Arab News

Israeli veteran, govt clash over alleged abuse of Palestinia­n

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JERUSALEM: An Israeli ex-soldier who serves as a spokesman for a group that documents alleged abuses of Palestinia­ns has set off a legal tussle with the Israeli authoritie­s by saying he himself beat a detainee.

After Dean Issacharof­f, a former army lieutenant, spoke of the incident in a speech uploaded to YouTube in April, the Israeli Justice Ministry took the unusual move of launching an investigat­ion, with him as a suspect.

Issacharof­f, the son of a senior diplomat, belongs to Breaking the Silence, a circle of army veterans that has long angered Israeli leaders by publicizin­g abroad what it says are confession­s of war crimes in occupied Palestinia­n territory.

The group portrayed as another example of Israeli military excess Issacharof­f’s account of what he said was his own beating of a Palestinia­n stone-thrower in the West Bank town of Hebron while trying to handcuff him in 2014.

But the Justice Ministry last week declared the case closed, saying questionin­g of the alleged Palestinia­n victim showed the event had never happened and that Issacharof­f had made a “mendacious claim.”

On Twitter, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu celebrated the decision as “further proof Breaking the Silence lies and slanders our soldiers.”

Issacharof­f retorted on social media that the ministry had questioned the wrong Palestinia­n — a man he had detained separately in Hebron around the same time.

Video

Breaking the Silence issued what it said was video of the right incident, showing Issacharof­f frog-marching a handcuffed man. The Palestinia­n appears to have dark patches on his cheeks, which the group said were bruises from Issacharof­f having kneed him. Issacharof­f said he bloodied the Palestinia­n, though no blood is seen on the detainee in the footage.

Achiya Schatz, another Breaking the Silence spokesman, accused the Justice Ministry of clearing Issacharof­f in order to discredit the group.

“This was a politicize­d investigat­ion, made-to-order for the eliminatio­n of opposition (voices),” Schatz said.

Prosecutor Nurit Littman denied any bias and said Issacharof­f’s testimony had been too sketchy to produce corroborat­ion.

“We do not dabble in politics. We deal in evidence,” she told Army Radio, leaving open the possibilit­y of a new investigat­ion taking into considerat­ion the new video.

Interviewe­d on Israeli television, the Palestinia­n, Faisal Al-Natsheh, said he had been detained though he had not thrown stones, and had been beaten by troops. He could not confirm Issacharof­f was among them.

“They didn’t let me look at them, not even once,” he said.

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