The interrogation of palestinians during the intifada



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בצלם - מרכז המידע הישראלי לזכויות האדם בשטחים (ע.ר.)

بتسيلم - مركز المعلومات الإسرائيلي لحقوق الإنسان في الأراضي المحتلة

B’Tselem – The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories




THE INTERROGATION OF PALESTINIANS DURING THE INTIFADA:
FOLLOW UP TO MARCH 1991 B'TSELEM REPORT


Jerusalem, March 1992

Writen by:

Stanley Cohen & Daphna Golan
Acknowledgements:

We are graeteful for the help we received from many individuals and organizations:



  • To the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel and especially Hanna Friedman for general co-operation in preparing this report;

  • To other Israeli, Palestinian and international human rights organizations for information;

  • To Bassem 'Eid for helping in interviewing and translating;

  • To Atty. Tamar Pelleg-Sryck for information about detainees in Gaza;

  • To Jessica Bonn, Yael Ungar, Nurit Wald and Hila Waldman for help in editing and translating.

  • B'Tselem would also like to thank Caroline Borup-Jorgensen for editing the English Internet version of the report.

In the past, the interrogator would say to me "Look. He got a bruise from the door frame. Write that he has redness. Redness, not swelling." Now I don't write that any more. I'm not going to be a sucker. Not from goodness of heart, it's just that I'm watching out for myself.


- Army medical orderly (reservist), February 5, 1992, when Mustafa 'Akawi's death in prison became known.

Table of Contetns:

1. SUMMARY OF ORIGINAL REPORT 5

2. REACTIONS BY PUBLIC AND MEDIA 8

(a) Israel () 8

(b) International 12

3. OFFICIAL INVESTIGATIONS 13

(a) Knesset and Knesset Committees 13

(b) Inquiry by IDF   (" Vardi Inquiry") 14

(c) Joint Ministry of Justice and GSS Committee 17

(d) Internal GSS Controller 19

(e) State Comptroller's Report 19

(f) Visit of Members of the Jerusalem City Council to the Russian Compound Prison 19

4. OTHER RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS 21

(a) Petition to High Court by PCATI 21

(b) Statement by ICRC 22

(c) Government Ratification of Convention Against Torture 23

d Police Interrogations in Jerusalem 26

(f) Other Legal Developments 29

5. FURTHER ALLEGATIONS ABOUT TORTURE AND ILL-TREATMENT 30

(a) Follow-up on those interviewed for 1991 Report 30

(b) Reports from other human rights organizations 32

(c) Media Reports 35

(d) Current Patterns and Allegations 37

(e) Death in Interrogation: Mustafa 'Akawi 45

6. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 49

APPENDIX I: Arie Shavit, "Twelve Days on Gaza Beach," 52

54


55

56


57

58


59

60


APPENDIX II: Extracts from Testimony of Ayman 'Awad to IDF Inquiry 61

APPENDIX III: Charge Sheet No. 1 against the Police Investigators in Jerusalem 64


1. SUMMARY OF ORIGINAL REPORT


In March 1991, B'tselem published a 150-page report: The Interrogation of Palestinians During the Intifada: Ill-treatment, "Moderate Physical Pressure" or Torture ? (hereinafter "the report")

The main part of the Report ["Research Findings" pp. 45 - 104] is based on interviews with 41 adult male Palestinians who had been interrogated during the previous year, mainly by the General Security Services (GSS) but also the IDF. and the police. These 41 interviewees were located from a list of 60 names (provided by lawyers and human rights organizations) of Palestinians who had alleged some ill-treatment during their interrogation. (The remaining 19 on the list declined to co-operate in the research, did not appear for the interviews or gave testimonies which we judged too incomplete or unreliable to be used).

Of the 41 interviewees, 29 were from the West Bank and 12 from Gaza. 26 out of the total had been recently released and 15 were still under detention. The released detainees were given detailed interviews (in Arabic) in their homes; the detainees still under detention testified in affidavits taken by lawyers. Between them, the group had been interrogated in 10 different detention centers or prisons in the Occupied Territories. Where possible, claims were checked from independent sources, such as medical reports.

The modal period of interrogation ranged from 10 to 18 days. There was a clear, consistent and routine pattern in the methods of interrogation used. Virtually everyone in the group were subjected to the following 10 methods : (i) verbal insults and abuse; (ii) threats to harm the detainee or his family members; (iii) sleep and food deprivation (sometimes up to 10 days with virtually no sleep); (iv) "hooding," that is, covering the head with a sack (sometimes wet) for several hours on end ; (v) prolonged periods of painful confinement crouched in small cells (the "closet" or "refrigerator"); (vi) being tied-up for long periods (in one case, for 36 hours) in deliberately painful positions, (for example the "banana" where the body is bent backwards, with hands tied to legs) or - the standard technique for nearly all detainees - "al-Shabah" (being tied, with hands bound over the head, sometimes to a wall attachment, for hours or even days); (vii) the use of collaborators to extract information either by violence or threats of violence; (viii) forced physical exercise; (vix) cold showers and enforced sitting on a wet floor for prolonged periods; (x) severe beatings on all parts of the body with fists, sticks and other instruments (as a direct result of beatings, 15 of the sample lost consciousness and 11 were injured so severely that they had to be treated, even in hospitals outside the detention center).

The Report gives detailed descriptions of these separate techniques, which are usually used in combination: for example, prolonged sleep deprivation, threats of injury, long periods of being tied up in a confined space with a sack over the head interspersed with beating. Some techniques are illustrated with sketches based on the interviewees' descriptions. The full accounts of 7 individuals (2 from Gaza and 5 from the West Bank) are reproduced to show typical sequences of interrogation.

Not one of the 41 interviewees was found guilty or even suspected of the type of "hostile terorist activity" for which the official Landau Commission [see below] justified the used of "moderate physical pressure." Of the 26 released detainees, in fact only 12 were eventually charged after their interrogation and 3 had been placed in administrative detention (that is, detention without trial). The other 11 were released without being charged. Of 15 detainees still in prison, 4 were under administrative detention orders and 5 were still awaiting trial. That is, of the total 41 interviewees, 23 were charged, none for serious offences involving violence. The average length of imprisonment was about the same as the time spent in detention waiting trial.

No correlation was found between the intensity of the interrogation and the seriousness of the offence or whether the suspect was eventually charged. Everyone interviewed was subject to some form of ill-treatment. All except one were physically beaten. There was no evidence indicating the use of special implements for inflicting pain or for the use of electric shock.

The methods of interrogation revealed by our enquiry are both prohibited by international declarations and conventions and by Israeli law. These prohibitions are reviewed in the introductory section of the Report (pp. 9 - 21). Israel is committed to international conventions against torture and "cruel and inhuman punishment" : defined as the intentional infliction of pain and suffering - mental or physical - in order to extract confessions or information. This commitment is fully reflected in the Israeli criminal code. There are clear and specific laws against the use of force by public servants for such purposes as extracting confessions. GSS agents (like the Israeli police or soldiers) are fully subject to these laws. There are also formal limitations to the admissability in court of evidence obtained by force.

The Report argues, though, that the administration of military justice in the Occupied Territories, particularly in the previous three years of the intifada, undermines these protections and prohibitions available in the legal system and required by international human rights law. Three particularly important problems are reviewed. First, the long period of incommunicado detention without access to a lawyer (usually for a period of 30 days); second, the wide powers given to the GSS and the high prestige it enjoys without a corresponding framework of public accountability or scrutiny; third, the difficulty of challenging confessions in court. Such conditions create a situation in which the ill-treatment of detainees can go unchecked and can become routine. Existing legal controls and mechanisms of complaint were found (pp. 97 - 104) to be inadequate. In not a single case, did the military judges use their authority to place the restrictions on the GSS whether by allowing access to a lawyer, limiting the period of detention or querying the status of a confession.

The Report also points to the wider political and legal conditions which allow for abuses during the interrogation of Palestinians. In this context, the controversial 1987 Landau Commission report1 is reviewed and criticized (pp 22 - 31). The Commission established that GSS agents had systematically lied to the courts for 16 years about using force to extract confessions. Though condemning this practice of perjury, the Commission went on to justify the use of "moderate physical pressure" as a method of interrogation. The B'tselem report rejects the Commission's legal and moral claims that "moderate physical pressure" is justified (for example, by the defence of "necessity"), is quite different from torture or is allowed by international and Israeli law.

We point to the grave implications of this removal of the sanctions against force - a removal achieved not by legal change, but by administrative directives contained in a secret set of "guidelines" implicitly directed only at the interrogation of Palestinians. First, by weakening the absolute moral taboo against torture, the Commission opened the way for interrogation practices which cannot be allowed in any democratic society. Second, by placing its "guidelines" for approved forms of "moderate physical pressure" in a secret, unpublished report, the public cannot know what measures are being permitted in its name. This also widens the net of secrecy; we describe the likely knowledge and complicity of others (such as prison staff, police, soldiers, judges, doctors) in human rights abuses or their concealment.

The B'tselem report acknowledges the difficulty of obtaining valid and reliable information about ill-treatment or torture during interrogation. The credibility of victims can be questioned; testimonies are subject to exaggeration and inaccuracy, either unintentionally or deliberately to discredit the authorities. We cannot vouch for every detail of the evidence presented in the Report. We are convinced, however, that the detailed internal consistency in our interviews, backed up sometimes by external evidence such as medical certification, together with information from other human rights organizations and lawyers (reviewed on pp. 32 - 44), reveal beyond any reasonable doubt an accurate picture of the interrogation experience of this particular group of detainees. Using the most conservative possible figures, we estimate (p.107) that some 1,500 - 2,000 Palestinians went through some permutation of these interrogation methods in each of the first three years of the intifada, 1988 - 1990. During the research for this follow-up Report we realized that this figure is a serious underestimate. The number was closer to 5,000 each year.

By formal criteria, these methods - particularly when used together over prolonged periods - fit accepted international definitions of "torture." Even if the Israeli government refuses to acknowledge that such definitions apply, then these methods are self evidently forms of ill-treament, abuse or "cruel and inhuman treatment." And to call these methods "moderate physical pressure" does not make them acceptable by the international human rights standards to which Israel is committed.

The Report concludes (pp 109 - 112) with ten policy recommendations aimed at reducing the conditions under which violations can occur. These include: making public the secret part of the Landau Report; abolishing the period of incommunicado detention - or at least reducing it by applying Israeli law which requires suspects to be brought before a judge within 48 hours; allowing detainees easier and quicker access to lawyers; only admitting as evidence testimonies made in Arabic; establishing a clear hierarchy for supervision of GSS investigations and the setting up an independent, external body to deal with individual complaints and allegations.



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