foreign Affairs and
Defense Committee, in charge of supervising the
defense system, "failed abysmally to protect the
public interest when it comes to ensuring the rule of
law in the actions of the executive branch in the
Territories." They deliberately ignored the issue,
even during the height of the Intifada.
PACTI concluded saying:
"We hope that this report will
encourage the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice
Committee to address the phenomenon of ill treatment
of Palestinian detainees by soldiers as part of the
responsibility the committee has accepted for
scrutinizing, inspecting, and encouraging change on
behalf of the public in matters relating to human
rights violations in the Occupied Territories."
A Final
Comment
To date, the Knesset hasn't
acted, and, in fact, performed worse, the Mossawa
Advocacy Center and Coalition Against Racism calling
the current body the most racist in Israeli history in
a 2010 report - Mossawa saying "almost every day"
another Israeli Arab is victimized by racist acts,
100s in various categories confirmed by media and
police reports.
In the Territories, Gaza remains
under siege, and West Bank and East Jerusalem
Palestinians endure daily neighborhood incursions,
loss of homes, frequent arrests, killings, various
other assaults, and violations of their dignity, civil
and human rights on streets, at work, in their homes,
and in detention.
On April 27, the Palestinian
Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) reported the killing of
Ali Isma'el Ali Swaiti in Beit 'Awwa, his home
demolished on top of him. PCHR condemned the crime,
calling it an extrajudicial execution in charging
politicians and commanders with war crimes.
On April 28, PCHR condemned
Fatah's General Intelligence Service (working
collaboratively with Israel) for harassing and
arresting Palestinian writers Muhannad Salahat and
Walid al-Hodali to prevent their free expression right
to document West Bank crimes against innocent
civilians.
Outlandish abuses happen daily,
endorsed by IDF commanders, MKs, and the fascist
Netanyahu government, as extremist and morally
decadent as any in Israeli history. As a result,
Palestinians suffer grievously, including in detention
where torture remains official Israeli policy.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago
and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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