- Details
-
Written by The Rachel Corrie Foundation The Rachel Corrie Foundation
-
Category: News News
-
Published: 07 October 2010 07 October 2010
-
Last Updated: 07 October 2010 07 October 2010
-
Created: 07 October 2010 07 October 2010
-
Hits: 3890 3890
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 7, 2010
http://rachelcorriefoundation.org/blog/2010/10/07/israeli-soldiers-to-testify-behind-screen-in-corrie-case
Extraordinary state secrecy motion is granted
Witness in Corrie trial testifies behind a screen.
Haifa, Israel – The Haifa District Court on Thursday granted a
government request to allow soldiers to testify behind a screen in the
lawsuit filed by Rachel Corrie’s family against the State of Israel for
her unlawful killing in Rafah, Gaza.
The order includes the driver of the bulldozer that killed Rachel, who
is slated to testify later this month. However, Judge Oded Gershon ruled
that both the commander of the unit and the second soldier in the
bulldozer that hit Rachel would testify in plain view, because their
faces were already publicly known.
Rachel Corrie, an American human rights defender from Olympia,
Washington, was crushed to death on March 16, 2003, by a Caterpillar D9R
bulldozer while nonviolently protesting the demolition of Palestinian
homes.
In asking for the highly unusual protective measures, state attorneys
argued that they were necessary to protect the soldiers’ safety and
prevent their images from being circulated. They based the request on an
overbroad security certificate issued by Defense Minister Ehud Barak in
2008, but did not provide concrete evidence to substantiate their
concerns for the soldiers’ safety or security.
Corrie attorneys opposed the motion, arguing that allowing the soldiers
to testify behind a screen infringes upon the right to an open, fair and
transparent trial. They asked to dismiss the request, filed just 48
hours before the first soldier’s testimony. Alternatively, the lawyers
asked the court to allow the family to see the witnesses even if the
public could not, but their request was denied. Lawyers for the Corrie
family plan to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court of Israel.
“While Rachel stood in front of a wall to protect the two families
huddled behind it, the state is now making the soldiers hide behind a
wall that denies us the opportunity to see them,” said Cindy Corrie,
Rachel’s mother. “The State of Israel has been hiding for over seven
years. Where is the justice?”
The first soldier to testify under the extraordinary new measures was
the commander of the second bulldozer. Known to the court only as A.S.,
with voice muffled behind the screen, he told the court he did not see
the other bulldozer strike Rachel and did not remember much about that
day.
Contrary to the detailed affidavit he signed less than eight weeks ago,
A.S. said he did not know how Rachel had been hurt; did not know the
distance from which the bulldozer had approached Rachel; and did not
know the height and width of the mound of earth the bulldozer was
pushing.
Also testifying on Thursday was the head of the Military Police Special
Investigative Unit, Shalom Michaeli, who oversaw the investigation into
Rachel’s killing. He told the court that he stood by his 2003
investigation and saw no reason that anyone should have been prosecuted.
Michaeli was also in charge of the investigation into the killing of
Iman al Hams, a 13-year-old Gaza school girl who was shot and killed by
an Israeli soldier in Rafah as she lay injured on the ground in October
2004. A military police internal investigation subsequently found major
failures in Michaeli’s investigation, saying it was conducted
unprofessionally and with negligence. The solider who killed al Hams was
court-martialed but subsequently acquitted – in part because of this
flawed investigation.
Michaeli’s cross-examination revealed similar flaws in the Corrie
investigation. These flaws support the family’s claim of government
negligence, for allowing soldiers and their commanders to act recklessly
using armored military bulldozers without due regard for the presence
of civilians.
Michaeli said that he ordered only a partial transcript of radio
transmissions because he did not think it important to transcribe the
full audio.
He said he did not go to the site of Rachel’s killing because it was
dangerous, the terrain had already been altered, and the vehicles
removed by the Israeli military. He acknowledged that he could have gone
to the scene in an armored vehicle, but chose not to.
Michaeli testified in his written affidavit that when he inspected the
bulldozer he did not find any signs of blood or other evidence that the
vehicle had injured anyone. However, in court testimony he said the
bulldozer could have been washed “or even painted” before he inspected
it.
Michaeli said he knew, prior to opening the investigation, there was a
video camera recording the area around the clock. But he failed to
obtain the tape until March 23, a week after the incident, because it
had been previously taken by senior commanders. When questioned about
his failure to interrogate the camera operator, who panned away from the
scene only minutes before Rachel was killed, he said he did not think
it was relevant.
When asked whether he questioned the bulldozer crews about an Israeli
military manual for low intensity conflict that states bulldozers should
not be operated near people, Michaeli said the manuals were not
relevant. He added that bulldozer operators could not be expected to
follow such procedures in this zone. He went on to say that he believed
the Israeli army was “at war” with everyone in the area, including the
ISM peace activists.
Michaeli still heads the Military Police Special Investigative Unit, but
has since been promoted from Sergeant Major to Warrant Officer.
“Today I was struck by the lead investigator’s failures – his failure to
look for evidence, to secure evidence, to resolve conflicting evidence,
and to turn evidence over to this court,” said Craig Corrie, Rachel’s
father. “This is not what we and the U.S. government were promised by
the government of Israel when Rachel was killed and it is not what we
will accept now.”
The proceedings on Thursday were attended by representatives of the US
Embassy, who have closely followed the hearings throughout the trial.
Subsequent hearings are scheduled for October 17,18 and 21 between the
hours of 9:00-16:00 before Judge Oded Gershon at the Haifa, District
Court, 12 Palyam St., Haifa, Israel.
See any changes to the schedule and register to receive further press releases at rachelcorriefoundation.org.
For press related inquiries and further information, please contact:
Stacy Sullivan
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Phone (Israel): 972-52-952-2143