Suspected Torturer Gets Key Police Job In Jerusalem: Doron
Zahavi Accused Of Running Israel’s Abu Ghraib
08 August 2010By Jonathan Cook
A police officer known as “Major George” who is
accused of torturing Arab prisoners in his previous
role as chief interrogator in a secret military jail
has been appointed to oversee relations with
Jerusalem’s Palestinian population, it has emerged.
The decision has been greeted with stunned disbelief
from human rights groups, who say unresolved
allegations against Major George that he brutally
abused Arab prisoners for many years should disqualify
him from such a sensitive post.
Relations between the Israeli police and the 250,000
Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have been on a
knife edge for many months, as extremist Jewish groups
-- backed by the municipality -- have increased their
settlement drive in traditional Palestinian
neighbourhoods such as Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan.
The Association of Civil Rights in Israel (Acri),
Israel’s largest legal rights group, revealed last
week that it had made a formal complaint in February
about Major George, whose real name is Doron Zahavi.
Acri said he had threatened to demolish the home of a
Palestinian community activist in Silwan for leading
protests against a settler takeover of Palestinian
homes in the area. During what police described as a
“getting to know each other session”, pressure was
also put on Jawad Siyam to become an informant.
Zahavi, however, first earnt notoriety in Unit 504, a
special wing of military intelligence, that oversaw
the interrogation of foreign Arab nationals held in
the secret prison, known as Facility 1391. Israel
claims to have closed the jail following its exposure
in 2003.
A Lebanese militia leader, Mustafa Dirani, who was
held in Facility 1391 for many years, alleged in an
Israeli court in 2004 that Zahavi repeatedly tortured
him, including by sodomising him with a baton.
The civil suit for $1.5 million damages was never
settled because Israel released Dirani in a prisoner
swap before the court had issued a ruling. The judge
has denied Zahavi’s subsequent requests to close the
case.
Although Zahavi has denied the main charges, he has
admitted interrogating prisoners while they were naked
and that he ordered one of his officers to undress in
Dirani’s cell and threaten to sexually assault him.
Several of Unit 504’s interrogators later corroborated
Dirani’s claims, revealing that they routinely used
the torture techniques he had described.
The case has attracted comparisons with Abu Ghraib,
the prison in Iraq where US soldiers sexually abused
Iraqi inmates.
Dalia Kerstein, director of Hamoked, an Israeli human
rights group that helped to expose Facility 1391,
called Zahavi’s appointment “appalling”.
She said the security services had a history of
appointing officials who acted violently towards
Palestinians to sensitive posts. The authorities’
logic, she said, appeared to be that “these people
know how to deal with the Arabs because they can speak
the language of violence”.
Zahavi’s new role as adviser on Arab affairs to
Jerusalem’s police chief, Aharon Franco, is one of the
key roles in the Jersualem force. Zahavi is supposed
to act as the main channel between Palestinian
residents and the police.
According to the job description, the adviser “must be
an accepted and welcome figure in the Arab community,
with excellent interpersonal skills.”
Melanie Takefman, a spokeswoman for Acri, said it was
hard to see how Zahavi could fill such a post. “The
problem in Jerusalem is that the police relate almost
exclusively to the Palestinians as suspects and do not
enforce the law equitably.”
Zahavi’s job in Facillity 1391 was to extract
information from important Arab prisoners.
Dirani -- a senior figure in Amal, a now-defunct
Lebanese militia, who was seized by Israeli commandos
in 1994 -- was assumed to know the location of a
missing airman, Ron Arad, whose plane went down over
Lebanon eight years earlier.
Dirani claimed he was left naked for his first month
in detention and was sexually abused repeatedly by his
interrogators.
When Dirani appeared in court in 2004, he entered
walking with great difficulty and aided by a cane. He
told the judge of his experience of torture: “I prayed
that I’d die.”
An unnamed interrogator who worked under Zahavi told
the Israeli media: “I remember one instance that I
still feel until today, which makes me shudder, in
which a baton was used -- not for hitting. Even in the
field, George did what he wanted, in front of my eyes
and the eyes of everyone else.”
After Zahavi was dismissed from military intelligence,
he joined the immigration police and later moved into
police intelligence. He is reported to have taken up
his new post in the past two months.
The recent meeting with Siyam suggests that he is
likely to bring an uncompromising approach to his role
as a liaison with Jerusalem’s Palestinians.
Siyam said Zahavi spent most of their meeting shouting
at him, and warning that a demolition order would be
drawn up for Siyam’s house if he continued his
political activities. Zahavi also threatened to get
him fired from his job.
Although Israel claims to have closed Facility 1391,
there are suspicions it and possibly other secret
prisons are still in operation. In May last year the
United Nations Committee Against Torture called for
the location of 1391 to be identified and the prison
inspected.
No bar to promotion
Zahavi is only the latest example of a security
official accused of violent crimes against
Palestinians later being placed in a sensitive post.
Gavriel Dahan: A lieutenant in the border police,
Dahan was found guilty of carrying out a “manifestly
illegal” order to shoot dead Israeli-Palestinian
citizens arriving at an improvised checkpoint in 1956.
In total, 47 civilians were killed at Kafr Qassem.
Dahan was later appointed adviser on Arab affairs in
the mixed city of Ramle.
Ehud Yatom: In the infamous Bus 300 affair in 1984,
Yatom admitted using a rock to smash the skulls of two
bound Palestinian teenagers who had hijacked a bus
full of Israelis. Yatom was later pardoned. In 2001
prime minister Ariel Sharon appointed him his
counter-terrorism adviser, though the supreme court
ruled him unfit for the post. He was elected to the
parliament in 2003.
Benzi Sau: A state commission of inquiry harshly
criticised Sau, northern commander of the border
police, for his role in the fatal shootings of 13
unarmed Palestinian citizens in 2000. The panel
recommended he be denied promotion for four years. In
that time he was promoted twice, eventually becoming
head of the national border police.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in
Nazareth, Israel. His latest books are “Israel and the
Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to
Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and
“Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human
Despair” (Zed Books). His website is www.jkcook.net.
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