Middle East Monitor / October 5, 2021
Representatives of Palestinian citizens of Israel, including mayors, members of the Knesset and rights groups have rejected the participation of the Shin Bet intelligence agency in police operations to combat crimes in the Palestinian communities, news reports said yesterday.
This comes after reports that Shin Bet and the Israeli army would be allocated a limited role in combating the rising crime rates among the Palestinian citizens of Israel.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s office announced on Sunday that they will join efforts to deal with illegal weapons in the Palestinian community.
This was, however, denied by the Minister of Internal Security, Omer Bar-Lev, who said the army would only help “in the context of the theft of weapons from its bases and their prevention.”
Quds Net News reported that the Palestinian community rejecting Shin Bet’s involvement due to its torture of thousands of Palestinians.
Palestinians make up 20 per cent of the population in Israel, they believe Israeli occupation authorities are purposely ignoring rising crime rates in their community.
Since the start of 2021, about 100 Palestinians have been killed, with protests being held to urge the government to act.
The committee of Palestinian mayors in Israel, according to Haaretz, called the Shin Bet and military participation “a bad decision, which results from viewing the Arab [Palestinian] population as a security threat rather than Israeli citizens with equal rights who are in a situation of distress.”
In a statement, the Legal Center for the Right of Arab Minority in Israel (Adalah) said: “The decision, in principle, to allow covert activity of unknown nature and gravity poses a further danger to the basic rights of Palestinian citizens, who are already systematically targeted and oppressed by the police today.”
“The establishment of an enforcement system intended only for one ethnic and national group is a racist decision that produces two systems of law.”