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'Israel'Admits Torture "Holy Work"

A recent official Israeli report has acknowledged for the first time that the Israeli security service tortured detainees during the Palestinian uprising, the Intifada, between 1988 and 1992. The report, written five years ago but kept secret until now.
The report did not detail the torture methods used, but human rights organisations say some detainees died or were left paralysed. Security agents were also accused of lying to the courts about their actions. The release of the report was authorised by a parliamentary committee after the Supreme Court recommended it no longer be kept secret. The Israeli Government has, in the past, denied that it used any interrogation methods that amounted to torture.
But the report says the Shin Bet routinely went beyond the "moderate physical pressure" authorised by a 1987 commission headed by then-Supreme Court Justice Moshe Landau.
Human rights groups in The Holy Land maintain that the practices authorised by the Landau commission - keeping prisoners in excruciatingly uncomfortable postures, covering their heads with filthy and malodorous sacks and depriving them of sleep - amount to torture. The report, however, written by former State Comptroller Miriam Ben-Porat, says the agents systematically overstepped even these limits, especially at the interrogation facility in the Gaza Strip.
"Most of the violations were not caused by lack of knowledge of the line between what was permitted and what was forbidden, but were committed knowingly," the report said.
"At the Gaza facility, veteran and even senior investigators committed very grave and systematic violations."
The report accuses the entire leadership of the Shin Bet of knowing what was going on but doing nothing to stop it. It says that the agents lied about their activities in court, to other investigating agencies and in their reports to superiors.
"The assurances of senior Shin Bet officials to the Landau Commission that truth-telling inside the organisation is enforced ... were found to have no basis in reality," it noted.
The report described this kind of activity as "holy work".
Soon we will be publishing torturing methods used by the Israeli against Palestinians.
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Updated on
9 March 2000