|
By
Gideon Levy
As the war in Gaza raged, Israel Defense Forces reservists
apparently thought anything was permissible: It was possible, maybe
even necessary, to kill innocents, in the West Bank, too. Under
cover of war, they thought, they could also kill a handcuffed
Palestinian.
After all, they could always claim he tried to steal their weapons -
never mind that he was bound with plastic handcuffs practically
impossible to get out of. A bullet in the stomach from close range
finished him off. Thus ended the life of Yasser Temeizi, 35, who had
a work permit and jobs in Israel all of his adult life; in the past
year he had worked for the Harash company in Ashdod. He was a young
father who'd never gotten in any trouble with the IDF before. The
soldiers arrested him for no reason, beat him for no reason in front
of one of his small children and finally executed him for no reason.
A month and a half has passed since this horrifying incident, and
the army's criminal investigations division is still looking into
the case. An investigation that could have been completed in an hour
is going on without end. Not a single Palestinian was questioned, as
usual; not a single soldier was arrested, and most likely none will
be - also as usual. The reservist soldiers who killed Temeizi have
likely already been sent back home; perhaps they returned feeling
good about their experiences and about doing their national duty.
Granted, they didn't take part in the war in Gaza, but they killed,
too. Why not? Herewith, as a service to them, is the story of the
consequences of their actions, which senior IDF officers have
already termed "a grave incident," that involved "a series of
serious failures."
Yasser Temeizi, a conscientious and hard-working laborer, lived in
the village of Idna, west of Hebron. He was the husband of Haife and
the father of 7-year-old Firas and 2-year-old Hala. For 15 years, he
got up every morning and went to work in Israel. In recent months,
he worked in Ashdod, for the Harash company, which builds cargo
compartments for trucks. On his last pay slip, it says: "Type of
worker: Autonomy" - in the language of the occupation. "Amount paid:
NIS 3,935.73." Upon the outbreak of the military operation in Gaza,
Temeizi's employers asked him not to come to work until things
calmed down. But he still had to support the family, so Temeizi made
his way to the "slave market" in Kiryat Gat, hoping to find odd
jobs. This is what he was doing on the morning of January 13.
On that day, Ehud Barak was trying to promote a week-long
"humanitarian cease-fire," the Paratroops advanced toward Gaza City
and a seventh Palestinian medical worker was killed by Israeli fire.
At 5:30 that morning, Temeizi set out for Kiryat Gat, his work
permit in his pocket. He returned home about four hours later; he
hadn't found work. His mother, Naife, made him a light breakfast and
then Temeizi asked his 7-year-old son Firas if he'd like to come
with him to the family olive grove about three kilometers west of
their house, a few hundred meters east of the separation fence, in
the territories. Father and son loaded water and food onto the
family's donkey and began riding toward the grove. If there was no
employment to be had in Israel, at least they could work on the
olives, they thought.
They arrived at the grove and got to work. Suddenly, a military jeep
appeared and four soldiers got out. Firas saw them approaching his
father. There was a verbal exchange between them, but it was in
Hebrew and Firas didn't understand what it was about. A minute
later, he saw the soldiers shoving his father down to the ground and
handcuffing him from behind. The soldiers ordered Firas to go home.
His father also told him to go; the frightened little boy started
running the long distance back toward home. On the way he was
attacked by dogs, he says, and some shepherds, his neighbors, saved
him from them. That was the last time Firas saw his father alive.
Handcuffed and on the ground, but alive.
Eyewitnesses told Temeizi's father Saker they'd seen soldiers
kicking his bound and blindfolded son. The witnesses tried to
intervene, but the soldiers shooed them away, brandishing their
rifles. Musa Abu Hashhash, a reputable field researcher for the
B'Tselem human rights organization, heard similar testimonies.
Eventually, according to the witnesses, the soldiers put Temeizi on
a jeep and drove off. This was the last time the Palestinians saw
him alive.
Firas meanwhile made it home and reported that his father had been
arrested. The family wasn't that concerned at first: The false
arrest of a Palestinian is a matter of routine. They were sure
Yasser would be released promptly and return home. He had all the
required permits and had never been in any trouble. The hours passed
and still Teimeizi didn't return. Around four in the afternoon,
neighbors reported he had been killed and that his body was at Al
Ahli Hospital in Hebron. Abu Hashhash rushed to the hospital and saw
the body: He says he noticed handcuff marks on the wrists. The entry
wound was in the stomach and the exit wound was in the thigh.
Experts say Temeizi was shot while sitting. Point blank. An autopsy
was performed at the Abu Dis pathology institute and Abu Hashhash
received the results; he said the reported cause of death was
extensive bleeding.
Temeizi was not dead when he arrived at the hospital, but died
shortly thereafter. It may have been possible to save him had he
received medical care in time. Ten days after the incident, Yuval
Azoulay wrote a report on the incident in Haaretz. It appears that
shortly after the killing, an IDF investigation was held with the
participation of division commander Brig. Gen. Noam Tibon and
brigade commander Col. Udi Ben-Moha, who raised the prospect that "a
series of failures" occurred on the part of the reservists who
killed Temeizi. It was established that he was brought, handcuffed,
to the Tarqumiya checkpoint and from there was taken to a nearby
army base.
The soldiers killed him in a room, without eyewitnesses, after he
tried - so they claim, of course - to steal their weapons. No one
explained how a handcuffed Palestinian could steal a weapon and why
the response should be a point-blank shooting.
Military sources told Azoulay that "the manner in which the incident
was handled, particularly in regard to summoning of assistance for
the wounded man, indicates there were serious failures. This is a
very serious incident and one can't help thinking that if a regular
force was stationed there, it would not have happened. The reservist
soldiers are simply not familiar with or trained for such scenarios
and such situations."
What kind of training is needed for such situations? Do soldiers
need to be trained not to shoot a handcuffed prisoner? Do they need
to be trained to know to immediately summon medical care for someone
who's wounded?
The IDF Spokesman told us officially this week, a month and a half
after the incident: "The matter is under investigation by the
criminal investigations division. Once the investigation is
complete, the findings will be relayed to the military prosecutor."
Firas enters the bereaved household in Idna, a blue UNICEF book bag
on his back. In a soft, chirpy voice, he tells the story of his last
day with his father. He recounts the donkey ride to the family's
olive grove, the soldiers who knocked his father down as he watched
and how he made his way home alone, scared by the barking dogs.
"Later on they told me that Daddy died," the boy says quietly, the
trauma evident on his face. Just so the soldiers who kill a
handcuffed man, and their commanders and investigators, should know.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1067254.html |