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Of all the war crimes committed by the Nazis during World War 11, none were more horrifying than those committedin their concentration camps. Millions of people, Jews, Gypsies, Poles, Serbs, Greeks, Frenchmen, Norwegians, Dutch, Russians and even Germans were victims of the Nazi concentration camps. One of the great Zionist crimes is that they did not lift a finger to save their co-religionists, preferring the Nazi persecution of Jews as a means of driving Jews to Palestine and of playing on the sentiments of the western democracies. Israel has imitated the Nazi system of concentration camps.
The establishment of the Israeli concentration camps is the same offense for which the Nazi war criminals Kaltenbrunner, Frank and Sauckel were hanged, among other Nazi war criminals. All of the Palestinian and Lebanese inmates of the Israeli concentration camps are victims of the same war crimes for which these Nazis were indicted, tried, convicted andexecuted. Their indictment reads: "They imprisoned such persons without judicial process, holding them in 'protective custody' and concentration camps, and subjected them to persecution, degradation, despoilment, enslavement, torture and murder." (1) This Statement of Offense is found in Count Four (Crimes Against Humanity) of the International Military Tribunal Indictment presented at Berlin on October 18, 1945.
It is a shocking irony of human behavior that some of the Jewish survivors of the Nazi gaolers imitated them in their own treatment of defenseless Palestinian Arabs. Even during the initial period of mass expulsion of Palestinians by the Zionists in 1948-1950, they herded Palestinians into concentration camps surrounded by barbed wire before expelling them from the country. In Majdal, for example, Israeli journalist Tom Segev writes:
On December 31, 1948, the Ministerial Committee for Abandoned Property discussed the future of Majdal. According to Elimelih Avner, "An investigation of the situation by the Ministry of Defense showed that there are 1,600 Arabs there, concentrated together and fenced in ..." (2)
That many of the Zionist guards who beat and mistreated the Palestinian Arabs were themselves survivors of Nazi concentration camps is confirmed by the caption of a photograph published in the June 22, 1950 issue of the Hebrew weekly Haolam Hazeh:
Note the number tattooed on the guarding soldier's arm. Many of the immigrants who have been through the hell of the European concentration camps lack the proper attitude toward the Arab captives of the State. (3)
From these rudimentary beginnings the Zionist concentration camp system evolved to the point where today its level of institutionalized brutality would fit the criteria established by Nazis Rudolf Hoess, Use Koch and Josef Mengele. Indeed, in an article entitled "You Will Get Used to Being a Mengele" the Israeli newspaper Al Hamishmar of September 19. 1988 compared the Israeli concentration camp system of today with the regimen of Dr. Josef Mengele, the Nazi physician at Auschwitz who was infamous for his cruelty:
Dr. Marcus Levin, a member of Kibbutz Matsuba, was called up for reserve duty in Ansar 2 prison. When he arrived at the prison clinic he met two of his colleagues and asked for information about the job of a doctor there. The answer: "Mainly you examine prisoners before and after an interrogation." When Dr. Levin asked, amazed, "After interrogation?" his colleagues replied: "It's nothing special. Sometimes there arefractures. Yesterday, for instance, they brought a 12-yearold boy with two broken legs." After this, Dr. Levin met with the compound commander, a Lieutenant Colonel, and told him: "My name is Marcus Levin and not Josef Mengele and for reasons of conscience I refuse to serve in this place." One of the doctors, who was present, tried to calm Dr. Levin and said: "Marcus, at first you feel like Mengele but after a few days you get used to it." (4)
The occupation of the West Bank and Gaza following the war of 1967 enabled the rapid expansion of the Israeli concentration camp system. The Zionists dragged into their concentration camp centers such so-called "terrorist" types as factory owners, journalists, dentists, trade union officials and well-known athletes. These people, who almost anywhere else would have been considered pillars of the community, were brutally tortured and mistreated in the Israeli concentration camp system.
Torture under interrogation is official policy in all Israeli concentration camps and interrogation centers. This conclusion was reached in 1977 by the London Sunday Times, which on June 19, 1977 published the results of an intensive investigation it had conducted of the Israeli prison system. Extracts from later study, Prisoners of Israel, conducted by prominent Jewish civil libertarians Ralph Schoenman and Mya Shone, are given below:
THE PREVALENCE OF TORTURE
The use of torture in Israeli prisons has been the subject
of inquiry. In 1977 the London Sunday Times conducted a
five months investigation in which 110,000 words of testimony
were tape recorded. Corroboration was obtained for
the evidence adduced. The torture documented occurred
"through the ten years of Israeli occupation" since 1967. (5) The
Sunday Times study presented the cases of 44 Palestinians
who were tortured. Most of them remain in the post-1967
Occupied Territories and many were willing to be named.
The investigation resulted in concrete conclusions. Israeli
interrogators routinely ill-treat and frequently torture Arab
prisoners. Torture of Palestinian prisoners is so widespread
and systematic that it cannot be dismissed as the work of
"rogue cops" exceeding orders. It is sanctioned as deliberate
policy. (6) The techniques place Israel's policy firmly in the
realm of torture. Prisoners are hooded or blindfolded and are
hung by their wrists for long periods. Many are sexually
assaulted. Others are given electric shock.
At least one detention center has a specially constructed
"cupboard" about two feet square and five feet high with
concrete spikes set in the floor. (7) The first hand accounts of
these practices will be examined later but now it should be
emphasized that all the Israeli intelligence services are implicated.
It is implausible, concludes the Sunday Times, that
knowledge of these practices is confined to the interrogators.
The Sunday Times investigation showed that maltreatment
designated as "merely primitive" was universal in Israeli
prisons and detention centers. Such treatment encompasses
"prolonged beatings." The report found that "refined techniques"
are also used including electric shock torture and confinement
to specially constructed cells. (8)
This torture was found to take place in at least six centers
including the four principal cities of Nablus, Ramallah and
Hebron on the West Bank. and Gaza. Torture was established
as prevalent in the interrogation and detention center in
Jerusalem known as the Russian Compound or Moscobiya. It
was found that a special military center, located inside the
huge military supply base at Sarafand near Ben Gurion airport
on the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv road, was a primary center for
torture. A second such military complex, where torture was
standard procedure, was situated in Gaza. (9)
There was specific authorization for the use of torture. In
concluding that torture "was officially sanctioned as
deliberate policy" the study determined that Israel's security
services were culpable:
- Shin Bet, equivalent to the F.B.I. and Secret Service
in the United States, reports directly to the office of the Prime
Minister.
- Military Intelligence reports to the Minister of
Defense.
- Border Police administer all checkpoints. There are
checkpoints throughout the territories occupied since 1967 as
there are at the borders.
- Latam is part of the Department of Special Missions.
- A para-military squad is assigned to police units.
The Sunday Times found this official policy of torture to
have at least three aims: to extract information; to induce
people to confess to security offenses of which they may or
may not have been guilty, so the confession could be used in
court as primary evidence; and to persuade Palestinians in the
post-1967 Occupied Territories that their least painful course
is passivity.
PATTERNS OF TORTURE IN THE POST-1967 OCCUPIED TERRITORIES
Over half of the victims were struck in the genitals or in
other ways sexually abused.10 Each detention center featured
interrogators with "apparent predilections." This was confinned
by fifty affidavits. The Russian Compound interrogators
in Jerusalem "favored assaults on the genitals,
besides endurance tests such as holding a chair with outstretched
arms or standing on one leg." (11)
The specialty of the military center at Sarafand was to
blindfold prisoners for long periods, assault them with dogs
and hang them by their wrists. (12) At Ramallah, however,
electric shock was not used. Ramallah was "almost alone" in
its failure to use electric shock torture. The specialty at
Ramallah was "anal assault." (13)
Fazi Abdel-Wahed Nijim was arrested in July 1970. He
was tortured at Sarafand and set upon by dogs. Arrested again
in July 1973 he was beaten in Gaza prison. Zudhir al-Dihi was
arrested in February 1970 and interrogated in Nablus where
he was whipped and beaten on the soles of his feet. His
testicles were squeezed and he was hosed with ice water.
Shehadeh Shalaldeh was arrested in August 1969 and
interrogated at Modcobiya. A ballpoint refill was pushed into
his penis. Abed al-Shalloudi was held without trial for sixteen
months. Blindfolded and handcuffed while at Moscobiya, he
was beaten by Naim Shabo, an Iraqi Jew, Director of the
Minorities Department.
Jamil Abu-Ghabiyr was arrested in February 1976 and
held in Moscobiya. He was beaten on the head, body and
genitals and made to lie in ice water. Issarn Atif al-Hamoury
was arrested in October 1976. In Hebron prison the authorities
arranged his rape by a prisoner trustee. (14)
In February 1969, Rasmiah Odeh was arrested and
brought to Moscobiya. Her father, Joseph and two sisters were
detained for interrogation. Joseph Odeh was kept in one room
while Rasmiah was beaten nearby. When they brought him
to her she was lying on the floor in blood stained clothes. Her
face was blue, her eye black. In his presence, they held her
down and shoved a stick up her vagina. One of the interrogators
ordered Joseph Odeh "to fuck" his daughter. When
he refused, they began beating both him and Rasmiah. They
again spread her legs and shoved the stick into her. She was
bleeding from the mouth, face and vagina when Joseph Odeh
fell unconscious. (15)
The pattern of torture reported by the Sunday Times is
similar to that found in the hundreds of testimonies published
by Israeli lawyers Felicia Langer and Lea Tsemel, by Palestinian
lawyer Walid Fahoum and the accounts we ourselves
heard from former prisoners.
This pattern is documented in the West Bank as early as
1968, one year after the occupation began. Although the
International Committee of the Red Cross does not make
public declarations, it had prepared in 1968 a finding of
torture. Its "Report on Nablus Prison" concluded:
"A number of detainees have undergone torture during
interrogation by the military police. According to the
evidence, the torture took the following forms:
1. Suspension of ihe detainees by the hands and the
simultaneous traction of his other members for hours at a time
until he loses consciousness.
2. Bums with cigarette stubs.
3. Blows by rods on the genitals.
4. Tying up and blindfolding for days.
5. Bites by dogs.
6. Electric shocks at the temples, the mouth, the chest and
testicles."(16)
THE CASE OF GHASSAN HARB
Israel's former Ambassador to the United Nations, Jacob
Doron, once said: "Nobody is in prison because of their
political beliefs." (17) However, as of 1977, over 60% of all
prisoners in pre- 1967 Israel and the territories occupied since
1967 were Palestinians found guilty of political offenses and
many of the other prisoners were Palestinians held administratively
without being charged.
In the West Bank and Gaza all political parties and their
activity are banned and Marxists are kept under surveillance.
In 1973, the PLO and the Palestinian Communist Party were
planning to form an alliance called the Palestine National
Front. On the night of April 21-22, the Israelis detained all
suspected would-be members.
Ghassan Harb, a 37 year old Palestinian intellectual and
journalist for At Fajr, an Arabic daily, was one of those
arrested.18 He was taken by Israeli soldiers and two plainclothes
agents from his home in Ramallah to Ramallah prison
where he was held 50 days. During this time he was neither
interrogated nor accused of any act. He was denied any
contact with his family or a lawyer.
On the 50th day, he was taken with a sack over his head
to an undisclosed place. His interrogator told him he was in
Kasr el-Nihaye or "The Palace of the End." Here he was
subjected to sustained beating: "Fifteen minutes, twenty
minutes beating with his hand across my face." Later a bag
was placed over his head. Stripped naked he was forced into
a confined space and he began to suffocate. He managed by
moving his head against the "wall" to remove the bag and
found himself in a cupboard-like compartment some two feet
square and five feet high (60 cm. and 150 cm. respectively).
He could neither sit down nor stand up. The floor was
concrete with a set of stone spikes set at irregular intervals.
They were "sharp with acute edges," some one and a half
centimeters high. Harb could not stand on them without pain.
He had to stand on one leg and then replace it continuously
with the other. He was kept in the box for approximately four
hours during the first session.
He was then made to crawl on his knees on sharp stones
while being beaten for an hour by four soldiers. Then after
questioning, he was returned to his cell and the routine was
repeated: Beatings, stripping, "the cupboard" and crawling.
He was made to crawl into a dog kennel two feet square.
While in the cupboard at night he heard prisoners pleading,
"Oh, my stomach. You are killing me."
Ghassan Harb's ordeal has been corroborated independently
by four people. Mohammed Abu-Ghabiyr, a
shoemaker from Jerusalem, described the identical courtyard
with its sharp stones and dog kennel. Jamal Freitah, a laborer
from Nablus, described the "cupboard" as a "frigidaire" with
the same dimensions. It had "a concrete floor with small
hills ... with very sharp edges, every one like a nail."
Kaldoun Abdul-Haq, aconstruction company owner from
Nablus, also described the courtyard and the cupboard with
its floor "covered with very sharp stones set in cement." Haq
was hung by his arms from a hook in a wall on the edge of
the courtyard.
Husni Haddad, a factory owner from Bethlehem, was
made to crawl in the courtyard, the sharp gravel underfoot,
and was kicked as he crawled. His box too had asfloor which
had spikes like people's thumbs but with sharp edges."
Ghassan Harb was released two and a half years later,
never having been charged with a crime or brought to trial.
His lawyer, Felicia Langer, succeeded in taking the matter of
his maltreatment to the Israeli Supreme Court. No full statements
were taken or admitted into the court hearing; no
witnesses were called. The court dismissed out of hand all
charges of torture.
Lawyers who regularly defend those accused of "security"
offenses declare unanimously that the Military Courts in
Israel and the post-1967 Occupied Territories "collude in and
knowingly conceal the use of torture by Israel's intelligence
services." (19)
Should defense counsel challenge the validity of the confession
or present evidence of torture, a "little trial" or Zuza
(Hebrew) occurs. The prosecution produces the army or
police officer who took down the confession. But, as the
Israeli lawyer, Lea Tsemel, observes, "the officer takes the
statement, indeed often composes it for the prisoner. But this
officer does not conduct the interrogation or perform the
torture. Hence he can state that the confession was freely
accepted." (20)
Interrogators and warders can rarely be identified and
brought to court because they use assumed Arab names such
as Abu Sami and Abu Jamil or nicknames such as Jacky,
Dany, Edi, Orli, etc. Even when a prisoner succeeds in
bringing his torturer to court - there is no result. Lea Tsemel
described how, after enormous effort in which countless
obstacles were overcome, the interrogator who had tortured
her client was brought into the courtroom. "He just looked at
the defendant and said he had never seen him before in his
life. That ended the matter." (21)
Wasfi O. Masri succeededin having five confessions ruled
inadmissible- for which he is much admired among lawyers
in Israel and the post-1967 Occupied Territories. This, however,
does not assure acquittal. The five were from "a total of
thousands."
THE CASE OF OMAR ABDEL-KARIM
Omar Abdel-Karim, a carpenter from the village of Beit
Sahour, near Bethlehem, was 35 at the time of his arrest in
1976.22 He "looked like an old man" when a Red Cross
delegate helped the frail figure onto a stretcher as he was
transferred by Israeli soldiers to East Jordan and into the
custody of the International Red Cross delegation to Jordan.
He was too weak to give his name and could barely move his
lips. He could not recognize his brother, a Jordanian army
liaison officer.
Admitted to King Hussain hospital, his case notes show
him to have ken thin and weak, suffering from chest pains,
difficulty in breathing, urinary tract infection, severe head
pains, giddiness, pains in his joints and inability to move
without pain, particularly in his knees. His ribs had been
fractured and he was in a state of nervous agitation. Despite
intensive treatment with antibiotics and multi-vitamins he
could barely walk two months later.
His torture had been "so organized and applied as to leave
no doubt," reports the Sunday Times, "that systematic torture
is an Israeli practice." For five months the investigative team
of the newspaper worked inside the West Bank and Gaza,
entering the neighboring countries as well, to verify the
evidence of torture. The case of Omar Abdel-Karim, concludes
the Sunday Times is typical in that "the facts differ little
from those of scores of other cases." (23)
Omar Abdel-Karim was arrested on October 3, 1976 en
route to visit his brother's wife in Amman. He was driven to
the Russian Compound where Shin Bet, Latam and the Border
Police were housed. Among his interrogators were two men
whom hecame to know as professional torturers. Their names
were "Edi" and "Orli."
They accused him of being a fedayeen, a member of the
Palestinian resistance. When he denied this, they began to
torture him. They beat him on the soles of his feet and hanged
him by his wrists for fifteen minutes at a time. The beatings
on his feet caused edema and swelling. He had to crawl to his
cell. During seven days of interrogation he was forced to lie
prone on the floor. One man stood on his legs while another
pulled back his arms. A stick was twisted through his handcuffs
cutting the blood supply to his hands. Transferred to
Sarafand he was hooded continuously. New interrogators
took over, but Odi remained in charge.
Two thin black leads of wire were taped to him. These
went to a transformer from which a thick white wire was
plugged into a wall socket. A button on the box switched on
the current.
"It felt, Abdel-Karim recounted, "as though my bones
were being crushed. The most painful was when they attached
the wire to my testicles. When the current was applied, I felt
it through my whole body. After the shocks ended, I felt pain
in all my joints. Every muscle ached. I felt my nerves were
exhausted."
There were between eight and nine prolonged sessions of
electric shock. After eleven days he was transferred to the
prison at Hebron on the West Bank. There were additional
interrogators, but Edi and Orli remained with him. One of the
interrogators, named "Ouzi," kicked his face and when blood
spotted Ouzi's boot, Omar Abdel-Karim was make to lick it
off.
Another interrogator, named Abu Ghazal, "swung him
round the room by his hair; when his hair came out he forced
him to eat it." Abdel-Karim reports, "It stuck all along my
throat. It made me want to throw up." He was made to drink
salty water after which Abu Ghazal and another interrogator
forced a wide bottle up Abdel-Karim's rectum. All of this
occurred on his first day in Hebron prison.
On the second day he was again suspended by his wrists
from a pulley and beaten. "I felt something break in my chest.
Then I fell unconscious." On the third day Omar Abdel-
Karim's wife, Nijmi, was brought to the prison. Upon seeing
her husband she began to scream. Orli grabbed her by the hair
and hit her in the face until blood issued from her nose and
mouth. Omar Abdel-Karim said he would confess.
He was told by Orli, "Now we are friends. Now talk!"
Abdel-Karim had nothing to tell but to save his wife he said
that he had hidden bombs in the lavatory of his house. His
wife interrupted him to say that it was she who had hidden
them.
At his house in Beit Sahour sewage trucks sucked out the
cesspool of his house. No bombs were found as none existed.
Edi now banged Abdel-Karim's head repeatedly against a
wall until pieces of plaster fell loose. Orli forced him to
swallow them.
He was kept under an ice shower and jammed into a barrel
of freezing water. Then he was again suspended from his
wrists while Orli squeezed his genitals with great force, "The
mind," Omar Abdel-Karim recalled, "cannot imagine how
much that hurts. It was so bad, it made me forget all other
pain."
The last assault that Abdel-Karim can recall before losing
his memory occurred when he was shut into a small cell. Gas
was squirted through the spy-hole of the cell door. His eyes
and nose began to run profusely. Everything began to whirl
around him. Then pieces of glass were slid into his nostrils.
He can remember no more. He does not recall a visit from his
wife and 12 year old son on December 12th.
Six weeks before Omar Abdel-Karim was interviewed, his
wife, Nijmi, informed the Sunday Times, independently, of
her first visit to the prison, when her face had been struck and
her hair pulled by Orli. She described the marks of severe
beatings on his face, the bums on the backs of his hands and
the scar on his face that looked like it had been made by an
iron. This was prior to the release of Abdel-Karim.
A scar on the back of his wrist had been caused by the
taping of wires directly into the socket. "It just blew me away
and they had to re-attach it. Sparks came from my hand." His
lawyer, Felicia Langer, and her clerk Abed el-Asali, describe
their meeting with Omar Abdel-Karim in Hebron prison:
"He was brought to me supported by other prisoners
because he was unable to walk. His face was completely
yellow. All the time he was pointing to his ribs, unable to
breathe out.
"His fellow prisoners told us that his ribs had been broken
during interrogation. Omar indicated that he had been tortured
by electricity. While speaking he started to tremble violently.
It was as if his body was convulsed. He did not know his age,
place of birth, address or whether he had children. He seemed
to us to be in another world." (24)
It should be noted that the Jerusalem Red Cross delegate
saw Abdel-karim only after 55 days. He was then moved to
Ramie prison hospital, but despite his "lamentable condition,"
borne out by medical records, he was transferred back to
Hebron prison.
THE CASE OF NADER AFOURI
Nader Afouri was a strong, vital man, the weight-lifting
champion of Jordan. When he was released in 1980 after his
fifth imprisonment, he could neither see, hear, speak, walk,
nor control his bodily functions. Between 1967 and 1980,
Nader Afouri was held 10 1/2 years as an administrative
detainee. He was suspected of being a member of the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine {P.F.L.P) and an arms
supplier for the West Bank. Despite the brutal treatment and
torture inflicted upon Nader during five imprisonments, the
Israeli authorities could neither extract a confession nor
produce any evidence with which to bring Nader Afouri to
trial." (25)
The First Imprisonment 1967-1971
"I was arrested initially in 1967, the first year of the
occupation. They took me from my home in Nablus,
blindfolded me and hanged me from a helicopter. All the
people of Beit Furik and Salem villages near Nablus witnessed
this.
"They brought me to Sarafand, the most harsh prison, a
military prison. I was the first man from the West Bank or
Gaza to be brought there. When they set the helicopter down,
they pushed me out and ordered me to run. I heard gunfire
and ran as they were shooting at me.
"They took me to a large room full of red, yellow and green
lights. I could hear screams and the sounds of beatings. I heard
a man yell: 'You'll have to confess.' Then I heard a man
confessing. Soon, I discovered this was a recording meant to
intimidate me.
"Then they took me to the interrogator. They tied me with
chains to green doors. Each door had a pulley. They opened
the doors, spreading my hands and legs, then wound the
pulleys 'till I fell unconscious.
"They made me get up on a chair, tied my hands to chains
hanging from a window and slowly removed the chair. My
muscles tore as the weight of my body pulled on my hands.
The pain was terrible.
"There were five or six men. They all beat me. They hit
me with blows on the head. They chained me to a chair. One
would beat me and some of the other men in the room would
say 'Stop.' Then they would change from one to the other,
each hitting me in turn. I was kept chained in that chair and
never allowed to stand up.
"They kept torturing me. An interrogator sucked on a
cigarette. When it was red, he placed it on my face, chest and
genitals - all over.
"One shoved a pen refill up my penis while the others
watched. As they did this they asked me to confess. I started
to bleed from my penis and was taken to Ramie prison
hospital but was soon brought back again to Sarafand for
further interrogation.
"I was in Sarafand 12 1/2 months and was interrogated
continuously. No one can endure 12 112 months. On four
occasions my friends in the other prisons were informed
officially that I had died.
"The first month in Sarafand I was always blindfolded and
had chains on my hands and legs. After one month they
removed the hand chains and blindfold. But I wore leg chains
for 12 112 months. Day and night I had chains on my legs.
The marks are still on my ankles.
"This was the routine: They would beat me, interrogate
me, then throw me in the cell. I would rest awhile; then they
would take me again.
"The cell was three feet by four feet by four feet high (1
meter by 1.3 meters). My height is five feet six inches (1.7
meters). I sleptcrouched with my legs upagainst my stomach.
There were no windows in the cell and no furnishing, only a
pot for shitting. I had two blankets. The stones on the floor
were very sharp. They punctured my feet when 1 walked.
"They began to bring other prisoners. They gave us army
clothes with numbers on the back. I was number one. They
would only call me by my number, never by my name. They
were always insulting me, yelling 'Maniuk (Faggot), I will
fuck you.' When we were chained outside they brought
savage dogs. The dogs jumped at us, grabbed our clothing and
bit us.
"Over thirty people were arrested after my own detention
and all underwent the same torture. All, however, broke down
under torture and wrote confessions and are in prison for life.
I didn't confess. The torture destroyed my penis and I could
only urinate drop by drop. I could not walk for 3 112 months
when I finished the interrogation. But I did not confess. I never
spoke a word in 12 1/2 months."
Nader was sent to Nablus prison where he began a hunger
strike demanding his freedom. He took only water and a little
salt. After ten days he was promised his release. Ten days later
when he had not been released, he renewed the hunger strike
for yet another week. Again the Administrative Vice-President
of Nablus prison promised to release Nader. When there
was still no action after twenty five days, Nader announced
another hunger strike.
"I was sent to the cells of Rarnle prison after twenty two
days of this hunger strike. Dr. Silvan, the director there,
brought several soldiers with him. They beat me on the head.
I passed between life and death. They chained my hands and
forced a tube in my nose. It was like an electrical shock. 1
began to shake. I became hysterical when the food reached
my throat and began to scream constantly. They gave me an
injection in the hip and I relaxed.
"When this torture failed to make me talk I was placed in
the Prison Hospital at Ramie and then sent back to Nablus
Prison."
Each time a confession was extracted from another
prisoner incriminating Nader, Nader would be called for
interrogation. Often he did not even know the people who
spoke against him. But still he did not confess, nor was he
brought to trial.
Nader was well respected in Nablus and became a leader
of the prisoners. When Abu Ard, an informer, accused him of
leading the other prisoners, Nader was sent to Tulkarm prison.
On his arrival at Tulkarm, Nader was beaten on the face
by Major Sofer and thrown into a cell with thirty five other
prisoners. Nader had had enough. When Major Sofer later
approached Nader to hit him again, Nader punched Sofer
through the bars of the cell door. Nader was now placed in a
room with five prisoners while awaiting the arrival of the
prison director. When the director struck Nader, Nader
grabbed an ashtray and hit the director on the head. The army
was called. Nader described the consequences:
"Fifteen soldiers came in and beat me on the head with a
chair. I fell unconscious. They put my shirt in my mouth and
beat me more. I became hysterical as I was gagging. They
gave me an injection and I fell unconscious. I awoke alone in
the corridor. 1 couldn't see.
"All Tulkarm prison went on strike and the prisoners met
with the director to speak about me. He promised he would
release me the next day if they stopped their strike. The
director came the next day and shook hands with me and said:
'I swear by my life that you are a man.' They brought me
socks and a jacket and promised me a private visit with my
family."
Nader was sent to Bet Il prison from which he was
eventually released in 197 1. His four years of imprisonment
were without trial and labelled administrative detention.
Only a few months lapsed before Nader was detained
again. His Second Imprisonment lasted from 1971 until 1972
and a Third from November 1972 until 1973.
THE FOURTH IMPRISONMENT
"Hebron, Moscobiya, Ramallah, and Nablus: I stayed
three months in a cell in each of these four prisons and the
interrogation and torture continued.
'It was snowing during the interrogation in Hebron. They
stripped me and put me outside in the cold. They tied me with
chains to a pole and poured ice water over me. They let me
down and brought me to a fire to warm up only to bring me
outside again for the ice water treatment.
"Iron balls were put into my scrotum and squeezed against
the testicles. Pain just enveloped me.
"One of the investigators, Abu Haroun, said he would turn
my face into a bulldog's. He was scientific. He hit me with
rapid punches for two hours. Then he brought a mirror and
said: 'Look at your face.' I did indeed look like a bulldog.
"In Nablus they burned me with cigarettes and again
pressed the metal balls against my testicles - squeezing the
egg against the iron. They used pliers to pull out four of my
teeth. I was detained three years administratively. During that
time, as an act of revenge, they also dynamited my house.
THE FIFTH IMPRISONMENT - NOVEMBER 1978-1980
"They arrested me again in November 1978 and sent me
directly to Hebron. They greeted me, sneeringly, declaring:
'We will make you confess from your asshole.' I told them I
speak from my mouth, not my asshole. At first they spoke
nicely to me because they knew torture wouldn't work. Then
they brought the men in charge of interrogation: Uri, Abu
Haroun, Joni, the Psychiatrist, Abu Nimer who has a finger
missing. Abu Ali Mikha and Dr. Jims.
"They chained me to a pole and concentrated their beatings
on my chest. They lay me down on the floor and jumped
high in the air landing on my chest. Uri did this seven or eight
times. It was savage, unending torture for seven days. They
smashed their boot heels on my fingernails, breaking my
fingers.
"It was snowing so they poured ice water on me. They
handed me paper and gave me two hours to confess. I said I
knew nothing. They chained me to a chair. All of them began
to beat me with their hands and feet. I fell down. My head was
on the floor. I saw Uri fly through the air and I felt his karate
chop on my head. This was the last memory I had for two
years.
"I have been told that I was dragged back to the cell. The
other prisoners had to feed me, clean me and"turn me over. I
was incontinent and shat on myself. I could not move my
hands or walk. I could not hear. I could not recognize anyone.
Only my lips could move and I would swallow whatever was
put in my mouth. People had to move my head. They had to
move my limbs from under my body. My weight fell to 103
pounds (47 kilos).
"Two years later, I woke up in amental hospital. I had five
fractures in my hips and I couldn't walk." (26)
Nader's friends were able to bring his situation to public
attention throughout pre-1967 Israel and the post-1967 Occupied
Territories. Israeli officials and journalists wrote that
Nader was 'feigning' and that he was an excellent 'actor.' But
the prisoners who had taken care of him and the journalists
and sympathizers who visited him when he was finally transferred
from prison to a hospital, as well as the hospital staff
that eventually treated him, bore witness to his condition.
Nader Afouri became a cause celebre for the Palestinian
people, a symbol of the torment inflicted on them and of the
heroic dimension of their resistance.
Despite his horrifying ordeal, Nader Afouri never gave his Israeli torturers a confession, which would have been a false one in any case, as he was guilty of nothing. This was corroborated by the fact that the Israelis could find no evidence whatsoever against him on which to build a case.
His case is not unique in his being a person who was falsely charged by the Zionists. Ralph Schoenman and Mya Shone report:
Tayseer Al Aruri a physicist and member of the Mathematics Faculty at Bir Zeit University was imprisoned from April 1974 to January 1978 as an administrative detainee. In response to an inquiry made by Dr. Hanna Nasir, President of Bir Zeit University, the Military Governor responded: "It is not what he has done, but what he is thinking of doing." (27)
In 1984, his novel about an imaginary dictatorship, George
Orwell could have been writing about the so-called justice in
present day Israel, as exemplified by the above comment of
the Israeli Military Governor.
NUMBER OF PRISONERS ESCALATES WITH 1982 INVASION OF LEBANON
The mistreatment and torture of Palestinian Arabs as described above are not exceptional cases. The brutality of Israel's methods has not changed. Moreover, the number of its prisoners increased with its invasion of Lebanon in 1982, and even more dramatically with Israeli attempts to suppress the Intifada after December 1987.
Even before the Intifada, it was estimated that 300.000 Palestinian Arabs had passed through Israeli prisons and concentration camps. (28) At the beginning of 1985 approximately 1,800 Palestinians and Lebanese were in the worst of these camps, Al Ansar (Ansar I) in Lebanon. Dachau and Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen and Buchenwald are shrines of man's inhumanity to his fellow man. Al Ansar must not be omitted from such a list of the hell-holes of this century. The conditions imposed upon the Palestinian and Lebanese inmates of Al Ansarare similar to those that were imposed upon the inmates of the Nazi concentration camps. (29) At the beginning of 1985 approximately 1,800 Palestinians and Lebanese were in the worst of these camps, Al Ansar, in Lebanon.
The stench of Ansar I concentration camp was so great that on April 3, 1985 the Israelis closed it. Out of its 1,800 inmates, 752 were released and the rest were transferred to the notorious Athlit prison in Israel. On September 10, 1985 all the detainees in Athlit were allegedly released in a frantic effort by Israel to cover up the fact that it was running a Nazi-like concentration camp system. But the victims were not truly released. Some were paroled, but others were shifted back and forth among different Israeli prisons.
In Athlit prison, a penal institution dating from the British Mandate period, the transferred inmates were subjected to incarceration in violation of Article 56 of the Geneva Convention: "In no case shall prisoners of war be transferred to penitentiary establishments (prisons, penitentiaries, convict establishments, etc.) in order to undergo disciplinary sentence there." (30) The Axis war criminals were sentenced for transferring prisoners of war to penitentiary establishments to undergo disciplinary sentence there, in violation of the Geneva Convention. The Israelis did even worse; they transferred prisoners of war to penitentiary establishments to undergo disciplinary punishment without even a pretext of a trial or a sentence.
There are as many places of detention as there are units of commands and districts of military government in the occupied territories of Lebanon, and this in addition to the central camps of detention. Before the Intifada, prisoners were detained in the following places: (31)
1. The concentration camps of "Al Ansar."
2. The military prison near Athlit (south of Haifa).
3. A school building of Sidon (Report of Amnesty International, testimony given by Dr. Francis Capet of Belgium, Humanite of July 1, 1982.)
4. The premises of the "Safa" Citrus Company south of Sidon.
5. The military prison in the vicinity of the Meggido junction (east of Haifa).
6. The old and neglected "Shmuel Harofe" hospital of Be'er Ya'akov (south of Tel Aviv) - for wounded prisoners.
7. The collapse of the Military Government's building in Tyre revealed that it had contained rooms for detention, and interrogation, where prisoners were held. (Some of them were killed when the building collapsed, others wounded.)
8. Detainees from the West Bank who had been held in the Hebron Prison told afterwards that they had met there prisoners from Lebanon.
At any given time the average number of detainees present in Israeli prisons before the Intifada was 3,500. (32) There are many thousands of Palestinians and Lebanese who are disabled as a result of long years of imprisonment and torture, for in the Israeli concentration camp system the daily calorie intake per prisoner averages 1500, compared to 2,700 as the minimum requirement needed. (33) As in the Nazi concentration camp system, as in the Stalinist Gulag, so it is in the Israeli concentration camps: its victims are permanently maimed and disabled through the effects of inhuman treatment, including long-term deprivation of bodily nourishment.
The Israeli Gulag Archipelago, in addition to the notorious Al Ansar concentration camp, Athlit, Sidon, Meggido, Be'er Ya'akov, Tyre and Hebron, includes facilities at Ashkelon, Nablus, Napha, Jenin, Ramallah, Kfar Yona, Damun, Gaza, Jericho, Tulkarm, Ramie, Jalameh, Beersheba, Shatta and Neve Tirza. (34)
At these camps the Israeli guards are present-day counterparts of the SS guards of Nazi Germany. They even use the same excuses the Nazis used, that they were only "following orders." Israeli journalist and writer Uri Avnery describes a conversation with an Israeli concentration camp guard:
He was surprised to hear me mentioning to him that he is
highly paid for his reserve service, and then I asked him what
his ideology was. And of course: "They are treated far too
well. They need a tough hand." And to sum up: "Most of us
are willing to sign a petition calling for a tougher policy
towards them."
I asked him where he got his information from. "Do you
talk to the detainees?"
"No."
"During the months you have served there, guarding
thousands of people, you never spoke to one detainee? Are
you not interested in who they are?"
"Not interested."
Only later I found out that the guards are forbidden to
speak with the detainees. I think that this is an astonishing
fact, which shows what is happening to the Israeli Army. This
artificial separation, that is supposed to enable undisturbed
and methodical brain washing of the soldiers is the way to
brutalization, stupidity and to turning them into robots and
into a colonial force.
"If you never spoke to a Palestinian detainee, then how do
you know who they are and what they think?"
"I read the newspapers."
"The journalist sits in Tel Aviv and supports one or the
other party and he is supposed to know more than you, you
who have been here for months?"
"I only follow orders."
"I have heard this sentence somewhere else.
"I am a simple man. I don't understand. The leaders know
better."
"This also reminds me of something."
"They wouldn't keep them if it wasn't necessary. And
besides, many of them are being released."
"20-30 a week are released. And in the meantime others
are detained."
"There must be a reason."
"Do you think about the fact that they have parents, wives
and children?"
"They are not human beings like us. They want to murder
us."
"How do you know, if you never spoke to one of them?"
"I know"(35)
During and after their invasion of Lebanon, the Israel forces detained thousands of people. A report by Amnesty International of August 9, 1982, estimated the number of detainees in the large prison camp of Ansar at 10,000. According to the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights, the total number of prisoners amounted to approximately 15,000, including children and elderly persons, of various nationalities. (36)
Amnesty International reported in 1983 that "not only combatants, but also civilians - including many medical personnel - of Palestinian, Lebanese and other nationalities were arrested in large numbers. They were initially held in temporary detention and interrogation centers in Southern Lebanon, and in Israeli prisons and prison camps." (37)
The status of the' detainees constituted an unprecedented
and devilish subterfuge. Israel did not acknowledge them as
prisoners of war. A special ordinance, issued by Israel's
Minister of Defence on June 9,1982 and entitled "Emergency
Ordinance: Arrests at Times of Special Emergency, 1982,"
empowers the Israeli forces to arrest in Lebanon any person
who is not a citizen or inhabitant of Israel. In this way, the
Israeli authorities circumvent the application of the Third
Geneva Convention (1949), which deals with the treatment
of prisoners of war. Since these prisoners do not enjoy any
recognized status, they are called the "brought ins" in the
official jargon. (38) Any judicial control or legal redress for the
"brought ins" was impossible because of the legal vacuum
which had been created.
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