dinsdag 17 april 2012

IDF officier op non-actief gezet voor slaan pro-Palestijnse activist

 

Het is een bekend patroon: een Israelische soldaat gebruikt geweld, er is beeldmateriaal dat de wereld over gaat en Israel maakt excuses maar zegt ook dat dat geweld niet zomaar werd gebruikt. In dit geval gaat het om een soldaat die een Deense activist met zijn geweer in het gezicht slaat. Een Palestijnse activist heeft het gefilmd, maar volgens de soldaat is daarin geknipt en is hij daarvoor door de activist geslagen en brak hij daarbij een vinger. Volgens collega's van hem zou hij eerder Palestijnen hebben geholpen en er niet op uit zijn geweest de boel te laten escaleren:

Lt. Col. Eisner's associates say that the highly esteemed officer had demonstrated restraint in previous incidents. In one instance, he helped deliver the baby of a Palestinian woman at a checkpoint and in another chased after Jewish drivers who had ran over a Palestinian girl and left her on the road. "I may have given one punch too many but I'm against violence as a concept. Sadly, the media reports are all that will be remembered," he said.

 

Wat is waar? We weten het niet, de IDF onderzoekt de zaak zoals een professioneel leger in een democratie hoort te doen maar dat zal weinigen ervan weerhouden een oordeel klaar te hebben. En wanneer het IDF onderzoek is afgerond zal niemand er nog in geïnteresseerd zijn. Wat blijft hangen is het beeld dat Israel voor de zoveelste keer met grof geweld reageert op vredesactivisten, niet dat Israelische soldaten die een illegale blokkade probeerden tegen te houden urenlang zeer terughoudend reageerden totdat ze zelf werden aangevallen. Israel is al bij voorbaat schuldig, ongeacht wat er uit dat onderzoek zal komen. 

 

RP

---------

 

IDF officer who beat activist suspended

Lt. Col. Shalom Eisner says he should not have flung his M-16 rifle on Danish activist but claims activists had beaten him with sticks, broke his finger. PM Netanyahu condemns incident

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4216424,00.html

Yoav Zitun

Published:

04.16.12, 00:11

 

Lieutenant-Colonel Shalom Eisner regretted an incident in which he beat a foreign activist with an M-16 rifle on Sunday. "I should not have flung my weapon like that," he told his associates. "But those are 60 seconds out of a two-hour event," he noted.

He has been suspended from his post and IDF chief of Staff Benny Gantz said he regarded the incident with the utmost severity. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the incident and said that "such conduct is not characteristic of IDF soldiers and commanders and has no place in the IDF and the State of Israel."

Related stories:

Central Command Chief Major-General Nitzan Alon ordered an immediate inquiry of the event. It has been decided that Eisner be suspended until the full investigation is completed. Meanwhile, the Military Advocate General has ordered an IMP (Investigating Military Police) investigation. IDF chief Gantz said: "This event does not reflect the IDF's values and will be thoroughly investigated and handled with the necessary severity."


Ynet has obtained Eisner's version of events as he told it to his associates. The deputy commander of the Jordan Valley Territorial Brigade said that after hearing of the activists' intention of blocking Route 90 he showed up at the scene and ordered the forces to prevent the blocking of the road. 

 

"I explained to the activists that many travelers were using the road because of the holiday and that they are posing a major security risk," he said. Eisner noted he had done the same thing when groups of right-wing activists had tried to access the road for protests. 

 

He said he allowed the activists to demonstrate inside the village of Ouja and ride off the road. "All was calm and in control and that is why I didn't bring a water canon and gave them 15 minutes to protest," he said.

"It was a group of 60 activists and suddenly two buses arrived and the activists all together called to block the road while closing our barrier. One of the Palestinian organizers told me at this stage that she no longer had control over the event." 

 

Lt. Col. Eisner claims that some of the protesters started attacking him with sticks which caused one of his fingers to break. He also suffered a major injury in his wrist which required a cast. "The weapon was the only thing I had in my hands. The whole thing lasted 60 seconds, we prevented them from getting on the road and they boarded the bus. Obviously, they didn't show the part where they attacked us with sticks in the video." 

 

Eisner's jeep contained a crowd dispersal kit which was not used during the event. "There was no reason for me to fire a gas grenade as there had been no violence in the course of two hours of dialogue. I thought about using the kit, but I decided it would be better to let them calm down." 

 

Lt. Col. Eisner's associates say that the highly esteemed officer had demonstrated restraint in previous incidents. In one instance, he helped deliver the baby of a Palestinian woman at a checkpoint and in another chased after Jewish drivers who had ran over a Palestinian girl and left her on the road. "I may have given one punch too many but I'm against violence as a concept. Sadly, the media reports are all that will be remembered," he said. 

 

"I could have stopped them but I didn't because I wanted a peaceful solution to the event. It's obvious the video had been edited and that it caused damage to the State of Israel. We should have had our own documenting crew," Eisner remarked. 

 

"What they were trying to do risked my life and the lives of many others. We maintained restraint for two hours. Some of the soldiers told me, 'Stop it, they're inciting.' I should have been better prepared. They caught us off guard. I used whatever I had in my hands." 

 

Some of Eisner's former subordinates said he showed restraint during riots and always opts for the path of negotiations. "The video is tendentious and edited," they said.

 

Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten