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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 2, 2018
Israeli inquiry clears officers of wrongdoing in Bedouin teacher killing
Rights
group says Ministry of Justice's exoneration in the 2017 case is part
of a 'policy of whitewashing' Israeli violence against Palestinians
Mourners pray during the funeral of Yaqoub Abu al-Qiyan, killed by Israeli police forces on 18 January 2017 (AFP)
Israeli
police officers who shot and killed a Palestinian citizen of Israel
during a demolition raid in a Bedouin village were cleared of any
criminal act, the Israeli justice ministry said on Tuesday.
Yaqoub
Abu al-Qiyan, 50, was killed on 18 January 2017 while driving his
vehicle as police staged a pre-dawn raid on the Bedouin village of Umm
al-Hiran to demolish several homes built without Israeli government
permission.
Police
claimed at the time that Abu al-Qiyan was shot as he deliberately drove
towards officers, hitting and killing a policeman.
However, eyewitnesses have said that Abu al-Qiyan did not constitute a threat when he was shot.
Videos
of the event - including aerial footage shot by Israeli police - showed
Abu al-Qiyan driving slowly in the area before shots were fired in his
direction, after which his vehicle accelerated in the direction of the
police officers.
An
autopsy on Abu al-Qiyan showed that a first bullet hit his right leg,
causing him to lose control of his car, while a second bullet hit him in
the chest, causing severe internal bleeding.
Abu al-Qiyan was not given medical treatment, and bled to death at the scene after 20 minutes.
The Israeli State Attorney Office’s decision to close its investigation attests to the policy of whitewashing and its perception of the lives of Arab citizens of Israel as unequal to those of Jewish citizen- Adalah
A
police statement shortly after the event described Abu al-Qiyan as a
"terrorist from the Islamic Movement", and suggested he may have had
ties to the Islamist State group.
Tuesday's
ministry statement said that there was no certainty that the impact
that killed a policeman was deliberate, but also cleared police of
criminal behaviour.
"There
was no reasonable suspicion of criminal offences committed by the
policemen involved in the incident," said the statement from the justice
ministry, which is responsible for investigating suspicions of police
misconduct.
"It was decided not to continue the inquiry into the incident."
It said that the police use of firearms was reasonable in light of their belief that their lives were in danger.
But
it added there were "some issues" that the department referred back to
the national police chief and the head of the police disciplinary
department for them to consider if there was need for disciplinary
action.
The
statement said the Shin Bet internal security agency had examined the
scene immediately after the deaths and had subsequently abandoned its
investigation, saying it was unable to determine whether there had been a
"terror attack".
Israeli
police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said on Tuesday that police “welcomed
the decision made by the State Attorney’s Office”, adding that the
ministry of justice investigation was “unfortunate” as it had “cut
short” an internal police investigation into the case.
However, legal rights organisation Adalah said in a statement that it would file an appeal against the ministry’s decision.
“The
Israeli State Attorney Office’s decision to close its investigation
attests to the policy of whitewashing and its perception of the lives of
Arab citizens of Israel as unequal to those of Jewish citizens,” the
group said.
Abu al-Qiyan's nephew Raed also demanded a broader investigation.
"Who
planned it, who took part, who gave the orders, who opened fire, who
left him to bleed for 30 minutes and prevented medics from reaching
him," he told Israeli public radio, citing what he said were the
post-mortem findings.
He
said that his late uncle had been a respected teacher and had
represented Israel as a delegate to international conferences on
education, science and technology.
Israeli
authorities rarely indict members of the country’s armed forces who
kill Palestinians. When charged for such deaths, sentences are often
short - creating what Israeli human rights NGO Yesh Din has called a
context of "near impunity".
Less
than a week prior, Israel police officer Ben Deri was sentenced to nine
months in prison as part of a plea deal for the 2014 killing of
Palestinian teenager Nadim Nuwara - prompting rights groups to accuse the Israeli justice system of “whitewashing” state violence against Palestinians.
Palestinian
citizens of Israel - including some 300,000 Bedouins - are descendants
of Palestinians who remained after the creation of the state of Israel
in 1948, and now make up around 20 percent of Israel’s population.
According to Adalah,
more than 65 Israeli laws discriminate between Palestinian and Jewish
citizens of Israel - "from citizenship rights to the right to political
participation, land and housing rights, education rights, cultural and
language rights, religious rights, and due process rights during
detention".
Umm
al-Hiran is one of 35 villages in the Negev that remain unrecognised by
the state of Israel, which means the residents, all Israeli citizens,
have never been granted building permits, basic services or
infrastructure.
The villagers have been living under the threat of expulsion from
the land since 2016, when the Israeli Supreme Court delivered its final
demolition ruling against the village so that a Jewish-only town could
be built on the site.