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 Israeli MK slams prosecutors of Israeli soldiers arrested for war crimes as ‘lowest of traitors’

August 2, 2024 at 3:44 pm

Knesset member Limor Son Har-Melech (right) and Yitzhak Kroizer (in white) from the far right-wing Otzma Yehudití party stand with armed and masked reservists from the ‘100 force’. Israeli right-wing activists demonstrated with masked IDF reservists from the ‘100 force’ and broke into ‘Beit Lid’ military police base following the detention of 9 military reservists from the unit today, who were suspected of sexual abuse of a detainee at the ‘Sde Teiman’ compound, on 29 July 2024 [Matan Golan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images]

Far-right Israeli MK, Limor Son Har-Melech, threatened at a rally yesterday that any prosecutors of Israeli soldiers for alleged crimes during its war against Gaza will be “charged and prosecuted as the lowest of traitors”.

It comes after nine Israeli soldiers were initially detained for their part in the abuse, in the notorious Sde Teiman detention facility, which has been compared to Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib. They appeared at the military court at the Beid Lid base for a bail hearing, at which one of the soldiers was released.

At a right-wing rally on yesterday evening, which appeared to include several dozen protesters, Son Har-Melech expressed her support for the arrested soldiers, vowing to “protect our soldiers”.

“Our soldiers have enemies abroad who need to be fought, but also enemies at home,” she stated. “Whoever dares lay a hand on our soldiers will be charged and prosecuted as the lowest of traitors.”

Following the arrests, a group of far-right activists and lawmakers broke into the base to demonstrate, later storming the Beit Lid base where the suspects were held and questioned.

READ: UN chief demands accountability after report about abuse of Palestinian prisoners by Israel 

One of the nine Israeli soldiers arrested for abusing Palestinian detainees in the notorious Sde Teiman detention facility has been released without charge, Haaretz has reported. Deliberations about the other eight are continuing.

At least 13 prisoners are said to have died in recent months from abuse in Israeli prisons. That figure could be much higher, with Haaretz reporting that the number of Palestinians who died because of Israeli torture and abuse could be as high as 27 since 7 October last year.

Allegations of abuse by Israeli soldiers against Palestinian detainees at Sde Teiman were reported in May. An anonymous Israeli whistle-blower who worked at the facility in the Negev Desert reported gruesome details of abuse, torture and mistreatment of Palestinians. In June, a shocking three-month investigation by the New York Times uncovered harrowing details of the conditions endured by the roughly 4,000 Palestinian detainees. Horrific accounts of rape were covered by the NYT investigation.

Although Israel denied that sexual abuse was taking place, lawyer Khaled Mahajneh, who visited the site three weeks later, not only corroborated the NYT report uncovering rape, but also went on to state that the treatment of Palestinians by Israeli soldiers is more horrifying than Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo.

Israel has not publicly acknowledged any investigation into the conduct of soldiers and guards working in its prisons, which has prompted speculation that the main motivation for the Occupation state in detaining the soldiers is to thwart International Criminal Court arrest warrants for Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and Defence Minister, Yoav Gallant.

According to the principle of complementarity in international law, particularly in the context of the ICC, the Court will only intervene when national legal systems are unwilling or unable to prosecute individuals for the most serious crimes of international concern, such as genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. This principle is grounded in the idea that states have the primary responsibility to exercise jurisdiction over these crimes.

One of the claims made in the filings by advocates for Israel who are arguing that the ICC has no jurisdiction is that the apartheid state has a sound legal system capable of prosecuting individuals for war crimes. Critics have said that the detention of the nine Israeli soldiers has, in light of its timing, more to do with stopping the ICC and less to do with the rule of law.

The sinister motive for the detention was echoed by an Israeli doctor who treated the Palestinian prisoners, who expressed his shock at one man’s condition. “If the state and Knesset members think there’s no limit to how much you can abuse prisoners, they should kill them themselves, like the Nazis did, or close the hospitals,” said Professor Yoel Donchin, a doctor at Sde Teiman. “If they maintain a hospital only for the sake of defending ourselves at [the International Criminal Court at] The Hague, that’s no good.”

READ: Israel returns sexually abused Gaza detainee to detention centre where he was tortured