The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Israeli ministers back ban on filming soldiers

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JERUSALEM: Israeli ministers on Sunday backed a draft law carrying a jail term of up to 10 years for those who film or photograph soldiers with harmful intent, the justice ministry said.

Critics say the law, which will now face a series of parliament­ary debates, could be a threat to free speech.

The ministeria­l committee on legislatio­n endorsed the bill against “people who film, photograph or record soldiers performing their duties in order to demoralise soldiers and Israeli civilians”.

The draft law would give courts the power to imprison those found guilty for five years, although a 10-year sentence would apply to defendants convicted of trying to “harm the state’s security”.

The same prison terms would apply to people sharing such images or recordings on social media or through traditiona­l media.

Explanator­y notes of the bill say that local “anti-Israeli” NGOs, as well groups affiliated with the “Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions” (BDS) movement, spend days around “soldiers eagerly awaiting activity that could be documented in a biased way and used to defame them.”

The BDS movement leads a global campaign against Israel, targeting the country’s economy, art scene and sports.

“Most of these organisati­ons are supported by foundation­s, organisati­ons and government­s with a clear anti-Israel agenda, which use this biased content to harm Israel and its security,” the notes said.

An Israeli soldier was recently released from prison after serving nine months behind bars for shooting dead an injured Palestinia­n, an act which was caught on video by a human rights group and spread widely online.

The draft law was sponsored by the nationalis­t Yisrael Beitenu party led by Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman.

Following the ministeria­l approval, Lieberman said in a statement he would end attempts by “terror supporters” to “humiliate, degrade and harm” soldiers.

Ksenia Svetlova, an opposition lawmaker with the centre-left Zionist Union, slammed the bill as “dangerous and antidemocr­atic,” warning it would “harm the media and civil society organisati­ons”.

“Whoever’s conduct is good doesn’t need to hide anything,” she wrote on Twitter.

The Israel Democracy Institute, a liberal think-tank, said the bill’s ambiguous wording could prevent anyone besides the army from documentin­g soldiers, and expose Israeli soldiers to legal proceeding­s in internatio­nal forums. — AFP

 ??  ?? Lieberman (left) sits opposite of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the weekly cabinet meeting at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem. — Reuters photo
Lieberman (left) sits opposite of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the weekly cabinet meeting at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem. — Reuters photo

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