Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for March, 2011

Shabak Arrests 18 Year-Old Palestinian Under Gag Order

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

On March 22nd, the Israeli Shabak arrested 18 year-old Ahmad Khaled Ghanem, a native of Nazareth.  Because his arrest is under gag order inside Israel, it’s likely he is suspected of some sort of security offense.  HaMoked has helped me locate him in Kishon Prison near Haifa.  I am trying to discover whether he has an attorney and also to contact his family to see if there are other ways to assist them in his defense.

He graduated from Galilea Experimental High School in Nazareth last year.  Ghanem will celebrate his 19th birthday in a Shabak dungeon on April 12th.  This was also Gilad Shalit’s age when he was captured.  May win their freedom.

If any Israeli human rights NGOs or activists can offer any further information about him, please contact me.

Abusisi’s First Public Words at Hearing: ‘I am a Simple, Innocent Man’

Thursday, March 31st, 2011
dirar abusisi

Dirar Abusisi speaks to media against wishes of security personnel (Alon Ron)

Dirar Abusisi has made his first public statement since his kidnapping in Ukraine and extraordinary rendition to Israel.   Before beginning a hearing that is underway as I write this, he made his first comments to the media during the court proceedings, saying:

The interrogated me about Gilad Shalit but I have no connection or information about him.  It’s all lies.  I am merely a simple man and electrical engineer.  I send my love to my family.  I am innocent.

He also said that he had been kidnapped from Ukraine and encouraged his family to be strong and patient.

Defense minister Ehud Barak has now gotten into the act and reinforced Netanyahu’s claim that Abusisi knows about Shalit.  This appears to be the line that the Israeli security services have fixed on as most likely to bring a prison sentence against him after two trial balloons linking him to building missles under Iranian training and the Victoria arms shipment were apparently dropped.

Yossi Melman is also reporting based on security sources that Abusisi will be charged with membership in a terror organization and aiding Hamas in manufacturing weapons.  The latter is a charge whispered by another TV news military correspondent weeks ago.  So here you can see how the gag works.  The defense and anyone sympathetic to the defendant may not report on matters that might work in his favor.  However, the prosecution and Shabak may leak at will to their chosen favorite reporters, who dutifully put it in the media pipeline.  Once again revealing a system stacked against all security detainees and in favor of the State.

The “leniency” with which the authorities have treated him derives no doubt from Bibi Netanyahu opening his big mouth during the Channel 2/YouTube interview and crowing about Abusisi’s membership in Hamas.  By the way, can you imagine the leader of a democratic nation proclaiming before not just a national, but international audience that a prisoner who hasn’t even yet been charged with a crime is guilty of being a member of a banned organization?  This surely is a conviction even before the trial has begun.  Would any of my pro-Israel readers want to reconcile that with the concept of innocent till proven guilty?  Or does that hold true only for Israeli Jews?  Palestinians apparently are guilty, not until proven innocent because in the Israeli system that doesn’t happen.  Just guilty.

So the court and/or prosecutor figured that because Bibi had already convicted him before the international media that they should at least allow him to be photographed and make a short statement.

Abusisi’s remand has been extended for another five days, which will bring him to 45 days imprisonment without being charged with a crime, an unprecedented length of time for Israeli prisoners.  At that time, charges are supposed to be filed (but at the last hearing that’s what the court insisted would happen).

I repeat what I said after the Attorney General stated that he was unsatisfied with the evidence Shabak had compiled against Abusisi–whatever they’ve gotten so far hasn’t been enough.  They need to continue working on him till they can build a case for something.  This delay also lends credibility to Smadar Ben Natan’s statement yesterday that her client has done nothing wrong, but rather deserves an airline ticket back to Ukraine with an apology (fat chance).  If Abusisi is guilty of something why has it taken 45 days to file charges?  How long do you need to have 24 hour/7 days a week access to a prisoner in order to find him guilty of terrorism?  A month, a year?

Bibi: Abusisi is Hamas and He’s Spilling His Guts

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011


Bibi Netanyahu took the unprecedented step, one which I don’t ever recall a previous prime minister taking regarding a specific security detainee, of publicly defending Israel’s extraordinary rendition of Dirar Abusisi.  He did so deliberately according to Amir Oren in Haaretz in an interview filled with softball questions and self-serving, hasbarist answers before an international audience assembled by a Youtube program called World View.  Here is what he said about Abusisi:

Asked about a Palestinian engineer who disappeared in Ukraine and later surfaced in an Israeli jail, Netanyahu said, “He is a Hamas member, held legally in Israeli detention.” Netanyahu added, “He delivered important information,” without elaborating.

The prime minister is clearly bluffing his way through this exercise.  The only reason he’s taken this question is that he feels the need to justify the kidnapping, which no nation or international body outside Israel (and Ukraine and Jordan who are implicated as collaborators) considers justified.  There is some sort of brewing pressure against the Mossad adventure that has made him feel it necessary to explain Israel’s position, weak as it is, to the world.

Further, I believe he’s lying about Abusisi being a Hamas member and I strongly doubt the latter’s delivering any information of any value on any subject pertinent to Israel.

I’m not sure whether it’s the looming threat of formal complaints to UN bodies or Ukrainian legal action or the possibility that this will be followed by recourse to the European Court of Human Rights once Ukrainian jurisdiction is exhausted.  Whatever the reason, I think Bibi’s feeling the heat.  And the heat will only increase as the case continues.

Though the Abusisi question is being widely covered in world media, I could only find the question in the Hebrew language video above. It comes in the context of a question about what the government is doing to free Gilad Shalit. The interviewer allows Bibi to infer that the Palestinian’s kidnapping has something to do with freeing Shalit (which his attorney denied flat out yesterday). I’m guessing that Bibi’s press office deliberately translated this portion of the interview both to showcase what the government is allegedly doing on Shalit’s behalf and also to defend an act that threatens to become an increasing international liability to Israel.

ALERT: If you’re in Israel please rally on Dirar’s behalf at the Petah Tikvah regional court at 10:00AM.  Show the security apparatus that it cannot act with impunity.  It cannot violate international law and allow the rule of impunity.

Maria Abusisi: ‘Ask Daddy to Buy Me a Barbie When He Comes Home’

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011
maria abusisi

Maria Abusisi wants her daddy to buy a Barbie (AP)

In the midst of all the spookery and legal maneuverings of the Israeli security apparatus as it lumbers into action against Dirar Abusisi, we should remember the very real human beings in this case and the very real suffering that this is inflicting on them.

Dirar’s brother, Yousef, told me he talked to the former’s youngest daughter, Maria, age 5, yesterday.  The girl said to him: “Ask Daddy when he comes home to bring me a Barbie.”  It broke my heart to hear this as I have a 6-year-old girl myself.  I wanted to buy the Barbie for her, but of course it would be nothing like Daddy bringing it home to her.  And keep in mind that her daddy faces years in an Israeli prison for a crime no one knows except his Shabak inquisitors.

A story like this makes me specially angry with irresponsible reporting like that of Der Spiegel, whose scribe dutifully regurgitates a morsel undoubtedly offered to him by an Israeli security reporter who can’t publish it legally under Israeli gag restrictions.  The way this noxious system works is Shabak feeds the story to the reporter.  He then offers it to Der Spiegel, which dutifully publishes it.  Then the Israeli reporter can publish it inside Israel.  Is it correct information?  Highly unlikely:

Jerusalem may believe that Abu Sisi had information relating to Gilad Shalit, the Israeli soldier kidnapped four and a half years ago by Hamas, according to another source…Jerusalem has not wholly given up hope of liberating him with a commando mission. But Israeli forces would have to know exactly where he’s held (presumably in the Gaza Strip) – information they appear to be hoping to obtain from Abu Sisi.

shai nitzan prosecutor

Shai Nitzan, Israeli prosecutor of Dirar Abusisi (Dod Vaknin)

Now, Israeli media is reporting this widely as if it were halacha l’Moshe mi’Sinai (God’s law from Moses on Sinai).  Haaretz reports it here.  Channel 2 news in Israel reports it in Hebrew here.  Now you have an entire news cycle devoted to prattering nonsense that distracts from the real issues of this case.  It doesn’t matter that Smadar Ben Natan, Dirar’s attorney has refuted the charges soundly.  What matters is the torrent of Shalit-related claims that Israelis will hear over that 24 hour cycle.

Keep in mind that this is the third or fourth futile cover story leaked by the intelligence services to  justify his kidnapping.  Earlier, he was Hamas’ senior rocket engineer under Iranian training.  Then he was somehow connected to the weapons ship, Victoria, which Israel intercepted on the high seas with arms supposedly meant for Gaza.  Now we have fictional account number three of his secret life as a terrorist.

Israel Radio quotes the spokesperson for the citizen’s group lobbying for Gilad Shalit’s freedom saying that the claim that Abusisi knows anything about Shalit is “spin” from Bibi Netanyahu’s camp, which allows the prime minister to boast about the magnificent strides he’s making on Shalit’s behalf.

Just for the record, Ben Natan says in this Army Radio story:

“I spoke with my client about this matter and he told me that he has no connection nor knowledge concerning Shalit.”  She said that he had no connection with the kidnapping of Shalit and he knows nothing of his whereabouts.

“The assumptions that he is affiliated with Hamas are also untrue.”  She continued, “the preconceived notions that he has any information pertinent to the security of Israeli have been frustrated throughout this investigation.  Now the State is seeking to cover up its error.  All this in place of sending him back home and apologizing.  Instead they’re looking for something to blame him for.”

To be clear, is it possible there is some nefarious connection Dirar Abusisi has with Hamas or terrorist elements?  Yes.  But for me to even begin to believe this the security forces will have to do a whole lot better than they have till now.  In the meantime, try to remember a little girl who wants a Barbie and her daddy whom she may not see for a very long time.

Among the claims to infamy of Shai Nitzan, the State prosecutor who is trying to throw Abusisi in prison for years, the former charged an Israeli journalist with “insulting a public servant” (yes, that’s apparently a crime in Israel), incitement and invading his privacy.  The journalist had published a story about threatening flyers being distributed among the settlements which attacked military officials presumably for their harsh treatment of settlers.  So get this, the State charges a journalist with a crime for reporting a story.  That’s what you can expect from the likes of Shai Nitzan.  And you thought John Yoo was bad when he defended Bush era torture practices?

Josh Block ‘Discovers’ Iranian Democracy

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

josh block, natasha mozgovaya, bill daroff

Josh Block palling around at Democratic convention with Haaretz's Natasha Mozgovaya and United Jewish Communities' Bill Daroff (Ron Kampeas)

Josh Block, Aipac’s former PR flack and media enforcer, has a new perch at the rather inaptly named Progressive Policy Institute, the place where hawkish Democrats go to die politically.  Apparently, the PPI hired Josh because they didn’t have enough street cred with the pro-Israel crowd.  Josh’s first initiative since coming there is a doozy.  He’s trying to exploit the political prominence of the Arab Spring democratic revolutions by hitching a new anti-Iranian so-called “democracy initiative” to them.  He’s doing this with another Bush-era neocon darling with a special interest in promoting anti-jihadi views, Freedom House:

With democratic revolutions shaking the Middle East, a Democratic think tank, the Progressive Policy Institute, and the pro-democracy group Freedom House are launching a new task force aimed at shifting American policy on its central regional foe, Iran, toward a more aggressive focus on democracy.

The new “Iran Strategy Task Force” is subtitled “Beyond Sanctions…”

You know what “beyond sanctions” is code word for, don’t you?  Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran.  And don’t ya just love that phrase “aggressive focus on democracy?”  Since when is the pursuit of democracy ‘aggressive?’  Since when does democracy come from pre-emptive air strikes or regime change such as the anti-Iran hawks propose?  And you know that’s what “aggressive” really means.

The names of the “luminaries” chosen for this august undertaking are also revealing, as they show its clear right-wing pro-Israel bias, and the slow drift rightward of some figures who should know better.  Among them are: Ken Pollack, Ray Tayekh, Steve Beckerman (Aipac), Rob Satloff (WINEP), Walter Russell Mead, Larry Diamond (Hoover Institution).

Memo to Josh: Iran doesn’t need your meddling.  In fact, if you really want democracy in Iran, butt out.  All the ayatollahs need to hear is that people like you are cynically trying to hijack the Arab revolution for your anti-Iran agenda, and they will turn around and yoke the real Iranian democracy activists like Moussavi and Karroubi to you.  That will be the end of Iranian democracy for the next ten years.

If Iranian democracy is to develop, we cannot be seen to be meddling internally or even lobbying aggressively outside Iran for to become what we want it to become.  That’s poison for the reformers that we support and Josh professes to support.  The truth is that Josh Block doesn’t care much about the people of Iran or democracy there.  Israel is his agenda and advancing the Likudist vision of Iran as an international hegemonic bogeyman is what Josh is really about.  If you scratched beneath the surface (or maybe not even), Josh is likely one of the “bomb Iran” crowd.  So his alleged support of Iranian democracy derives from his desire for regime change.  What he won’t tell you is that his “aggressive” pursuit of democracy really means he’s in favor of attacking Iran, rather than promoting democracy there.  If Iran could re-introduce a new Shah who would be pro-Israel, that would likely be fine with Josh and some of this crowd.  The only reason Josh doesn’t overtly support monarchism, as many wealthy Iranian-American Jews do, is that it’s declasse in this age of Arab revolution.

Now, would he prefer that the masses of Iranians rise up and overthrow their masters in a bloodless revolution?  Probably.  But I think Josh would take an overthrow any way he can get it with or without violence, with or without democracy as the ultimate outcome.  Claiming to support Iranian democracy is the ultimate political opportunism.

Bibi Names New Shin Bet Director, New Israeli Palestinian Arrest Under Gag

Monday, March 28th, 2011

yoram cohen

Yoram Cohen, new Shin Bet chief

Now, the other shoe has dropped.  Bibi Netanyahu has surprised everyone by naming as the new Shabak chief, Yoram Cohen (and in English), an Orthodox Jewish candidate for the job who was championed by the ultra-Orthodox, extremist settler community.  Bibi had long-planned to nominate Yitzhak Ilan, one of the current chief’s deputy directors, to the job as I reported here based on an Israeli source.  But the campaign by the far-right was a powerful factor in the prime minister rejecting Ilan, who would’ve been the first director of Georgian-Jewish background.

The black mark against Ilan was that he’d been the head of the unit investigating Jewish terror.  As such, he’d cut a little too close to the bone for the settler terror apologists, who prefer people like Jack Teitel, Chaim Pearlman and Ephraim Khantses roaming free rather than behind bars.  The very rabbis behind the campaigns against employing Palestinians in Jewish stores and renting housing to Palestinians were those who torpedoed Ilan’s candidacy.  In fact, Ynet goes so far as to say that Bibi turned away from Ilan out of fear of the settlers.  So Ilan loses and Cohen wins based on the support of the Orthodox Jewish racist crowd.  Does that tell you a bit about where Israeli democracy, already almost mortally wounded, is headed?

Cohen, on the other hand, commanded the Arab terror unit.  As such, and along with that kippah on his head, he’s scored points with the ultra-nationalist crowd currently running rampant in Israeli politics.  The Nana article linked above notes he is a Tel Aviv native and attended an Orthodox yeshiva.  He will be the first Orthodox Jew to head the spy agency.  He is 51, a resident of Jerusalem and father of five.  Among his studies, he completed an executive management course at the Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania).

He has also been a visiting fellow at Aipac’s Washington Institute for Near East Peace where he wrote an essay I critiqued here some time ago.  In publishing the piece, WINEP allowed my friend Sol Salbe to identify him, since normally no Israeli security agents below director may be named in the Israeli press.  In case you’re wondering at the level of strategic thinking to expect from him, here is how he managed in one and the same paragraph both to admit Israel broke the ceasefire which eventually led to Operation Cast Lead, while blaming Hamas for the violence that followed:

Last week, Israeli forces entered Gaza, destroyed an underground border tunnel, and battled Hamas fighters, leaving several militants dead. In response, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad fired around eighty rockets into southern Israel…Despite this breach of the tahdiya, or ceasefire, both Hamas and Israeli leaders have stressed their desire to deescalate the situation. But considering Hamas’s history of violence against Israel, the organization’s commitment to the tahdiya is open to serious question.

Among his fields of expertise are Arab-Iranian counter terror, which would place him among those intelligence operatives shreying about Iran’s efforts at Middle East hegemony, and inside Gaza in particular.  When you read headlines like yesterday’s in Haaretz in which a columnist cries gevalt over Iran’s alleged takeover of Syria, you’ll see the influence of this Cohen mindset.

Here is some of his trolodytic “wisdom” concerning Hamas’ “real” intentions in Gaza:

Hamas’s primary long-term goal is the liberation of historic Palestine “from the sea to the river” and the foundation of an independent state based on sharia, or Islamic religious law. This would require the destruction of the state of Israel and control over Palestinian institutions, including the Palestinian Authority (PA), the Palestine Liberation Organization, and all of the Palestinian Diaspora groups. To this end, Hamas seeks a powerful modern army to continue its armed struggle against Israel, a goal that is aided by Israel’s enemies, Iran, Syria, and Hizballah.

It’s safe to say you won’t be getting any new or innovative thinking out of the director-designate.  In fact, you can expect two things from him, a continuing erosion in investigation and prosecution of the growing wave of terrorist acts of Judean (aka settler) terrorists.  And a ratcheting up of the number and intensity of detention of Israeli Palestinian terrorists and their interrogation.  And possibly a return to more intensive forms of State sanctioned violence in the form of targeted killings.

You’ll feel a frisson of foreboding when you read this blessing from the outgoing chief, Yuval Diskin:

Yoav is a field officer.  He rose in the field, knows the field and the field knows him.  I’m convinced that he understands the objectives standing before us…

Indeed.  More Ameer Makhouls, more renditions of victims like Dirar Abusisi.  You should expect no less.

And indeed, yesterday brought news that there is a new young Palestinian victim on the altar of Shabak counter-terrorism.  He is a 19-year-old boy, Ahmad Khaled Ghanem from Nazareth.  His arrest and the reasons for it are under typical Israeli gag order. This allows the interrogators to work him over a bit before the world wakes up and find out what happened.  If there are any Israeli human rights NGO staffer who can follow-up with research of their own please contact me.  I’d like to know where he’s imprisoned, who is his lawyer, how to contact his family, and any other pertinent information to publicize his plight.

Uri Blau: Revenge of the State

Sunday, March 27th, 2011
uri blau

Uri Blau focuses lens on the deterioration of Israeli democracy

Yet another nail in the coffin of Israeli democracy will be hammered by the nation’s attorney general, who announced that the State will prosecute one of Israel’s most distinguished investigative journalists, Uri Blau, for his reporting in Haaretz about the top-secret IDF documents leaked to him by Anat Kamm.  Never, as far as I know, has a journalist been charged with a crime for publishing such leaked documents.  There will be Israeli advocates who will attempt to use arguments of strict legalism saying Blau violated a law and therefore must be prosecuted, etc., etc.  But by the attorney general’s own admission this case is one of revenge against a reporter who’s gored the ox of the intelligence apparatus one too many times with his sharp, incisive and damaging reporting of stories of outrages perpetrated by the generals and intelligence agents.

In a startling admission apparently made with the approval of the attorney general, a senior government lawyer told a right-wing columnist why the government was pursuing Blau, but not Haaretz itself or it’s publisher, Amos Schocken:

“…I [Mati Golan] got a phone call from [deputy Attorney General] Raz Nezri. He said he was calling me because I’ve written before about the problematics of not having Haaretz and Shocken put on trial. Alongside the decision to try Blau, Nezri said, the Attorney General decided not to prosecute Haaretz. Why? Nezri confirmed “Haaretz acted inappropriately when it backed and sponsored Blau’s stay abroad”, but “we thought it was more correct to go for the precedent-setting move of prosecuting a journalist for retaining stolen documents, and not a move against Haaretz for obstruction of justice…

Uzi Benziman goes even farther in the online media criticism journal, 7th Eye:

The announcement [of Blau's prosecution] derives from [the State's] anger that he has insulted Shabak investigators because earlier in the case he agreed to return secret documents to the Shabak, but did not return all of them.  Shabak cannot stand lies.

Except its own.  It’s darkly ironic that Shabak take such umbrage at Blau’s impudence in lying to it when this agency lies both to detainees, lawyers and the public with equal impudence.  How does the Shabak or government make a serious claim regarding Blau’s ethical lapses when they violate such norms regularly?

I’ve written about Yuval Diskin’s public comments that Blau “stuck his finger in his agency’s eye and twisted it” when he not only published a top-secret IDF document, but a photograph of the document itself.  This effrontery the agency could not stomach.  Though he continued by claiming there was no motive of vengeance or settling scores, as Benziman notes, this is precisely what the attorney general’s prosecution reveals.

Can you imagine that there is an Israeli journalist who advocates that the publisher of a competitor be thrown in prison because he published a story based on top-secret IDF documents?  Israeli defense reporters do this virtually every day.  They are leaked top-secret documents and information that the generals WANT the public to know.  But when a reporter writes about such a document that IDF doesn’t want the public to know about, only then does it become a criminal offense.

Make no mistake, this is the criminalization of investigative reporting.  This is the State saying you may report what we wish you to report and nothing more.  It’s not quite there yet.  But I note the absolute cowing of the Israeli media in the face of the Dirar Abusisi story, which I offered almost a score of Israeli and foreign journalists before it broke widely.  To this day, there are major aspects of the case not yet reported within Israel.  Why?  Because journalists are patriots?  That’s what Yossi Melman once argued to me.  But I don’t buy it.  And even if it’s true, this means journalists are subordinating their obligation to their profession to their obligation to the State.  An unwelcome state of affairs in any so-called democracy.

Not to mention that very few Israeli journalists have come to Blau’s defense.  You’d think there would be thundering editorials in all but the most right-wing publications.  There are none.  You’d think columnists would rally to Blau’s defense.  With only rare exceptions, they haven’t.  Partly, this stems from jealousy at the audacity of Blau’s stories; partly it stems from a desire for self-preservation.  Only the protruding nail gets clobbered by the hammer.  Those journalists who keep their heads down and don’t threaten the established order or consensus will continue to have access to their cherished intelligence sources who dole out leaks to them at their pleasure.

One might easily argue that this is a case of legal double jeopardy since Blau has already signed a plea deal through which he returned all top-secret documents in his possession (not just those offered him by Kamm) in exchange for being allowed to come back to Israel and not be charged.  Now the State has changed its mind and thrown the plea deal out the window and decided to go full steam ahead with a prosecution that makes a mockery of due process and fair dealing, not to mention commits a grievous violation of press freedom.  It does so based, according to Dimi Reider, on the unsupported claim that Blau hasn’t returned ALL the documents in his possession.

Let us be clear, Uri Blau is no ordinary reporter and turning him into a convicted felon is no ordinary undertaking.  Blau has unearthed some of the most damaging stories involving generals, politicians and their feudal dynasties that were published in Israel in the past decade.  This would be the equivalent of the Justice Department trying Seymour Hersh for his reporting.  Many have likened him to Julian Assange in terms of his breathtaking access to whistleblowers inside the belly of the beast.  From the authorities point of view, if they can knock off Blau they will have struck a major blow for defanging the Israeli media.  While there are other good reporters in Israel, ones who are courageous and principled, Blau has been in a class by himself.  His downfall would be a tragedy of major proportions for Israeli democracy and the public’s right to know.

Benziman notes the critical importance of leaks to all democracies:

Israeli media serve their social purpose successfully only when journalists are able to obtain and publish leaks.  And such leaks sometimes take the form of secret documents.

This prosecution reveals once again the inadequacy of the Israeli political system in the absence of a constitution or Bill of Rights, which clearly define the obligations and rights of citizens under the law.

Abusisi Case: Put Up or Shut Up Time for Shabak

Sunday, March 27th, 2011
dirar abusisi

Dirar Abusisi photo from yesterday's court hearing (Yediot)

Israel Radio reported today that the Petah Tikvah court rejected (as is always the case in such security matters) Dirar Abusisi’s appeal against the extension of his detention as had been requested by the Shabak and prosecutor. So this coming Thursday will bring another hearing at which it’s ‘put up or shut up’ time for Shabak. They’ve already extended his remand well beyond the normal 30 days which is a clear due process violation. Smadar Ben Natan, Abusisi’s attorney, told Kol Yisrael that Shabak will get no further extensions and must file charges by the next hearing.

I have appealed to Israeli human rights activists to demonstrate their solidarity at the Petah Tikvah court at 2PM on Thursday. I think we owe this much to Dirar and his family. In addition, it’s important that the security services know that there are Israelis opposed to Israel’s flagrant disregard for all norms of due process and international law both regarding his detention inside Israel and the collusion with Ukrainian and Jordanian Mukhabarat. We are accustomed to talking about the dark, violent nature of the Arab secret service agencies. But now we must acknowledge the existence of an Israeli Mukhabarat, which perhaps has learned a few lessons from their Arab counterparts.

Performance Optimization WordPress Plugins by W3 EDGE