Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Content
Skip to Main ContentAccessibility Help
When search suggestions are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to select.
Israeli military's former top lawyer arrested days after resigning over leaked video of alleged prison abuse | CBC News Loaded
World

Israeli military's former top lawyer arrested days after resigning over leaked video of alleged prison abuse

Israeli police have arrested a former top military chief legal officer, days after she handed in her resignation over a criminal inquiry into a leaked video that shows soldiers allegedly abusing a Palestinian detainee.

Former chief held on suspicion of offences including fraud, breach of trust and obstruction of justice

Sara Jabakhanji ·CBC News ·
Text to Speech Icon
Listen to this article
Estimated 5 minutes
The audio version of this article is generated by text-to-speech, a technology based on artificial intelligence.

Israel's former top military lawyer arrested after resigning over leaked video

November 4|
Duration4:20
The Israeli army's former top lawyer, Maj.-Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, has been taken into custody a week after admitting to leaking a video in 2024 of Israeli soldiers suspected of sexually assaulting a Palestinian detainee. After the admission, Tomer-Yerushalmi abruptly resigned and briefly disappeared before being found on a Tel Aviv beach.

Social Sharing

Israeli police have arrested a former top military chief legal officer, days after she handed in her resignation over a criminal inquiry into a leaked video that allegedly shows soldiers abusing a Palestinian detainee.

Maj.-Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi was arrested Sunday night, Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir confirmed Tuesday. Her decision to step down from her position had been officially accepted by the chief of staff of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) on Friday.

The leaked security camera video allegedly depicts the sodomy of a Palestinian detainee. Soldiers are seen taking the detainee aside, crowding around him while holding a dog and blocking their actions from visibility with their riot gear. At the time, the detainee was cuffed at the hands and ankles, and blindfolded.

According to medical informationobtained by Israel’s Haaretz newspaper last year, the alleged victim suffered from a ruptured bowel, a severe injury to his anus, lung damage and broken ribs. He was taken to a hospital for an operation.

At a court hearing Monday, the judge extended Tomer-Yerushalmi's detention until Wednesday, according to a copy of the decision. 

The decision said she is being held on suspicion of offences including fraud, breach of trust and obstruction of justice. 

An investigation is ongoing while she is held in a women's prison in central Israel.

Israeli security members walk behind taped off area.
Israeli security forces are seen in Herzliya Sunday after Israel's military said they were employing all means available to locate Tomer-Yerushalmi. (Nir Elias/Reuters)

Police conducted a frantic search for Tomer-Yerushalmi on Sunday after her family raised concerns about her safety and police found her abandoned car near the beach in Tel Aviv, Israel's Channel 12 reported. Police said she was found soon after the search began.

Former chief military prosecutor Col. Matan Solomesh was also arrested overnight and his detention was also extended, Israeli media reported.

On Friday, Tomer-Yerushalmi said that she was stepping down because she had approved the video's leak in August 2024.

Following her accepted resignation, Defence Minister Israel Katz welcomed the decision.

"Anyone who spreads blood libels against IDF troops is unfit to wear the army's uniform," he said in a statement.

The abuse investigation led tocriminal charges against five soldiers and stirred an uproar. The inquiry drew condemnation from right-wing politicians and prompted protesters to storm two military compounds after investigators sought troops for questioning in the case.

A week after the break-ins at the bases, a security camera video showing the moments of the alleged abuse was leaked to Israel's N12 News.

The subject of the alleged abuse in the video was released and returned to Gaza on Oct. 13, according to documentation from the military prosecutor's office obtained by The Associated Press.

Tomer-Yerushalmi defended her actions as an attempt to fend off propaganda against the military's legal department entrusted with upholding the rule of law, and which she said had been subjected to smears throughout the war.

Widespread reports of abuse within facility

The leaked footage came from the Sde Teiman detention camp, where some Hamas militants who took part in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered the war are held, alongside Palestinians captured in subsequent months of Gaza combat, who have been held without charge.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel, when arguing for the prison's closure in 2024, had alleged that detainees at the facility are punished with severe violence, including with attack dogs and sexual assault; are made to sit on the ground blindfolded and handcuffed 24 hours a day and are forbidden from moving or speaking.

A 2024 report from Israeli human rights group B'Tselemaccused Israel of conducting a systematic policy of prisoner abuse and torture since the start of the war in Gaza, subjecting Palestinian detainees to acts ranging from arbitrary violence to sexual abuse. At the time, the IDF said it "categorically rejects allegations of systematic abuse, including sexual abuse, in its detention facilities," in response to the report.

WATCH | Palestinian detainee released last month recalls time in Sde Teiman:

Gaza man says abuse in Israeli prison left him blind

October 25|
Duration1:57

Israel's military said it is investigating dozens of cases and denies all reports of abuse.

In her resignation letter, Tomer-Yerushalmi called Sde Teiman detainees "terrorists of the worst kind," but added that this did not take away from the obligation to investigate suspected abuse.

"To my regret, this basic understanding — that there are acts to which even the most vile of detainees must not be subjected — is no longer convincing to all," she said.

Some politicians were swift to seize on Tomer-Yerushalmi's resignation.

Ben-Gvir welcomed the resignation and called for an inquiry into more legal authorities.

He also posted a video of himself standing over Palestinian prisoners who were lying bound on the floor in an Israeli jail, saying that they were Oct. 7 attackers who should receive the death penalty.

Around 1,700 Gaza detainees were freed this month as part of the Gaza ceasefire in exchange for 20 Israeli hostages, some of whom havereported torture and abuse during their captivity.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sara Jabakhanji

Senior Writer

Sara Jabakhanji is a Toronto-based senior writer assigned to cover news developments in the Middle East, including the war in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. She has worked in CBC bureaus in Ottawa, London and Toronto. You can reach her at sara.jabakhanji@cbc.ca.

    With files from The Associated Press and Reuters


    [8]ページ先頭

    ©2009-2025 Movatter.jp