53 mosques and churches vandalized in Israel since 2009, but only 9 indictments filed
***
haaretz.com
Over 50 Christian and Muslim sites have been
vandalized in Israel and the West Bank since 2009, but only nine
indictments have been filed and only seven convictions handed down,
according to Public Security Ministry data. Moreover, only eight of the
53 cases are still under investigation, with the other 45 all closed.
The ministry data only goes through July 2017, but the vandalism hasn’t ended.
The
latest attack occurred last Wednesday, at St. Stephen’s Church in the
Beit Jamal Monastery, near Beit Shemesh. Many items were broken,
including some of the stained glass windows and a status of the Virgin
Mary. Police are investigating, but so far no suspects have been
arrested and the motive is said to be unknown.
This was the third such attack on the monastery in the last five years. In 2013, a firebomb was thrown at a door and hateful slogans were scrawled on the walls. And about 18 months ago, gravestones were vandalized in the cemetery. No suspects were arrested in those cases, either.
The
wave of vandalism peaked in 2013, the data show. That year, 11
investigations were opened and five people were convicted. Also that
year, the police opened a special hate crimes unit in their Judea and
Samaria District. But judging by the data, the unit’s deterrent effect
has been minimal.
Nine
Christian and Muslim sites were vandalized in 2014 and the same number
in 2015. In 2016, only three such attacks were recorded, but there were
four in the first half of this year. From 2009 through 2012, there were
17 such incidents – but there wasn’t a single indictment.
The
Tag Meir organization, which monitors hate crimes, keeps its own
records. It says there were 44 attacks on Christian and Muslim sites
between the end of 2009 and the beginning of 2016.
Tag
Meir said many arson attacks on mosques have never been solved. These
include mosque attacks in the West Bank villages of Kafr Yasif, Luban
al-Sharqiya, Beit Fajjar, Hawara and Qusra, as well as one in the
Israeli Bedouin town of Tuba-Zangaria and some in Jerusalem.
The
ministry’s data doesn’t specify the location of the vandalized site,
the severity of the damage or whether an indictment was filed in any
given case.
Asked
who the seven convicted people are and which cases it considers solved,
Judea and Samaria District Police referred questions to the Justice
Ministry.
The
Justice Ministry said it didn’t have this information and couldn’t
extract it from its computer system. It said the data would have to be
compiled manually and suggested that Haaretz file a freedom of
information request for it.
Tag Meir said it knows of only two cases that were solved: an arson attack on a Christian seminary near the Abbey of the Dormition, Jerusalem; and an arson attack on the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes
in Tabgha, on the Lake Kinneret shoreline. The Israel Religious Action
Center, which also tracks hate crimes, said it was also unaware of any
other cases being solved.
Tag
Meir Chairman Gadi Gvaryahu said he believes the many unsolved crimes
are a question of police priorities. “Without a doubt, they aren’t
looking hard enough,” he said, adding that some crimes remain unsolved
despite security camera footage that included images of the suspected
vandals’ cars.
“We
know that after the Church of the Loaves and Fishes, someone –
apparently the prime minister – decided they had to find them. So they
found them,” Gvaryahu added.
The
ministry data were divulged in response to a parliamentary question
filed by MK Itzik Shmuli (Zionist Union) at Tag Meir’s request. Shmuli
also said that when “about 85 percent of the cases in such serious
crimes are closed with nothing,” this should “sound an alarm about the
order of priorities.”
The
data Shmuli received was accompanied by a letter from Public Security
Minister Gilad Erdan that included an odd statement. Though all these
cases involve suspected arson, Erdan said the investigations had
concluded that “they were perpetrated from various motives, ranging from
negligence through mental illness and, in extreme cases, incidents of
arson that appear deliberate.”
This seems to contradict the fact that most of the cases were closed on the grounds of “perpetrator unknown.”
Gvaryahu
said this also contradicts the fact that most of the arson attacks were
accompanied by hateful graffiti. Erdan’s letter, he said, is
“disconnected from reality.”
Yotam Berger
Haaretz Correspondent
Commenti
Posta un commento