July 1989, Page 39a
From the Hebrew Press
The Night of the Broken Clubs
By Yossi Safid (translated by Dr. Israel Shahak)
The following story is a grim one, but it cannot be evaded. It
reveals that Israel is no longer what it once was. It is a different
country, in the same way the Israeli army is a different army, and
in the new Israel, any atrocity is possible.
I am withholding the names and a few other identifying details,
but the rest is presented in full and accurately. It could happen
to almost anyone.
In the second month of the intifada, at the end of January 1988,
Captain A., a support-company commander in a well-known battalion,
was summoned to his commander, a lieutenant colonel. The lieutenant
colonel gave the captain clear instructions to carry out arrests
in the village of Hawara outside of Nablus. Captain A. told his
commander that, in his view, the instructions were neither morally
defensible nor would they contribute to calming the area. The lieutenant
colonel responded by saying that it was a new policy, and it must
be implemented.
When the lieutenant colonel gave the orders, other officers of
different ranks were present in the room and did not comment or
interfere. Incensed, Captain A. said he would carry out the mission
only under protest.
That afternoon, Colonel Z. summoned Captain A. to discuss "how
all this would affect the company's morale." Captain A. said
that if Colonel Z. personally talked to the company it could help
matters, so a talk was scheduled for the next day, after the night
action in the village of Hawara.
In the evening, the company—40 soldiers and four officers—boarded
a civilian bus and met three more officers in two jeeps. One of
the officers, Major G., complained to Captain A. that he needed
the whole operation like a hole in the head and that it could ruin
his relations with the muhktar of the village.
At approximately 11 p.m., the bus and the two jeeps arrived in
Hawara. Major G. proposed that rather than have the soldiers go
from house to house, he would instruct the muhktar to gather the
wanted men in one spot. Major G. gave the muhktar a fist of 12 persons,
and they were rounded up without any problems. They sat on the sidewalk,
by shops in the center of the village and didn't resist.
Then, shackled with their hands behind their backs, they were led
to the bus. Major G. left the site and disappeared. The bus left
the village but, after 200 to 300 meters, it stopped beside an orchard.
"The locals" were taken off the bus and led into the orchard
in four groups of three. Each group was accompanied by an officer.
Captain A., although not psychologically prepared to take part in
the action, ensured that it was being carried out in accordance
with the orders. He later commented that dividing the men into groups
of three was necessary in order to remain "on top of the situation."
In the darkness, in the orchard, the soldiers also shackled the
Hawara residents' legs and laid them on the ground. The officers
urged the soldiers to "get it over with quickly, so that we
can leave and forget about it." Flannel was stuffed into the
Arabs' mouths to prevent them from screaming and the bus driver
revved up the motor so that the noise would drown out the cries.
And then the soldiers carried out the orders they had been given:
- To break both arms and both legs by clubbing the Arabs;
- To avoid clubbing them on the heads;
- To remove their bonds after breaking their arms and legs, and
to leave them at the site; and
- To leave one local with broken arms but without broken legs
so he could make it back to the village to get help.
The mission was completed. Most of the wooden clubs used broke.
The soldiers who would not participate in the beatings were allowed
to remain in the bus.
Four and a half months later, at the beginning of May 1988, the
Red Cross lodged a complaint with the police about the brutality
of the IDF soldiers toward the residents of Hawara. An investigation
was launched and some of the findings are presented here. If the
Red Cross had not complained, the entire affair would have remained
buried in the orchard.
We are not talking here about an "aberration." Exactly
two days before, in accordance with the same instructions, the same
actors and additional officers carried out the same action in the
nearby village of Beita.
The officer in charge didn't hear, didn't see and didn't know anything.
The commander, Colonel Z., didn't hear, didn't see and didn't know
anything, although others testified that he met with the support
company prior to and following the action in the village of Hawara.
The regional commander, Lieutenant Colonel Y., refused to give
his version in writing or orally Major G. confirmed that there had
been no need to employ force while making the arrests.
Captain A. said that immediately after the action he promised the
disconcerted soldiers that he would ask Colonel Z. "not to
give us any more such tasks." He justified that "this
case, among other things, made me leave the IDF."
Although the military police inquiry established that "Colonel
Y. deviated from his authority by ordering the beating of locals,"
since the incident in Hawara some of the officers involved have
been promoted, and no one has been brought to trial.
This article is included in From The Hebrew Press, a monthly
compilation of significant translations by Dr. Israel Shahak, distributed
by the American Educational Trust at $30 for 12 issues ($25 for
subscribers to the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs). |