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Justice, Gas and Tears
Uri
Avnery
3.7.04
In
the silence of the courtroom, there was an audible gasp of
surprise
and
shock when Supreme Justice Aharon
Barak, reading the court’s
decision,
reached the words: “The military commander did not use his
discretion
in a proportional way, as required.”
At
that moment the veteran peace activists who filled the room
realized
that
they had won.
Four
days before, we could not have dreamt of that. We were far
from the
sterile
silence of the beautiful Supreme Court building: a distance
of a
few
kilometers geographically, a distance of light-years
mentally. At that time we were running through clouds of tear
gas, choking and
coughing,
in the center of A-Ram.
It
began, surprisingly, in an atmosphere of friendliness. We
came in a
convoy
of buses from all over the country in order to join the
inhabitants
demonstrating against the wall, on the eve of the Supreme
Court
decision.
We
expected to be held up at the roadblock across the entrance
to A-Ram. The
demonstration was not secret, we
had announced it in the media. We
were
ready to leave the buses quickly and continue around the
roadblock
on
foot. We were surprised, therefore, when the border-policemen
were all
smiles.
The one who entered our bus spoke like a sympathizer. “Do you
know
what you are getting into?” he asked in a friendly way. When
we
answered
that we did, he said “have a nice day” and waved us on. In
the center of A-Ram, thousands of Palestinians were waiting
for us. We
intended
to march on the main road, along the planned path of the wall
that
will cut the densely populated urban area in two. The big
concrete
slabs
of the wall were already lying in the ground, waiting for the
moment
when the court would lift the temporary injunction that is
holding
up
the building activity.
The
demonstration was intended, of course, to be completely
non-violent. The
proof: in the first line there marched a Christian Orthodox
priest, a
senior
Muslim sheikh, local dignitaries and present and past members
of
the
Knesset and the Palestinian parliament. In front of us walked
the A- Ram youth orchestra. As a symbolic act we had brought
five big hammers, and some of the
demonstrators
were asked to use them to strike concrete slabs lying on
the
ground.
We
advanced slowly in the burning sun. Suddenly a row of
border- policemen appeared on top of the hill overlooking the
road. Before we
realized
what was happening, a salvo of teargas grenades – one, two,
three
… dozens – were shot at us. In a few moments we were
enveloped by a
dense
cloud of gas that covered all escape routes.
We
dispersed in all directions, but the gas grenades continued
to explode
around
us. Those of us who made it to the central square of the town
were
attacked
with tear gas, water cannon and rubber-coated bullets.
The
place resembled a real battlefield – clouds of gas, the sound
of
exploding
stun grenades and shooting, the screaming sirens of the
Palestinian ambulances, burning boxes along the street,
abandoned
posters,
shuttered shops. When the Palestinian paramedics started to
run
with
their stretchers towards the ambulances, local boys emerged
from the
alleys
to throw stones at the border-policemen (a mercenary force
universally
hated in the Palestinian territories). From time to time
groups
of border-policemen ran towards us, grabbing demonstrators of
both
sexes
and dragging them towards the armored jeeps. One of the
ambulances
was
burning. Undercover policemen in plain clothes, pistols in
their
hands
- beat people and dragged them along the ground.
All
this continued for more than two hours. All that time, a
question was
nagging
me: Why was this happening? Clearly we had walked into a
well- prepared trap. But what was the aim? On the way back we
listened to the news on the radio. A police spokesman
announced
that the border-police had been attacked by demonstrators who
threw
axes and hammers at them. In our bus, everybody burst out
laughing.
The
mystery was solved two days later in court, when the judges
were
dealing
with A-Ram. The government attorneys demanded that the
temporary
injunction
that was holding up the wall in A-Ram be lifted. They had a
crushing
argument: two days ago, they said, the border-policemen
guarding
the
machinery had been viciously attacked by demonstrators. Their
life
was
in danger. Therefore, in order to save the policemen from the
evildoers
(us), the building of the wall must be speeded up.
The
judges, so it seems, were not impressed. They announced that
in
another
two days, on Wednesday, the court would publish a set of
principles
that would, from now on, apply to he whole length of the
barrier,
including A-Ram.
And
indeed, on Wednesday the decision that caused the audience to
gasp
was
delivered. We knew in advance that the court could not forbid
the
wall
altogether. That would have been a challenge to the
government, the
army
and the national consensus. Neither did we expect a decision
that
would
have decreed that the wall should be set up on the Green Line
(the
internationally
recognized pre-1967 border).
We
thought that the court would, at most, change the path of the
wall a
few
kilometers here and there. But the actual decision went much
further:
it
demands big changes all along the 750 kilometers of the
barrier, in
order
to remove it from the vicinity of Palestinian villages and
release
their
land.
The
judges accepted, in fact, most of the arguments that we had
been
voicing
in dozens of demonstrations: (a) that the path of the wall
violates
international law, (b) that it destroys the fabric of life of
the
Palestinian population and turns their life into hell, and
(c) that
this
path does not emanate from security considerations, but
rather from
a
desire to enlarge the settlements, annex territory to Israel
and drive
the
Palestinians out.
Judge
Barak, the president of the
Supreme Court who drafted the decision,
was
walking a tightrope. On one side he risked provoking the
powerful
military
establishment and a large section of public opinion. On the
other
side, he wanted to keep his considerable reputation in the
international
judicial community.
Years
ago I interviewed him at length. One of the things he told me
is
engraved
in my memory: “The court has no divisions to enforce its
decisions.
Its power is based solely on the confidence of the public.
Therefore, the court cannot distance itself too much from the
public.”
That
was shown again this week: Barak
went very far, but knew where to
stop
– half way between the planned path and the green Line. In
this he
was
helped by the Council for Peace and Security, a pro-peace
group of
retired
senior army officers, who proposed an alternative path.
Barak
knows well that he is taking a considerable risk: if a
suicide
attack
now takes place inside Israel, the right-wing will surely put
the
blame
on the court.
Actually, something similar has already happened. Only a few
minutes
after
the court decision was read out, Colonel (res.) Danny
Tirzeh, the
skull-capped
officer with responsibility at the Ministry of Defense for
the
building of the wall, said that the court’s decision will
cause Jews
to
be murdered. The man was not fired on the spot, God forbid,
but only
rebuked
by his minister.
Ariel
Sharon may well be satisfied with the court’s decision. True,
the
path
of the wall will have to be planned anew, costing more money
and
time.
But in a week the International Court of Justice in The Hague
will
deliver
its decision on the wall and the matter will return to the
UN.
There
the Israeli and American representatives will argue that the
Israeli court has already rectified the inequities that
needed to be
addressed.
In
A-Ram and the other suburbs of Jerusalem, too, the path will
have to
be
changed. I hope that it will be removed from the highway
where we were
demonstrating
last Saturday. I have inhaled enough gas to last me a
while.
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