Sabtu 19 Apr 2014 01:28 WIB
In West Bank, teen offenders face different fates

In West Bank, teen offenders face different fates

The  April 18, 2014 picture shows the Jewish settlement of Bat Ayin, north of the West Bank city of Hebron. Israeli settlers in the West Bank fall mostly under civilian rule, Palestinians are subject to Israeli military law.
Foto: AP/ Nasser Shiyoukhi
The April 18, 2014 picture shows the Jewish settlement of Bat Ayin, north of the West Bank city of Hebron. Israeli settlers in the West Bank fall mostly under civilian rule, Palestinians are subject to Israeli military law.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, BEIT UMAR - The boys were both 15, with the crackly voices and awkward peach fuzz of adolescence. They lived just a few minutes away from one another in the West Bank. And both were accused of throwing stones at vehicles, one day after the other.

But there was a crucial difference that helped to shape each boy's fate: One was Israeli, and the other Palestinian.

The tale of the two teens provides a stark example of the vast disparities of Israel's justice system in the West Bank, a contested area at the heart of the elusive search for a lasting peace.

While Israeli settlers in the West Bank fall mostly under civilian rule, Palestinians are subject to Israeli military law. Israeli and Palestinian youths face inequities at every stage in the path of justice, from arrests to convictions and sentencing, according to police statistics obtained by The Associated Press through multiple requests under Israel's freedom of information law. The results can ripple for years.

"Jail destroyed his life," said the Palestinian boy's father.

Only 53 Israeli settler youths were arrested for stone-throwing over the past six years, the data shows, and 90 percent were released without charge. Five were indicted. Four of those were found "guilty without conviction," a common sentence for Israeli juveniles that aims not to stain their record. The fifth case was still in court as of October, the most recent information available.Locals

By contrast, 1,142 Palestinian youths were arrested by police over the same period for throwing stones, and 528 were indicted. All were convicted. Lawyers say the penalty is typically three to eight months in military prison.

Israel's Justice Ministry said more than five Israeli stone-throwers were indicted in the past six years, but declined to provide examples. Itzik Bam, a lawyer who represents Israeli settler youths, said he knew of 20 Israeli minors in the West Bank indicted for stone-throwing in recent years, including six who pleaded guilty and six who were cleared. He said the other cases are still in court.

sumber : AP
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