Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Israeli abuse pictures 'common'
Israeli abuse pictures 'common'
May 2, 2025 6:59 PM

  Israeli soldiers are routinely taking degrading photographs of dead and captured Palestinians and posting them on the internet, human rights groups have said.

  The claims come a day after the Israeli military attempted to quell controversy over photographs showing a female soldier posing provocatively with blindfolded Palestinian detainees.

  The Israeli military said on Monday that the pictures were "disgraceful" and insisted that the incident was in "total opposition" to the army's "ethical code".

  But on Tuesday an Israeli rights group released a fresh batch of photographs, apparently showing Israeli troops posing with dead, wounded and captured Palestinians, which they said cast doubt on the official line that such incidents are rare.

  Breaking the Silence, an organization that collects testimony from former soldiers, posted a folder on the internet containing nine pictures obtained from army veterans.

  It is unclear when and where the pictures were taken, but the photographs appear to show armed Israeli soldiers posing with prisoners and bodies of dead Palestinians.

  Common practice

  Rights activists say that the phenomenon of taking so-called 'souvenir pictures' is widespread within the Israeli military.

  "We released these because it seemed as if the IDF was presenting the pictures that came out yesterday as a one-off case," Mikhael Manekin, a campaigner from Breaking the Silence, told Al Jazeera.

  "Pictures of soldiers with detainees are highly normative. The soldiers themselves aren't even embarrassed about these pictures, which show how normative they are."

  Meanwhile, Israeli human rights group B'tselem said testimony from Palestinians corroborates anecdotal evidence that such pictures are not unusual.

  In an incident in September last year, Muhammed Id'is, a Palestinian driver, says he was attacked by Israeli soldiers who took pictures on cell-phones while they beat him with their weapons and threatened to kill him.

  "I wasn't able to walk and fell to the ground. The two soldiers kicked me in the stomach and back," he told B'tselem. "While I was lying there on the ground, the officer and the first soldier took pictures of me on their mobile phones."

  In separate testimony gathered by the group, detainees reported hearing the click of camera shutters after being blindfolded by Israeli troops who had arrested them.

  Michelle Bubis, a spokesperson for B'tselem, told Al Jazeera that the emergence of the new photographs suggests that these "are not isolated incidents."

  "Regarding the pictures published, B’tselem cannot corroborate the precise incidents in which they took place, but reiterates that they are a clear violation of detainees right to dignity and an abuse of power by soldiers," she said.

  Special monitoring unit

  The growth in popularity of social networking sites in recent years has been a source of concern for the Israeli military, which has been hit by a series of setbacks caused by material its soldiers have posted online.

  In March, officers were forced to call off a raid in the West Bank after a soldier published details on Facebook of the forthcoming operation.

  In an effort to prevent similar incidents, the Israeli military has implemented strict rules on the type of information that soldiers can upload to the internet.

  In addition, a special unit to monitor information posted online has been created in an effort to tackle the problem.

  Members of the unit scan websites including Facebook, Twitter and MySpace looking for sensitive or embarrassing material posted by soldiers.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  An Israeli soldier uses his rifle to terrorize a Palestinian boy.

  Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Four children among the dead following joint Afghan-NATO operation
  At least five Afghan civilians, of which four were children, were reportedly killed Tuesday night during an operation by joint NATO and Afghan forces in the eastern Arghanistan province of Logar, according to reports by a local police official.   Reports indicate that the military operation included both soldiers operating on...
Israel arrests 14-year-old US citizen
  On April 11, in one of the trailer caravans that house the Israeli military courtrooms at Ofer prison, three boys sat in the brown Israeli Prison Service shabas uniform. Their feet shackled, their eyes darting between the judge, their lawyers, and their families.   The youngest was 14-year-old Mohammad Khaleq, a...
Syria: the failure of our so-called international community
  The massacres in Syria rage on and yet we stand idle. We must realize that, to millions of Syrians trapped in the country, the virtual absence of humanitarian relief is nearly as arbitrary and cruel as the war itself.   Bombs, even ballistic missiles, are tearing homes apart and more than...
Syria air strikes 'target civilians'
  Regime air strikes have hit bakeries and hospitals among other civilian targets in Syria, a watchdog reported Thursday, accusing the Syrian government of killing thousands in such raids it said amounted to war crimes.   "Individuals who commit serious violations of the laws of war willfully, that is intentionally or recklessly,...
Maliki's Iraq: Rape, executions and torture
  Heba al-Shamary (name changed for security reasons) was released recently from an Iraqi prison where she spent the last four years.   "I was tortured and raped repeatedly by the Iraqi security forces," she told Al Jazeera. "I want to tell the world what I and other Iraqi women in prison...
Asad's thugs massacres of Sunni families and children
  The pictures appear to tell a familiar story. In one a pile of bodies lies on a street corner, shot down, apparently where they were gathered. Among them is a girl in a red blouse, perhaps five years old, spread-eagled among a dozen other family members, some covered in sheets....
Jordan to host 'world's largest refugee camp'
  Al-Zaatari refugee camp near Jordan's northern border with Syria is the second largest refugee camp in the world. On days when violence in Syria worsens, between 2,000-4,000 Syrians flood into Zaatari, and the stories they tell are horrific.   "Things are happening in Syria that our minds couldn't even imagine," 65-year-old...
Kurds flee for Iraq as Syria war slogs on
  As Syria's brutal war slogs on, some of the country's ethnic Kurds have been fleeing the chaos and destruction and taking refuge across the border in Iraq.   About 50,000 people live in the Domiz camp, located near the city of Duhok about 60 kilometers from the Syria-Iraq border. The camp's...
Afghans stranded in Pakistan's no-man's land
  Generations of Afghan refugees raised in Pakistan now face the prospect of returning to a home they have never known.   Ali Muhammad, an Afghan resident of Chaghai, in Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province, was born in 1981, as his family was fleeing the Afghan-Soviet war for the relative safety of Pakistan....
Camp Nama: horrors of a secret US base in Baghdad
  British soldiers and airmen who helped to operate a secretive US detention facility in Baghdad that was at the center of some of the most serious human rights abuses to occur in Iraq after the invasion have, for the first time, spoken about abuses they witnessed there.   Personnel from two...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved