Letters of
Warning
The
Or Commission in Israel Jonathan
Cook
(Jonathan
Cook is al-Ahram Weekly's correspondent in Israel.)
March 18, 2002
| Further
Info
Azmi Bishara
is interviewed about the October 2000 crisis in Middle East
Report 217 (Winter 2000). The interview is accessible online.
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After
12 long months of hearings and the appearance of 349 witnesses,
a panel of Israeli judges has offered the first insight into its
conclusions about the deaths of 13 Palestinian citizens at the hands
of the country's police force in October 2000. Justice Theodor Or,
head of the commission tasked with investigating the deaths, surprised
most legal observers by issuing letters of warning to former prime
minister Ehud Barak and his internal security minister, Shlomo Ben
Ami, who was also foreign minister at the time. Barak, Ben Ami and
12 others, who were urged to hire a lawyer and prepare for a second
round of investigations, can expect to be judged harshly in the
commission of inquiry's final report. In effect, each is being warned
now to prepare his defense against the accusations made in the letter.
The next stage
in mid-May is expected to look like a series of trials: witnesses
will be cross-examined, possibly by hostile lawyers. After that
the inquiry will issue a final report in which the three judges
will attribute levels of responsibility for the events that led
to the deaths and may in some cases recommend criminal prosecutions.
Only those who have been warned can be criticized in the final report.
This limitation
of the inquiry's scope means that families of the 13 dead victims,
and the hundreds of Palestinian citizens injured by indiscriminate
police gunfire, are now unlikely to find out who pulled the trigger.
Since the Justice Ministry's internal affairs unit, Mahash, largely
abandoned its own investigations because it said they would interfere
with the commission's work, the families have apparently reached
a dead end.
NET OF WARNINGS
The first round
of hearings has established that the police entered Arab towns and
villages in the Galilee in the first week of October 2000 to break
up a general strike. The strike was called by the Arab leadership
after six Palestinians were killed protesting Ariel Sharon's fateful
visit to the Haram al-Sharif on September 28. Police fired tear
gas, rubber bullets and live ammunition at youths throwing stones
and burning tires. As the demonstrations and stone-throwing intensified,
the police brought an anti-terror sniper squad armed with high-caliber
ammunition to two towns, Nazareth and Umm al-Fahm, where a total
of six people died.
Justice Or's
net of warnings trawled deepest among the police, catching nine,
including former national police chief Yehuda Wilk and Alik Ron,
former commander of the northern force. Or faulted Wilk and Ron,
both now retired, for 11 decisions, most relating to the use of
snipers and resorting to rubber bullets and live ammunition as a
first line of defense. Further investigation of the actions of the
two highest-ranking politicians involved -- Barak and Ben Ami --
may shed light on why the police reacted so violently to the protests.
In this regard, the first round of hearings were disappointing.
Barak in particular was given an easy ride by the panel during his
questioning in November last year.
Finally, Justice
Or issued letters of warning to three Arab politicians, blaming
them for inciting the demonstrations that led to the deaths. One
was Azmi Bishara of the National Democratic Assembly, a Member of
Knesset who was stripped of his parliamentary immunity and is currently
on trial for sedition over speeches he made in Israel and Syria.
The other two were leaders of the two branches of the Islamic Movement:
MK Abd al-Malik Dahamsheh and Sheikh Raed Salah, who heads the militant
and extra-parliamentary northern wing.
"INCITERS
AND ORGANIZERS"
The decision
to "blame the victims," as some critics described the
accusations against the Arab leadership, seemed a foregone conclusion.
In November 2000, when Barak established the commission of inquiry
-- upgrading it from a less powerful clarification committee --
he included in its mandate an examination of the "conduct of
inciters and organizers." At the time Arab lawyers objected
that the terms of reference presumed that incitement took place
before the investigation had begun.
Adalah, the
legal center for the Palestinian minority in Israel which is representing
the three Arab politicians, is preparing to argue with the inquiry
that these last warnings are illegal and should be rescinded. Adalah
points out that all previous commissions of inquiry have limited
their judgments to the executive arm of the state rather than the
public or its representatives. It fears that the warnings may be
a prelude to attempts by the government to outlaw Bishara's party
and the Islamic Movement.
As evidence
for these arguments, Adalah lawyer Marwan Dallal cites the questions
posed by Justice Or to the Arab leaders, most of whom appeared towards
the end of the first round of hearings in December and January.
"They were asked about their political agendas," said
Dallal. "No other politicians before the inquiry faced these
kind of questions. For example, Bishara was asked questions like
'Aren't you the most nationalist politician among the Israeli Arabs?'
even though this had no obvious relevance to investigation of the
events of October 2000. It was also suggested that his party's platform
concerning Israel becoming a state of all its citizens had contributed
to the tension." Sheikh Raed Salah was asked similar questions
about his "al-Aqsa is in danger" campaign, Dallal added.
"We know that Jews rioted across the country in that first
week of October, but there are no Jewish politicians being investigated
for incitement."
CHARGED
ATMOSPHERE
Justice Or's
inquiry was intended to uncover the mistakes that occurred in the
handling of the October demonstrations -- a largely administrative-strategic
question. But the atmosphere surrounding the inquiry has been politically
charged, at times resembling a post-mortem on the terminal state
of relations between Arabs and Jews within Israel. Recent Palestinian
suicide bombings and Israel's major offensive in the Occupied Territories
have only aggravated Jewish perceptions of the commission's work
as dangerous meddling.
The decision
to criticize the Arab leadership is doubtless part of an attempt
by the three judges to appear even-handed. If Jews (in the form
of the government and police command) will be reprimanded, so must
the Arabs (in the shape of their political leadership). But this
artificial "balance" -- between the aggressor and the
victim -- reopens the wounds the Or commission is trying to heal.
The futility of the "balanced" approach was underscored
the day after the commission issued its warnings on February 27.
Likud member Uzi Landau, the current internal security minister,
declared that the government would not be bound by the inquiry's
conclusions. In a swipe at the entire Israeli judicial system, under
attack from right-wing and religious groups who see it as a bastion
of leftism and secularism, Landau added: "The legal system
has become increasingly involved in managing what is happening in
the country, and that which is under the authority of the government.
This needs to be stopped."
Throughout
the hearings, Landau has been outspoken in his support for the police,
even when the evidence has painted a picture of a police force infected
with racism and guided by a brutal disregard for Arab life. Similarly,
he appears concerned that the commission's work should not set any
political precedents for the treatment of Israel's Palestinian citizens.
Justice Or's warnings are a challenge, both to the infallibility
of the police and to politicians' attitudes toward the Arab minority.
FINDING
FAULT WITH BARAK
The commission
found five faults in Barak's behavior during the October 2000 crisis.
"In his capacity as prime minister, he was not sufficiently
aware of the changes taking place in the Arab community in Israel
during his time in office," the findings read. "These
changes created a substantial possibility that riots would break
out on a large scale." Here the commission refers to the frustration
generated by Barak's repeated refusal to meet the Arab leadership
after the election of 1999, in which his victory was largely secured
by the almost unanimous support of the Arab population. Barak failed
to meet anyone from the leadership until October 3, after three
days of violence in the Galilee. The warning letter also reveals
that Barak declined a meeting "despite an assessment by intelligence
officials, given to him at his own request, that such a meeting,
if held quickly, could significantly calm the situation."
Barak is also
faulted for a decision taken on October 2: "He ordered the
police to use every means to keep the roads open, with special reference
to the Wadi Ara road [the main route into the Galilee, which passes
by the town of Umm al-Fahm], thus ignoring the many casualties,
including fatalities, that could have, and should have, been anticipated
as a result of the order." Further, Adalah lawyers have brought
to Justice Or's attention a radio interview Barak gave on the morning
before the majority of deaths occurred in the Galilee. In it the
former prime minister said that he had met with police commanders
the night before and given them the "green light" to take
whatever action was necessary to keep the roads open and preserve
the rule of law.
But the commission's
letters of warning make no link between Alik Ron's decision to use
a unit of snipers on October 2 to keep the Wadi Ara road open and
the decision taken by Barak and Ben Ami three days earlier to deploy
the same squad at the Haram al-Sharif. The snipers were responsible
for some of the Palestinian deaths there. If, as Barak and Ben Ami
contend, they delegated to Galilee police commanders the decisions
on when and how to keep the Wadi Ara road open, cannot Ron reasonably
defend his decision to use snipers on the grounds that he simply
followed the example set by Barak and Ben Ami in Jerusalem? This
point appears to have been ignored by the panel.
TIME TO
PONDER?
While Justice
Or has been doling out blame for the Arab protesters' deaths, he
has himself been accused of dragging his feet. Former military intelligence
head Shlomo Gazit, an implacable foe of the Or proceedings, observed
in the Jerusalem Post: "The tremendous tension that has prevailed
since the events of 'black October' threatens to burst forth. Enough
tension and explosives are out there for one spark to cause a huge
blast." Comparing the Or commission with the commission of
inquiry under Shimon Agranat into the failures surrounding the 1973
Yom Kippur war, he added: "The [Agranat] commission understood
it could not put off its conclusions ad infinitum. After just over
four months of investigation it issued its recommendations. It delayed
the full and detailed report to a much later date."
The Or commission,
by contrast, appears to be in no hurry to complete its work. Are
the judges merely diligent in establishing the facts? One wonders
whether Justice Or hopes to put off indefinitely the day he must
draw his final conclusions -- or at least delay them until the divisions
generated in Israel by the Palestinian uprising have faded. But
the protests of October 2000 were not simply an expression of conflicting
loyalties experienced by Palestinian citizens faced by the violence
inflicted on their ethnic kin in the West Bank and Gaza. Those citizens'
grievances against the state, and political conflict phrased in
ethnic terms, long predate the intifada. Given the increasing ethnic
polarization of Israeli society -- and the ever louder voices on
the right in favor of the expulsion of the Arab minority -- Justice
Or may not have as much time to ponder as he thinks.

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