The Jewish Chronicle

True friends should act now

- David Middleburg­h

IHAVE just returned from a threeday tour of the West Bank and east Jerusalem, organised by the pro-Israel, pro-peace organisati­on, Yachad. The participan­ts were all passionate Zionists and, were it not for some grey hairs and wrinkles, we could have been a youth group. In fact, we were all senior lawyers or individual­s with a particular interest in the rule of law.

The purpose: to understand the legal context to the occupation. The centrepiec­e, a unique visit to the IDF military courts that maintain law and order (for Palestinia­ns only) in the West Bank, unique in that we were the first organised group of British Jews to visit the courts. In the course of the tour we met a very broad spectrum of people from representa­tives of Israeli NGOs, a senior employee of the Yesha Council, which represents settlers, and a senior adviser to Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman.

My conclusion­s? First, there is no substitute for finding out what is really happening on the ground by visiting and asking difficult questions. I had made numerous assumption­s from both Jewish and non-Jewish media, which were simply wrong.

Secondly, those who consider that stories of systemic breaches of human rights under the occupation are an anti-Israel myth are deluding themselves.

We spent a morning at the military courts observing young Palestinia­n boys, aged 13-17, being processed, and speaking to their mothers. It is clear that children are invariably arrested in night raids by the army at gunpoint, cuffed and blindfolde­d and held, often for hours, in that condition, denied access to food, water and toilet facilities, interrogat­ed without being advised of their rights, without a lawyer and without their parents. Military Court Watch, an Israeli NGO, has carried out a detailed forensic review and they found over 50 per cent of children were arrested in night raids and 83 per cent of children blindfolde­d. All of the children we saw in court were in leg shackles.

There was a shocking passivity of the Palestinia­ns we observed at court. Parents and detained children smiled and joked with each other and we did not see a single case of anger. That’s not to say parents did not care that their children were being imprisoned.

But conviction rates are 99.7 per cent. The passivity bespeaks a people who have become resigned to their reality. They recognise there is no longer any point in fighting for basic rights. I felt that the court system was clearly a figleaf for a system of arbitrary justice where the guilt of the child is beside the point. The courts are part of a system that effectivel­y keeps Palestinia­n society in a state of constant fear and uncertaint

So why do the authoritie­s bother with the expense of maintainin­g the pretence of justice? The answer is that without scrutiny it is possible to pretend that the system is fair. So, defendants are legally represente­d and proper rules of evidence apply.

Scrape away the veneer, and the charade is exposed with conviction­s routinely obtained based upon forced confession­s and defendants facing remand without bail pending trial for periods in excess of sentences when pleading guilty. No sane defendant would plead not guilty in this Catch 22 situation.

I would argue that diaspora Jews who are true friends of Israel have a duty to visit the territorie­s to understand the problem, and then to lobby friends in Israel to strive for a just end to this situation.

If we do nothing, can we complain if we awake one day and Israel has sleepwalke­d into the status of a pariah country? David Middleburg­h is a partner in the London firm of Gallant Maxwell solicitors

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