Case closed against police for killing Israeli Arabs in riots during Palestinian uprising

Posted on 2008-01-27

Case closed against police for killing Israeli Arabs in riots during Palestinian uprising The Associated Press Published: January 27, 2008   E-Mail Article   Listen to Article   Printer-Friendly   3-Column Format   Translate   Share Article      Text Size

JERUSALEM: Israel's attorney general announced Sunday that no police officers will be prosecuted in connection with the killing of 13 Israeli Arabs during anti-government riots in 2000, angering relatives.

Closing the case, Attorney General Menachem Mazuz cited insufficient evidence for his decision, according to a statement from the Justice Ministry.

Thousands of Israeli Arabs rioted in the north of the country for several days in October 2000 in solidarity with the Palestinian uprising that was then erupting in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Arab protesters blocked off roads and threw rocks, fire bombs and in some incidents opened fire at police.

Israel's police force was taken by surprise and was not equipped to deal with the rioters. Officers at the time complained they did not have enough non-lethal crowd dispersal gear and were heavily outnumbered by the violent mobs.

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Police opened fire, and killed 13 rioters just outside the Israeli Arab town of Um el-Fahm in northern Israel. It was the most serious outbreak of violence among Israel's minority Arabs in more than 20 years.

Mazuz described the killings as "terrible and worrying" but said their was not enough evidence to warrant indictments. He cited refusal of the families to allow autopsies of the dead as one of his reasons.

"This decision is a black stain on Israeli democracy and deepens the chasm between Jews and Arabs," Abdel Abu Salah, whose son Walid was among those killed, told Channel 2 TV. "This gives the green light for attacks on Arabs," he said. During hearings of a commission investigating the riots, Abu Salah assaulted a police officer who was testifying.

Israeli Arab outrage over the killings only intensified after the inquiry cleared all the police officers involved.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel condemned the decision. "This alarming trend suggests that it's acceptable and even lawful for the police not to be held responsible for killing Arab citizens," the group said in a statement.

Arab citizens of Israel make up about 20 percent of the country's mainly Jewish population. They enjoy full rights but have suffered from discrimination through decades of Israeli governments.

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