{"id":187447,"date":"1977-07-05T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-11T22:14:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?p=187447"},"modified":"2019-03-11T22:14:56","modified_gmt":"2019-03-11T22:14:56","slug":"auto-insert-187447","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/auto-insert-187447\/","title":{"rendered":"Israeli practices\/tortureof Arab prisoners – Letter from Sudan"},"content":{"rendered":"
Letter dated 30 June 1977 from the Permanent Representative of the <\/u><\/p><\/div>\n Sudan to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \t<\/span>I have the honour to forward herewith the text of an article entitled "Israel tortures Arab Prisoners" and a related editorial which appeared in The Sunday Times <\/u>19 June 1977 with the request that they be circulated as an official document the General Assembly, under items 30 and 57 of the preliminary list, and of the Security Council.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>I would appreciate it very much if the attention of the President of the Security Council could be drawn to the subject—matter.<\/p><\/div>\n \n (Signed) Mustafa MEDANI <\/p>\n Permanent Representative of the Sudan Chairman of the Arab Group<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n <\/p>\n \n <\/p>\n ANNEX<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A. Article published in "The Sunday Times" (London) <\/u>on 19 June 1977<\/p><\/div>\n Israel tortures Arab prisoners <\/p><\/div>\n Special investigation by INSIGHT<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \t<\/span>Israeli interrogators routinely ill-treat and often torture Arab prisoners.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>This central conclusion emerges from a five-month inquiry into Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. The methods used vary. Often there is just prolonged beating – which could imply that there are merely a number of "rogue cops" exceeding orders.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Insight has evidence, however, of techniques which go well beyond this, and place Israel's practice firmly in the realm of torture. Prisoners are often hooded 51 or blindfolded or hung by their wrists for long periods. Many are sexually assaulted. Others are given electric shocks. At least one detention centre has (or had) a specially constructed "cupboard", about two feet square and five feet high, with concrete spikes set in the floor.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>All Israel's intelligence services are implicated., and it is implausible that knowledge of these practices is confined to the interrogators.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Torture is sometimes used to obtain information, and it also evidently helps to pacify the occupied territories. But one of its main purposes is to try to justify Israel's claim that it administers the West Bank and Gaza through the rule of law. The Israelis claim that Arabs accused of "security offences" are properly tried. They are, however, often convicted on their confessions and our investigation indicates that many of these confessions are extracted through ill-treatment extending to torture.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Israel has consistently denied allegations of ill-treatment and torture. Nine days ago Gabriel Padon, Press counsellor at the Israeli embassy in London, said on BBC Radio's World At One:<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>"Every case of alleged torture or mistreatment is investigated very thoroughly by the police and by the courts… Some cases have occurred where the police was found to have used excessive zeal in interrogation…<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>"An Insight Inquiry" – The Insight team has carried out a detailed inquiry in Israeli-occupied territories into Arab allegations and official Israeli denials of the use of torture. In concludes in part: "Torture of Arab prisoners is so widespread and systematic that it cannot be dismissed as 'rogue cops' exceeding orders. It appears to be sanctioned as deliberate policy."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>"Israel is a country of the rule of law. There are procedures which the same procedures that are used in Britain in interrogation. There is absolutely no truth in the charges of torture, burning, electric shocks and all these. This is \/a\/ very good propaganda slogan but that is about as fa as it goes."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Insight has questioned 44 Arabs who claim to have been ill-treated or tortured. Most of them still live in the occupied areas and some are willing to be name. We have tape recorded 110,000 words of testimony, and obtained corroboration wherever possible. Because the findings contradict official denials the evidence is set in considerable detail in this issue of The Sunday Times.<\/u> The report begins on page 17.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The practices we have examined have occurred throughout the 10 years of Israeli occupation; our evidence spans this period, the last base being in December 1976. There is no reason to believe it has ceased: the allegations are continuing.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Prime Minister designate Menahen Begin is today signing a coalition agreement with two religious parties ending a month of fierce political haggling over the formation of the first Likud-led government in Israel's 29 years of statehood.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Begin, 63, will then inform President Ephraim Katzir of the successful completion of his Government-forming efforts, a week ahead of schedule. He will seek a confidence vote in the Knesset (parliament) on Monday.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Early on the morning of 24 February this year, a transfer took place at the Allenby Bridge, the main crossing point from the Israeli-occupied West Bank to the East Bank of Jordan.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>An Israeli army jeep drove to the centre of the bridge and pulled up. Several Israeli soldiers climbed out, followed by an International Red Cross delegate from Jerusalem, a young Swiss named Bernard Munger. Together they helped a frail figure from the jeep and laid him on a stretcher. His name was Omar Abdel-Karim. He was a Palestinian carpenter from the village of Beit Sahur, just below Bethlehem. He was 35 years old, but he looked an old man.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>On the Jordanian side of the bridge a small group awaited Abdel-Karim. It comprised his brother; a Jordanian army liaison officer; and Jean Courvoisier, head of the International Red Cross delegation in Jordan's capital, Amman. The Red Cross men, Courvoisier and Miinger, picked up the stretcher and carried it to an ambulance of the Jordanian Red Crescent (which operates in Jordan in liaison with the International Red Cross).<\/p><\/div>\n As Munger walked back to the Israeli jeep, Abdel-Karim tried feebly to wave good-bye. When an army man asked his name, his lips barely moved. To his brother's distress, Abdel-Karim appeared not to recognise him. "I thought he was going to die. Courvoisier told friends later.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Abdel-Karim lived. At midday, he was admitted to the King Hussein hospital at Salt, 25 miles from the bridge on the road to Amman. The case notes of his initial examination recorded that he was thin and weak. He complained of pains in the chest and found it hard to breathe out. He had an infection of the urinary tract. He talked of severe head pains and showed signs of giddiness. And his difficulty in moving tended to confirm his complaint that his joints, especially 'his knees, were painful too. Chest X-rays then showed that Abdel-Karim's ribs had at some point "been fractured. The houseman also noted that Abdel-Karim was in a highly nervous state – and prescribed tranquillizers.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Abdel-Karim continued to bear the marks of having come through some traumatic experience, however. When his wife Nijmi came to see him, he stared at her. "Who are you?" he asked. It was some time before he showed signs of remembering her.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>With the aid of antibiotics, multi-vitamins and a high-protein diet, Abdel-Karim has slowly recovered, though two months later, he could still barely walk.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>He had been arrested, said Abdel-Karim, by the Israeli security forces four months before and accused of belonging to the fedayeen,<\/u> the Palestinian resistance and terrorist movement. He had then, he said, been tortured. And the tortures he recounted were so brutal, so prolonged and, above all, so organised and applied as to leave no doubt – if his story were true – that systematic torture is an Israeli practice.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>We were expecting Abdel-Karim's arrival. We had learned of his case in January, while he was still in Israeli custody; and before his release we had talked with his wife, his lawyer and the mayor of his village.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>For five months, we have been inquiring into allegations of systematic torture by Israel of Arab prisoners. Such allegations have been persistent for almost a decade, ever since the first weeks of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza strip after Israel's victory of June 1967. The United Nations, Amnesty and several individuals, have, at different times, made detailed examinations of the evidence and have, in varying degrees, been disapproving of Israel. But virtually all previous inquiries have been vulnerable to criticism because they were conducted outside Israel and the occupied territories, without attempts at on the spot verification. Even a special committee of the United Nations, a body not loathe to criticise Israel, has admitted its inability "to reach a conclusive finding, since this would only be possible after a free investigation inside the occupied territories".<\/p><\/div>\n For this Insight inquiry we have worked inside the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, taking statements and examining stories there and going into neighbouring Arab countries, when necessary, to check those claims further. We have questioned ^9 Palestinian Arabs, who have been in the custody of the Israeli security forces. Almost all are still living in the occupied territories. Forty-four of them alleged,, in varying detail, that they had been tortured.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>In 22 of the cases 5 the Arabs involved have agreed to be named, even though they still live under Israeli military rule. In reaching our conclusions we have given greater weight to these cases. The remaining cases where Palestinians have asked to remain anonymous, we have treated with great caution, though consistent-patterns emerge from these, too. Our conclusions are:<\/p><\/div>\n (1)\t<\/span>Israel's security and intelligence services ill-treat Arabs in detention<\/p><\/div>\n (2)\t<\/span>Some of the ill-treatment is merely primitive: prolonged beatings, for example. But more refined techniques are also used, including electric-shock torture and confinement in specially-constructed cells. This sort of apparatus, allied to the degree of organisation evident in its application, removes Israel's practice from the lesser realms of brutality and places it firmly in the category'' of torture.<\/p><\/div>\n (3)\t<\/span>Torture takes place in at least six centres: at the prisons of the main occupied towns of Nablus, Ramallah and Hebron on the West Bank, and Gaza in the south; at the detention centre in Jerusalem, known as the Russian Compound; and at a special military intelligence centre whose whereabouts are uncertain, but which testimony suggests is somewhere inside the vast military supply base at Sarafand, near Lod airport on the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv road. There is some evidence too that, at least for a time, there was a second such, camp somewhere near Gaza.<\/p><\/div>\n (4)\t<\/span>All of Israel's security services are implicated: the Shin Beth, roughly Israeli's MI5 and Special Branch in one, which reports to the office of the I Prime Minister; Military Intelligence, which reports to the Minister of Defence; the border police; and Latam, Israel's "Department for Special Missions", both of which report to the Police Minister.<\/p><\/div>\n (5)\t<\/span>Torture is organised so methodically that it cannot be dismissed as a handful of "rogue cops" exceeding orders. It is systematic. It appears to be sanctioned at some level as deliberate policy.<\/p><\/div>\n (6) Torture seems to be used for three purposes. The first is, of course, to extract information. The second motive, which seems at least as common, is to induce people to confess to "security" offences, of which they may, or may not, be guilty. The extracted confession is then used as the principal evidence in court: Israel makes something of the fact that it has few political prisoners in its jails, only those duly convicted according to law. The third purpose appears to be to persuade Arabs in the occupied territories that it is least painful to behave passively.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>It may be, therefore that the 22 Arabs we name are at risk of reaction in Israel. The 22 knew and accepted this. We see no way to protect them except by publicity, so we publish as an appendix to this report, their names and home towns.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n * * *<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The problems of checking<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The case of Omar Abdel-Karim,, the man sent over the Allenby "bridge- is typical for two reasons. His allegations differ little from those in scores of previous cases. And the difficulties of checking what he says are, as we shall show, no different either. First, his story, recorded during eight hours of questioning in mid-April, The phrase "he says" should mentally be added to each assertion that follows:<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Omar Abdel-Karim was arrested on October 3, 1976, as he was crossing eastward over the Allenby bridge™ on his way to see his brother's wife in Amman. He was driven to the Russian Compound, known to Arabs as "Moscobiya" – the |detention and interrogation centre in Jerusalem which houses Shin Beth and Latam rand occasionally the border police.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Among the interrogators who questioned him the same evening were two whom he came to know as "Edi" and "Orli". They accused him of being one of the fedayeen. <\/u>'When he denied this, they beat him on the soles of his feet. Later, for about '15 minutes, he was hung up by his wrists. Then he was sent to a cell in the main prison block at Hoscobiya. His feet were swollen; he crawled there.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>He was in Moscobiya for seven days. In later interrogations, he lay prone on the floor and, while one man stood on his legs, another pulled his arms back. Another time, a stick was twisted through his handcuffs, cutting the blood supply to his hands. He still denied involvement with the fedayeen.<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>After a week, he was transferred in a closed lorry to another location -he thought Sarafand. So far his treatment might just be described as "brutality" rather than torture. But the new centre was more purposeful. Except during interrogation sessions,; he was continuously hooded by a black canvas bag. Fresh interrogators took over, though Orli was also there.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Electricity was now used. Two thin, black leads were taped to Abdel-Karim with sticking plaster. These went into a black box, presumably a transformer, and from it a thick white wire was plugged into a wall socket. A button on the box switched the current on. "it felt as though my bones were being crushed", Abdel-Karim said. "The most painful was when they attached the wires to my testicles. When the current was applied, I felt it through my whole body. After Every muscle ached and I felt the shocks ended, I felt pain in all my joints, that my nerves were exhausted."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Abdel-Karim says electricity was used at "eight or nine" sessions. But he says he continued to maintain his innocence. After 11 days he was moved again, to the prison at Hebron on the West Bank, Edi and Orli were still with him, but yet more interrogators now joined in. On his first day at Hebron, one named "Ouzi" kicked his face; when blood from Abdel-Karim's nose spotted his boot, Ouzi made him lick it off. Abdel-Karim recalls the boot: "Thick, with a kind of grid on the soles, like a commando's."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>He also identifies one interrogator as "Abu Ghazal", a man with an "Aleppo rose" on his cheek, a pitting peculiar to the Middle East. Abu Ghazal swung him round the room by his hair and, when it came out. forced him to eat it. "It stuck all down my throat. It made me want to throw up." Then he had to drink salty water. Finally, Abu Ghazal and a second interrogator forced a bottle up Abdel-Karim's rectum.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>That was the first day. The second day, he says he was again suspended by his wrists from a pulley and beaten. I felt something break in my chest. Then I fell unconscious. When I came to I was on the floor and they were throwing water in my face."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>It was on the third or fourth day that Orli brought Abdel-Karim's wife Hijrni the prison. "When she saw me in such condition, she started screaming. Orli grabbed her by the hair. He started slapping her face until blood came from her nose and mouth …" Abdel-Karim said he would confess.<\/p><\/div>\n "Orli said: 'Now we are friends.' He pulled out a. cigarette and handed it to me. I took the cigarette and started smoking and he said: How talk. 'So I had to start lying. I had nothing to tell and I had to save my wife. I said I had bombs and I hid them in my lavatory. When I said this my wife said: 'No, I was the one who put them there.' In fact there was nothing we had done but she said-she had done it to save me, and I said it to save her."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Abdel-Karim was taken back to his home at Beit Sahur where sewage trucks sucked out the cess-pit by his house. They found nothing. When it was realised he had lied, Edi repeatedly banged Abdel-Karim's head against a rough wall. Pieces of plaster fell out and Orli told him to swallow them, which he did.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>If I had anything I would give it to you", Abdel-Karim kept telling his interrogators. They did not believe him. He was kept under a cold shower; jammed into a barrel of freezing water; and suspended from his wrists once more while the interrogator Orli squeezed his genitals. "The mind cannot imagine how that hurts. It was so bad, it made me forget all the other pain."<\/p><\/div>\n The last assault Abdel-Karim remembers is being shut in a small cell into which some kind of gas was squirted through the judas-hole in the door. "I couldn't stop coughing. My eyes and nose were running. The whole world started turning round me." He remembers a piece of glass like a finger" which was finally slid into each nostril to ease his breathing.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>From that point, Abdel-Karim's alleged recollections are confused and fragmentary. We have established that at the end of November, for example, he spent a week in the main Israeli prison hospital at Ramleh. He says he does not remember this. Then on December 12, his wife Nijmi says, she and their 12-year-old son visited him back in Hebron and he did not recognise the boy. He says he does not remember this episode either. About this time, the Israelis took him to the Jordanian border; but the Jordanians refused to accept him because no arrangements had been made. Abdel-Karim says he just recalls something like that. Of his eventual journey to Salt in February through the mediation of the International Red Cross, he remembers very little.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>IT IS AN APPALLING story, but how much of it is true? In the nature of torture, only two parties are present: torturer and victim. As Amnesty International has said: "The confrontation between the individual and the limitless power of the state … takes place in the darkest recess of political power." Failing confession by the torturers we have to look for other things: corroboration of verifiable details; or the consistency of one account with others, in circumstances Bhere collusion can be ruled out. By those tests, Abdel-Karim's story deserves Credence.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>We had learned of his case, as we said, even before his release. The independent interviews we conducted then went some way to corroborate his account.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Six weeks before<\/u> Abdel-Karim's release, his wife Nijmi had told us – in an interview at Beit Sahur – how she had been arrested and taken to Hebron prison. She and her husband had been beaten in front of each other, she said. Her face been slapped and her hair pulled. Her husband appeared "badly beaten on his face and his eyes were swollen. There were burns on the back of his hands and there were burns on his face as if made by an iron or an electric fire." Abdel-Karim later showed us, among other marks on his body, a flat scar on the pack of his right wrist. He said it had been caused by the application of electricity, unmodified by a transformer, in Hebron. "They taped the wires to me and then put the plug directly in the socket. It just blew me away, and they had to reattach it. Sparks came from my hand. The other equipment didn't cause sparks .")<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Other interviews helped to corroborate Abdel-Karim's story. On November 14, his lawyer, Felicia Langer and her clerk Abed el-Asali visited Abdel-Karim in Hebron prison. Langer subsequently wrote an account of the visit:<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>In another interview six weeks before Abdel-Karim's release, Langer's clerk Asali confirmed her account, adding that they had seen Abdel-Karim suddenly start laughing and kiss a prison guard. He said that the guard was the only one who didn't torture him …" (Asali did not mention burns on Abdel-Karim but he did claim to have seen "blue marks and red marks like blood near his ear.") It was also in mid-January, again six weeks before his release, that we interviewed the mayor of Abdel-Karim's village, Hanna al-Atrash. He told us then how the Israelis had spent several days draining the sewers around Abdel-Karimfs house. His account of the episode agrees in general with that given to us later by Abdel-Karim – who could in no way have colluded with him.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The mayor also told us that in late November, having heard from' Felicia Langer of Abdel-Karim's state, he went to see the Israeli military governor of the Bethlehem district: "He said he didn't believe the story, but he would look into it. He later told the mayor that Abdel-Karim had been moved to a prison hospital.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The mayor also contacted the International Red Cross in Jerusalem: "I asked them to look into the allegations. Later the Red Cross delegate Bernard Hunger confirmed to me that they were true. He confirmed Felicia Langer's letter completely."<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>As a matter of policy, the Red Cross never comments publicly on cases. The chief Red Cross delegate in Jerusalem, Alfredo Witschi, said he could not confirm or deny the mayor's statement. "We make our reports to the authorities and request action", he said. Similarly in Amman, Jean Courvoisier would confirm only that he had med Abdel-Karim on the Allenby bridge.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>We have established, however, that the Jerusalem Red Cross delegate Hunger first got access to Abdel-Karim at the end of November, about 55 days after his arrest. It was about then – and so possibly as a result of Hunger's intervention – that Abdel-Karim was moved to Ramleh prison hospital. He was X-rayed, but returned, after a week to Hebron. In the light of his later condition – which Hunger described to doctors in Amman as "lamentable" and to which the medical records at Salt bear witness – this seems a strange decision. It is not surprising that Abdel-Karim has the fondest memories of Hunger, whose continued efforts helped finally bring his release. "'He saved my life", Abdel-Karim says.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n * * *<\/p><\/div>\n The Arabs under Israeli rule<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \t<\/span>ABOUT 1.7 MILLION Arabs live under Israeli rule. Half a million live within the pre-1967 borders, and are Israeli citizens. The other 1.2 million live in areas occupied by Israel during the 1967 six-day war – 800,000 in East Jerusalem and the Bank (formerly part of Jordan), and 4O0,000 in Gaza (formerly administered by Egypt). A small number also live on the Golan Heights, captured from Syria.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Israel annexed East Jerusalem to "reunite" the divided city. The rest of the West Bank and Gaza are administered by military governors, and basic policy is made Israel's Ministry of Defence – which has, for example, sanctioned about 80 Jewish settlements in the occupied areas.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>A degree of normal civilian life is permitted: there are Arab newspapers (though subject to censorship), and last year municipal elections took place on the West Bank. Beyond this, political organisation and activity is banned.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Local justice is administered by Palestinian Arab officials Jordanian law on the West Bank, and British Mandate law in Gaza. This is the same Legal system applied there by Egypt from 1949 to 1967).<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>All "security offences", however, are handled by military courts staffed by Israeli judges and court officials. Most allegations of torture and ill-treatment involve border police and members of Israeli intelligence who arrest and interrogate suspected security offenders before bringing them before a military court.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Member of the fedayeen<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \t<\/span>BUT IF THERE IS independent corroboration for points of Abdel-Karim's story, there are also weaknesses which make it fall short of final proof.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>In the first place, he was<\/u> once a member of the fedayeen.<\/u> Seven years ago, he served a 20-month sentence for possessing a revolver. His lawyer, Felicia Langer, though Jewish and a refugee from the Final Solution, is an active Communist, regularly denounced by the Israeli Government for political contacts with enemies of the state.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Secondly, the medical evidence is not conclusive. It rests ultimately upon the judgements and testimony of the director of the Salt hospital. Dr. Ahmad Hamzeh. But Dr. Hamzeh is scarcely neutral. In 1976 the Israelis deported him from the West Bank. His clinical judgements, too, are open to challenge. In finding Abdel-Karim's injuries "consistent with" his story of torture, Dr. Hamzeh placed some emphasis on his fractured ribs. Yet in February 1976, we have discovered, Abdel-Karim visited the Mount of David orthopaedic hospital in Bethlehem, complaining of pains in his back and chest. Hospital records show that an X-ray taken then also showed evidence of multiple fractures in ribs". Medical experts in London say that even if Abdel-Karim's ribs had later been refractured, Dr. Hamzeh's X-rays might not have allowed him to distinguish between the two sets of breaks.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>It might be said that, in a country of avowed political freedom., Felicia Langer's politics should not debar her testimony. It could also be said that old fractures were surely susceptible to fresh damage from beatings. Yet doubts remain. And while we could corroborate many points in their accounts, Abdel-Karim and his wife disagreed on one significant detail. He said that his wife was brought before him at Hebron about October 25 – and the detail of his testimony leaves little room for error. She had already told us that the date was October 15.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>THIS EBB AND FLOW of evidence is typical of torture allegations, and it illustrates the persistent difficulties of proof. In Abdel-Karim's case, however, one piece of external evidence strongly suggests that something<\/u> which the Israelis wish to hide did indeed happen to him. It comes from the Israelis themselves.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The day he was sent over the Jordan and up to Salt hospital, Dr. Hamzeh contacted Reuters and told them of Abdel-Karim's condition. A Reuters' reporter in Israel asked the West Bank military authorities for an explanation.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>He was told that Abdel-Karim was a convicted Arab guerrilla and saboteur who had fallen ill in prison after serving three years of an 11-year sentence. He had asked the Israelis to let him go to Jordan for medical treatment, and they had agreed.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The story was a lie. Medical records in Bethlehem show, as we have said, that in February 1976 – a year before his release over the Allenby bridge – Abdel-Karim went, a free man, to the Bethlehem orthopaedic hospital, and made several further visits as an out-patient before his arrest. The mayor, Hannan-al Atrash, confirms that the arrest was in October 1976. Finally, we reproduce (page 17) the picture of Abdel-Karim and his wife taken on their 13th wedding anniversary. It was taken at the Photo-david studio in Bethlehem in the spring of 1976. The studio remembers taking it.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Mistaken identity can be ruled out. Few convicted "guerrillas and saboteurs" are invalided in mid-sentence over the Allenby bridge. Nor did the military-authorities sound confused. The point, however, is not that they probably lied. The disquieting point is that the officer who told the lie must either have been ordered by his superiors to do so – or else lied on his own initiative, knowing he would not be punished if his superiors found out. Whatever happened to Omar Abdel-Karim, in other words, was part of an officially-sanctioned system.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n * * * <\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The judgement of the world<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>ON THE DAY after the United Nations had voted to establish the State of Israel in November, 1947, Chaim Weitzmann, Israel's first president and,, to many, its founding father, wrote: "I am certain that the world will judge the Jewish state by what it shall do with the Arabs ." The dilemma his prophecy encapsulates leads directly to the situation revealed by our investigation.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Israel is a Jewish state, determined to remain so. Yet it rules 1.7 million Arabs – for a decade 1.2 million of these have been under military occupation.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>The reasons why Israel has since 1948 steadily increased its dominion over Arabs and their land go back into the infinite regress of cause-and-effect, charge and counter-charge that makes up modern Middle Eastern history. That is outside the scope of our inquiry. The fact is that most Israelis see no choice but to r continue military occupation; while some Israelis actively want to do so, on the grounds of historic Jewish rights to the land.<\/p><\/div>\n \t<\/span>Because Israel is so dependent on what Weitzmann saw as the judgement of the world, it must try to ensure the judgement is favourable. The conflict between this Is international need and the domestic reality of military rule and Arab resistance expressed sometimes through terrorism seems to us the most concrete explanation of torture has become, on the evidence, an accepted Israeli practice.<\/p><\/div>\n\n
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