'A Mockery of Justice': Outrage Over One-Month Community Service Sentence for Israeli Soldier Who Shot Dead Palestinian Teen
An Israeli soldier who shot dead a Palestinian child during the Great March of Return protests last year was sentenced Monday to one month of community service.
Author and Electronic Intifada co-founder Ali Abunimah called the military court’s action a “rare conviction and an obvious travesty attempting to fool the International Criminal Court that the criminal occupier can police itself.”
The deadly incident—just one of hundreds in which Israeli forces used lethal violence against protesters in the series of protests along the fenced border of the Gaza Strip—took place July 13, 2018, when the Israeli solder shot 15-year-old “plainly unarmed” Osman Rami Halas.
As Haaretz reported:
The soldier, whose name is blocked under a gag order, was convicted not for firing but for doing so “without receiving the required permission from his commanders,” according to a statement from the military quoted by The Times of Israel.
“The soldier was not convicted of a more serious offense like manslaughter,” the news outlet added, “as military prosecutors were unable to collect sufficient evidence connecting his gunshot to Halas’ death.”
The outcome, Haaretz noted, marks a plea bargain in which the soldier was sentenced to “a month of the military’s equivalent of community service, and a downgrade to the rank of private, for endangering a life by deviating from orders.”
“This makes a mockery of justice,” tweeted Yousef Munayyer, the exeuctive director of the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. “This soldier got in trouble for not waiting his turn.”
“This is what apartheid looks like,” opined Portugal-based researcher Adam al-Alou.
What’s more, warned the Geneva-based Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, the light conviction could open the floodgates for similar shootings by Israeli soldiers. In a statement released Wednesday, the group said:
On the one-year anniversary of the protests in March, human rights group Amnesty International condemned what it called “Israel’s ruthless tactics without accountability” towards the Palestinian protestors.
“The shocking scale and horrific nature of the debilitating injuries inflicted by Israeli forces on Palestinian protesters in Gaza last year suggests Israel pursued a deliberate strategy to maim civilians,” Saleh Higazi, Middle East and North Africa Deputy director for Amnesty International, said at the time.
A United Nations inquiry into the Gaza protests released in February also found there were “reasonable grounds” to believe “Israeli soldiers committed violations of international human rights and humanitarian law. Some of those violations may constitute war crimes or crimes against humanity.”