News Nosh 03.31.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Thursday March 31, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
"This must be stated clearly. Perhaps for the first time in the history of the state, an abhorrent murder whose only obvious justification seems to be a hatred of Arabs and contempt for their lives, has become a heroic act."
--Haaretz commentator Gideon Levy writes about the "new peak of (Jewish) Israeli racism."


Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
  • Suspicions in the political echelons (Photos of Herzog and Deri)
  • “The soldier said: The terrorist won’t come out of this alive”
  • War of the MKs: Who received a black car?
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only) Israel Hayom

News Summary:
Opposition leader MK Isaac Herzog (Zionist Camp) and once-convicted Interior Minister (Shas) Arieh Deri are being investigated in separate cases of alleged corruption,
in the wake of the storm over the ‘Shooting Soldier’ who shot a prone Palestinian assailant last week, the IDF Chief of Staff called on Israeli soldiers to maintain ‘IDF values’ or face legal action and a senior US Democratic Senator called for a probe into alleged Israeli extra-judicial killings using US-supplied weapons making top stories in today’s Hebrew newspapers. Also, barely mentioned in the press, the Middle East Quartet is in Jerusalem this week meeting with Palestinian and Israeli officials to advance a two-state solution. 
 
An officer from the Kfir Brigade gave Yedioth details of the IDF investigation into the ‘Shooting Soldier’ (name still under gag order). The soldier, who also serves in the Kfir Brigade, shot dead a bleeding Palestinian assailant who was lying on the ground. The officer said there was no question of a fear of the assailant having explosives as the soldier had claimed. Moreover, the soldier said before and after he shot him that “The terrorist won’t get out of this alive.” The officer said that “It’s clear to all the soldiers of the Kfir Brigade that he made a mistake. None of the soldiers think this was a legitimate thing to do. He is an outstanding soldier, but he let his emotions take over him.” Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot clarified the rules of opening fire in a letter to soldiers and warned that anyone ‘deviating’ from “IDF values” will face legal action.

Today the military court will decide whether to extend the ‘Shooting Soldier’s detention at the request of the prosecution, Maariv reported. The autopsy of the killed Palestinian, Abd al-Fattah al-Sharif, was supposed to take place today, but his family is refusing without the participation of a Palestinian coroner. So far Israel has rejected the family’s demand. Without an autopsy, it is virtually impossible to directly link the soldier's gunshot and the Al-Sharif’s death, as he had already been shot once before by other soldiers. [Note: Israel Hayom failed to say why the family refused the autopsy. – OH] The Head of Al-Quds University's Institute for Forensic Medicine, Sabir al-Aloul, said that a number of the people killed whom he autopsied were “shot in the head and the chest many times from a very close distance,” similar to incident caught on film Thursday.
 
Last week’s controversial Israeli killing of a Palestinian youth during this six-month wave of violence is only one of a number that were caught on video, leading to accusations of extra-judicial killings. Yesterday, Politico news site revealed that in February, Senator Patrick Leahy (Dem.) and 10 other Democratic members of Congress urged the State Department to investigate Israeli 'extrajudicial executions' of Palestinians in the West Bank - as well as 'gross violations of human rights' in Egypt, and reexamine military aid to the two countries. Leahy cited reports by Amnesty International and said by name five of the Palestinians listed.
 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded saying, "The IDF and the Israel Police do not engage in executions” and suggested that the US investigate “violations by Palestinian terrorists.” Leahy fired back saying that “the United States does not provide weapons or other aid to Hamas” and that the probe was “only fair to US taxpayers.”

The UN expert on extrajudicial executions said, "The images shown carry all the signs of a clear case of an extrajudicial execution...Whatever legal regime one applies to the case, shooting someone who is no longer a threat is murder."
 
Quick Hits:
  • Israeli military shuts investigation into (controversial) fatal 2014 shooting of Palestinian teen - A border policeman has been indicted for shooting live ammunition that killed another protester at the same site, but the IDF has found no evidence any of its troops firing live bullets. Nadim Nuwara, 17, and Muhammad Abu al-Thair, 15, were killed at a Naqba protest. Nuwara’s father denied 'rumors' that Israel closed the investigation. (Haaretz+ and Maan
  • Case closed against policeman suspected of killing Bedouin youth in 2015 - Sami al-Ja’ar, 20, died in a police raid in Rahat; Father had been told he would have more time to notify authorities of his objections to shutting the file. (Haaretz
  • Israeli court asked to reconsider legality of demolishing the homes of terrorists’ families - Move by human-rights lawyers comes after justices say more debate is needed. (Haaretz+) 
  • B'Tselem: Israel killed 2 children in bed in Gaza in March due to refusal to change policy - “Despite repeated civilian fatalities and casualties, Israel refuses to change its policy and continues to adopt a distorted and far-reaching interpretation of the provisions of international humanitarian law in order to justify its position,” B’Tselem said in a statement. (Maan
  • Israeli forces 'assault' Palestinians detained for Facebook posts - Four Palestinians arrested this week for Facebook posts have spoken of physical assault during their detention and interrogation, in the latest evidence to emerge of abuse that rights groups say is systemic in Israel's prisons. (Maan
  • Israeli Arabs declared strike Wednesday to mark 40th anniversary of Land Day - Arab organizations criticized government for discriminatory policies and incitement against Arab community. Wednesday’s two biggest marches were scheduled to take place in Dir Hanna and Kafr Kana. (Haaretz+ and Ynet
  • Thousands of Palestinians march on 40th Land Day to protest decades of land grabs -  Hundreds of Gazans marched from the city towards the Erez crossing waving Palestinian flags and demanding the right of return. In Ramallah district, university students managed to cut through barbed-wire of Israel's separation wall, reached confiscated agricultural lands and raised a Palestinian flag before Israeli forces intervened. (Maan
  • Israeli police detain minor for raising Palestinian flag at Aqsa (on Land Day)- Witnesses told Ma'an that Israeli police responded after the youth raised the flag over the mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem's Old City, in what may have been intended as an act to mark the 40th Land Day. Meanwhile, right-wing toured the holy site Israelis under police escort. (Maan)
  • Palestinians and Israeli Arabs mark Land Day - At Ofer prison near Ramallah, Land Day rally turns into violent clashes between Palestinian rioters and Israeli security forces. (Israel Hayom
  • Islamic Jihad and PFLP prisoners to start protest over incarceration conditions - Prisoners demanded an end to the use of solitary confinement, that prisoners be permitted to receive family visits, and that overcrowding issues in the Nafha and Ofer prisons be resolved. (Maan)
  • Israeli High Court rejects Haaretz petition to interview jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti - Senior Fatah official is serving five life sentences for murdering Israelis; court rejects petition without hearing parties' arguments. Justices Yoram Danziger and Uri Shoham explained that if Barghouti wanted to be interviewed, he should have petitioned the court himself. Justice Daphne Barak-Erez dissented. (Haaretz+) 
  • Hamas delegation returns to Gaza after Cairo, Doha meetings - The meetings were the latest in a series of attempts to reconcile the two movements since a violent fallout in 2007 led Hamas and Fatah to separate and dominate the Gaza Strip and West Bank respectively. (Maan
  • PA delegation visits family of deceased Israeli Civil Administration head - An official Palestinian Authority delegation on Wednesday made a condolence visit to the family of Munir Ammar, the head of the Israeli forces' Civil Administration, who died in plane crash in the Lower Galilee in northern Israel last week. (Maan)
  • World Bank: Israeli Restrictions Cost Palestinian Mobile Phone Sector $1 Billion - New report says restrictions prevent the import of telecom equipment for Palestinian companies and prevent a second Palestinian mobile phone company in the West Bank from operating in Gaza. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Senior IDF General: Ban on Palestinian Meat and Dairy in East Jerusalem Harming Israel - Coordinator of government activities in the territories slams Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel’s decision to bar sale of produce from PA. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israeli Justice Minister Intervenes to Appoint Ideological Peer to Court Role - Ayelet Shaked wants attorney Amitsur Eitam, son of right-wing former minister Effi Eitam, promoted to labor court registrar. (Haaretz
  • J Street rebuffs Danny Dayan, who called the organization “un-Jewish”: “A statement unworthy of Israel's official representative” - The man appointed to the position of Consul General in New York slammed a Jewish organization in an interview with the foreign media. J Street fired back at Dayan for “not Jewish remarks”: “Many in the city's Jewish community advocate positions that are closer to our “pro-Israel, pro-peace world view than his." (Maariv and JPost)
  • US firms invest millions in Israeli medical marijuana patents - Already a pioneer in high-tech and cutting-edge agriculture, Israel is starting to attract American companies looking to bring medical marijuana know-how to a booming market back home. (Israel Hayom)
  • Hebrew U. Used 'Creative Accounting' to Hide $309 Million Missing From Endowment, Study Finds - Council of Higher Education says university misrepresented its financial health. (Haaretz
  • NGO aiding deaf Israeli children to close due to lack of funds - The non-profit, which serves a third of deaf Israeli children aged 6 to 18, had its government funding cut last year. (Haaretz+) 
  • 260 Ukrainian immigrants set to arrive in Israel - 
  • Two planes carrying Ukrainian immigrants to land in Israel on Wednesday. "Immigration is the realization of the Zionist vision and a key driver of social and economic development in Israel," says head of International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. (Israel Hayom
  • Child Labor Increases in Gaza Amid 43 Percent Unemployment Rate - In the past five years, the number of working children between 10 and 17 has doubled to 9,700, according to the Palestinian Bureau of Statistics. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Palestinian Fishing Union: Israel to expand fishing zone off parts of Gaza coast - Israel decided to expand the fishing zone to nine nautical miles off the coast, from Wadi Gaza in the central Gaza Strip to the Egyptian border in the south. (Maan
  • Police investigate possible fraud in second Duma fire - Investigators report home was locked, windows intact, belying claim that fire was started by a Molotov cocktail thrown by settlers. Police look into possible motives for false report, including desire to frame settlers or attempt at insurance fraud. (Israel Hayom
  • Bill criminalizing sexual relations between clerics and clients passes Knesset - Amendment to Penal Code imposes maximum three-year sentence on offenders, even if relationship is ostensibly consensual. (Haaretz+) 
  • Greek president in Israel: We cannot accept terrorism - President Reuven Rivlin hosts Greek counterpart Prokopis Pavlopoulos for meeting at President's Residence in Jerusalem. Rivlin: Pavlopoulos is a true friend of Israel. Pavlopoulos: Jihadist terrorism is aimed at all of humanity. (Israel Hayom
  • Israeli finance minister: We shouldn't put off signing U.S. defense aid deal - Moshe Kahlon also says Israel must help the Palestinian economy in order to prevent a deterioration in the security situation. 'When the economy is good, they don’t shoot,' he says. (Haaretz+) 
  • Israeli finance minister: Coalition can't function unless major change is made - Moshe Kahlon says he is pressuring Netanyahu and opposition leader Isaac Herzog to form a unity government, saying the government's second year will be much more difficult than the first year. (Haaretz+) 
  • German man returns ancient coin he took from Israel 25 years ago - Bronze coin bears image of Roman Emperor Commodus and the word "Ashkelon" in Greek script and is larger and heavier than other contemporary coins. Tourist writes to Israel Museum: I had to return the unique coin to its owner, the State of Israel. (Israel Hayom)
  • N.Y. Legislators Urge City Colleges to Ban pro-Palestinian Student Group - In a letter to CUNY Chancellor James Milliken, assemblyman Dov Hikind calls Students for Justice in Palestine 'toxic.' (JTA, Haaretz
  • U.S. condemns UN rights council's call to 'blacklist' firms operating in West Bank - State Department accuses Human Rights Council of 'bias against Israel.' (Israel Hayom)
  • French PM criticized for being under 'Jewish influence' of his wife - Local politician continues string of officials attacking Manuel Valls' position on Israel, Jewish community. (JTA, Haaretz
  • Syrians Rush to Rescue History With ISIS Militants at the Door - 2,500 archaeologists, specialists, curators and engineers with Syria's antiquities department, including some who defected to join the opposition, have often risked death to protect what they can. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Iran's Khamenei: Future Lies in Missiles, Not Just Negotiations - The supreme leader's comments are made while the U.S. and allies urge UN action against the Islamic Republic over missile tests. (Agencies, Haaretz


Features:
Witness to his cousin’s shooting by the IDF, an Israeli Arab still works for coexistence
As Gazal Abu Raya marks the 40th anniversary of Land Day – when six Israeli Arabs were shot by soldiers – he continues to cultivate better relations with his Jewish neighbors. (Allyn Fisher-Ilan, Haaretz+)
See Jerusalem from 100 years ago
A new archive full of pictures of Jerusalem from over 100 years ago has been reopened. Here is a selection of some of them. (Amit Cotler, Yedioth/Ynet)
Israeli Theater Company's 'Mephisto' Invites Unwelcome Parallels to a Darker Period
Once upon a time in Nazi Germany, there was a brilliant actor who found himself collaborating with a nationalist dictatorship. Any resemblance to our present-day reality is purely coincidental. (Michael Handelzalts, Haaretz+)
From Lebanon to south Tel Aviv: Historic Torah bell comes home
IDF soldier found silver bell in Lebanese village during Operation Litani, almost 40 years ago • Recently, he was able to discover to whom it had been dedicated and bring the bell "home" to a synagogue where the man who donated it once lived. (Nitzi Yaakov, Israel Hayom)
 
Commentary/Analysis:
Never Have So Many Cheered Such a Vile Murderer (Gideon Levy, Haaretz+) It’s doubtful there’s another Western society whose racism is accompanied by such bloodlust. 
Medals and Models – What kind of hero (Yonatan Yavin, Yedioth) In the name of the decorated combat soldiers, who showed noble heroism, which is based on moral superiority, allow me to express repugnance towards anyone who dares to call the soldier from Hebron a ‘hero.’
Inside the Mind of the Budding Fascist (B. Michael, Haaretz+) In the neofascist Israeli consciousness, the Palestinians are like cockroaches. Even when they lie on the ground, helpless, their heads must be crushed with a slipper, or punctured by a bullet. 
What Has Happened to Us? (Ari Shavit, Haaretz+) The polar opposite responses between the Bus 300 and Hebron shooting cases cast a revealing and cruel light on the changes we’ve undergone in the past few decades.
We need silence from our politicians (Smadar Bat-Adam, Israel Hayom) The fiery public debate over the "shooting soldier" is not only unhelpful; it adds to the animosity and resentment among us, creates a chasm between the IDF and the public, and confuses soldiers.
They’re Palestinian Children in Distress, Not Terrorists (Steven Klein, Haaretz+) From what we know about the adolescent mind, none of Israel’s punitive policies will have any impact on the willingness of so many teenage Palestinian knife attackers to commit acts of violence. 
The Chief of Staff writes to his soldiers - Good intentions and a missed opportunity (Ariella Ringel-Hoffman, Yedioth) The Chief of Staff's letter does not give answers to the real problems. Therefore, it's almost certain that before the echoes of this affair (the 'Shooting Soldier in Hebron - OH) are quieted, more incidents will blow up in our faces. Not because there is a soldier who doesn't know what is right to do, but because there are thousands of soldiers who don't know how to do properly. Because they are 18 and 19 and 20 years old. Because the demands of them are not reasonable for someone of their age, because the reality puts them in changing dilemmas daily, because they are flooded with contradictory messages. Because in the homes of their parents, who are crazy with worry, they say, "I prefer my son in jail than my son dead," and it is enough to hear the heart-breaking cry of the mother whose son is the 'Shooting Soldier, "We are going through very difficult days and I want my son at home." 
Policy of Contempt for Palestinian Lives (Amira Hass, Haaretz+) The cumulative results of the establishment's actions against the Palestinians are more destructive and lethal than all the acts of the individuals.
Fact-checking Bill Maher: Are Europeans 'Assholes to Israel?' (Asher Schechter, Haaretz+) If Europeans had truly tried to be 'real assholes' toward Israel, they could. But a few softly-spoken rebukes do not an asshole make.
Habayit Hayehudi party - refreshments for the (religious Zionist) sector (Yossi Dahan, Yedioth) This week, Education Minister Naftali Bennett completed another stage in the cleansing of the education establishment from professionals who are not from the religious Zionist sector. But advancing the interests of his voters at the expense of the general population does not stop in his ministry. (Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel did not transfer funds to Israeli communities in the Gaza area because he demanded money for settlements first.)
No, anti-Zionism isn’t anti-Semitism (Peter Beinart, Haaretz+) Israel’s own policies are fueling the very debate it wants to quash. 
The ironies that link probed politicians Herzog and Dery (Yossi Verter, Haaretz+) The 1999 Knesset elections yielded two political dramas. 17 years later, suspicions are again being raised against both politicians. 
 
Interviews:
 


 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.