What we knew, what the government refuses to admit. Pictures, in this case, show the brutal truth. The brutality of Ehud Olmert, Gideon Ezra, Shaul Mofaz...
Public Security Minister Gideon Ezra, who said: "The police should be congratulated for carrying out the mission."
Gideon Ezra, who said: Public Security Minister Gideon Ezra: “The police did their job in Amona according to the law, and police officers
should be praised for accomplishing their mission as they were instructed by the
Israeli government.”
YNET: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3230393,00.html
Ilan Marciano
Police officers
involved in the evacuation of the illegal West Bank outpost of Amona used
excessive
force, while politicians failed to coordinate the operation with
forces, a commission of inquiry into the violent clashes ruled. About 50 days after the violence evacuation, the parliamentary
commission of inquiry into clashes that left hundreds wounded submitted its
interim report Tuesday morning.
The
committee's findings reveal that it found it difficult to point to the reasons
for the unprecedented violence involving officers and settlers. The committee rebuked Internal Security Minister Gideon Ezra, who
refused to cooperate with the inquiry and did not allow senior police officers
to testify. The political echelon, the committee ruled, did not make the
necessary preparations and did not coordinate the evacuation operation with
forces tasked with the mission.
The commission also said that it was misled by Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
, when he stated that security forces were ordered to act with "sensitivity and diligence."
...There were also contradictions between the testimony of Public Security Minister Gideon Ezra and that of Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Dan Halutz. Ezra, for example, claimed that police were only able to reach Amona on foot via back roads, since settlers had blocked the main access routes to the site. As a result, Ezra claimed, the officers arrived at Amona after having marched for hours across rough terrain. Halutz, on the other hand, said that the soldiers had left their base for Amona at 1:30 A.M. and had arrived within 30 minutes....One of the questions raised was why female officers were not deployed to evacuate women settlers. Instead, the report states, male officers were forced to remove women settlers, some of whom later claimed that they were sexually assaulted during the process. 
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/news.php3?id=97967
A list of videos showing police brutality at Amona:
Neriah
Zamir, 19, a student in Yeshivat Elon Moreh, a resident of Moreshet in the
Galilee, who was evacuated by helicopter to the hospital:
"I was sitting
in the kitchen of house number 9, the last house in the line. I couldn't see
anything outside, but I heard my friends saying how the police were beating one
boy, and grabbing another one by the testicles, and the like...
"We
heard the Yassamnikim breaking the windows in one of the other rooms and
starting to come in. When they came towards us, we threw cottage cheese and
chocolate cups at them, as our way of protesting. They came into the living room
and started hitting without discrimination, without mercy. I saw one policeman
lifting up his club and smashing it down again and again and again, seemingly
without end... Then they jumped over to another group and started hitting there
as well... I remember scenes of them screaming, 'Get out!' - and then Boom!,
they would smash someone...
"We started trying to crawl out towards the
hall, and when I got there, one policeman gave me a terrific blow to the head
and then to my eye. I passed out for a short time and the next thing I remember
was being near the door, and that everything looked blurred from my left eye...
"Once outside, the police refused to let me go towards the army medics,
even though people were being treated there and even though I heard people
saying, 'He's hurt!' Finally I made my way up to the Amona makeshift clinic, and
from there I was flown to the hospital in Jerusalem, where they found that the
wound was, thank G-d, would not cause permanent damage. I was released two days
later, on Friday..."
Aharon Tebger, 23, Givat Ze'ev, a student at
Bar Ilan University:
"I was in the salon of house #8, together with some
expellees from Shirat HaYam [in Gush Katif] and others. The other two rooms were
full, and the police first broke into those room. We heard screaming, and we saw
a lot of boys running away from those rooms towards the kitchen; they were very
scared and some were already bleeding. But everything was happening at once, so
we still didn't realize exactly what was going on.
"At the same time,
the police were trying to break into our room, and soon they came upon us from
both sides. We screamed that they should put away their clubs, that we were not
fighting with them, but they said that rocks were thrown at them... Then one
said, 'you have until a count of three to leave through the window,' and then he
counted quickly 1,2,3 and then they started beating and pushing, while the other
police came from the other direction. First they started hitting us on the legs,
and then on our heads.
"I was one of the last ones in the room, and one
policeman told me to go one way, but then two others hit me hard in my head. I
fell down, and then - five of them were on top of me, hitting me in head and
kicking me all over my body. Five on one, and I was on the floor!
"Then
they brought me to another room, where I got out through the window; I had no
choice, because if I stayed there, they would smash me again. Someone helped me
get to the road, and only then did I realize that I was full of blood. They took
me on a stretcher to the clinic, and from there by ambulance to Ein Karem
Hospital, where I received stitches in three places: near my eye and on my head.
I also was hit on my limbs, and I still have trouble walking."
© by Paula Stern. All rights reserved.
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