home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: odin@netlink.cts.com (Hank Roth)
- Subject: Torture in Israel
- Message-ID: <1992Dec16.205423.8424@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: NetLink Online Communications, San Diego CA
- Date: Wed, 16 Dec 1992 20:54:23 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 120
-
- <<< via P_news/p.news >>>
- The Other Israel #47
- Torture and the law
-
- ...Bypassers on Jerusalem's crowded Jaffa Street
- encountered a group of young men and women with their heads
- covered with sacks and their hands tied. It was an action
- organised by the "Public Committee Against Torture" in order to
- show the public what is going on behind the walls of the nearby
- "Russian Compound" - headquarters of the Jerusalem Police and
- seat of the regional Shabak (security service) bureau. On
- different days, demonstrations against prison torture also took
- place in Haifa (organised there by "Peace Now") and at the
- Defence Ministry in Tel-Aviv (by "Women for Political
- Prisoners"). This year's "Israel Prize" ceremony was disrupted by
- hecklers and demonstrators. One of the recipients of the annual
- prize was former Supreme Court Judge Moshe Landau - who in 1987
- headed the "Landau Commission", which was supposed to investigate
- prison torture. This commission's report declared the use of
- "moderate physical pressure" to be a legitimate means in the
- interrogation of suspected terrorists. In a secret appendix -
- accessible only to a select group of high officials - the report
- also details the ways in which such physical pressure may be
- applied. The "Committee Against Torture" intends to lodge an
- appeal to the Supreme Court to declassify this appendix.
-
- The "B'tzelem" human rights organisation's recent revelations
- about the practice of torture of Palestinian prisoners had
- brought the Landau report back into public attention. Landau
- responded by attacking "B'tzelem", as "an organisation blind to
- the needs of state security. The authorities couldn't just ignore
- the sudden public attention, inside and outside Israel. The three
- institutions involved in the use of torture - the army, the
- police and the security service - are now engaged in efforts to
- shift blame upon each other. The police commander of the Russian
- Compound welcomed a delegation of four Jerusalem municipal
- councillors (from Ratz and the religious parties Degel Hatora and
- Agudat Yisrael) to examine all parts of the facilities - all but
- the Shabak section, where interrogations take place. `There I
- can't enter myself, unless the Shabak invites me.' (Ha'aretz, May
- 24). The army announced the formation of a commission of inquiry,
- headed by General Rafael Vardi, to investigate all evidence with
- regard to soldiers mistreating Palestinian prisoners.
-
- The Shabak has disclosed that it has appointed an internal
- comptroller. Since his reports, and even his name - remain
- classified, it is difficult to evaluate the significance of this
- innovation.
-
- The Knesset State Comptrollership Committee, headed by David
- Libai (Labor), formed a special subcommittee on the Shabak, and
- demanded that the Shabak will come to testify before it.
- Meanwhile, more reports of torture continue to arrive. "B'tzelem"
- researcher Bassam Id: "I visited in the East Jerusalem Musakad
- Hospital a guy from Gaza, who was arrested in good medical
- condition and came out half paralysed. He has reportedly been
- tied to a pipe and beaten while his face was covered with a sack.
- They continued beating him even after the prison doctor warned
- them that he is developing signs of paralysis." (Hadashot, May
- 12).
-
- Contact: B'tzelem, 18 Keren Hayesod St., Jerusalem 92149;
- phone: 02-667271; The Public Committee Against Torture in Israel,
- POB 8588, Jerusalem 91083
-
-
- TORTURE AT ANSAR-2
- by Ari Shavit
-
- The following few lines are translated from an extensive account
- by "Ha'aretz" journalist Ari Shavit, describing his recent term
- of reserve service as a guard in the Gaza detention camp, Ansar-
- 2. It was published in Ha'aretz, on May 3.
- Ansar-2 has twelve guard towers, mine was Number 6. You sit on
- top of this tower the whole night. There is a projector, but it
- is rarely used, because the whole prisoner enclosure is, in any
- case, lighted by a strong yellow light. (...) You come off, after
- a night without any incident. You take the towel and the soap
- from your tent, and go off to the showers. On the way there, you
- have to pass the galvanised iron fence, marking off the
- interrogations section. And then, from the other side, you hear a
- scream, a hair-raising scream. What is going on there, five
- meters from you? You cannot see, you can only imagine it. You do
- know that from now on you will have no rest, because fifty meters
- from the bed where you try to sleep, eighty meters from the mess
- hall where you try to eat, human beings are screaming. They are
- screaming because other human beings - who wear the same uniform
- as you do - are making them scream. They are screaming because
- your country - your democratic country, your Jewish country - is
- making them scream, in a systematic and organised manner and in
- accordance with the law.
-
- Shortly after the end of the Gulf War, 18-year old Lior Ovshani
- was conscripted. Soon, he was ordered to pass a course of basic
- training at a camp located in the Occupied Territories - and
- refused to obey this order. At first, the commanding officer sent
- him to another camp - also located in the Occupied Territories,
- but near to the pre-'67 border. When he refused this compromise,
- too, Ovshani was sentenced to 21 days' imprisonment, followed -
- on his continued refusal - by a further 28 days. According to his
- father, Lior decided not to serve in the Occupied Territories at
- the age of 17, after he worked as a construction worker together
- with Palestinian workers. At first it seemed that the military
- authorities intended to break his resistance in a harsh manner.
-
- However, the affair got increasing public attention through an
- interview in "Hadashot" newspaper. Later, Israeli television
- picked up Lior Ovshani's parents at the Abie Nathan rally,
- holding a sign protesting the harassment of their son. The
- military authorities started to soften; Lior Ovshani's third term
- was for seven days only, and - so far - there was not a fourth.
- Letters of support to: Private Lior Ovshani, Military Personal
- Number 5045337, Israeli Defence Forces.
-
-
- --
- INTERNET: odin@netlink.cts.com (Hank Roth)
- UUCP: ...!ryptyde!netlink!odin
- NetLink Online Communications * Public Access in San Diego, CA (619) 453-1115
-
-