by Shlomi Diaz, Mati Tuchfeld, Yair Altman and Israel Hayom Staff
Justice minister: Anyone saying collecting classified information has anything to do with human rights is lying • Former IDF chief: What Breaking the Silence is doing is very wrong • Group's supporters say report that sparked controversy is biased, false.
A screen shot from the
Channel 2 investigative report on left-wing group Breaking the Silence
|
Photo credit: Channel 2 News |
The left-wing group Breaking the Silence came under scathing criticism over the weekend, following a Channel 2 News report that
suggested its members were actively collecting classified military
information, with some critics saying the organization's actions were
akin to espionage and even treason.
"Breaking the Silence poses a big problem,"
former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz said Saturday. "The IDF is an
organization experienced in conducting its own investigations and
maintaining its ethics. The military doesn't distort its findings and it
doesn't need external help. The State of Israel faces serious
challenges, and anyone who cares about this country knows better than to
come out against it like this, especially when you expose operational
inquiries. What this group is doing is very wrong."
On Friday, Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon
instructed the military to launch an investigation into the
organization, which is dedicated to exposing alleged human rights
violations by the IDF.
The Military Advocate General will oversee the
investigation, which is being conducted jointly by the Military Police
and the Information Security Department at the Military Intelligence
Directorate. The probe will focus on Breaking the Silence's information
gathering tactics and whether its members were able to operate on
military bases.
Ya'alon had barred the group's members from
all military bases in December, calling their activities "outrageous and
unacceptable."
While the IDF offered no official comment to
the matter, a defense official told Israel Hayom: "Following the defense
minister's order, we'll have to see if regular troops, not only
reservists, are giving [Breaking the Silence] information. The military
will also clarify and underscore [information security] guidelines on
all bases, especially across Judea and Samaria, barring disclosing
operational information to anyone."
Former Shin Bet security agency chief Yuval
Diskin told Channel 2 Saturday that "the issue should be viewed on two
levels: If this group is operating illegally within the IDF, then the
military has to investigate this and, depending on the evidence, press
charges. However, in the complex reality we operate under, I think that
overall, having groups that focus on human rights is a good thing."
Tourism Minister Yariv Levin (Likud) told
Channel 2 News Saturday that Breaking the Silence's actions were akin to
"espionage" and "treason," and he believes the group's activities must
be curtailed.
"This is a group of people who, using foreign
funding, systematically try to have Israeli soldiers prosecuted
overseas, to deter others from doing their job. Nowhere in the world, no
country, would allow this. Now we find out that they have also taken up
espionage by collecting [classified] information."
Commenting on Elkin's remarks, Meretz leader
Zehava Galon said, "Breaking the Silence runs everything by the
[military] censor, and they don't publish anything the censor redacts.
This group is part of a system of social organizations that criticize
the government and the policy of controlling another people for over 50
years. You want to silence anyone who criticizes the government -- this
is the beginning of McCarthyism."
Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked commented on
Channel 2's report saying, "The fact that there's an organization that
has usurped the authority to gather tactical intelligence on the
military's operational activities is very serious, especially since it
exploits soldiers by presenting them with ostensibly innocent questions.
"It's clear to any reasonable person that
anyone saying collecting this kind of information has anything to do
with human rights is lying. Those collecting this kind of information
are trying to undermine their country, in a way not very different than
espionage."
Meanwhile, the right-wing Im Tirtzu
organization is promoting a public petition urging Attorney General
Avichai Mendelblit to launch an investigation into Breaking the Silence.
"We ask a criminal investigation be launched
against the radical group Breaking the Silence without delay, as its
actions raise suspicion of espionage," the petition said, noting that
much of the leftist group's funding comes from the Human Rights and
International Humanitarian Law Secretariat, a Ramallah-based Palestinian
nongovernmental organization.
Some 4,000 people have signed the petition since it was made public on Friday.
Breaking the Silence supporters, including former GOC
Northern Command Maj. Gen. (ret.) Amiram Levin, criticized Channel 2's
report as false. Levin, who in December took out a half-page ad in
Haaretz in support of the controversial group, told Army Radio on Sunday
that Channel 2's report was "biased, misleading, and borderline
fictitious."
Shlomi Diaz, Mati Tuchfeld, Yair Altman and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=32525
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment