December/January 1991/92, Page 45
Under Occupation
The Detention and Torture of Mahmoud Najjar
By Stephen J. Sosebee
Though my profession is writing, much of my time now is spent arranging
medical treatment they cannot get in their homeland for injured
Palestinian youths. However, the Israeli incarceration and torture
of Mahmoud Najjar, a handsome 17-year-old from the Al Amari refugee
camp near Ramallah, is the most difficult challenge I have encountered.
In January 1989 he sustained a basal fracture of the left femur
after falling off a cliff while being chased by soldiers. Despite
application of an internal pin and plate, the fracture failed to
unite. Since the plate was removed, Mahmoud has been forced to use
crutches. To recover from his injury, he needs an artificial hip
joint, which is only available outside of the West Bank.
I first visited Mahmoud at his home after the six-week curfew imposed
during the Gulf war had been relaxed. Though still suffering greatly,
he was eager to obtain the necessary surgery, as was his mother,
who herself had been shot during the infitada.
Although tickets were purchased and hospitals prepared, Mahmoud
had been arrested on June 16.
I sent Mahmoud's medical reports to the Rotary Club in Houston,
Texas, which agreed to sponsor his operation. I then appealed to
a friend, Lucia Smith, who raised donations for his transportation
from the Palestinian-American community in Texas. I then returned
to Jerusalem at the end of July to pick up Mahmoud and two other
boys from Gaza who also had been accepted for medical treatment
in the US.
I learned that although tickets were purchased and hospitals prepared,
Mahmoud had been arrested on June 16. His lawyer, Mary Rock, informed
me that Mahmoud was being held in Ramallah prison without charge.
"He was abused during the interrogation period," she
explained. "He has experienced the usual treatment: beatings,
being forced into a closet where he stood for days without food.
More disturbing is that an investigator, angry when all this failed
to make Mahmoud sign a confession, stood on his stomach and injured
hip."
Though shocked, neither of us were surprised. It is typical torture.
"He is a strong boy, but I think this was too much," Ms.
Rock said with a sigh at her Bethlehem office, crowded with the
families of clients.
I knew that getting a Palestinian released from prison before his
sentence is finished is unlikely, but the brutality of his interrogation
made me even more determined to try. He might not be tortured again
if the Israeli interrogators knew he had ties to Americans.
For advice I turned to an overworked Israeli lawyer, Tamar Pelleg,
who has the complete trust of Muslims, Christians and Jews working
for peace and justice in the Holy Land. She advised me to use all
channels, including the Hebrew press, to try to get help for Mahmoud.
"But don't get your hopes up," she warned. "He is
in the hands of the Shin Bet [internal security police], and they
answer only to the prime minister."
Over the next two weeks in August I approached the American Embassy
in Tel Aviv, Member of the Knesset Deddi Zucker of the Ratz party,
Israeli journalists, Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups
such as B'Tselem and Al-Haq, the Committee Against Torture in Israel,
the Israeli and Palestinian Physicians for Human Rights, and even
the office of Avi Pazner, aide to the prime minister.
MK Zucker promised to look into the matter and advised patience,
as "such things take time." The US Embassy officially
appealed for Mahmoud's release on humanitarian grounds. The various
human rights groups released press statements calling for Mahmoud's
immediate release so he could travel to the US for his operation.
Journalist Yoram Binur, author of the book My Enemy, My Self,
visited Mahmoud's family and publicized the case in Ha'artez.
A "Violent Terrorist"?
Avi Pazner's office informed me over the phone that Mahmoud would
not be released because he is a "violent terrorist from the
PFLP" and that his medical situation was "not serious.
" "You don't allow criminals to walk around free in America
do you?" asked a women employee in Pazner's office. "In
the US we do not imprison injured 17year-olds without trial and
then torture them for a month because we suspect that they did something
political to gain their basic rights, " I explained. Like her
government, she was unimpressed.
After a month of doing everything short of chaining myself to Ramallah
prison to try to get Mahmoud released, I left Jerusalem without
him. The two boys from Gaza could no longer wait for their own treatment.
The US government's efforts availed nothing, nor did those of MK
Zucker.
"He is an Administrative Detainee, " the latter said.
"Maybe in six months he will be out. Call me then."
So now it has come down to waiting. Mahmoud waits in a cell. The
doctors wait in Texas to operate on a hip that, thanks to the Shin
Bet, may be much harder to replace than before. Various Israelis,
Palestinians, and Americans wait to meet a grievously injured, polite
young man whose detention they seek to end because it is illegal
and morally wrong. And Mahmoud's mother waits to see her beloved
son able to walk again. For Palestinians like Mahmoud and his mother,
waiting is as much a part of life as the rising sun and the changing
seasons. They belong to a nation that has waited 43 years for the
liberation that, with each passing day and passing season, draws
closer. |