Shabak Torture Drives Israeli Palestinian Lawyer to Suicide
by alethoBy Richard Silverstein | Tikun Olam | April 29, 2014
Amjad
al-Safadi was an East Jerusalem defense attorney whose clients were
Palestinian security prisoners. Two months ago, he himself was arrested
by the Shabak and detained for 45 days. He was charged with aiding
Palestinian militant groups and their detainees. During his detention
he was tortured by Shabak interrogator goons. Among his claims were
that electric shocks were used against him. He was released from prison
and placed under house arrest (the same process used in the case of Majd Kayyal). Yesterday, five days after his release, he hung himself at his home and died.
News1, in that breathless credulous way Israeli media has of reporting Palestinian security “crimes,” claims
(Hebrew) that four Palestinian lawyers were arrested (the charge sheet
was filed on April 4th) after being recruited by a former prisoner to
pass messages to arrestees from Islamic Jihad and Hamas housed in
various prisons within Israel.
They
were accused of “tens” of violations of various security statutes
including “contact with a foreign agent,” “serving an unlawful
association,” and “obtaining materials to facilitate in acts of
terror.” The accused purportedly passed messages from the prisoners to
the leadership of the militant groups with which they were affiliated.
The attorneys were allegedly paid between $100-150 for each message
delivered, with the funds coming from the militant groups in Gaza. The
messages were designed to coordinate protests within the prisons against
treatment of security detainees, including hunger strikes, attempts to
establish “radio contact between Gaza and the prisons,” transfer of
funds among the prisons and coordination between the organizations and
their imprisoned leaders. The origin of these funds was allegedly an
unnamed lawyer representing the organizations in Gaza.
For Israeli TV news coverage of the original arrests, see here.
Anyone
who regularly reads this blog will know of my profound skepticism about
virtually any criminal charge offered by the security services. While I
haven’t been able to delve into the evidence offered, the charges in
this case strike me as dubious, if not ludicrous. How some of the most
highly surveilled prisoners in the Israeli prison system would’ve been
able to create surreptitious radio communication between the prisons and
Gaza, how they would have been able to transfer tens of thousands of
dollars between prisoners and militant groups on the outside, how
specifically the defendants aided in acts of terror–what materials they
procured, and who they give them to? It all appears to be an elaborate
fictional conspiracy.
These
alleged activities began, according to the charge sheet in January 2012
and continued till their arrest. How such a conspiracy involving so
much money, equipment and co-conspirators could’ve extended for a period
of two years in some of the most secure facilities in the State of
Israel beggars belief.
There
are always readers who point out the heinous charges against the
victims as if they were proven. So let’s keep in mind that not only
weren’t the charges proven, the victims hadn’t been tried, let alone
convicted. There is a presumption of innocence in most democracies,
though my right-wing readers often conveniently forget this when a
Palestinian is involved.
Whether
or not al-Safadi was guilty of any of the charges, the very notion of
torturing a defense attorney in a so-called democracy is beyond
repulsive. What does it say about Israel that it’s torturers can make a
well-educated professional man kill himself when released? Don’t
Israelis understand that when their representatives do such heinous
things it reflects on the entire nation? Or do they not care because
they can create a wall between “us,” the Jews, and “them,” the
Palestinians? What they do to “them” is somehow insulated from “us?”
All
this proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that Israeli ‘democracy’ is skin
deep and reserved for the Jewish sector. Among Israeli Jews there is a
prevalent notion that their country can be a democracy even with the
Palestinian minority being denied democratic rights. The very notion is
preposterous and indicates Israel is an ethnocracy rather than a
democracy.
I have only been able to find one instance
of an Israeli Palestinian prisoner committing suicide in an Israeli
prison and none of prisoners killing themselves shortly after release
from the torture chambers (there is of course the example of Ben Zygier,
who committed suicide in his cell). It’s always thrilling when Israel
achieves yet another milestone in its march toward democracy and the
rule of law!
I
contacted the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel and asked what
they knew about the case. Ishai Menuchin the director told me that
they’d tried to locate Amjad within the prison system twice during his
detention without success. They heard he was at the Russian Compound
(Jerusalem). When they arrived to see him they discovered he’d been
moved to Ramon, a different prison. When they asked to meet with him
there they were told he’d been released.
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