guardian.co.uk,
Harriet Sherwood in Ramallah, Friday 20 April 2012
Israeli
soldier Shalom Eisner strikes Danish protester Andreas Ias with his rifle
Without the
video, all Andreas Ias would have to show for his weekend bicycle ride in the
Jordan valley would be two stitches and a slightly swollen lower lip – plus a
hardening anger about the treatment by Israeli soldiers of Palestinians.
But a few seconds of footage uploaded to YouTube catapulted the 20-year-old Danish
activist into the media spotlight, drew statements from the Israeli prime
minister, president and chief of staff, led to the disciplining of an Israeli
army officer, and prompted debate over the use of video cameras as a weapon of
modern warfare.
Nevertheless,
Ias – not his real name – is dismayed that in the aftermath of him being struck in the face with a soldier's rifle, so little attention has focused on what he
describes as the routine aggression, harassment and displacement suffered by
Palestinian villagers in the area.
"It
has been framed in the media as the 'Danish incident', as though this is not
how the IDF normally act," he said, swathed in a red keffiyeh in a
Ramallah cafe. "But what happened to me is nothing compared to the
systematic violence carried out on Palestinians. This is not a single incident,
it's what we see every day. But it's very difficult to move the focus from me
to the issues of the Palestinian struggle in the West Bank."
While
volunteering for the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) in the West Bank
over the past six weeks, Ias says he has witnessed "a process of ethnic
cleansing that has been going on since the start of the occupation".
"I've
seen people whose homes have been demolished in the middle of the night by
dozens of soldiers, people who are left with nothing. I've seen Bedouin
villages without running water or electricity next to Israeli settlements with
total control over water resources. I've seen people denied their basic human
rights and any hope for the future. You can't experience that without it
changing you."
Last
Saturday, a group of 150-200 Palestinians and international activists set off
on a bicycle ride through the Jordan valley to visit villages in an act of
solidarity. As they reached route 90, the main road running north to south
through the valley, they found their way blocked by the Israel Defence Forces.
According
to Ias, the soldiers said the cyclists could not proceed "for security
reasons". There was a standoff. "We were very peaceful, singing
songs, clapping hands. It was a good, empowering experience, people were
happy," he said.
But as one
of the organisers moved forward, Lieutenant Colonel Shalom Eisner, the deputy
commander of the Jordan Valley Brigade who was in charge of the operation,
removed his rifle. "He obviously wanted us to move back, but he didn't say
anything."
According
to Ias's account, a Dutch activist was pushed to the ground and a Palestinian
man was struck from behind. Then Eisner slammed the base of his rifle into
Ias's face. "I fell to the ground. I was surprised and disoriented. I
didn't feel any pain until later."
Eisner, who
was forbidden to speak directly to the media, gave a different version of
events to colleagues and friends. He said the activists were armed with sticks
and were violent, and that one had hit him, breaking a finger. But, he added,
"these stories do not interest the chief of staff or my commander. We know
the history of these anarchists. They came with sticks and broke my hand – but
no one will tell and film that."
He said his
actions were necessary. "It was a two-minute confrontation so, yes, it's
true that some pictures look bad, but I used a weapon in a [non-lethal] manner
and I did not put anyone's life in danger."
Eisner –
who was seen in the video wearing a type of kippah associated with the
national-religious settler movement – and his colleagues claimed that the clip
uploaded to YouTube was edited to distort the incident and cut out violence by
the activists. Ias rejects this, saying the organisers have offered to hand
over the unedited footage to the Israeli media to prove there was "no
aggression, no attempt to violence, not a single stone picked up".
The
military, which routinely films such incidents, mainly for
intelligence-gathering, has not produced any footage.
Ias was
taken to hospital in Jericho for treatment, later rejoined the activists, and
"went home feeling it was just another incident in a lot of incidents I
have seen in the past few weeks. I didn't expect it to have any consequences at
all."
But the video
was picked up and broadcast by Israeli television on Sunday – the same day the
Israeli authorities launched a big security operation to prevent hundreds of international activists landing at Ben Gurion airport to attend a week of
solidarity actions in the West Bank.
By Monday,
the video had appeared on countless news websites and the story was running in
papers round the world. The prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, the president,
Shimon Peres, and the military's chief of staff, Benny Gantz, all made statements
saying Eisner's actions were unacceptable and in breach of Israeli military
standards of conduct.
On
Wednesday, Eisner was dismissed from his post for two years although he has
been allowed to remain in the army.
"The
incident that took place in the Jordan river valley is extremely serious and in
absolute contradiction with [IDF] ethics," an army spokesman said.
"There are different bodies, some of them anarchists and belligerent war
instigators, disparaging our soldiers to create a buzz in the media, but we
must maintain IDF ethics and avoid getting dragged into a provocation."
Eisner told
colleagues: "I did not expect this to be the decision. I thought they
accepted my version of events and understood it. They showed me the door out. I
need to digest the decision and then plan my future."
He said he
did not "accept this as a moral failure in any way [but] it could have
been a professional mistake to use a weapon in front of the cameras".
Ias is
taking legal advice on the possibility of a civil suit against the officer.
After
finishing high school in Aarhus, the young Dane worked in factories and hotels
to save money for his trip to the West Bank. He arrived in mid-February, and
will leave in three weeks when his tourist visa expires. He attended a two-day
workshop in Ramallah to learn about his legal rights as an international
activist, non-violent protest and Palestinian culture. He did not plan to spend
any time in Israel.
"The
ISM differs from other international solidarity groups in that we are willing
to try to actively oppose the occupation, rather than just monitor it,"
Ias said. "We will use our bodies to intervene, to challenge. So if we see
soldiers trying to grab Palestinians at a demo, we will hold on to them to make
the arrest difficult."
But, he
added: "I've not been presented with one single incident of ISM members
being violent. I've not seen any statements espousing terrorism. The ISM is
founded on principles of non-violence."
He said the
international community had a duty to intervene when wrong was being done.
"The colour of my skin and my nationality gives me great privileges. We
have to use that to stand in solidarity with the Palestinians."
The Israeli
government rejects the image of the ISM as peace activists. "They parade
themselves as a non-violent movement but they refuse to condemn suicide
bombings or attacks by Palestinians on innocent civilians," said the
government spokesman Mark Regev. "They educate their members in an
aggressively anti-Israel position. They never criticise human rights abuses on
the Palestinian side."
This, Regev
stressed, did not justify the actions of the Israeli soldier.
The
incident triggered wide debate in Israel about activism and the power of the
camera. B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights organisation, has been giving cameras
to Palestinians for several years, encouraging them to document the behaviour
of Israeli soldiers. The IDF has trained around 100 combat soldiers to use
video cameras, partly to identify protesters, partly to counter what they see
as activist propaganda, and sometimes to use in internal investigations.
Many
commentators have pointed out that the IDF would not have taken action over the
incident had it not been filmed and broadcast round the world. But, Ias said,
his nationality and skin colour contributed to the attention. "The global
media wouldn't care at all if a Palestinian had been hit in the face with a
rifle."
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Israeli
army Lt. Col. Shalom Eisner hits an unidentified
activist with an M-16 rifle,
April 14, 2012. (Photo by: AP / ISM)
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