January 2, 2006
"After the soldiers instruct you to return home, suddenly a
frightening dog, in the Oketz trained dogs unit of the IDF [the Israeli
Army] enters your apartment, grabs your child, who is sitting on his
bed in shock, bites him hard in his leg and drags him down the 20 steps
that lead from the second-floor apartment to the street", Gideon Levy, Ha’aretz, 15 December 2005.
As
the U.S. methods of torture are exposed around the world, Israeli
methods of systematic torture on the Palestinians remain unbroken
taboo. Western countries – led by the U.S. – have not only failed to
condemn Israel’s brutal methods of torturing Palestinians, they are
complicit in Israel’s denial. The fact is that, Israel has been
routinely torturing Palestinians for decades with tacit support of
Western powers and without comment.
Israel’s
policy of denying torture fits into the three common forms of denial of
torture identifies in Stanley Cohen’s State of Denial. [1] First, the
"Literal denial" is when Israel denies that there is torture and that
those who made the allegations against Israel are "anti-Smite" and
"enemies of the state". Second, the "Interpretive denial", in which
Israel denies practicing torture, but something else, such as 'lite
torture’ and 'moderate physical pressure’ to "extract" information from
prisoners. Third, the "Implicatory denial", this form of denial is Abu
Ghraib model of acknowledging torture, but blaming it on a few "bad
apples"; it is the Bush-Rumsfeld model.
In
1999 the Israeli High Court "banned" the practice of torture, but
despite the "ban", torture practice continues unabated. Systematic
torture, including a policy of hooding and stressing all Palestinian
detainees has been routinely used in Israeli prisons for decades. The
practices follow a "well-defined set of steps and guidelines … selected
to inflict extreme physical pain and mental anguish without causing …
traceable physical injury". Torture and ill-treatment of Palestinians
continued to be systematic and state sanctioned. The Israeli Court
continued to sanction the use of physical force, including electric
shocks and beating, amounting to torture in interrogations of
Palestinians, by rejecting court injunctions forbidding the use of
physical force.
As
Alexander Cockburn wrote at the time: "’Moderate physical pressure’
sounds almost sedate. So does 'shaking’, until one discovers that more
than once Israel's torturers have shaken their victims to death. One
such victim was Abdel Samad Hraizat, brought to hospital unconscious
less than twenty-four hours after his arrest on April 22, 1995, and
pronounced dead on April 25. Thousands of Palestinians – never Jews –
have experienced this 'moderate pressure’ since [Supreme Court judge]
Landau made it legal". [2] In 1987, the Landau Commission sanctioned
the use of the so-called "lite torture", where many Palestinian
tortured to death. It is simply a smokescreen for injustice, violence
and ongoing occupation of Palestinian land.
A joint report by the Public Committee against Torture in Israel, the Palestinian rights group Law and the Swiss-based World Organisation against Torture
contends that the September 1999 High Court ruling has been regularly
flouted, particularly since the Intifada (Uprising) began in September
2000. According to B'Tselem, the Israeli human rights NGO, torture of
Palestinians at the Gush Etzion police station continued from October
2000 through January 2001. "Testimonies given to B'Tselem indicate that
these are not isolated cases or uncommon conduct by certain police
officers, and information received by B'Tselem raises the serious
likelihood that torture during interrogations at the Gush Etzion police
station continues"[3]. "[T]hey torture almost all the Palestinians they
could. It was in the System. The moment you start, you can’t stop",
said one researcher working with B’Tselem.
Since
its creation, Israel has used the media very efficiently to construct
an Israeli image completely removed from reality. "While [Israel]
patently and grossly violates international humanitarian and human
rights laws in its treatment of the Palestinian prisoners, it certainly
recognises the importance of these standards and indeed generally acts
to uphold them in dealing with its own [Jewish] citizens". In addition,
Israel publicly denies these standards to the Palestinians living under
its military occupation in the Occupied Territories, and pretends that
upholding international humanitarian and human rights laws there is
against "Israel’s security". Through the manipulation of the mass
media, and powerful allies like the U.S., Israel is immune from any
guilt or condemnation, and virtually free to commit crimes.
Israel’s
model of torture is praised by the Bush Administration. Indeed U.S.
forces in Iraq are following Israel’s textbook of illegal torture. The
blatantly brutal, sadistic, cruel and inhumane treatments of Iraqi
prisoners of war (POW) by U.S. soldiers and mercenaries at Abu Ghraib
in Iraq resemble to great extent the interrogation methods used by
Israel's GSS on Palestinian prisoners. Sleep deprivation, electric
shocks, shackling a prisoner to a chair in painful positions for
prolonged periods, use of smelly hoods, the playing of deafening sounds
and beating, slapping and kicking are common practices.
According
to Robert Fisk of The Independent; "The head of an American company
whose personnel are implicated in the Iraqi tortures, it now turns out,
attended an 'anti-terror’ training camp in Israel and, earlier this
year, was presented with an award by Shaul Mofaz, the right-wing
Israeli defence minister." Israeli mercenaries were seen at Abu Ghraib
where brutal and sadistic practices of torture on Iraqi prisoners and
detainees are taking place. An Israeli Knesset member told Al-Jazeera;
"there are many Israeli experts on torture in Iraq who are transferring
to the Americans their accumulative experience of thirty-seven years of
torturing and mistreating Palestinians" [4]. Similar reports of Israeli
involvement in torture of Iraqi prisoners have been reported in the
Daily Star of Lebanon.
Prisons
in Israel and Israel-run prison in Palestine are modelled on the
prisons of the old Gulag. They includes, the "secret" Facility 1391,
Jerusalem’s notorious Moskobiyya, Gush Etzion and Ashkelon are just a
few, where Palestinian youth and members of the Palestinian Resistance
continue to be tortured by Israeli General Security Service (GSS) and
Shin Bet or Shabak. Many of these prisons and torture centres are well
known to the West, and have been visited by the Red Cross, and other
"humanitarian" NGOs.
Tens
of thousands of thousands of Palestinians have been imprisoned in
Israeli prisons and torture centres since 1967. According to MIFTAH,
a Palestinian peace and justice group; "Since the 1967 war, Israel has
detained up to 650,000 Palestinians, and since the outbreak of the
Palestinian Intifada in September 2000, 35,000 Palestinians have been
arrested, including a stunning 3,000 Palestinian children". Most, if
not all of the Palestinians held without charges in Israeli-run prisons
on the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In addition, thousands of
Palestinians are imprisoned inside Israel.
Based
on official data, GSS agents interrogated thousands of Palestinians per
year during the Intifada, and over 200 at any given moment. In July
2002, the GSS related to the press that 90 Palestinians were defined as
'ticking bombs' and were tortured. According to the Public Committee
against Torture in Israel (PCATI) the number tortured is actually much
greater; and those GSS agents who interrogate Palestinian detainees
torture them, degrade them, and otherwise ill-treat them routinely, in
blatant violation of the provisions of International Laws.
The
majority of Palestinians are imprisoned under the so-called
"Administrative Detention" described by Amnesty International (AI) as:
"a procedure under which detainees are held without charge or trial. No
charges are filed, and there is no intention of bringing a detainee to
trial. By the detention order, a detainee is given a specific term of
detention. On or before the expiry of the term, the detention order is
frequently renewed. This process can be continued indefinitely". Israel
has used this method since its creation by Western powers in the Middle
East in 1948. Since 1967 the entire population of 3.7 Palestinians are
virtually imprisoned by Israeli system of military control and
humiliation.
A
report by the Palestinian Prisoner Society in June 2002, revealed that
95% of the Palestinian prisoners where exposed to inhumane treatment,
physical and psychological torture during their detention and
interrogation. Since the Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip and
the West Bank in 1967 some 180 Palestinian prisoners have been murdered
in the Israeli prisons, said a report by the Palestinian Information Centre in Britain.
In
its brutal treatments of Palestinians, Israel doesn’t discriminate
between men, women and children. However, most of the victims are
innocent Palestinian children – the most vulnerable sector of society –
arrested randomly. Children are arrested "at checkpoints, on the
street, or at their homes by heavily armed Israeli soldiers in the
middle of the night. The soldiers take them to detention centres in
Israeli settlements or military camps … the children are interrogated.
This almost always involves some form of torture or abuse, including
sleep and food deprivation, threatening language, beatings with heavy
batons, being punched and kicked, as well as being tied in painful and
contorted positions for long periods of time" [5]. The point was to
extract confessions about other minors. According to B'Tselem;
"Testimonies given to B'Tselem indicate that these are not isolated
cases or uncommon conduct by certain police officers, and information
received by B'Tselem raises the serious likelihood that torture during
interrogations at the Gush Etzion police station continues".
In
October and November 2000, "Rami Zaul, 16, was interrogated, and
freezing water was poured on to him", reported Steve Weizman of the
London Independent. He was "forced, while handcuffed, to drag a wooden
beam with one of his interrogators standing on it. 'When I got tired
and dropped it I was beaten hard’", added Weizman. Crucifixion is and
ancient for of Israeli torture.
A
15-years old Palestinian boy, Riad Faraj recounted his ordeal with the
Israeli Army as follow: "They handcuffed and beat me during the journey
to Fara'a [Israel prison in Nablus]. Once we arrived, they took me to a
'doctor' for a 'check-up.' I found out later that this 'check-up' is to
locate any physical weakness to concentrate on during torture. They
paid particular attention to my leg, which was once injured and was
still sensitive. Before they began interrogation, they asked me if I
was ready to confess. They then hanged me by my wrists, naked, outside
in the cold, and gave me hot and cold showers alternatively. A hood
covered in manure was put over my head" [3].
The
line is increasingly blurred between life in Israeli-run prisons and
outside, in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Outside Israel-run
prisons, the general Palestinian population are living under Israel’s
brutal Occupation. The situation on the ground is accurately described
by Israeli reporter Amira Hass of Ha’aretz, as, an "assault on the
chances of the Palestinian people to lead normal lives is evident in
millions of different ways. Here, a family is hurt, there, a village.
Here it's from ammunition, there from settlers, here it's a new
military order". Here is a pregnant woman and her unborn baby died at
an Israeli checkpoint – military stations within the Palestinian
territory. Here a young schoolgirl’ body shredded with Israeli bullets.
Here a newborn baby, from Gaza, in need of an incubator dies in an
ambulance after the Israeli army delays his transport. "The assault is
intensified gradually. But the overall totality of the damage is not
felt, because of the way it is gradually applied, dispersed over large
areas", added Hass.
On
Christmas Eve, the Israeli daily, Ha’aretz shed new light on the
increasing and grotesque crimes of Israeli Border Police against
Palestinian workers. "The face of the dead man is smashed. Shawara`s
body lies on the floor in his house, covered by a Palestine flag and a
sheet from Shaare Zedek Medical Centre in Jerusalem (even though he
died in Hadassah)". Shawara was tortured and murdered by the Israeli
"Border Police".
These
torturous crimes – together with the illegal Apartheid Wall – are parts
of a racist system of collective punishment and control. It is a policy
aimed at terrorising Palestinians, and controlling and restricting the
movement of Palestinians as a population. The policy is designed to
humiliate, intimidate and make life unbearable for Palestinians and
force them out of their land. All is in contravention of International
Human Rights Laws and the Geneva Convention.
The
global system of injustice and torture, purposely mounted in the moral
and legal darkness, beyond reach or oversight of anyone but those in
the highest levels within the Israeli, U.S. and British governments.
The recent exposure of the horror of abuse, torture and disappearance
of prisoners is just the tip of an iceberg of a wide spread systemic
torture and violation of human rights of citizens, including women and
children, not only in Palestine, Iraq, but also around the world in
Western-friendly countries.
Torture
is denied, because it is abhorrent and illegal. There is no such thing
as "never before". The U.S. and Britain practiced the use of torture
for many decades. Britain practiced torture during the occupation of
Germany after World War II. The town of Bad Nenndorf, a German resort
for the elderly, was converted to an Abu Ghraib prison in 1945, where
British interrogators tortured and murdered German prisoners with
impunity. The U.S. is notoriously famous in Viet Nam and Central
America, where the practices of torture were wide-spread and contracted
on behalf of the U.S. to U.S.-trained local death squads trained by
U.S. forces and personnel.
The
new U.S. law – the John McCain’s amendment – passed by Congress banning
the use of 'some form’ of torture by U.S. personnel anywhere in the
world may be like the Landau Commission; just a smokescreen for
torture. Can we trust the Bush Administration? No, the Bush
Administration is not to be trusted. Since the 9/11 attack, the U.S.
authorities have violated International Laws, the UN Charted and the
Geneva Convention. The illegal war of aggression against Iraqi is a
case in point.
Furthermore,
the U.S. has consistently hindered the application of International
Laws and cover up crimes perpetuated by Israel against the Palestinian
people. In addition to over $3 billion (U.S. taxpayers’ money) a year
given by the U.S. to Israel to finance the occupation and the theft of
Palestinian land, Israel is the largest recipient of U.S. and
British-made weapons. Israel is armed to the teeth with nuclear,
biological and chemical weapons.
U.S.
support for Israel’s brutal policy against the Palestinians will
continue to produce blowbacks, not only against Americans but also
against Jews. Like the criminal war against the Iraqi people allegedly
committed in the name of "Western civilisation", Israel’s crimes
against the Palestinian people are committed in the name of all Jews,
"because what Israel does, it does it openly in the name of the Jewish
people" said In fact many Zionist Jews have argued that "Israel
represents Jews of the world". If condemning Israeli crimes against the
Palestinians is seen as "anti-Semitism", why attacking Arabs is not
considered "anti-Semitism"? It is legitimate to criticise Israel’s
brutal policy without being anti-Jews
Western
mainstream media, led by the U.S. media have constructed a fearful myth
which implies that criticism of Israel amount to being "anti-Semites".
They use the myth to turn blind eyes to Israel’s brutal and
militaristic policies against defenceless people. Israel is not
"defending’ itself; it is torturing people and stealing their land. It
is one thing to continue supply Israel with weapons, including nuclear
weapons, and another thing of instilling fear in the public about the
danger of Iran peaceful nuclear program.
It's
hard to see how U.S. interests are served by supporting Israel’s
criminal policy against the Palestinian people. Recent world-wide polls
show that, Israel is a great danger to world peace. U.S. unconditional
support for Israel at the expense of the Palestinian people inflames
anti-America and anti-Jews sentiment. U.S. support for Israel is
destroying the Palestinian society and is leading to "the breaking of
Palestine organic links to Jerusalem [the capital of Palestine] and the
disintegration of the remnants of Palestinian society". This policy
exposes the U.S. hypocrisy of an "honest broker" for peace. It is time
to call a criminal a criminal, not "a man of peace".
Torture
doesn’t work, and the evidence is overwhelming. "Aside from its
immorality and its illegality, torture is 'not a good way to get
information’. Worse, you'll have the other side effects of torture. It
'endangers our soldiers on the battlefield by encouraging reciprocity’.
It does 'damage’ to our country's image’ and undermines our credibility
in Iraq", reported Anne Applebaum of the Washington Post, quoting Army Col. Stuart Herrington, a military intelligence specialist in interrogations.
Israelis
have long acknowledged that "torture, abusive tactics, made things
overall worse for them politically". The 'ticking bomb’ theory has also
been discredited, because it was base on unfounded assumption and had
to be abandoned. The release – without charges – of many prisoners and
detainees, including Palestinians and other nationals, who alleged to
have been tortured in Israeli and U.S.-run prisons provides ample
evidence of flawed policy that torture innocent people. People would
say virtually anything to end their torture.
Any
form of torture is inhumane and illegal. The ongoing torture of
Palestinians by Israeli authorities demonstrates that the mainstream
media are deliberately ignoring Palestinian sufferings, and in the
process betraying their own principles of impartiality. Western
governments can not pretend to be fighting the scourge of Fascism while
they are nurturing a clone of Fascism on Palestinian land.
As
Western governments have failed to act against Israel’s methods of
torture, the taboo must be broken by the citizens and grassroots
movements dedicated to peace and justice. Israel’s brutal treatments of
Palestinians and the use of sadistic methods of torture on the
Palestinian people must be exposed and condemned. It is the duty of
every citizen with concern to democracy, International Laws, and human
decency. Unless the 'International Community’ condemns all forms of
torture, including Israel’s practices of torturing Palestinians, it
remains complicit in an illegal and inhumane policy of torture.
Ghali Hassan lives in Perth, Western Australia.
Sources:
[1] Stanley Cohen, 'State of Denial: Knowing about atrocities and Suffering’. Cambridge: Polity, 2001.
[2] Alexander Cockburn, 'Israel's Torture Ban’, The Nation, 27 September 1999.
[3] B’Tselem, Routine Torture, 19 May 1998, and other B’Tselem reports.
[4] Khalid Amayreh, 'Israeli Lessons for the U.S. in Iraq’, Al-jazeera.net, 6 May 2004.
[5] Catherine Cook, et al., 'Stolen Youth: The Politics of Israel's Detention of Palestinian Children’. London: Pluto, 2004.
[6] The English version of Ha’aretz can be accessed on www.Ha’aretz.com