In Israel, Not All Blood is the Same

By NEVE GORDON and  YIGAL BRONNER from CounterPunch [HERE]

The  Death of Samir Dari

Almost a year and a half has passed  since our friend Samir Dari was gunned down by an Israeli policeman. Samir, an Israeli resident and father of two, approached a group  of policemen who had just detained his brother on a street corner  not far away from his house and demanded the latter's release.  There are conflicting versions about how the events unfolded,  but there is no dispute about the following facts: Samir was  unarmed and the policeman Shmuel Yechezkel shot him from close  range in the back.

 The Israeli police were quick to disseminate a fallacious version  of the incident which portrayed the killing as an act of self-defense.  This is a typical and almost automatic police response, one which  inverts the order between victim and aggressor. When an Arab  is killed, he is said to have been violent; when he is beaten  up, he is said to have struck the policeman first; when he is  oppressed, he is the one who is guilty.

 Also typical was the lack of public interest in Samir's death.  The killing of an Arab is, after all, not the kind of event that  makes headlines in Israel.

 The non-violent protest which Samir's friends organized in response  to the killing did, however, attract attention. Israeli Jews  cannot easily digest angry Arabs in the streets, and many did  not hesitate to openly threaten the protesters: "An immediate  and forceful response is necessary"; "A missile attack  on their village is needed," were some of the responses  that appeared in the local newspaper.

 But now, a year and a half later, it turns out that the Israeli  legal system shares the public's perception, although the way  it expresses itself is less strident.

 Judge Noam Solburg recently acquitted the policeman Yechezkel.  Ironically, in his verdict the judge states that Samir had not  threatened Yechezkel, at no point was there physical contact  between Samir and the policemen on the scene, and Samir was actually  moving away from the policemen when he was shot in the back.  "The accused made an awful and terrible mistake,"  the judge concludes, adding that "The deceased was killed  for no reason."

 The judge, nonetheless, exonerated Yechezkel because, in his  opinion, it is not beyond probable doubt that the policeman  felt he was acting in self-defense. Thus, when the "mistake"  is killing an Arab, no one pays the price -- except, of course,  the victim, his wife and children.

 Judge Solburg's verdict sends a message to Samir's family and  all Arab citizens of Israel: they should not expect justice and  protection from the Israeli state. While the law's role is to  protect citizens and the police's responsibility is to uphold  the law, often these basic truths are ignored when it comes to  Arabs. Since September 2000, thirty-four Arab citizens have  been killed at the hands of the police, security guards and soldiers. Nonetheless, only four indictments have been issued, and only  after a vigorous public campaign. Not one of these cases has  resulted in a conviction.

 And yet, at times, naiveté stubbornly tries to challenge political reality. When Samir was killed, we thought it was worth demanding justice. Initially, Samir's family refused to  allow an autopsy. Only after considerable pressure from friends  and lawyers, who argued that without concrete evidence the policeman  would walk free, did the family agree, against their religious  convictions, to permit the forensic procedure. The doctor's report  was unequivocal: Samir had been shot in the back from short range.

 Apparently, Judge Solburg has no patience for naiveté  and ensured that political reality would win the day. He did  not allow the autopsy results or, in his own words, "the objective dimension" of the case to alter his verdict and thus sent a very clear message to Arab citizens of Israel that  evidence is not the most important criteria for determining guilt.  It will, accordingly, be no surprise if the next victim's family  refuses to consent to an autopsy.

 The verdict also sends a clear message to the police: "don't  worry." Israeli policemen can rest assured that everything  will be done to cover up violence against Arabs. If internal  affairs won't do the job, then a judge, who will acquit the policeman,  can be found, even when the officer is guilty of shooting a man  in cold blood.

 Moreover, the verdict reinforces the idea among the Jewish public  that not all blood is the same. Not that this should really surprise  anyone. A year and a half ago, when Samir was killed, we wrote  an article for the Israeli press that ended with the following  lines:

 "Samir is gone. We would like to hope that someone will be courageous enough to hold the person who shot him in the back  accountable. We would like to believe that this incident will  begin revealing the web of lies and racism that serves to perpetuate  the circle of violence. We would like to know that Samir's children  will be the last ones orphaned by the violence of the secret  services, police and military. But no. We won't delude ourselves."
 To our great sorrow, our pessimism has not been misplaced.

Neve Gordon teaches politics at Ben-Gurion University, Israel and can be reached at nevegordon@gmail.com

Yigal Bronner teaches in the South Asian Department at the University of Chicago, USA and can be reached at ybronner@uchicago.edu