26 August 2012

The Israeli Military's Child Abuse

Ex-soldiers admit to appalling violence against Palestinian children


A young Palestinian protester runs away from Israeli soldiers during a demonstration against the expropriation of Palestinian land by Israel in the village of Kafr Qaddum, near the West Bank city of Ramallah (AFP Photo / Jaafar Ashtiyeh)
                   
                                   

Israeli military accused of mistreating children

Donald MacIntyre, Hebron, Sunday 26 August 2012
Hafez Rajabi
Hafez Rajabi was marked for life by his encounter with the men of the Israeli army's Kfir Brigade five years ago this week. Sitting beneath the photograph of his late father, the slightly built 21-year-old in jeans and trainers points to the scar above his right eye where he was hit with the magazine of a soldier's assault rifle after the patrol came for him at his grandmother's house before 6am on 28 August 2007.
13-year-old Walid Abu Obeida recounted his time in an Israeli prison
Linda Forsell

He lifts his black Boss T-shirt to show another scar running some three inches down his back from the left shoulder when he says he was violently pushed – twice – against a sharp point of the cast-iron balustrade beside the steps leading up to the front door. And all that before he says he was dragged 300m to another house by a unit commander who threatened to kill him if he did not confess to throwing stones at troops, had started to beat him again, and at one point held a gun to his head. "He was so angry," says Hafez. "I was certain that he was going to kill me."

This is just one young man's story, of course. Except that – remarkably – it is corroborated by one of the soldiers who came looking for him that morning. One of 50 testimonies on the military's treatment of children – published today by the veterans' organisation Breaking the Silence – describes the same episode, if anything more luridly than Hafez does. "We had a commander, never mind his name, who was a bit on the edge," the soldier, a first sergeant, testifies. "He beat the boy to a pulp, really knocked him around. He said: 'Just wait, now we're taking you.' Showed him all kinds of potholes on the way, asked him: 'Want to die? Want to die right here?' and the kid goes: 'No, no...' He was taken into a building under construction. The commander took a stick, broke it on him, boom boom. That commander had no mercy. Anyway the kid could no longer stand on his feet and was already crying. He couldn't take it any more. He cried. The commander shouted: 'Stand up!' Tried to make him stand, but from so much beating he just couldn't. The commander goes: 'Don't put on a show,' and kicks him some more."
Brutalised: Israeli soldiers accuse a Palestinian boy of throwing stones
Two months ago, a report from a team of British lawyers, headed by Sir Stephen Sedley and funded by the UK Foreign Office, accused Israel of serial breaches of international law in its military's handling of children in custody. The report focused on the interrogation and formal detention of children brought before military courts – mainly for allegedly throwing stones.

For the past eight years, Breaking the Silence has been taking testimonies from former soldiers who witnessed or participated in human rights abuses in the occupied territories. Most of these accounts deal with "rough justice" administered to minors by soldiers on the ground, often without specific authorisation and without recourse to the military courts. Reading them, however, it's hard not to recall the Sedley report's shocked reference to the "belief, which was advanced to us by a military prosecutor, that every Palestinian child is a 'potential terrorist'".
Br
The soldier puts it differently: "We were sort of indifferent. It becomes a kind of habit. Patrols with beatings happened on a daily basis. We were really going at it. It was enough for you to give us a look that we didn't like, straight in the eye, and you'd be hit on the spot. We got to such a state and were so sick of being there."

Some time ago, after he had testified to Breaking the Silence, we had interviewed this soldier. As he sat nervously one morning in a quiet Israeli beauty spot, an incongruous location he had chosen to ensure no one knew he was talking, he went through his recollections about the incident – and several others – once again. His account does not match the Palestinian's in every detail. (Hafez remembers a gun being pressed to his temple, for example, while the soldier recalls that the commander "actually stuck the gun barrel in the kid's mouth. Literally".)

But in every salient respect, the two accounts match. Both agree that Hafez, on the run after hearing that he was wanted, had slipped into his grandmother's house before dawn. Hafez showed us the room in his grandmother's house, the last on the left in the corridor leading to her room, where he had been hiding when the soldiers arrived. Sure enough, the soldier says: "We entered, began to trash the place. We found the boy behind the last door on the left. He was totally scared."

Both Hafez – who has never read or heard the soldier's account – and the soldier recall the commander forcing him at one point during his ordeal to throw a stone at them, and that the boy did so as feebly as possible. Then, in the soldier's words "the commander said: 'Of course you throw stones at a soldier.' Boom, banged him up even more".

Perhaps luckily for Hafez, the second, still uncompleted, house is within sight of that of his aunt, Fathia Rajabi, 57, who told us how she had gone there after seeing the soldiers dragging a young man behind a wall, unaware that he was her nephew. "I was crying, 'God forbids to beat him.' He recognised my voice and yelled: 'My aunt, my aunt.' I tried to enter but the two soldiers pointed their guns at me and yelled rouh min houn, Arabic for 'go away'. I began slapping my face and shouting at passers-by to come and help. Ten minutes later the soldiers left. I and my mother, my brother and neighbours went to the room. He was bleeding from his nose and head, and his back."

The soldier, who like his comrades mistook Ms Rajabi for the boy's mother, recalls: "The commander said to [her]: 'Keep away!' Came close, cocked his gun. She got scared. [He shouted:] 'Anyone gets close, I kill him. Don't annoy me. I'll kill him. I have no mercy.' He was really on the edge. Obviously [the boy] had been beaten up. Anyway, he told them: 'Get the hell out of here!' and all hell broke loose. His nose was bleeding. He had really been beaten to a pulp."

Finally, Hafez's brother Mousa, 23, a stone cutter who joined his aunt at the second house, recalls a second army jeep arriving and one soldier taking Hafez's pulse, giving Mousa a bottle of water which he then poured over Hafez's face and speaking to the commander in Hebrew.

"I understood he was protesting," says Mousa. This was almost certainly the 'sensitive' medic whom the soldier describes as having "caught the commander and said: 'Don't touch him any more. That's it.'" The commander goes: 'What's with you, gone leftie?' And he said: 'No, I don't want to see such things being done. All you're doing to this family is making them produce another suicide bomber. If I were a father and saw you doing this to my kid, I'd seek revenge that very moment.'"

In fact Hafez, did not turn into a "suicide bomber". He has never even been in prison. Instead, the outcome has been more prosaic. He no longer has nightmares about his experience as he did in the first two months. But as a former mechanic he is currently unemployed partly because there are few jobs outside construction sites and the Hebron quarries, where he says his injuries still prevent him from carrying heavy loads, and partly because he often does "not feel I want to work again". And he has not – so far – received any compensation, including the more than £1,100 he and Mousa had to spend on his medical treatment in the two years after he was taken.

The report by Sir Stephen Sedley's team remarks that "as the United Kingdom has itself learned by recent experience in Iraq, the risk of abuse is inherent in any system of justice which depends on military force". Moreover, Britain, unlike Israel, has no organisation like Breaking the Silence that can document, from the inside, the abuse of victims like Hafez Rajabi who never even make it to court.

But as the Sedley report also says, after drawing attention to the argument that every Palestinian is a "potential terrorist": "Such a stance seems to us to be the starting point of a spiral of injustice, and one which only Israel, as the occupying power in the West Bank, can reverse."

Breaking the silence: soldiers' testimonies

Scarred: Hafez Rajabi, 21, was beaten in 2007 by soldiers

First Sergeant, Kfir Brigade

Salfit 2009

"We took over a school and had to arrest anyone in the village who was between the ages of 17 and 50. When these detainees asked to go to the bathroom, and the soldiers took them there, they beat them to a pulp and cursed them for no reason, and there was nothing that would legitimise hitting them. An Arab was taken to the bathroom to piss, and a soldier slapped him, took him down to the ground while he was shackled and blindfolded. The guy wasn't rude and did nothing to provoke any hatred or nerves. Just like that, because he is an Arab. He was about 15, hadn't done a thing.

"In general people at the school were sitting for hours in the sun. They could get water once in a while, but let's say someone asked for water five times, a soldier could come to him and slap him just like that. I saw many soldiers using their knees to hit them, just out of boredom. Because you're standing around for 10 hours doing nothing, you're bored, so you hit them. I know that at the bathroom, there was this 'demons' dance' as it was called. Anyone who brought a Palestinian there – it was catastrophic. Not bleeding beatings – they stayed dry – but still beatings."


First Sergeant, Combat Engineering Corps

Ramallah 2006-07

"There was this incident where a 'straw widow' was put up following a riot at Qalandiya on a Friday, in an abandoned house near the square. Soldiers got out with army clubs and beat people to a pulp. Finally the children who remained on the ground were arrested. The order was to run, make people fall to the ground. There was a 10- to 12-man team, four soldiers lighting up the area. People were made to fall to the ground, and then the soldiers with the clubs would go over to them and beat them. A slow runner was beaten – that was the rule.

"We were told not to use it on people's heads. I don't remember where we were told to hit, but as soon as a person on the ground is beaten with such a club, it's difficult to be particular."
First Sergeant, Kfir Brigade

Hebron 2006-07

"We'd often provoke riots there. We'd be on patrol, walking in the village, bored, so we'd trash shops, find a detonator, beat someone to a pulp, you know how it is. Search, mess it all up. Say we'd want a riot? We'd go up to the windows of a mosque, smash the panes, throw in a stun grenade, make a big boom, then we'd get a riot.

"Every time we'd catch Arab kids.You catch him, push the gun against his body. He can't make a move – he's totally petrified. He only goes: 'No, no, army.' You can tell he's petrified. He sees you're mad, that you couldn't care less about him and you're hitting him really hard the whole time. And all those stones flying around. You grab him like this, you see? We were mean, really. Only later did I begin to think about these things, that we'd lost all sense of mercy."

Rank and unit unidentified in report

Hebron 2007-08

"One night, things were hopping in Idna village [a small town of 20,000 people, about 13km west of Hebron], so we were told there's this wild riot, and we should get there fast. Suddenly we were showered with stones and didn't know what was going on. Everyone stopped suddenly; the sergeant sees the company commander get out of the vehicle and joins him. We jump out without knowing what was going on – I was last. Suddenly I see a shackled and blindfolded boy. The stoning stopped as soon as the company commander gets out of the car. He fired rubber ammo at the stone-throwers and hit this boy.

"At some point they talked about hitting his face with their knees. At that point I argued with them and said: 'I swear to you, if a drop of his blood or a hair falls off his head, you won't sleep for three nights. I'll make you miserable.'

"They laughed at me for being a leftie. 'If we don't show them what's what, they go back to doing this.' I argued with them that the guy was shackled and couldn't do anything. That he was being taken to the Shabak [security service] and we'd finished our job."



From Time Magazine Does Israel Mistreat Palestinian Child Prisoners?

10 comments:

  1. As all have no Names, here is my story as an Ex-Soldier.
    I fkjkjhfkj jhdgs dhshfcv xhgcjdhgsjh djdhsgs cjdhgsjg dgsfsgsfd]fdds]dhdsg sgdgsf[]
    sjshdgd

    This has the same impact as this cut an paste propaganda.

    ReplyDelete
  2. People have all sorts of reasons not to give their names, such as victimisation, prosecution etc. etc. Question is why they would tell it if it isn't true, when we know from video footage that the Israeli Occupation Force behave like animals.

    At least you admit you have nothing to say yourself. The testimony of the honest few is akin to those Nazis who spoke out, few though they were. People like you, liars who participated, are beneath contempt.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "People have all sorts of reasons not to give their names, " you always think that everyone is a fool, I gave your intelligence some more credit in the past, but I think you are losing it. its about time you get it that people are not stupid and news like that are childish.... everyone can bring up stories
    so why do you always think that someone will take you seriously with such a low source of information.
    You can add my jibrish it makes the same impact as your made up stories.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's not an accident that most Zioniss who post here either give no name (whilst complaining that others in far more dangerous circumstances don't!) or give false names with no e-mail addresses.

    Why do people take the blog seriously? Because it is well sourced. It has been cited in numerous national dailies, including in Israel and was cited by the Defence in the Raed Salah case when he won his case against deportation.

    So if I don't impress some holocaust denier/Zionist imitation who cares? If I said the Earth was round you'd deny it because I said it!

    The fact is that Zionists are taking to quibbling with people like former

    Why even the Jewish Chronicle, a Zionist propaganda rag if ever there was, is forced to admit, following a damning report by ex-Lord Chief Justice Sedley that Israel routinely abuses children.

    Israel 'in breach of international law' over child detainees http://www.thejc.com/news/israel-news/69248/israel-breach-international-law-over-child-detainees

    Or maybe you don't believe them either? Sedley was told that Palestinian children will only grow up to be terrorists, hence their treatment. Exactly the same was said of Jewish children by the Nazis, so well done anon- you are nothing but a Jewish Nazi (or are you just a neo-Nazi?).

    As for not being taken seriously both the Guardian and Independent have carried stories - even the staid old Time Magazine. Israel's days are numbered. It is an oddity, a leftover of Hitler's war against the Jews.

    Former Israeli soldiers disclose routine mistreatment of Palestinian children
    Booklet of testimonies of former Israeli soldiers describes beatings, intimidation and humiliation of children

    Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem


    News
    World news
    Israel

    Former Israeli soldiers disclose routine mistreatment of Palestinian children

    Booklet of testimonies of former Israeli soldiers describes beatings, intimidation and humiliation of children

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/aug/26/israeli-soldiers-mistreatment-palestinian-children

    As I said, some people deny the holocaust, Zionists deny the evidence of their own war crimes, even when everyone else can see them.

    As for why the ex-soldiers remain anonymous I'll leave you to work that one out.

    ReplyDelete
  5. "It's not an accident that most Zioniss (what's that......) who post here either give no name "...... well looks like you are trapped in your own writings...... all your infor are anonymous..... that's ok for you..... for me to wrtie as anonymous, gets the regular childish spew.
    so how come you accept the Zionist soldiers Anonymous and not the once that give you the most simple critic, that a source without name is NOTHING.
    let me tell you why it is bull..... because Israelies are not afraid to say what they think, and those who come out with critic are proud to announce their names.
    So your stories are made up.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Palestinian solidarity has become creepily anthropological. It increasingly treats Palestinians, not as a people who simply need more political independence, but as a threatened tribe that must be protected from further harm by “human shields” from the enlightened west. Decked out in Arafat-style keffiyehs (a PC form of blacking up), and possessed of a conviction that it falls to white-skinned, iPhone-armed westerners to expose Israel’s “genocidal” crimes to the world media, solidarity activists who travel to Palestinian territories are becoming more and more like secular versions of the crusaders of old. They are effectively going to Palestine to find themselves, to try to give meaning to their potentially shallow lives through imagining that they can “save” an entire people and halt a “genocide” by standing in front of a tank or writing some blog posts about how tragic are the lives of cute Palestinian children. It is a peculiar form of solidarity that reduces an entire foreign people to the level of child-like victims who need the likes of St Rachel to save them.

    You are dommed

    ReplyDelete
  7. It is particularly unfortunate that you should write this on the day that an Israeli court has approved the murder of Rachel Corrie.

    You attribute motives to groups like ISM which belong to your own particular obsessions.

    People go out to Palestine and risk their lives in the name of solidarity. Palestinians want them to do so and for you to disparage them through tasteless comments and suggest that their lives are 'potentially shallow' tells us more about you than anyone else.

    I suspect you are another Zionist trying to role play.

    ReplyDelete
  8. As for anonymous, like most Zionists he combines stupidity with malevolence.

    There is all the difference in the world between someone who will be victimised, targetted and much else besides, giving evidence anonymously (although Breaking the Silence know his identity) and a Zionist propagandist, who has never risked anything, writing anonymously.

    And if you can't see that then that's because there's none so blind as those who will not see.


    Anonymous said...

    "It's not an accident that most Zioniss (what's that......) who post here either give no name "...... well looks like you are trapped in your own writings...... all your infor are anonymous..... that's ok for you..... for me to wrtie as anonymous, gets the regular childish spew.
    so how come you accept the Zionist soldiers Anonymous and not the once that give you the most simple critic, that a source without name is NOTHING.
    let me tell you why it is bull..... because Israelies are not afraid to say what they think, and those who come out with critic are proud to announce their names.
    So your stories are made up.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I bet you will send your Daughter to stop
    Bulldozers too.
    At least, it will show that her family is activ.
    You share the same stereotype as Corrie's Parents.
    Jew Haters who play humanists.

    You are doomed

    ReplyDelete
  10. You are a good example Stefan of the sick mentality of Zionism's supporters. To call you a Jewish Nazi would be an understatement. Israel is indeed a posthumous victory for pre-war German nationalism just as the growth of a new Jewish community in that country is the nail in the Nazi coffin.

    You wouldn't understand such things as Rachel Corrie was a brave woman, who wasn't 'sent' - she had a mind of her own. Her parents, being the kind of loving people that people like u, whose heads are full of poison and vitriol, couldn't understand.

    If opposing the demolition of the homes of Palestinians is an example of Jew hatred then Jew hatred must be a good thing. And that is precisely the lesson that too many people adopt from the poison spread by vipers like you.

    I have had a couple of other sad and sick comments from Zionists, who like to post to this blog too, but I have rejected them. But some useful idiots are worth publishing just to expose how sad and sick they are

    ReplyDelete

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