Israel

Torture of Israeli citizen by Israeli secret police to extract confessions for a conviction of a crime. The Supreme Court of Israel upheld the sentence of three life terms due to confessions in September 2022.

Amiram Ben Uliel [center] at Supreme Court in March 2022.

Amiram Ben Uliel, 28 was arrested in wake of an arson attack on a home in the Arab town of Duma in July 2015 in which three people were killed. In January 2016, Ben Uliel was indicted for murder and membership in a terrorist organization.

In May 2020, Ben Uliel was convicted of three counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder, three counts of arson, and conspiring to commit a racially-motivated crime. He was sentenced to three life terms plus 17 years’ imprisonment.

 

Suspects were brought in. Many of them were subjected to torture and isolation. For 21 days, detainees were not allowed to speak to a relative or attorney.

In June 2018, the Central District Court in Lod confirmed that Ben Uliel had been tortured and ruled out several confessions that he had made to interrogators of the General Security Services. The court admitted confessions by Ben Uliel that were made after torture sessions. This served as the only basis for his conviction. 

The court also determined that an unidentified defendant, then a minor, was tortured. In May 2019, the suspect, now an adult, entered a plea bargain and eventually was sentenced to 42 months, 32 of which had already been served.

 

Methods of Torture

Both media accounts and defense attorneys have reported that the General Security Services used what was termed a “menu of torture” against Ben Uliel and other suspects, most of them minors. They included electric shocks, sexual harassment, beatings, groping by a female interrogator, and the stretching and shrinking of detainees on what was called a Procrustean bed. The torture was approved by the highest judicial authorities, the attorney general, and later the Supreme Court, the latter which upheld the use of torture in obtaining confessions.

 

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

The detention and interrogation of Ben Uliel violated Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights – “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”

The case also violated Articles 8-11, which guarantee an effective remedy for violations of fundamental rights, freedom from arbitrary detention, right to a fair trial and presumption of innocence.

In the words of defense attorney Avigdor Feldman, Ben Uliel underwent unprecedented torture by the General Security Services. Feldman, who in 1991 received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award, said he read a GSS document to the Supreme Court that listed torture methods.

For the first time, I saw an organized listing of torture methods – how long each method was employed on the body of the interrogatee, how many times each procedure was repeated, and the various auxiliary aids that were designed to produce visceral pain. When I studied the document, which I was forbidden to copy or keep in my office, my hair stood on end. I understood that it was prepared by a brain trust of doctors, interrogators, psychologists, and apparently lawmakers, who used the tested and primitive methods whose purpose was to shatter the feeling of self of the interrogatee, to abandon him to the mercy of his interrogators.

Reenactment of torture method by General Security Services.

Call for Action

Amiram Ben Uliel and anybody else who has been tortured must be immediately released. Those who tortured the detainees must be prosecuted.

The General Security Services must come under strict scrutiny with regard to how it conducts interrogations and treats detainees.

International law calls for a complete ban on torture and the need for open trials and transparency. The case of Amiram Ben Uliel has shown how the State of Israel is ready to disregard any legal safeguards to achieve political aims.

 

Sources

  1. https://www.honenu.org/kfar-duma-case-articles