Eritrean
Man Lynched By Israelis In Uniform, New Video Shows
By Rania Khalek
Warning: This post includes video of
extreme violence.
January 20,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Electronic
Intifada " -
On 18 October, 29-year-old Eritrean refugee
Haftom Zarhum was severely beaten and shot to
death by a vengeful mob of Israeli soldiers, prison
officers and police in and out of uniform, security
camera footage recently obtained by the Tel Aviv
newspaper Haaretz has
revealed.
The mob
mistook Zarhum, unarmed and injured, for the
gunman who had opened fire moments earlier at the
central bus station in Bir al-Saba (Beer Sheva), a
city in the south of present-day Israel.
The gunman, a 19-year-old Bedouin Palestinian
citizen of Israel named Muhannad al-Okbi, killed an
Israeli soldier and wounded around ten others,
mostly Israeli security personnel. He was ultimately
shot and killed by Israeli forces.
Zarhum had traveled to Bir al-Saba that day to
apply for a permit so he could stay in the country.
He was on his way home when the bus station was
attacked.
The newly released footage opens with a station
security guard shooting Zarhum as he frantically
crawls on the floor presumably to seek safety.
Seventeen seconds later, a man Haaretz
identified as a bus driver is seen hurling a chair
at Zarhum.
The next day this same bus driver told the
Israeli news site NRG that he had
“protected” Zarhum from the lynch mob.
With each passing minute, the footage shows more
Israelis, often in uniform, joining in the attack,
kicking Zarhum in the head, throwing heavy furniture
at him and spitting on him as he writhes on the
floor bleeding.
One man wearing a yellow shirt is the only person
who is seen pushing back against the crowd to
protect Zarhum and for that he is assaulted.
All the while onlookers
chanted for his death, shouting “mehabel”
(terrorist), “Kill him!” and “Break his head! Break
his head! Son of a prostitute!”
As the lynching was in progress, the real gunman,
who was holed up in the bathroom, began shooting
again, but the crowd continued beating Zarhum.
Israel has
refused to grant Zarhum official recognition as
a victim of terrorism, which would allow his family
to receive benefits, on the grounds that he had
“entered the country illegally.”
Disturbing pattern
The lynching of Zarhum fits a disturbing pattern
of street executions of Palestinians over the last
several months, propelled by inflammatory rhetoric
from Israeli leaders who have
openly encouraged vigilantism.
Israeli forces have killed more than 150
Palestinians since 1 October in what has been
condemned by human rights groups as a
“shoot to kill” policy.
Israel claims that the majority of slain
Palestinians were killed while carrying out attacks
on Israelis.
But rights groups have accused Israeli forces of
using deadly force as a first resort against alleged
Palestinian attackers who posed no immediate threat.
In other cases, Palestinians were
not attempting to attack anyone when killed.
Israel has reacted angrily to
calls from Sweden’s foreign minister for an
investigation into the pattern of killings.
Denial of medical treatment
Forensic analysis found that Zarhum, though
savagely beaten, died as a result of
eight gunshot wounds fired by three different
people, however it remains unclear who besides the
security guard shot him.
Despite the severity of his injuries, medics from
Magen David Adom, Israel’s national emergency
service, did not evacuate Zarhum until 18 minutes
after he was shot, even though they had arrived to
the scene ten minutes earlier.
When medics finally evacuated Zarhum, they “ran
into objection from the crowds at the scene, who
blocked their way and called out “Death to Arabs,”
“Arabs out!” and “Am Israel Chai” (“The people of
Israel live”),” according to
Ynet.
Magen David Adom told Haaretz that
Israeli security officers prevented their medics
from treating Zarhum because they believed him to be
the attacker.
However, the indictment against the four Israeli
mob participants states that Zarhum was the
last of the wounded to be evacuated to the
hospital despite his injuries being the most severe.
In a statement to Haaretz, the group
said that “despite the promise of the director of
Magen David Adom that treatment is based on medical
considerations alone, without judging the wounded
for their actions preceding their injury, the teams
on the ground are influenced by the public
atmosphere. The statements of irresponsible
politicians are eroding medical ethics.”
Indeed, the
denial and prevention of medical aid to
suspected attackers wounded by Israeli forces is
routine practice.
That changed last month after a petition by
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel compelled the
association to publish new guidelines instructing
paramedics to triage first aid based on the
seriousness of the injury, even if it means treating
an alleged attacker first.
Dubious justice
While Israelis are rarely, if ever, held
accountable for violence against Palestinians and
African refugees, every so often there comes a
killing so shameful and embarrassing to the Israel’s
image that some face-saving action is called for.
The graphically documented lynching of Zarhum
appears to be one of those cases.
Even so, only four of the nine Israelis caught on
video beating Zarhum have been
indicted, on charges of aggravated assault,
which carries a prison sentence of up to 20 years.
The shooters who fired the bullets responsible
for killing Zarhum have not been charged.
David Moyal, a restaurant worker in the bus
station, was charged with throwing a bench at Zarhum.
Yaakov Shamba, an Israeli soldier, was indicted for
kicking Zarhum in the torso while he lay on the
floor pinned under a bench. And Eviatar Damari,
described only as “a young man from Netivot,” is
being prosecuted for kicking Zarhum in the head
multiple times.
Ronen Cohen and Chen Shabat, both prison
officers, repeatedly tossed a metal bench at Zarhum.
Cohen also allegedly kicked Zarhum in the head and
assaulted a bystander who tried to stop the mob
violence.
Cohen was indicted with the others, while Shabat
managed to convince the state prosecutor that he
threw the bench at Zarhum to protect him from the
mob. He may even keep his job with the
Israel Prison Service.
“The state prosecutor accepted this claim, noting
that Shabat did not go on to kick Zarhum in the head
as Cohen did,”
reportedHaaretz.
The bar doesn’t get any lower than that.
Rania
Khalek is an independent journalist reporting on the
underclass and marginalized.
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