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APPENDIX B
JEWISH SETTLER TERRORIST ACTIVITIES 1984-1988
Sources: Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories: 29 October, 1984, A/39/591; 4 October, 1985, A/40/702; 20 October, 1986, A/41/680; 15 October, 1987, A/42/650/; 24 October, 1988, A/43/694.
Hebron residents, on 28 May 1984, complained that about
locars had been damaged by unidentified persons. (Ma'ariv,
29 May 1984)
A group of settlers allegedly stopped cars carrying watermelons
on the Jericho Bridge before crossing into Jordan, and
confiscated their licences and identity cards. (Ai Tali'ah, 14
June 1984).
Israeli settlers allegedly began opening a road on privately-
owned Palestinian land in the village of Husan, Bethlehem
district, on 13 July 1984, in violation of the order nisi which
obliges the Israeli authorities and land-owners not to make
any changes in the land until a final verdict is issued by the
Military Objections Committee. The land in question — an
estimated 4,000 dunums of land from the Arqoub villages of
Husan, Wadi Fukin and Nahalin — had been confiscated by
the Israeli military authorities in June 1981 and declared State
property. (Al Fajr, 20 July 1984)
It was reported on 1 August 1984 that Yosef Zeruya, one
of the defendants in the Jewish underground case, was convicted
by the Jerusalem District Court of plotting to blow up
the Dome of the Rock Mosque, possessing parts of weapons
and of fraudulent acts. He was sentenced to three years'
imprisonment and three years' suspended term. (Ha'aretz, 1
August; Jerusalem Post. Ha'aretz, 5 August 1984)
Moshe Zar, charged with membership in the Jewish terrorist
organization and with planting an explosive charge in
the car of Bassam Shak'a, was on 9 September 1984 released
on bail of IS 750,000 (approximately $57,672) after Prisons Service physicians had given an opinion that further detention
would aggravate Zar's health condition. (Ha'aretz, 10 September
1984)
The trial of 20 members of the Jewish terrorist organization
reportedly opened on 16 September 1984 at the Jerusalem
District Court. The 20 defendants had already admitted the
charges attributed to them. The defence lawyers asserted that
the confessions were obtained illegally and should therefore
be disallowed. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 16 September,
1984; Jerusalem Post. 21 September 1984)
Avinoam Katrieli, member of the Jewish underground
organization, was on 2 1 September 1984 convicted of plotting
to bomb the Dome of the Rock mosque and was sentenced to
15 months effective prison term and 33 months suspended
imprisonment. (Ha'aretz, 23 September 1984)
A group of Jewish settlers accompanied by Israeli security
forces allegedly stormed the "Dar Al Aytam" (orphanage)
school in Jerusalem and arrested a 15-year old boy on the
pretext of throwing stones. This was reportedly the second
case in one week of Jewish settlers arresting Palestinian
minors in Jerusalem's old city. (Al Fajr, 28 September 1984)
Jewish settlers from Hebron and the Etzion Bloc, led by
Rabbi Moshe Levinger, on 2 October 1984 patrolled the area
outside the Dheisheh refugee camp which was under curfew
following stone-throwing incidents. One of the settlers fired
into the area inside the camp. He was detained for questioning
at the Bethlehem police station and was later released.
(Ha'aretz, 3,4, 10 and 15 October 1984; Jerusalem Post, 3
and 4 October 1984)
In apparent revenge for a bomb attack on 15 October 1984,
in which seven Israeli youths were injured near Nablus,
Jewish settlers reportedly vandalized two houses in the Balata
refugee camp on 16 October 1984 and chased Palestinians in
the streets of Nablus. Villages near Nablus were put under
curfew and checkposts were erected at the Balata and Askar
refugee camps. (Al Fajr, 19 October 1984)
The Supreme Court, on 7 November 1984, rejected the
appeal of Mr. Yehuda Cohen, one of the first members of the
Jewish underground to be convicted, against his sentence. Mr.
Cohen, a settler from Ofra, had been charged with membership
in a conspiracy to blow up the Dome of the Rock mosque
and was sentenced to 18 months in prison and another two
years suspended term, after pleading guilty. In a related
development, it was reported on 14 November 1984 that a
GSS agent known as "David," giving evidence in the Jewish
underground trial at the Jerusalem District Court, said that he
believed that one of the defendants, Mr. Shaul Nir, had killed
Mr. Tahsin Abd el-Fatah Hatafteh, aged 18, from Tarkumiya.
According to the witness, this happened on 30 March 1983,
during a demonstration and stone-throwing by local youths
who blocked traffic to Kiryat Arba. One of the passengers of
a car at a road block fired at the Arab youth and killed him.
According to the witness, it was Mr. Nir, but the witness
added that Mr. Nir had denied having anything to do with that
killing. At the Jewish underground trial, Mr. Nir had been
charged in connection with the booby-trapping of Arab buses,
the attack on the West Bank mayors, the attack at the Hebron
University and the plot to blow up the Temple Mount
mosques. (Jerusalem Post, 8 November; Ha'aretz, 14
November 1984)
On 9 November 1984, Mr. Yehuda Richter, a leading
member of Rabbi Meir Kahane's "Kach" Party, was sentenced
to five years in prison and a three-year suspended term
for his involvement in the shooting attack on a bus carrying
Arab workers near Ramallah in March 1984. Mr. Richter was
originally charged with attempted murder, conspiring to commit
a crime and setting fire to Arab vehicles and to the offices
of Al Fajr in East Jerusalem, but after plea bargaining he was
convicted of causing bodily harm under aggravated circumstances.
(Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 11 November 1984)
On 14 November 1984, it was reported that Rabbi
Levinger was ordered to leave the room he had rented in the
Dheisheh camp since the house belonged to UNRWA.
Meanwhile, the camp was declared a closed military area,
barring anyone except local residents or the army from entering
it. The curfew, imposed on the camp following a stonethrowing
incident on 12 November 1984, was lifted the next
day after security forces had detained two suspects. (Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, 14 November 1984)
Three men from the Jerusalem suburb of Ein Karem,
members of the so-called "Terror Against Terror Gang," were
on 20 November 1984 sentenced to six years imprisoned and
to a three-year suspended term in the Jerusalem District Court
for sabotaging Muslim and Christian holy sites in Jerusalem.
Several persons were wounded in the attacks which were
carried out in late 1983 and early 1984. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 21 November 1984)
On 3 January 1985, the Supreme Court imposed a stiffer
sentence on Mr. Noam Yinon, who was arrested with the
members of the Jewish underground and was convicted of
transporting 50 Syrian mines in the Golan Heights for members
of the underground. He was sentenced by the Jerusalem
District Court to 18 months in jail and 18 months suspended
sentence. The State appealed against that sentence and the
Supreme Court accepted the appeal and increased the sentence
to 28 months in prison and 20 months suspended
sentence. In another development the Supreme Court on the
same day increased to three years the sentence of Mr. Levy
Hazan, a "Kach" member convicted of planning an attack
against an Arab bus in Ramallah. (Ha'aretz, 4 January 1985)
Claiming that a settler had been pelted with stones, settlers
reportedly surrounded Al ' Amari refugee camp and attempted
to enter with aims and axes. Subsequently, the occupation
authorities carried out a large-scale search and arrested
dozens of youths in the camp. (Al Tali'ah, 10 January 1985)
On 20 January 1985, IDF soldiers forcibly stopped a group
of squatters from building a road to Tel-Rumeida where they
have been squatting for several months, living in housetrailers
without permission from the authorities. On 30
January 1985, IDF troops pulled down a fence erected by
Jewish settlers around two plots in Tel-Rumeida which they
claimed for themselves. (Ha'aretz, 15 January; Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, 21 and 31 January 1985)
It was reported that the fire at the Court of First Instance
in Nablus, which had destroyed most of the land registration
records a month earlier, was followed by renewed activities
by settlers and companies. A number of Arab landowners
reportedly filed complaints with the court and the police
concerning the renewed assaults by these companies on their
lands. (Al Tali'ah. 24 January 1985)
On 2 and 3 February 1985, Jewish settlers from Hebron
reportedly uprooted 38 trees in a plot of land belonging to a
local resident, Mr. Jamil Ratab Abu-Heikal, situated in the
disputed area of Tel-Rumeida. Settlers in Hebron reportedly
admitted to the act, explaining that they had no other choice
since the army had removed fences they had placed in the
area. According to the settlers the plot in question is registered
in the Tabu as belonging to the Jewish Sephardi community
in Hebron before 191 7. (Ha'aretz, 4 February 1985)
On 4 February 1985, Rabbi Moshe Levinger and one of
his guards opened fire at residents of the Dheisheh refugee
camp who threw stones at him. The camp was placed under
curfew. It was reported that Rabbi Levinger and his guards
later entered the camp and stayed there over one hour in an
attempt to discover the stone-throwers. He reportedly ran
along the camp alleys, together with a guard, and both men
fired into the air in an indiscriminate manner. (Ha'aretz, 5
February 1985)
On 18 April 1985, the Jerusalem District Court imposed
prison sentences ranging from 25 months to three years on
three members of the Jewish terrorist underground whose
trials were separated from the other defendants following a
plea bargaining deal with the prosecution. (Ha'aretz, 19 April
1985.20,22,24 and 3 1 May 1985; Jerusalem Post, 19 April
1985, 20 May 1985; Ma'ariv. 31 May 1985)
On 23 April 1985, the Jerusalem District Court determined
by a majority vote that the confessions of 14 of the defendants
in the Jewish underground trial were admissible and could
constitute evidence in the trail. The president of the court,
Justice Yaacov Bazak, decided inaminority opinion to accept
the defence counsel's arguments and disqualify the confessions
of 12 of the defendants, while harshly criticizing the
General Security Service for the methods used in order to
obtain the defendants' confessions. (Ha'aretz, 24 April 1985)
On 3 June 1985, it was reported that File 345184, the State
of Israel vs. Menahem Livni. Shaul Nir, Barak Nir, Uzi
Sharabaf and Yitzhak Ganiram, on charge of premeditated
murder in the Islamic University in Hebron, was unified with
the "big Jewish underground file" concerning the attempted
TempleMount sabotage, the attacks on the West Bank mayors
and the aborted bombing of five Arab-owned buses.
The prosecution reportedly agreed to reunite the cases
after the defence consented that there would be no challenge
to the confessions made by the defendants. The six defendants
on 2 June 1985 pleaded guilty to all the charges except intent
to murder. The charges include assaulting the Islamic University
campus with automatic weapons fire and throwing a hand
grenade into the courtyard of the campus during a class recess.
The six said they had "no intention to kill, only to frighten."
(Haaretz, Jerusalem Post, 3 June 1985)
On 6 June 1985, a group of settlers allegedly seized three
rooms in Aqabat Al Saraya in the old city of Jerusalem and
looted them. The three rooms, according to the report, had
been owned for over 50 years by an Arab resident who had
the official titles to ownership. (Al Tali'ah, 13 June 1985)
On 18 June 1985, a group of 50 Jewish settlers reportedly
blocked the easternentrance to the Patriarchs' Cave in Hebron
in protest against a military government decision to close the
place to Jews temporarily because of the Muslim feast of Id
Al Fitr. Someof the settlers reportedly carried arms when they
arrived at the site and demanded to enter their synagogue for
morning prayers. Three soldiers blocked their way and, in
response, the settlers blocked the entry to Muslim worshippers.
(Ha'aretz, 20 June 1985; Jerusalem Post, 19 June 1985)
On7 July 1985, it was reported that the Abu Heikalfamily,
residing near the Tel Rumeida settlement in Hebron, had
complained over the weekend that a number of settlers from
Tel Rumeida had attempted to prevent the family entering
their home when they returned from a family event. The
settlers allegedly threatened the family with weapons not to
enter the house. The settlers dispersed when security personnel
arrived on the scene. (Ha'aretz, 7 July 1985)
On 10 July 1985, the Jerusalem District Court convicted
15 members of the Jewish terrorist underground on most of
the charges imputed to them 14 months earlier, ranging from
membership of a terrorist organization to murder, Menahem
Livni, Shaul Nir and Uzi Sharabaf were convicted of murder
for their part in the attack on the Islamic University in Hebron
in which three persons were killed and more than two dozen
injured. A conviction of murder carries a mandatory life
sentence. Shelomo Ganiram and Barak Nir were convicted,
in connection with that attack, of manslaughter and attempted
murder. In the case of the bomb-attacks and maiming of the
three West Bank mayors and three other members of the
National Guidance Committee, 1 1 defendants were found not
guilty of attempted murder, but were convicted of causing
grievous bodily harm. The court, in a majority decision,
convicted 10 defendants of conspiracy to blow up the Dome
of the Rock Mosque on the Temple Mount. The president of
the court, Justice Yaaeov Bazak, determined in a minority
opinion that the plot to blow up the mosque did not reach the
extent of a conspiracy and acquitted the defendants on that
count. The 10 convicted of conspiracy are Menahem Livni,
Shaul Nir, Yehuda Etzion, Yeshua Ben-Shoshan, Yitzhak
Ganiram, Benzion Heineman, Ya'acov Heineman, Haim
Ben-David, Barak Nir and Boaz Heinemann. Six defendants
were convicted of membership of a terrorist organization; six
others were convicted of activity in a terrorist organization;
and many defendants were also convicted of illegal possession
and transport of weapons and of deliberately damaging
IDF property. In the case of the booby-trapping of the Arab
buses the court unanimously convicted Shaul Nir and Uzi
Sharabaf, and, by a majority vote, Menahem Livni and Barak
Nir, of attempted murder. Menahem Livni, Shaul Nir and Uzi
Sharabaf were also convicted of attempted murder for placing
charges at the entrance to several mosques in Hebron, and
Shaul Nir was convicted on another count of attempted murder
for placing charges at the entrance to several mosques in
Hebron, and Shaul Nir was convicted on another count of
attempted murder for planting a grenade in a schoolyard in
Hebron. Ten other defendants in the case have previously
been convicted on the basis of plea bargaining. One, Gilad
Peli, was sentenced to 10 years in jail. The trial of two other
defendants, army officers charged with prior knowledge of
the attacks on the mayors, has been postponed pending completion
of the main trial. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 11 July
1985)
On 25 July 1985, Gush Emunim leader Rabbi Moshe
Levinger was fined IS 200,000 (approximately $15,385) and
given a three-month suspended sentence for trespassing in the
house of a Hebron woman and attacking her six-year-old son.
Levinger told the Jerusalem Magistrate Court that the boy had
thrown a stone at his son. (Jerusalem Post, 26 July 1985)
On 15 August, 1985, four members of Knesset of the
right-wing Tehiya party, Geula Cohen, Yuval Ne'eman,
Eliezer Waldman and Gersho Shafat, reportedly entered the
flat in the Casbah area of Hebron that had earlier been
occupied by nine Kiryat Arba settlers. The members of Knesset
were accompanied by a group of settlers. The area was
later declared a closed military area and the IDF evicted the
settlers, but not the members of Knesset, who reportedly
remained in the flat and were allowed to bring in food, chairs
and mattresses. On 18 August, the inner cabinet decided not
to permit Jews toinhabit the house in the Hebron Casbah were
six members of Knesset were in their fourth day of a sit-in.
On 19 August, Rabbi Moshe Levinger, accompanied by eight
settlers, blocked the entrance to the Casbah. protesting that
closing the area to Jews only "constituted racism." On 20
August, at dawn, the IDFevicted without incident the Knesset
members who were holding a sit-in in aflat in the Casbah area
of Hebron. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 16 and 18 August
1985; Jerusalem Post, 19 and 20 August 1985; Yediot
Aharonot, 20 August 1985; Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 21
August 1985)
On 4 September 1985, it was reported that, following the
murder of a reservist and the wounding of another in the
Hebron market, settlers in the town attempted to expand the
Jewish presence in Tel Rumeida. The attempt was foiled by
the security forces. The settlers of the Hebron Jewish quarter
also cut open a passage from the "Abraham the Patriarch" area
near the wholesale vegetable market into the Casbah. After
they had cut open the passage they were evicted from the area,
but the passage remained open. In a consultation between the
heads of the Jewish councils in the West Bank and Gaza, the
heads of the Kiryat Arba and the Hebron settlers it was
decided to set up the headquarters of the Jewish Councils in
the territories in the Jewish quarter of Hebron until the
Government took a decision with regard to the deteriorating
security in the region. On 5 September, it was reported that
the army had sealed the passage. The settlers later complained
they were being placed in a ghetto. When the army lifted the
curfew in the Casbah to allow residents to buy supplies the
settlers intervened in an attempt not to allow a resumption of
normal life only 24 hours after murder of the reservist. Fifteen
settlers, including Rabbi Levinger, entered the Casbah and
clashes were reported with thesecurity forces. Several settlers
attempted to reoccupy the house in the Casbah in front of
which the reservist was murdered, but they were forcibly
evicted by a border guard. According to one report, Hebron
settlers attacked two houses of released prisoners on the night
of 4 September. (Ha'aretz, 4 September 1985; Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, Ma'ariv, 5 September 1985)
On 6 September 1985, it was reported that armed groups
of Gush Emunim settlers had held "presence-demonstrations"
in the streets of Ramallah and Nablus the previous day. Settler
sources described the armed patrols as "helping to step up
security" in the region and said that the settlers intended to
continue holding such patrols in the following days. Military
sources said that "patrolling the streets in West Bank towns
with legally held weapons is not an offence, and therefore
there is no reason to act against the settlers." On 8 September,
the Defence Minister Mr. Yitzhak Rabin said at the weekly
cabinet meeting that the Government would not permit armed
settlers to patrol through Arab areas in the West Bank, but
West Bank and Gaza Strip settlers said that despite the army
and border police clampdown on the region, they had continued
their armed patrols in major Arab towns. One of the
organizers of these patrols in Hebron told the Jerusalem Post
that settlers in groups of 6 to 10 men patrolled Tulkarem.
Nablus and Jenin and were outside the Damascus Gate in
Jerusalem. The settlers were armed with pistols. (Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, Yediot Aharonot, 6,8 and 9 September 1985)
On 7 September 1985, during the night, unidentified persons
believed to be Kiryat-Arba and Hebron settlers tried to
set fire to a house in Dura belonging to Mahmud Mohammad
Atrash, whom they suspected of being a released prisoner's
relative and that the released prisoner, Azmi Atrash, did not
live in that house. Material damage was caused. Settlers also
smashed windows in a house in the Balata refugee camp near
Nablus belonging to a released prisoner. (Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, Yediot Aharonot, 9 September 1985)
On 8 September 1985, after midnight, Hebron settlers led
by Rabbi Moshe Levinger occupied a house in the Casbah
area bordering on the Jewish quarter. The settlers were forcibly
evicted from the house by border guards. Four settlers
were detained. (Ha'aretz, 9 September 1985)
On 27 September 1985, dozens of Kiryat Arba settlers,
including "Kach" members, reportedly rioted and caused
extensive damage in Halhul following an attack on Egged bus
in the area. An Israeli television crew that arrived on the scene
to film the rioting was attacked by the settlers. In the rioting
windows and windshields were smashed, including the windows
of the local mosque. Settlers were also reported to fire
shots in the air and to set fire to several shops. (Ha'aretz, 29
September 1985; Jerusalem Post, 4 October 1985)
A number of Arab drivers operating in Al Arqoub village
near Bethlehem reported that settlers from Hadar Bitar settlement
established on Husan village land had begun to harass
the Arab drivers by crowding them off the road, which was
narrow and dangerous. (Al Fajr, 15 November 1985)
On 17 November 1985, it was reported that Knesset
member Matti Peled (Progressive List for Peace) had requested
that the Knesset hold an emergency session to discuss
revelations that West Bank settlers were holding large quantities
of weapons over which the IDF and the security bodies
had no control. According to the military correspondent of
Ha'aretz. Zeev Schiff, the Central Region Command had
attempted to control the individual weapons held by the
settlers, but its efforts were of no avail. Mr. Peled said that
"that stupefying revelation should not go unheeded ... today
(the settlers) disobey the army and tomorrow they will hold
arms against the Government," hesaid. (Ha'aretz, 17 November 1985)
A group of anti-occupation Israelis were allegedly attacked
by armed settlers while in Dheisheh refugee camp. (Al Fajr, 29 November 1985)
On 19 January 1986, Israeli settlers from Ne'ot Adumim
settlement allegedly uprooted 130 olive trees belonging to
Hamdan Jaafreh of Al Sawahreh Al Sharqiyeh village. They
also reportedly obliged him, under the threat of the gun, to
remove the barbed wire surrounding his land. The landowner *
filed a complaint at the Bethlehem police station against the
settlers' action. The landowner said that he receivedclearance
to plant his land from the Israeli authorities before he started
planting. (Al Tali'ah, 23 January 1986; Al Fajr, 31 January
1986)
According to Al Fajr, settlers of Arya'el and Yakeer had
intensified their harassment against Arab residents of Deir
Hareth and Istya. Settlers allegedly use weapons to threaten
them, they also detain them and set firein their fields. (Al Fajr, 21 February 1986; Al Tali'ah, 27 February 1986)
On 26 March 1986. it was reported that several Kiryat
Arba settlers on 24 March 1986, after midnight, entered the
Patriarchs' Cave in Hebron, knocked down wooden partitions
between a synagogue and a mosque and desecrated Muslim
prayer rugs by treading on them while wearing shoes. They
reportedly attacked soldiers and policemen who tried to evict
them. Three settlers were finally arrested while others reportedly eluded the police. The three were released on bail later
in the day. On 26 March 1986 Jewish settlers in Hebron held
a noisy carnival procession in the center of town. (Ha'aretz,
27 March 1986; Jerusalem Post, 26 March 1986)
On 12 May 1986, it was reported that the security
authorities had authorized the march planned by Gush
Emunim to be held on Independence Day to commemorate
the tenth anniversary of Jewish settlement in Samaria. The
authorization was given on condition that the participants in
the march undertook not to alight from their vehicles inside
the town of Nablus and not to gather in large groups near
Joseph's Tomb and near Tel Balata, close to the Balata
refugee camp. In addition to the march and visits the settlers
were organizing a festive assembly in Eilon Moreh. On 15
May, it was reported that thousands of supporters had taken
part in the Gush Emunim organized events. The tours and
visits in the Nablus areagave rise to serious incidents in which
several people were injured. (Ha'aretz, 12 May 1986;
Jerusalem Post, Ma'ariv, 15 May 1986)
On 1 July 1986, it was reported that the Hebron police had
arrested for questioning several settlers, some of whom were
activists of the Kach movement from Hebron and Kiryat Arba
on suspicion of having set fire, several days earlier, to an Arab
resident's car and having attempted to set fire to his home.
The Hebron police reportedly continued its investigation. No
suspects had so far been detained, although several Kach
activists had been questioned. (Ha'aretz, 1 and 2 July 1986)
On 7 August 1986, a group of Kiryat Arba settlers allegedly
attacked Abdul Rahim Jaber, aged 95. A large stone one
settler allegedly hurled at him struck his head and passersby
rushed him to a hospital in Hebron. (Al Fajr, 14 August 1986)
On 14 December 1986, a group of reservist paratroopers
who had just finished a month's service at Hebron, reported
to Mk Ran Cohen about settlers' attitude towards the local
population. The paratroopers alleged that the Hebron settlers
were gradually - and with the knowledge of all the military
echelons - occupying and taking control of the entire surface
of the Patriarchs' Cave, including the Yussufiya Hall, where
Jewish prayers were prohibited. The paratroopers also complained
that, for each Jewish settler at Hebron there were two
soldiers to protect him. (Yediot Aharonot, 15 December 1986)
On 13 February 1987, it was reported that villagers from
Azzun Atma and Beit Amin, near Qalqilyah, were fired on by
settlers when they tried to return to their lands. The two
villages were at present surrounded by settlements. (Al Fajr,
13 February 1987)
On March 5 1987, settlers from Kiryat-Arba and Hebron
reportedly smashed windows of 20 cars in Halhul, in retaliation
for the stoning of 2 Egged buses earlier. On two occasions
in the previous week an "Action Committee for the Safe
Driving on Judea and Samaria Roads," headed by Kiryat-
Arba council member Ben-Yishai, reportedly vandalized
Arab property in the Al-Arroub refugee camp, north of
Hebron, following stone-throwing incidents. (Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, Ma'ariv, 6 March 1987)
On 19 April 1987, after midnight, three settlers from the
Gaza Strip allegedly kidnapped a 9-year-old child from the
village of Bani Suheileh, Riad Izzat Al Moughrabi, whom
they suspected of stone throwing, beat him and drove him in
their car in the direction of the Erez check-point. At the
check-point the child managed to escape and reported about
his kidnapping to one of the soldiers. On 25 April 1987, a
police officer reported that the three would be charged with
illegal imprisonment, trespassing, assault and breaking the
public peace. On 12 June 1987, the head of the investigation
department in the Gaza district police reportedly recommended
that the three be tried on charges of illegal detention,
trespassing and assault. (Ha'aretz, 21,23 and 26 April 1987
and 12 June 1987; Jerusalem Post, 23 April 1987)
On 5 May 1987, during the night dozens of settlers from
Alfei-Menashe, Karnei Shomron and Kedumim, led by the
Gush Emunim secretary general, Daniella Weiss, broke
through an IDF road-block at the entrance to Qalqilyah -
which was placed under curfew - smashed empty bottles
against store fronts, set tyres on fire and overturned garbage
bins and vegetable carts. The operation was reportedly in
reaction to the throwing of a petrol bomb at an Israeli settler's
car. On 19 May 1987, a charge sheet was filed with a
magistrate's court in Kfar Saba against Mrs. Daniella Weiss,
who was reportedly facing charges of unruly conduct in a
public placeand o f intentionally causing damage. (Ha'aretz,
7,8 and 10 May 1987; Jerusalem Post, 7 May 1987; Ma'arir,
8 May 1987)
On 6 June 1987, some 70 armed settlers from Kiryat Arba
and Hebron, believed to be supporters of the Kach movement,
rioted in the Dheisheh refugee camp; they fired in the air and
set fire to two cars. Local residents threw stones at them and
a violent scuffle broke out. IDF troops stepped in and dispersed
the rioters. Six settlers were arrested and the camp was
placed under curfew. Five more Kiryat Arba settlers were
arrested on 7 June 1987, bringing the number of suspects to
11. On 12 June 1987, a charge sheet was filed against 12 of
the suspects. Six of them were charged with aggravated
assault and rioting. The other seven, charged with lesser
offences, were released on bail. On 15 June 1987, it was
reported that the six suspects held in custody had gone on
hunger strike and that other Kiryat Arba settlers were to join
them in the strike in sympathy On 17 June 1987, the six
settlers charged with rioting at Dheisheh were released on bail
on condition that they remain in their homes every day from
9 p.m. to the 6 a.m. and stay away from Dheisheh and AL
Aroub refugee camps. On 18 August 1987, the State
Attorney's Office added two members of the Kiryat Arba
council to the list of persons charged with rioting in the
Dheisheh refugee camp in June 1987. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, Ma'ariv, 7- 11, 14, 16 and 18 June 1987; Ha'aretz, 19
August 1987)
On 19 October 1987, students of the "Shuvu Banim"
yeshivain the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City attacked
and beat Arab shopkeepers and passersby. Three yeshiva
students were arrested and questioned by police about the
incident. Following the incident Jerusalem Mayor Teddy
Kollek urged Prime Minister Shamir to help remove the
yeshiva from the Muslim Quarter and replace it with a yeshiva
"capable of behaving as a good neighbor with the residents."
On 9 November 1987, it was reported that Prime Minister
Shamir had rejected the request by Jerusalem Mayor Teddy
Kollek. In a letter received by Kollek it was stated that "the
Prime Minister does not deal with removing Jews from the
place where they are settled, either in Old Jerusalem or
elsewhere in the Land of Israel." (Ha'aretz, 22 October 1987
and 9 November 1987; Jerusalem Post, 20 and 25 October
1987)
On 10 November 1987, four settlers from the Gaza Strip
were held for questioning following a stone-throwing incident
near Deir El Balah in which settlers opened fire after their cars
were stoned, allegedly killing a 17-year-old pupil, Intisar El
Atar. Settlers in the Katif bloc reacted angrily to the detention
of four of their members and demanded that civil guards be
reintroduced to the region. They claimed stone-throwing
incidents occurred daily. On 12 November 1987, the Ashkelon
magistrates' court ordered that two of the suspects,
Menahem Beit Halahmi, spokesman of the Gaza District
Regional Council, and Avner Shimoni, secretary of the Katif
council, be released on NIS 10,000 ($6,500) bail, with the
provision that they remained in Ashkelon and reported to the
police in that town twice daily. The other two suspects, Yosef
Fisheimer and Shimon Mar Yosef, were released on bail
without any conditions. Security sources confirmed on 12
November 1987 that the slain girl was found inside the school
courtyard, and not near the barricades at which the settlers'
cars were allegedly stopped. Her shooting was a clear violation
of standing orders, but it was not clear who was responsible.
On 4 December 1987, it was reported that the Gaza
district police was holding a settler from the Neve Dekalim
settlement, on suspicion of having killed Intisar El Atar. On
6 December 1987, it was reported that the settler Shimon
Yifrah, 30, had admitted to having fired the shot that killed
El Atar. On 7 December 1987, it was reported that the police
had transmitted the file of the four settlers to the Southern
Region Attorney, with a recommendation that Yifrah be put
on trial on a charge of manslaughter, and the other three
settlers who were with him in the car on charges of assistance
and failure to prevent the offence. On 13 December 1987, it
was reported that Yifrah had been charged, at the Beersheba
district court, with acting with criminal negligence when he
opened fire on the courtyard of the girls' school in Deir El
Balah, killing Intisar El Atar. On 17 December 1987, Justice
Efraim Laron of the Beersheba district court ordered that
Yifrah should be released on bail of NIS 30,000 ($20,0001,
and that he should stay in Arad (near Beersheba) and avoid
any contact with the settler population of the Katif bloc. The
office of the Southern Region Attorney announced that it
would lodge an appeal with the Supreme Court against the
decision. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 11, 12, 13 and 18
November 1987; Ha'aretz, 4.6,7,13 and 18 December 1987;
Jerusalem Post, 6, 1 3 and 16 December 1987)
On 26 November 1987, the Southern Region Attorney,
Yaacov Krosser, ordered the authorities to close the inquiry
file against three settlers from the Katif bloc who, on 2 1 April
1987, abducted and detained an Arab boy. The incident
occurred after their car was pelted with stones near the Bureij
refugee camp. They noticed one of the stone-throwers, Raid
Al Mamri, chased after him to his hom and forced him to
accompany them to a police station. The boy's grandfather
later complained to the police that the boy had been beaten.
(Ha'aretz, 27 November 1987)
On 11 January 1988, two Palestinians were shot dead and
a third died of wounds received earlier. Rabah Hussein Mahmoud
Ghanem, 17, was shot dead by two Israeli settlers
whose car was stopped at a barricade in the village of Beitin,
near Ramallah. The settlers, from the nearby Ofra settlement,
were named as Pinhas Wallerstein, the head of the Binyamin
Regional Council and a Gush Emunim member, and Shai Ben
Yosef, aregional security officer. After the incident they were
questioned by police and were later released on bail. On 16
May 1988, it was reported that the family of Rabah Ghanem
had petitioned the High Court of Justice, demanding that
Pinhas Wallerstein be tried for murder and causing serious
injury to the victim's brother. The family also demanded that
the results of the autopsy be released to them. According to
the petition, submitted by the family's lawyer FeliciaLanger,
Wallerstein fired at the two youths from a distance of 70
meters. After hitting Rabah Wallersteindidnot try togive him
first aid. Wallerstein told the police after the incident that he
acted in self-defence, after stones were thrown at him. He was
detained, but was released the same evening, following intervention
by Prime Minister Shamir. On 3 1 May 1988, it was
reported that Attorney General Yosef Harish had decided to
summon Wallerstein for questioning, before he decided
whether the settler should be put on trial. (Ha'aretz,
Jerusalem Post, 12 January 1988; Ha'aretz, 16 and 31 May
1988)
On 13 January 1988, the Tel Aviv District Court passed a
six-month suspended sentence on Ephraim Segal from the
Eilon-Moreh settlement for his role in a shooting incident that
occurred on 26 July 1987 in Nablus, in which a local woman
was killed and another was injured. The incident occurred
during a stone-throwing demonstration during which Segal's
car was attacked. Judge Uri Strausman said it was clear that
Segal had not fired in the air, but the court bore in mind the
factthat he was acting under pressure inan attempt toextricate
himself and his family from danger. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 14 January 1988)
On 14 January 1988, a group of settlers raided the village
of Kissan, Bethlehem, and tried to seize the cattle. Settlers
used live ammunition when the villagers showed resistance,
killing Ahmed Ali Alabiyat, 45, and injuring his brother. (Al
Ittihad, 15 January 1988)
On 2 February 1988, settlers raided Al Aza, Aida and
Dheisheh camps, firing bullets and causing serious damage
to residents' property. Security forces and military officers
reportedly participated during the settlers' assaults. (Attolia,
4 February 1988)
It was reported that on 7 February 1988, Jewish settlers
kidnapped five young girls of Khula Bent Al Azur school in
El Bireh. They were released the same day after having been
beaten. Three residents were also kidnapped and beaten by
settlers in Silwad, triggering serious clashes. (Attalia, 11
February 1988)
On 8 February 1988, settlers helped IDF troops in raiding
houses and assaulting local residents in Kalkiliya. They also
attacked the villages of Kafr Malik, Ein Yabrud and Silwad
where they fired at residents, injuring three persons. Two
other residents were detained by them. (Attalia, 11 February
1988)
On 9 February 1988, Itzhak Rabin promised Kiryat Arba
settlers to increase IDF troops on Jerusalem-Hebron road.
Israeli settlers carried out works, under the protection of
border guards, on land that belongs to residents of Husan and
Nahalin near Bitar settlement. The case of the land in question
is still pending before the courts. (Attulia, 11 February 1988)
On 28 February 1988, a settler from Neveh Tzuf shot and
killed two youths near the village of Abud. They were named
as Ibrahim Al Barguti, 22, and Raid Mahmud Al Barguti, 17.
The settler was detained for questioning. (Ha'aretz, 29
February 1988)
On 1 March 1988, it was reported that an Israeli student
from Jerusalem, Danny Kirtchuk, had witnessed an incident
that occurred on 26 February 1988, in which several settlers
from Homesh attacked the village of Burka, near Jenin,
following a stone-throwing incident. The settlers were accompanied by soldiers, some of them reservists from the same
settlement of Homesh. Together they entered Burka, armed
with assault rifles and sub-machine guns, and fired bursts in
and around the village. MK Amira Sartani reportedly asked
Defence Minister Rabin to open an immediate inquiry into
the report. No casualties were reported. (Ha'aretz, 1 March
1988)
On 10 March 1988, it was reported that Defence Minister
Rabin described the organized acts of vengeance by settlers
from Ariel against Arab passers-by and villagers from Haris,
two days earlier, as "a very serious development that will
aggravate the problem." The settlers reportedly went to the
main road, blocked it, stopped Arabcars, beat theirpassengers
and set fire to the cars. They subsequently conducted"stonethrowing
battles" with villagers of Haris and Kifl Harith. The
Ariel settlers were also operating an armed patrol, which
consisted of vehicles with armed settlers that accompanied
settlers' cars travelling on the Trans-Samaria road. The IDF
reportedly did not prevent the operation of the settlers'
patrols. (Ha'aretz, 10 March 1988)
On 1 1 March 1988, it was reported that settlers had thrown
stones at Arab rioters in Hebron and fired bursts of machinegun
fire. According to Arab sources six quarters of Hebron
were attacked by settlers on the night of 8 March 1988. The
settlers allegedly damaged cars and fired dt homes before
bursting inside, smashing windows and vandalizing furniture.
(Jerusalem Post, 11 March 1988)
On 27 March 1988. yeshiva students in the Old City of
Jerusalem attempted to evict an elderly Arab woman from her
room in the Muslim Quarter. The students had a court order,
but they tried to apply it on their own, without notifying the
police. Their action sparked off a riot, and police quickly
intervened and put the old woman's belongings back in the
room. The woman was named as Rafikah Salamiyeh. The
students belonged to the "Ateret Layoshna" yeshiva.
(Jerusalem Post, 28 March 1988)
On 11 April 1988, it was reported that settlers attacked two
villages, Deir El Hatab and Burin, near Eilon Moreh, following
the incident in which a group of settlers were attacked in
Beita. (Ha'aretz, 11 April 1988)
On 5 May 1988, Jodeh Muhammad Awad, 28, a shepherd
from Turmus Aya, was shot and killed by a settler from Shilo,
Israel Ze'ev. The circumstances of the incident were not clear.
The settlers alleged that Awad, together with several other
shepherds, had thrown stones at the settlers, but Arab sources
denied this and said the settlers opened fire without any
provocation. The incident occurred near Shilo. Another Arab
shepherd was injured. On 8 May 1988, more details were
published on the incident. On 1 May 1988. the police maintained
in the Jerusalem magistrates court that Shilo settler
Israel Ze'ev had shot the shepherd Awad because of a land
dispute and not because the shepherd attacked him. The police
said there was no evidence that there was provocation on the
shepherd's part, and that Ze'ev was suspected of murder and
attempted murder. The court remanded Ze'ev for afurther 10
days. (Ha'aretz, 6 and 8 May 1988; Jerusalem Post, 6 and 17
May 1988)
On 10 May 1988, the Chief of Staff, Maj.-Gen. Dan
Shomron, addressed the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defence
Committee. Referring to relations between settlers and Arabs
in the territories he said that prevailing tensions in the West
Bank was due partly to acts by the Jewish settlers. "When
stones are thrown (at settlers), but there is no danger to life,
(the settlers) should report to the army and the army will deal
with the case," he said. Referring to the incident in the village
of Beita (in which a settler girl and two Arabs were killed) he
said: "The bodies investigating and judging Jews function at
a slower pace than those dealing with Arabs, but despite this
difference the law will be observed and some of the settlers
mentioned in the report on the Beita incident will have to stand
trial, at least with regard to the coordination of their excursion
(with the army). We have an interest that justice should be
done, and seen, regarding both Jews and Arabs." (Ma'ariv, 1 May 1988)
On 19 May 1988, it was reported that MK Dedi Zucker
had submitted to Police Minister Haim Bar-Lev a list of 13
Arabs from the territories believed to have been killed by
settlers. In all those cases the IDF maintained that the death
had not been caused by troops. MK Zucker asked the Minister
to report on the state of the investigation into those cases, and
what the police had recommended to the State Attorney's
office with regard to each of them. The cases were the
following: Tabat Hawihi, 17, from Beit-Hanun, killed on 15
February 1988; Tukan Misbah, 32, on 11 January 1988;
Abdul Basat Jum'a, 27, from Kaddun, killed on 7 February
1988; Kamal Darwish, 23, from Deir Amar, killed on 21
February 1988; Radda Najib Hassan, 13, from Bak'a
Sharkiya, killed on 27 February 1988; Hamed Muhammad
Hamida, 4 1, from Mazra'a Sharkiya, killed on 9 March 1988;
Nujah Hassan Hizag, 18, from Turmus Aya, killedon 9 March
1988; Musa Salah Musa, 20, and Hatem Ahmed El Jaber,
Turmus Aya, killed on 4 May 1988. (Ma'ariv, 19 May 1988)
On 29 May 1988, it was reported that the Ministry of
Justice, the defence establishment and the Police Investigations
Department had set up a joint team to look into complaints
by Arab residents of the territories against Jewish
settlers. Most of the complaints, filed through the Red Cross
or the complainants' lawyers, concerned alleged violent acts
by settlers that had not been duly investigated by the police,
owing to a shortage of investigators. The number of such
complaints had reportedly increased since the beginning of
the uprising in the territories. (Ha'aretz, 29 May 1988)
On 23 May 1988, it was reported that State President
Chaim Herzog reduced the prison terms of three convicted
members of the Jewish terrorist organization who had
originally been sentenced to life imprisonment and later had
their sentence reduced to 24 years. The President now further
reduced it to 15 years. The prisoners concerned were
Menahem Livni, Shaul Nir and Shaul Sharabaf. They were
convicted of murder in the case of the attack on the Islamic
College in Hebron, in 1984, in which three were killed and
over 30 were injured. They were also convicted of planting
bombs in Arab buses and of threatening to blow up the Temple
Mount mosques. (Ha'aretz, 23 May 1988)
On 2 June 1988, it was reported that the Judea district
police were investigating the circumstances of an incident in
which Rabbi Moshe Levinger had allegedly beaten Arabs of
the Samuh family, who live near the Hadassa House in
Hebron. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 2 June 1988)
On 3 June 1988, a group of Israeli civilians believed to be
settlers entered the village of Shuyukh, provoked villagers,
beat some of them and opened fire at houses. Mustafa Ahmed
El Halaika, 20, was shot in the chest and died of his wounds.
A 15-year-old boy was injured in the arm, and two others, a
15-year-old boy and a man aged 42, were hospitalized in
Hebron with broken limbs. The IDFannounced that its forces
Jewish Settler Terrorism Against Palestinians in The West Bank and Gazu Strip
were not involved in the incident. According to one report,
Kach movement members privately admitted to being responsible,
saying they acted in retaliation to the killing in
Jerusalem of a yeshiva student, several days earlier.
(Ha'aretz, Ma'ariv, 5 June 1988)
On 3 June 1988, five young armed settlers arrived at Si'ir,
near Hebron, and asked for the location of the mosque, built
on the traditional site of Esau's grave. The settlers told
villagers they wanted to live near the mosque and asked
whether there was a house for rent. They then opened fire,
wounding a local youth. From Si'ir the settlers went to the
nearby village of Shuyukh, where they broke windows and
doors in three houses and attacked and beat Nai'm Khalaika,
46, and his wife, On their way out the settlers opened fire,
killing Mustafa Khalaika, 20, who was grazing sheep nearby.
The settlers were seen leaving the area in jeeps. According to
one press report, Kach movement members were responsible
for the acts, but a spokesman for the movement denied that
report. (Jerusalem Post, 6 June 1988)
On 5 June 1988, it was reported that settlers from Ramat-
Mamre, near Kiryat Arba (the former "Porcelain Hill"), had
severely beaten an Israeli, Shmuel Cohen, after mistaking him
for an Arab. The man needed medical treatment. In another
development, it was reported that two settlers had been caught
by the IDF officers destroying wheat sacks belonging to
Arabs in the Mas'ha region. The two were handed over to the
police, which opened a file against them and started an
inquiry. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 6 June 1988)
On 24 June 1988, two incidents involving settlers were
reported. InNablus asettler's car was stoned andits occupants
opened fire at stone-throwers. Troops arrived on the scene and
dispersed the crowd with tear gas and rubber bullets. According
to Arab sources 13 persons were hospitalized. In Hebron
a settler living in the Hason house in the town was stabbed in
the shoulder. The settler, YonaCheikin, amember of theKach
movement, chased after his assailant, shot at him and injured
him. The assailant was named as Abd El Majid Sharawna. He
was later discovered in hospital. (Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post,
26 June 1988)
On 7 July 1988, it was reported that the High Court of
Justice had rejected a petition by family members of Jodeh
Abdallah Awad, from Turmus Aya, who asked that Israel
Ze'ev, the Shilo settler suspected of killing Awad, be charged
with murder and not merely with manslaughter. The High
Court justices ruled that there was no ground for intervening
in the Attorney-General's discretion, when hedetermined that
the evidence held by the prosecution did not contain the
element of intention to kill necessary for a murder charge.
(Ha'areft, 7 July 1988)
On 2 August 1988, it was reported that the Attomey-
General, Yosef Harish, had decided that Pinhas Wallerstein,
headof the Binyamin Regional Council, should be put on trial
on a charge of manslaughter. Wallerstein would be charged
with the killing on 11 January 1988 of Rabah Mahmud
Hussein Hamad, 17, and the wounding of Ziad Hamad, during
a demonstration in Beitin, near Ramallah. On 11 August
1988, Wallerstein was charged at the Jerusalem District Court
with manslaughter and causing injury in aggravated circumstances.
(Ha'aretz, Jerusalem Post, 2 and 12 August
1988)
NOTES TO CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT
1. Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories, dated 24 October, 1988, United Nations Document A/43/694, pp. 102- 103.
2. Anthony Lewis, "A Warning Signal," New York Times, May 7, 1984, p. 19.
3. Jerusalem Post, May 3, 1984, p. 8. Quoted in Jan Demarest Abu Shakrah, Israeli Settler Violence in the Occupied Territories: 1980-1984 (Chicago: Palestine Human Rights Campaign, 1985). p. 44.
4. Ze'ev Schiff, "The Military Potential of the Settlers," Ha'aretz, November 15, 1985. Published in Israel Source, volume 2, April 2, 1986, pp. 15-16.
5. Meron Benvenisti, 1986 Report: Demographic, Economic. Legal, Social and Political Developments in the West Bank (Jerusalem: The West Bank Data Base Project, 1986), p. 75.
6. Ze'ev Schiff, "The Military Potential of the Settlers," Ha'aretz, November 15, 1 985. Published in Israel Source, volume 2, April 2, 1986, pp. 15-16.
7. New York Times, 6 November. 1985, p. 15.
8. Ibid.
9. Sally V. Mallison and W. Thomas Mallison, "Legal Postscript: The Law Applicable to Israeli Settler Violence in Occupied Territories," in Israeli Settler Violence, pp. 78-82. For a detailed analysis of the judicial system under Israeli occupation see Raja Shehadeh, Occupier's Law: Israel and the West Bank (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies, 1985), pp. 76- 102.
10. The Karp Report: An Israeli Government Inquiry into Settler Violence Against Palestinians on the West Bank (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies, 1984), pp. 35-49.
11. David Zucker et al, Research on Human Rights in the Occupied Territories 1979-1983 (Tel Aviv: International Center for Peace in the Middle East. 1983), pp. 47-59.
12. Meron Benvenisti, 1986 Report, pp. 70-71.
13. Amnon Rubinstein. "Some Remarks on Jewish Terror," Ha'aretz, 22 May 1984. Israel Shahak, Shahak Papers, Collection No. 2: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 11-13.
14. Uriel Ofek, "Thou Shalt Not Kill? Not Always!," Davar, 6 July 1984, Shahak Papers, Collection No. 4: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 11 - 13.
15. Pe-er-Li Shahar "Yuval Ne'eman: In 1945 a Palmach Unit Castrated an Arab," Hadashot, 11 May 1984. Shahak Papers, Collection No. 3: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 1-2.
16. Chicago Tribune, 13 July 1985, p. 1-2.
17. Davar, 2 May 1984. Shuhak Papers: Collection No. 1: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 1-2.
18. Robert I. Friedman, "In the Realm of Perfect Faith: Israel's Jewish Terrorists," The Village Voice, 12 November 1986, p. 17.
19. Jan Abu Shakrah, Israeli Settler Violence in the Occupied Territories, p. 15.
20. The Karp Report pp. 38-39.
21. Abu Shakrah, Israeli Settler Violence in the Occupied Territories, pp. 14-36.
22. Jan Metzger, Martin Orth and Christian Sterzing, This Land is Our Land: The West Bank Under Israeli Occupation (London: Zed Press, l983), pp. 30-31.
23. Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories, dated 4 October 1985, United Nations Document A/40/702, p. 55.
24. Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Occupied Territories, dated 29 October, 1984, United Nations Document A/59/591. pp. 58-66.
25. Report of the United Nations Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories, dated 29 October, 1984, United Nations Document A/59/591, pp. 58-66.
26. Washington Times, 15 April, 1986, p. 8.
27. New York Times. 9 December 1985, p. 11.
28. Dani Rubinstein, "Two Nightmares," Davar, 24 May 1984. Shahak Papers, Collection No. 4: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 2-3.
29. Robert I. Friedman, "The Return of the JDL: Nice Jewish Boys with Bombs," The Village Voice, May 6, 1986, p. 23.
30. Friedman. "In the Realm of Perfect Faith."
31. Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Population of the Occupied Territories, dated 29 October, 1984, United Nations Document A/39/591, p. 55. 32. Ibid., pp. 55-56.
33. The Karp Report, p. 45.
34. Jay Y. Gonen, A Psychohistory of Zionism (New York: New American Library, 1973, p. 182.
35. Zucker et al. Research on Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, p. 52.
36. Ibid.
37. Jerusalem Post International Edition, 14 June 1986, p. 2.
38. Meron Benvenisti, The West Bank Handbook: A Political Lexicon (Jerusalem: The Jerusalem Post, 1986), pp. 126-127.
39. Al Hamishmar, 12 March 1984. Shahak Papers. Collection No. I: Background to the Jewish Terror, pp. 3-4.
40. Friedman, "In the Realm of Perfect Faith."
41. Ibid.
42. The Jerusalem Post International Edition, 24 June- 1 July 1984, pp. 12-14.
43. Beita: Lidice Revisited (Washington: RootsfFriends of Palestinian Prisoners, 1989), pp. 5-6. 44. Ibid., pp. 7-9.
45. Ibid., pp. 11-12.
46. New York Times, February 23, 1989, p. 12.
47. Hadashot, February 9. 1989, as cited by the Jerusalem Press Daily Report, February 9, 1989, p. 6.
48. Yediot Ahronot, February 9, 1989, as cited by the Jerusalem Press Daily Report, February 9, 1989, p. 7.
49. New York Times, February 23, 1989, p. 12.
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