Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March 2000, Pages
35-36, 78
The Ostrovsky Files
A Message From Hell
By Victor Ostrovsky
Occasionally an article appears that is so disturbing in nature
that one wants to cry out to the world in anger and frustration,
“stop!” The Tel Aviv daily Ha’aretz carried just such an
article, by Aviv Lavi, on Dec. 23.
For the most part Ha’aretz translates its articles—or somewhat
sanitized versions—into English and makes them available on its
Web site at www.haaretz.co.il/english.
But others, like the one described below, remain untranslated for
reasons that will become obvious.
It is the story of Haim Peretz, a seemingly ordinary Israeli who
grew up in the small town of Ofakim—not a place overflowing with
left-wing activists. Nevertheless, in clearing him for obligatory
military service, Israeli officials overlooked a character flaw.
This ordinary young man from an ordinary town had, unnoticed by
the authorities, developed a conscience. It apparently went unnoticed
while Haim Peretz spent almost three years working on F-16 aircraft
as an Israeli air force technician. However, with only two weeks
left to complete his three years of obligatory service, this first
sergeant with a clean record was sent for a two-week stint as a
security guard at the holding facility at the Erez crossing between
Israel and the Gaza Strip.
It is not at all unusual that soldiers reaching the end of their
service are volunteered by their units to bolster manpower in under-staffed
units to which no one wants to be assigned. Peretz had no intention
of making waves at that facility. He just wanted to finish his two
weeks and return to civilian life.
The holding facility is on the Israeli side of the Erez checkpoint
and it is designed to incarcerate Palestinians arrested while trying
to enter Israel without the proper documentation. The majority of
the prisoners are people who were apprehended while trying to get
into Israel to find work. They are arrested and brought to the facility
where they await trial. The wait can extend from a week to three
months.
Usually the facility holds about 60 inmates and is run by a regular
crew of IDF soldiers, bolstered by temporary help sent in from various
units, as was Haim Peretz.
He arrived at the facility in March of 1999. After he was released
from the military and was a civilian again, he came forward and
described his experiences at Erez to Ha’aretz. Below are
some excerpts:
Peretz spent his last two weeks of military service at the Erez
crossing’s holding facility.
“From the first day I started to understand what was going on there.
Six to seven prisoners are housed in every three-by-three meters
(about nine-by-nine feet) cell. There are no beds. The prisoners
(men of all ages, from teenagers to old men) sleep on blankets on
the (concrete) floor.
“The cell is windowless except for two small barred ventilation
slots. There is no toilet in the cell: the prisoners are given access
to a toilet once a day when they are taken out in the morning for
their daily walk. The rest of the time they use a large bucket that
is placed in the center of their cell. By the way, this practice
prevents them from praying (as their religion requires them to do
five times daily) because the bucket turns the cell into a washroom,
an environment in which Muslims are not allowed to pray.
“Regulations specify that the prisoners have the right to a full
hour’s walk every day. But an hour is a flexible thing: Sometimes
the sergeant (a reference to whomever is responsible for the prisoners,
usually a corporal or even a private) decides that it will be only
a half hour, or even 15 minutes. Letting the prisoners outside their
cells for the daily walk is a hassle for him, and in most cases
he does not want to bother.
“At this time all of the prisoners are supposed to go to the toilet,
using two stalls for 20 people, since 20 are taken for their walk
at a time. Often there is no toilet paper. When they ask for it,
sometimes they are told yes, sometimes no, sometimes maybe.
“On the sabbath there is no walk. After all, the sergeant has to
get his sabbath rest. So the prisoners are locked in for a full
48 hours, from Friday morning to Sunday morning.
“Everyone is entitled to two cigarettes a day, but the guards use
the cigarettes as a bargaining chip, taking the prisoners through
seven stages of hell before they receive their smokes. Sometimes
the guards don’t give the prisoners any cigarettes, just because
they don’t feel like doing it.
“The prisoners are taken out for a shower once a week, on Wednesday.
It’s a horrible sight: the prisoners are pushed in a large group
into two showers, with one cake of soap for the entire group. Meanwhile
the guards hold a stopwatch, shouting at the prisoners to hurry.
“Some of the prisoners just forego the humiliation and stand aside.
There were some in the prison who did not take a shower for weeks.
There is no reason for letting them take only one shower a week
except that to provide more showers would be a bother for the sergeant.
Even after taking a shower the prisoners have to get back into their
own dirty clothing. They are not given any clean clothing or even
a towel. Sometimes they sit for months in the same dirty clothes.
“There are 12- and 13-year-old kids there. When I was there (in
March), there was one kid who arrived barefoot. That was the way
he stayed. He walked around that way and was brought in front of
the judge that way.
“They have no contact with their families. The day they are arrested
they are allowed one telephone call, and if there is no one at home,
that’s their problem. Whoever is brought to trial is entitled to
a conference with a lawyer, but that doesn’t happen often because
the trials themselves appear to be an aberration.
“The lawyer promises that if he is hired he will get the prisoner
off with a 1,500-shekel fine. That from people who tried to infiltrate
Israel to work for 50 shekels a day.
“I would escort the prisoners to trial as a security guard. The
trials took place in a small room in an adjacent facility. These
are assembly line trials. They are worthless. The lady judge and
the lady prosecutor have lunch together before the hearings and
are themselves bored by the routine. They call each other by their
first names. They hand out sentences of several months or a fine,
and because most of the prisoners do not have any money to pay a
fine, they remain in jail.
“One 15- or 16-year-old kid was fined 300 shekels. I took him aside
and gave him 200 shekels that I had on me. The officer saw the exchange
from the corner of his eye and yelled at me for wanting to bail
out an Arab. I saw the kid a week later still in jail, just because
he did not have all of the money to pay the fine.
“They get three meals a day. In the morning a large plate is placed
in the cell on which the guards throw a loaf of bread, a small container
of white cheese, and some vegetables. The single small container
of cheese is supposed to be enough for seven people. At lunch there
are rice and one or two hotdogs per prisoner. How many depends on
how much the prisoner sucks up to the soldiers.
“When there was a visit from Amnesty International to the facility
the inspectors were taken to the cell where the collaborators were
housed. The collaborators told the visitors the food was great.
In the evening the prisoners get the same thing as in the morning.
Most of the time they are hungry. If someone happens to be out for
a trial during lunch, or if he has been taken away for any other
reason, he will not be given his lunch. When I tried to change that,
I was told to shut up. Even as it is, I was told, the upkeep of
the prisoners is costing the country too much and ‘These leeches
are ruining our lives.’
“Once a week, on Tuesday or Wednesday, the prisoners are given
a hot drink. One week when I was in the facility they did not get
a hot drink. It is pitiful to see people who have been looking forward
for a full week to a hot cup of tea begging when they do not get
it. (This was winter and there was no heating in the cells.) The
only reason the tea was not made was that the cooks didn’t want
to bother.”
It is a rarity that an Israeli breaks ranks and tells the public
the minute details of what is really going on inside such government
installations. It is not an easy thing to do, and Haim is still
trying to understand why he felt it was up to him to come forward
and tell his story.
“Maybe it’s because I myself have come from a place where affluence
was not the norm, and I saw people enduring hard times. I couldn’t
stand seeing people so mistreated. For God’s sake, we were not dealing
with terrorists here, or people who wanted to harm anyone. All these
poor people wanted to do was work so they could feed their families.
“When I was in high school I worked in a textile factory where
most of the workers were Arabs. I had a great relationship with
them. I learned a few words of Arabic before I went into the army.
I also had the opportunity to take a couple of courses in Arabic
and Islam in the open university. That is probably the reason that
I, unlike most other soldiers, did not regard every Palestinian
as a terrorist and I didn’t look down on them.”
Liaison Between Guards and Prisoners
Due to his partial knowledge of Arabic Haim became a liaison between
the guards and the prisoners. He escorted them to trial or to the
nurse or the doctor. There a prisoner might have expected to find
an island of compassion, someone who, in compliance with the Hippocratic
oath he or she had taken, would relieve some of the prisoner’s suffering.
But the reality was different.
“The medical treatment they get is a story in itself. When they
arrive they are given a medical check-up to verify that they are
healthy enough to be held in prison. That checkup is meant to provide
the facility with a cover of legitimacy.
“In fact, the doctor did not touch or check the prisoners. He just
asked them if they were all right. He did not speak one word of
Arabic and couldn’t understand what they answered—not that there
was much chance that they would complain anyway.
“The doctors are rotating reservists. When I was there, the doctor
did not let the prisoners sit or lie on the bed when he checked
them. He didn’t want to get it dirty, so he told them to lie on
the floor. During one of the visits, when a prisoner complained
of some pain the doctor said in my presence: ‘They should die, these
Arabs, they should get one bullet each and be done with them. Who
needs to treat them?’ Later he said he was only joking, but I know
he was not.
“From the beginning he treated them like garbage. He only pulled
them or pushed them, barked at them and cursed them. ‘What is your
name, dirty Arab?’ he would say. On a good day he would give them
Acamole [an Israeli version of aspirin], which was not much help.
“One day one of the prisoners swallowed several pills and lost
consciousness. He lay there for over an hour, but the doctor was
in no hurry. ‘Let him wait, no one told him to commit suicide,’
the doctor explained. ‘One fewer Arab will be better.’
“One of the prisoners had a bad rash, which he got from the military
blankets. The prisoner was accused of arriving from Gaza that way.
But I know he was well when he came. He was 16 and had been caught
the day before when he and his brother tried to infiltrate Israel.
The doctor said that he should be placed in isolation.
“When the prisoner was placed in isolation, still suffering from
an extremely itchy rash, he was crying and yelling for help. He
stayed like that for a long time, freezing in a small cell with
very little to eat. I begged the officer to let me explain to him
why he was isolated and try to calm him down. I was not allowed
to do so.
“The doctor said that the prisoner needed to have a shower every
day. And even if he had a shower, it probably wouldn’t help as he
would have to get back into his old clothing afterward.
“Most soldiers regarded the Palestinians as animals. I saw soldiers
who would, for the fun of it, spit into the plates of the prisoners.
When the prisoners arrive they already have been beaten up by the
border patrol that caught them.
“On one of the first days I saw a border patrol soldier beating
up a kid right there in the facility. I asked him to stop. ‘Shut
up, you Arab-loving lefty,’ he said to me. At the time I still didn’t
want to get involved, so I backed off.
“The sergeants beat up the prisoners all the time. It appears the
soldiers expect the prisoners to speak fluent Hebrew, and every
word a prisoner speaks in Arabic sounds to the guards like a curse
word. If a prisoner who did not know better complained, he would
be beaten up.
“During a roll call one of the prisoners said something and the
guard thought he was talking back so he twisted the prisoner’s hand
behind his back and threw him against the wall. The guard then placed
him in isolation in a tiny cell. The prisoner was moaning in pain
for several days before I was asked to take him to the doctor, who
diagnosed a broken arm. When I told the doctor what had happened,
he wrote in his report that it was the result of the prisoner tripping.
When I insisted that it was a beating, one of the male nurses made
it clear to me that if I opened my mouth they would ‘blow my head
off.’”
After Haim went public he was harassed and regarded by many of
his friends as a traitor. The military said it would look into his
revelations and an official investigation was promised. The commander
of the facility was removed from office.
It must be remembered, however, that there are many more facilities
like this one in Israel, and there are many prisoners who are simply
unaccounted for. In additon, one should not forget the hostages
Israel has kidnapped from Lebanon and who are held as pawns for
future exchanges with the Hezbollah. Five such Lebanese hostages
were released recently. One was 31 years old and had been in captivity—without
trial and without committing a crime—since he was 16—15 years ago.
Haim’s exposé made very few ripples in Israel. Is it possible that
the well of Israeli compassion has totally run dry? The most worrisome
element of this story is the uncalled for and unnecessary cruelty
displayed by what one can only regard as “regular Israelis.” It
appears to vindicate the many predictions made by psychologists
that the prolonged Israeli occupation of the territories might rob
the Israelis of their souls. When and if peace is achieved, and
hopefully that day is near, where will “the new Israeli” release
all his stored up cruelty, hatred and violence? Already the rates
of violence by Israelis against Israelis, starting with their own
families, may be the final revenge of Israel’s hundreds of thousands
of innocent victims.
Former Mossad case officer Victor Ostrovsky is the author of
By Way of Deception and The Other Side of Deception,
both of which are available on audiotape through the
AET Book Club. |