Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
Page 1 of 1
Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
While authorities vow to crack down on settler violence against Palestinians, studies by rights groups show Israel has a poor track record in bringing Jewish terrorists to justice.
The deadly arson attack in the West Bank village of Duma last week may have shocked mainstream Israelis, but international organizations and human rights groups say it fits a pattern of unchecked violence against Palestinian civilians and impunity for the settlers who perpetrate it.
The attack that killed 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh and seriously injured three of his family is only the latest act in a campaign of Jewish terrorism that targets Palestinians and in most cases goes unpunished, according to data compiled by various organizations.
In 2006 and 2007, when the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs started keeping count, about 100 settler attacks against Palestinians were recorded each year. Violence spiked at the end of the decade, as the so-called “price tag” campaign by extremist settlers gained strength, and since 2010 between 300 to 400 attacks have been recorded annually. Despite recent events, the latest numbers point to a possible dip, as 322 incidents were recorded in 2014 versus 397 in 2013, and up to July this year there had been 118 reported attacks.
Incidents are only counted if actual damage or casualties are reported, OCHA notes, and can range from uprooting trees and destroying fields to stone throwing, arson and physical attacks.
While Israeli authorities say they are committed to cracking down on nationalistically-motivated crimes and have stepped up efforts to fight Jewish extremists, human rights groups say that the state largely fails to investigate, prosecute and convict Israeli suspects when their victims are Palestinian.
Lax enforcement
A report published in May by Yesh Din, an Israeli group that provides legal assistance to Palestinians, looked at the fate of some 1,000 complaints filed with Israeli police over alleged violence by settlers between 2005 and 2014.
The study found that more than 91 percent of investigations were closed without indictments being filed. In the overwhelming majority of these cases, around 85 percent, the investigation was closed due to a failure to find suspects or collect sufficient evidence to file charges, the report says.
“Of course, not every crime can be solved,” said Yesh Din spokesman Gilad Grossman. “But if such a large proportion of cases remains unsolved it is because the police fails to take even the most basic investigative steps such as interviewing witnesses, the complainant and potential suspects.”
Only about 7 percent of investigations lead to charges being filed, according to Yesh Din. Most of these involve violent attacks and high-profile cases, such as a 2007 kidnapping and beating of a 15-year-old Palestinian boy, the report says.
For cases that do end up in court, almost 23 percent of indictments are dropped or thrown out, while nearly a quarter of trials end with a guilty verdict but a decision not to convict the defendant. This measure of leniency – which is often applied to minors or people without a criminal record – is used unusually liberally with settlers, the report suggests, noting that such an outcome occurs only in 5.3 percent of cases tried in magistrates courts and 1.2 percent in district courts.
Only a third of the trials end with a full or partial conviction, which may result from a plea bargain, according to the report. Taking into account the amount of indictments originally filed, this means that for Palestinian victims of Jewish violence there is less than a 2.5 percent chance of the perpetrators being found, tried and convicted.
Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said the authorities “take nationalist crime very seriously.” She told Haaretz that the police has created a specially-dedicated unit in the Judea and Samaria District and was “investing efforts and resources in the intelligence, operational and investigative spheres to identify the perpetrators [of such crimes].”
Last year there was an increase of 30 percent in cases handled compared to 2013, while arrests and indictments had risen respectively by 98 percent and 75 percent, she said. However, Samri could not provide further data on the actual investigations and indictments that those percentages refer to.
Parallel justice systems
Critics say that lack of police resources in the West Bank is just one of the factors behind the lax enforcement.
“On a basic level there’s a bias against Palestinians who complain to Israeli police over violence by Israeli settlers,” says Sarit Michaeli, spokeswoman for the B’Tselem human rights group. “These cases are not handled with the same seriousness and efficiency as when Israelis are victims of Palestinian violence.”
Even when indictments are filed, the fact that settlers are tried in civilian courts while Palestinians face military tribunals creates another level of discrimination, Michaeli says – civilian courts offer more guarantees and protections to defendants, while demanding stronger proof from the prosecution to secure a guilty verdict.
Jewish terror suspects are also usually freed on bail and can prepare their defense at home, while Palestinians are held pending trial and more easily pressured into a confession or a plea bargain, she told Haaretz in a telephone interview.
Inactive army
Another factor is the role of the Israel Defense Forces, which, rights groups say, is heavily involved in fighting Palestinian terrorism, but is mostly passive when it comes to stopping settler violence and tends to pass on responsibility to the police.
Yesh Din published another report in May, for which it collected the testimonies of 77 soldiers and officers about the lack of orders and procedures issued by commanders on how to deal with settler attacks against Palestinians – or in some cases toward the army itself.
“If you ask the soldiers they will tell you they are there to protect the settlers,” Grossman said. “Very few understand that under international law they are also supposed to protect the Palestinians.”
As a result, he said, soldiers often stand idly by even when directly witnessing settlers throwing stones at Palestinians or engaging in other forms of violence – something that does not happen when the roles are reversed.
The IDF spokesperson’s unit said in a written response that the army “has procedures in place dictating that when an offense occurs all necessary action to prevent or stop it must be taken, regardless of who caused the event.”
B’Tselem’s Michaeli said that the combined inaction and inefficiency of the army, police and judiciary have sent the message that there is little or no political will to stop Jewish terror and encouraged the spread of violence.
“For years people get to throw stones, burn fields, cut down trees without being stopped, and so some of them advance to more serious attacks, like burning cars and houses,” she said. “We can’t say that it’s just them, just a small minority of extremists, because that would mean rejecting the responsibility we all share for creating this situation.”
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/beta/.premium-1.669588
Says it all really.
The deadly arson attack in the West Bank village of Duma last week may have shocked mainstream Israelis, but international organizations and human rights groups say it fits a pattern of unchecked violence against Palestinian civilians and impunity for the settlers who perpetrate it.
The attack that killed 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh and seriously injured three of his family is only the latest act in a campaign of Jewish terrorism that targets Palestinians and in most cases goes unpunished, according to data compiled by various organizations.
In 2006 and 2007, when the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs started keeping count, about 100 settler attacks against Palestinians were recorded each year. Violence spiked at the end of the decade, as the so-called “price tag” campaign by extremist settlers gained strength, and since 2010 between 300 to 400 attacks have been recorded annually. Despite recent events, the latest numbers point to a possible dip, as 322 incidents were recorded in 2014 versus 397 in 2013, and up to July this year there had been 118 reported attacks.
Incidents are only counted if actual damage or casualties are reported, OCHA notes, and can range from uprooting trees and destroying fields to stone throwing, arson and physical attacks.
While Israeli authorities say they are committed to cracking down on nationalistically-motivated crimes and have stepped up efforts to fight Jewish extremists, human rights groups say that the state largely fails to investigate, prosecute and convict Israeli suspects when their victims are Palestinian.
Lax enforcement
A report published in May by Yesh Din, an Israeli group that provides legal assistance to Palestinians, looked at the fate of some 1,000 complaints filed with Israeli police over alleged violence by settlers between 2005 and 2014.
The study found that more than 91 percent of investigations were closed without indictments being filed. In the overwhelming majority of these cases, around 85 percent, the investigation was closed due to a failure to find suspects or collect sufficient evidence to file charges, the report says.
“Of course, not every crime can be solved,” said Yesh Din spokesman Gilad Grossman. “But if such a large proportion of cases remains unsolved it is because the police fails to take even the most basic investigative steps such as interviewing witnesses, the complainant and potential suspects.”
Only about 7 percent of investigations lead to charges being filed, according to Yesh Din. Most of these involve violent attacks and high-profile cases, such as a 2007 kidnapping and beating of a 15-year-old Palestinian boy, the report says.
For cases that do end up in court, almost 23 percent of indictments are dropped or thrown out, while nearly a quarter of trials end with a guilty verdict but a decision not to convict the defendant. This measure of leniency – which is often applied to minors or people without a criminal record – is used unusually liberally with settlers, the report suggests, noting that such an outcome occurs only in 5.3 percent of cases tried in magistrates courts and 1.2 percent in district courts.
Only a third of the trials end with a full or partial conviction, which may result from a plea bargain, according to the report. Taking into account the amount of indictments originally filed, this means that for Palestinian victims of Jewish violence there is less than a 2.5 percent chance of the perpetrators being found, tried and convicted.
Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said the authorities “take nationalist crime very seriously.” She told Haaretz that the police has created a specially-dedicated unit in the Judea and Samaria District and was “investing efforts and resources in the intelligence, operational and investigative spheres to identify the perpetrators [of such crimes].”
Last year there was an increase of 30 percent in cases handled compared to 2013, while arrests and indictments had risen respectively by 98 percent and 75 percent, she said. However, Samri could not provide further data on the actual investigations and indictments that those percentages refer to.
Parallel justice systems
Critics say that lack of police resources in the West Bank is just one of the factors behind the lax enforcement.
“On a basic level there’s a bias against Palestinians who complain to Israeli police over violence by Israeli settlers,” says Sarit Michaeli, spokeswoman for the B’Tselem human rights group. “These cases are not handled with the same seriousness and efficiency as when Israelis are victims of Palestinian violence.”
Even when indictments are filed, the fact that settlers are tried in civilian courts while Palestinians face military tribunals creates another level of discrimination, Michaeli says – civilian courts offer more guarantees and protections to defendants, while demanding stronger proof from the prosecution to secure a guilty verdict.
Jewish terror suspects are also usually freed on bail and can prepare their defense at home, while Palestinians are held pending trial and more easily pressured into a confession or a plea bargain, she told Haaretz in a telephone interview.
Inactive army
Another factor is the role of the Israel Defense Forces, which, rights groups say, is heavily involved in fighting Palestinian terrorism, but is mostly passive when it comes to stopping settler violence and tends to pass on responsibility to the police.
Yesh Din published another report in May, for which it collected the testimonies of 77 soldiers and officers about the lack of orders and procedures issued by commanders on how to deal with settler attacks against Palestinians – or in some cases toward the army itself.
“If you ask the soldiers they will tell you they are there to protect the settlers,” Grossman said. “Very few understand that under international law they are also supposed to protect the Palestinians.”
As a result, he said, soldiers often stand idly by even when directly witnessing settlers throwing stones at Palestinians or engaging in other forms of violence – something that does not happen when the roles are reversed.
The IDF spokesperson’s unit said in a written response that the army “has procedures in place dictating that when an offense occurs all necessary action to prevent or stop it must be taken, regardless of who caused the event.”
B’Tselem’s Michaeli said that the combined inaction and inefficiency of the army, police and judiciary have sent the message that there is little or no political will to stop Jewish terror and encouraged the spread of violence.
“For years people get to throw stones, burn fields, cut down trees without being stopped, and so some of them advance to more serious attacks, like burning cars and houses,” she said. “We can’t say that it’s just them, just a small minority of extremists, because that would mean rejecting the responsibility we all share for creating this situation.”
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/beta/.premium-1.669588
Says it all really.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
How many extremists or terrorists has Fatah or Hamas arrested and jailed?
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
How many settler homes, crops etc have been attacked? Perhaps you would like to find me instances? How many churches have Palestinians burnt down? Have a good google, it might take you a while.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
sassy wrote:How many settler homes, crops etc have been attacked? Perhaps you would like to find me instances? How many churches have Palestinians burnt down? Have a good google, it might take you a while.
Copout
Answer again:
How many extremists or terrorists has Fatah or Hamas arrested and jailed?
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
You seem to expect a standard of Israel yet not the same of the Weest Bank and gaza, why is that sassy?
Is it because you are a hypoccritical fuckwit?
So again:
How many extremists or terrorists has Fatah or Hamas arrested and jailed that target Israel?
Is it because you are a hypoccritical fuckwit?
So again:
How many extremists or terrorists has Fatah or Hamas arrested and jailed that target Israel?
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
Oh dear, you had all that time and couldn't find any. I don't expect differing standards, I expect the same standards. Now find me an instance of it happening to Jewish settlers. The Palestinian Police Authority don't have jurisdiction anyway, it comes under the auspices of military law for Palestinians, civil law for Israelis, funny that. If it happened Palestinians would have their arses thrown in military prison toute de suite. The huge majority of Israeli settlers walk away scott free or with a very light sentence as the chart above shows.
Oh, and BTW, the Israeli extremists are part of their government.
Oh, and BTW, the Israeli extremists are part of their government.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
sassy wrote:Oh dear, you had all that time and couldn't find any. I don't expect differing standards, I expect the same standards. Now find me an instance of it happening to Jewish settlers. The Palestinian Police Authority don't have jurisdiction anyway, it comes under the auspices of military law for Palestinians, civil law for Israelis, funny that. If it happened Palestinians would have their arses thrown in military prison toute de suite. The huge majority of Israeli settlers walk away scott free or with a very light sentence as the chart above shows.
Oh, and BTW, the Israeli extremists are part of their government.
Don't have jurisdiction?
What an idiot.
That is because hamas are terrorists you fucking idiot.
So after asking you a simple questions you weasel out of answering.
Who give s shit about Palestinain extremists?
They are scum just like jewish extremists. Unlike you though who supports armed resisstance against innocent Israelis including babies, I condemn all extremism and where people are not convicted they should be. The fact is like with Christians persecuted, the Palestinians in Fatah and hamas do fuck all an d what does sassy say on this:
Yep fuck all
s
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
We are talking about the West Bank. Hamas are not in the West Bank and the Palestinians in the West Bank come under military law. You obviously didn't know that. How thick and uneducated are you.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
sassy wrote:We are talking about the West Bank. Hamas are not in the West Bank and the Palestinians in the West Bank come under military law. You obviously didn't know that. How thick and uneducated are you.
The West bank arresst Hamas supporters but no extremists against the jews, proving again your claim to not being ab le to do anything is a complete an utter lie
Youi are as thick as shit you scumbag.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
You're just making me laugh now LOL, and as I have things to do I will leave you to burble to yourself. Bless, one of these days you'll get a brain, but I won't hold my breath, far to dangerous in the circumstances.
Guest- Guest
Re: Israel’s Dismal Record of Arresting and Convicting Jewish Terrorists
sassy wrote:You're just making me laugh now LOL, and as I have things to do I will leave you to burble to yourself. Bless, one of these days you'll get a brain, but I won't hold my breath, far to dangerous in the circumstances.
Yet more drivel because as per usual I just made you look an even bigger ignorant ----
Too easy to show up a scumbag terrorist supporting wankstain
There is nothing laugable about a traitor who support Muslim extremists.
Typical left wing scum
Guest- Guest
Similar topics
» Naftali Bennett on Israel’s Jewish Terrorists
» Israel Bans Novel on Arab-Jewish Romance From Schools for 'Threatening Jewish Identity'
» Israel Day Parade faces Jewish anti-Israel protesters
» The mutant-alien Jewish terrorists who have nothing to do with the Israeli right
» Israel: a Jewish state or a democracy
» Israel Bans Novel on Arab-Jewish Romance From Schools for 'Threatening Jewish Identity'
» Israel Day Parade faces Jewish anti-Israel protesters
» The mutant-alien Jewish terrorists who have nothing to do with the Israeli right
» Israel: a Jewish state or a democracy
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Sat Mar 18, 2023 12:28 pm by Ben Reilly
» TOTAL MADNESS Great British Railway Journeys among shows flagged by counter terror scheme ‘for encouraging far-right sympathies
Wed Feb 22, 2023 5:14 pm by Tommy Monk
» Interesting COVID figures
Tue Feb 21, 2023 5:00 am by Tommy Monk
» HAPPY CHRISTMAS.
Sun Jan 01, 2023 7:33 pm by Tommy Monk
» The Fight Over Climate Change is Over (The Greenies Won!)
Thu Dec 15, 2022 3:59 pm by Tommy Monk
» Trump supporter murders wife, kills family dog, shoots daughter
Mon Dec 12, 2022 1:21 am by 'Wolfie
» Quill
Thu Oct 20, 2022 10:28 pm by Tommy Monk
» Algerian Woman under investigation for torture and murder of French girl, 12, whose body was found in plastic case in Paris
Thu Oct 20, 2022 10:04 pm by Tommy Monk
» Wind turbines cool down the Earth (edited with better video link)
Sun Oct 16, 2022 9:19 am by Ben Reilly
» Saying goodbye to our Queen.
Sun Sep 25, 2022 9:02 pm by Maddog
» PHEW.
Sat Sep 17, 2022 6:33 pm by Syl
» And here's some more enrichment...
Thu Sep 15, 2022 3:46 pm by Ben Reilly
» John F Kennedy Assassination
Thu Sep 15, 2022 3:40 pm by Ben Reilly
» Where is everyone lately...?
Thu Sep 15, 2022 3:33 pm by Ben Reilly
» London violence over the weekend...
Mon Sep 05, 2022 2:19 pm by Tommy Monk
» Why should anyone believe anything that Mo Farah says...!?
Wed Jul 13, 2022 1:44 am by Tommy Monk
» Liverpool Labour defends mayor role poll after turnout was only 3% and they say they will push ahead with the option that was least preferred!!!
Mon Jul 11, 2022 1:11 pm by Tommy Monk
» Labour leader Keir Stammer can't answer the simple question of whether a woman has a penis or not...
Mon Jul 11, 2022 3:58 am by Tommy Monk
» More evidence of remoaners still trying to overturn Brexit... and this is a conservative MP who should be drummed out of the party and out of parliament!
Sun Jul 10, 2022 10:50 pm by Tommy Monk
» R Kelly 30 years, Ghislaine Maxwell 20 years... but here in UK...
Fri Jul 08, 2022 5:31 pm by Original Quill