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WSWS : News
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East : Israel
Israel: Netanyahus nephew victimised for refusing military
service
By Harvey Thompson
29 March 2003
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Jonathan Ben-Artzi, a 20-year-old physics student, has served
a total of 214 days in military imprisonment for refusing to fight
in the Israeli army. He has now spent more time in prisonstretching
seven sentencesthan any other Israeli conscientious objector
and was recently designated a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty
International.
What has made Ben-Artzis case especially sensitive for
the Israeli authorities is that his uncle is the former prime
minister and now Likud Finance Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu.
Jonathan Ben-Artzi expanded on his case in an interview with
Britains Guardian newspaper on March 11. His account
underlines the brutal and intimidating treatment handed out by
the Israeli state against its own citizens who refuse to participate
in its murderous offensive against the Palestinians.
Ben-Artzi was first called up to join the army in 2001, on
his eighteenth birthday. Having stated that he was a pacifist
who therefore refused to serve, Jonathan requested to appear before
one of the conscience committees (required by the
International Human Rights Convention) to explain his reasons.
The committee studied his record of refusal to engage in military
areas of his school curriculum and came to the two following bizarre
conclusions: first, his record of opposition to the army showed
he had the character of a warrior and was clearly
not a pacifist; second, the best place for someone like him who
refused to submit to authority and discipline was the army!
Several delays followed, including a lawsuit filed with the
Supreme Court of Israel; which three months ago decided not to
interfere with the Israeli Defence Forces decision that
Ben-Artzi should not be recognised as a pacifist.
Jonathan appeared before the Army Induction Centre (AIC) on
August 8, 2002, where he read out the following statement:
I, Jonathan Ben-Artzi, am refusing to join the army on
grounds of pacifism. My profound convictions in non-violence began
when I was a small child, and developed over the years into a
broad political philosophy. Because of my beliefs, my own country
is going to imprison me, in defiance of international laws, basic
moral values and fundamental human rights. I will go to prison
proudly, knowing that this is the least I can do to improve this
country, and the cause of pacifism.
He was sentenced to his first 28 days in military prison.
Released on September 3, he was immediately sent back to the
AIC. After again reiterating his conscientious objection to serving
in the IDF, and requesting civil service instead, Jonathan was
court-martialled the following day and given a second 28-day sentence.
Completing his second prison term on September 30, Jonathan
was again sent to AIC, where he again requested civil service.
Again this was rejected and he was sentenced a third time, to
three weeks imprisonment.
When this sentence finished on October 18, Jonathan managed
a short visit home to his family, before being summoned to the
AIC. Again declining military service, he was sentence to 21 days
imprisonment.
Called up to the AIC on November 10 after completing his fourth
sentence, Jonathan was not allowed to address the committee. According
to his parents, Jonathan had prepared to read the following statement:
According to Amnesty International, more than 50 children
under the age of 12 have been killed by Israeli Army fire, during
the first seven months of 2002 alone. You have not sentenced even
one of the perpetrators of these crimes. But youre sentencing
me for the fifth time, just because I refuse to take part in such
activities.
On December 8, he received his sixth sentence, this time of
35 days. Released on January 8, he faced numerous interviews intended
to persuade him to be drafted. His uncle, Netanyahu, also tried
to convince Ben-Artzi not to make any further protests.
On January 16, Jonathan was again summoned, and again requested
civil service. His request was rejected and he was sentenced to
35 days imprisonment.
In his interview, Ben-Artzi recalled a school trip made when
he was 14 years old: We had a trip to the Sea of Galilee
through the occupied territories. I told the teacher I wouldnt
go because its not OK to have kids on a trip going through
villages where [Palestinians] are trapped in their homes under
curfew. I always had arguments in school. It just grew until my
last year when I was 17 or 18 when the first orders came to be
interviewed by officers. I came to everything they told me to
come to and said I wouldnt serve.
He went on to describe the militarisation of Israeli society
and its impact on the youth: In Israel, the army is a kind
of god and I was expected to worship it from as young as I can
remember.... There were military activities in school. High school
students go to army fire shows to convince them to
join. They are making a bid for these children, to recruit them
to the paratroopers or engineering corps or whichever. They are
guided down a mental corridor to the military. Theres a
lot of social pressure from the principal, teachers, friends.
Ben-Artzi is only one of a growing number of people refusing
to serve in the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) in protest at its
brutal treatment of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories.
Several hundred Israeli military reservists are refusing to serve
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, despite the possibility of jail
sentences.
Israeli men are required to carry out three years of compulsory
military service from the age of 18 and then at least a month
a year of reserve duty until the age of 40. Women are also obliged
to do military service, but are not required to serve in combat
units. Those exempted from service include students of the Torah,
Israeli Arabs and those with mental health problems or a criminal
record. In total, around 45 percent of Israeli men avoid the draft.
The 10 other men held alongside Ben-Artzi at the end of last
month included: Dror Baumel, who had served 173 days for refusing
to wear a uniform at the Tel Hashomer induction base last August;
Hagai Matar, 133 days; Yoni Yehezkel, 118 days; Shomri Zameret,
80 days; Adam Maor, 77 days; and Hillel Goral, 77 days.
Last month, Ben-Artzi was called in for a chat
by a brigadier general who made him an offer. If Ben-Artzi agreed
to enlist he would be granted an easy service, without a
gun, uniform or military training. A job would be found
for him in a hospital. Ben-Artzi replied that he would do three
years service, but not in an organisation dedicated to killing.
Ben-Artzi was then told that he was already conscripted and
so was refusing to carry out an order. He was told he could face
a court martialthe first for an Israeli conscientious objector
in three decades. The maximum sentence is three yearsthe
same length as conscription.
At the initial hearing, the military prosecutor described Ben-Artzi
as no better than any deserter or drug addict, and
said the young prisoner was not a pacifist because the competent
military committee has already reviewed his case and decided
he was not. He added that to let Ben-Artzi go would undermine
discipline in the army. Later the IDF prosecutor, Captain
Elisha Caspi, insisted that Ben-Artzi posed a threat to national
security. Releasing him would cause countless others
to choose the path of refusal in order to shirk military duty.
On March 9, a few days before court martial procedures were
due to begin, Ben-Artzis lawyers petitioned the High Court
of Justice to have his case transferred from the military to the
civilian court system. Avigdor Feldman and Michael Sfarad, acting
for Ben-Artzi, argued that the question of whether a certain part
of the populationparticularly a group of pacifistsis
eligible to be exempted from military service is a societal question
of the first order.
Therefore, the lawyers continued, civil rather than military
authorities must provide an answer to this questioneither
in the courtroom or via the passing of appropriate laws. Feldman
and Sfarad further insisted that military interference in such
a decision is as illegal as military interference in political
questions. They claim that it is not possible that a military
courtas a wing of the IDFdetermine whether or not
there is protection for conscientious objectors.
The court martial opens the way to the Supreme Court, where
human rights lawyers believe the young refusnik will finally get
to put his case before civilian judgeswho are more likely
to be persuaded that there is such a thing as a pacifist in Israel.
As of the writing of this article, a decision has not been
released. Jonathan Ben-Artzis fate stands in the balance,
and so to does the ability of the Israeli state to recruit significant
numbers of young men to carry out its criminal policies in the
occupied territories.
See Also:
Rachel Corrie: a victim of Israeli policy
and US complicity
[19 March 2003]
Israeli military kills US student
[18 March 2003]
Protest by Israeli
reservists opens new chapter in the struggle against Zionism
[9 February 2002]
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