Aron's Israel Peace Weblog

Susan Barclay Security Threat
Susan Barclay:  "Security Threat"
 
American peace activist Susan Barclay has recently be re-arrested by Israeli police. Israel's Interior Ministry in demanding her deportation, claims that her activities as a non-violent peace activist in Nablus represent "a threat to Israel's security."
 
Susan has prepared the following statement refuting the claims made by the Interior Ministry against her:
My name is Susan Barclay.  I am a non-violent peace activist with the International Solidarity Movement and have been living primarily in Nablus for the past 8 months.  I was arrested on February 20th, 2003 and released from Hadera prison on February 28th,  2003 after successfully resisting deportation.  I have spent the past week largely in legal matters (filing a civil law suit against the State of Israel for unlawful arrest and contesting my deportation order) during which I have been repeatedly called a "security threat" by the State of Israel.  Currently the state is using the pretext of security to pre-empt discussion of legality.  I am appealing a decision made by an Immigration judge in a hearing on March 4th to re-arrest me and will have a haring as soon as the presiding judge reviews my appeal and sets a time (probably March 9th or 10th).  At the hearing there is a very high possibility that I will be re-arrested.  I am writing what may be my last statement before being imprisoned.
 
This week the State of Israel in hearing and court proceedings regarding my unlawful arrest, my deportation order, my civil suit and now my potential re-arrest has completely avoided the illegality of my arrest and the issue of my visa, saying in every legal forum that I am a "security threat" as if this justifies my unlawful treatment.
 
The accusations from the State of Israel are based on information collected by the Shabak (Israeli Secret Police)and include the following:
 
  1. That I staying in the Occupied Territories with an expired visa;
  2. That I was arrested while participating in a violent demonstration;
  3. That I stayed "in the houses of suicide bombers as a sign of solidarity";
  4. That I have been involved in demonstrations against IDF soldiers and provocations;
  5. That I have "ties with Palestinians suspected of terrorism";
  6. That "It is also known that she has been collecting information about an IDF officer".

These allegations are from a memorandum from Attorney Daniel Solomon of the Ministry of the Interior dated March 4th and from other official legal documents of which I have copies.
 
The first accusation is regarding my "expired" visa.  I had a three month tourist visa dated September 17th, 2002 which expired December 17th, 2002. I went to the Ministry of the Interior on the 17th and discovered an enormous bureaucracy that necessitated an early morning arrival in order to be seen before noon when the office closed.  After spending 2 more days waiting in lines with numbers and Friday and Saturday while the Ministry was closed, I finally completed the application for a visa extension on December 22, 2002 and received a blue receipt for 135 shekels, proof that I had applied and begun the process.  I provided the Ministry with an address and phone number where I could be reached and I explicitly asked if I would have any problems with police or soldiers.  I was assured that I wouldn't and told to come back in about a month. 
 
I returned on January 26th, 2003 at 6:30 am to the Ministry and was seen and informed around 9:45 am that no decision had yet been made and to come back in a few more weeks.  The night I was detained there was a taxi from Jerusalem waiting for me on the other side of Huwara checkpoint and I planned to enquire about my visa over the weekend.
 
The Ministry of Interior never phoned or sent anything to the address I provided and I was informed during my interrogation by Avi (the interrogating police officer) for the first time that my application had been denied to which I responded:
 
"Isn't it normal process that I would be informed and given a period of time to leave the country?"
 
This question remains unanswered.
 
The second accusation is that I was arrested during a violent demonstration.  I was detained at Huwara checkpoint with another international at approximately 6 pm on February 20th.  I had done nothing more than say "Hello.  How are you?"  to the soldier and turn over my ID, when I was informed that I was going to have to wait.  I was told that I had "interfered in something" and had to wait for someone, who I suspected and later learned to be the police.  We (the other activist and I) did not object or resist in the slightest; in fact we completely cooperated, convinced that there was a misunderstanding.  When the police arrived and claimed my visa was expired, the soldier who had detained us said: "Wow Susan, none of us in Nablus knew about your visa!"
 
Additionally, it should be reiterated that I am a non-violent peace activist and have never participated in any violent demonstration. Moreover, there were absolutely no demonstrations, non-violent or otherwise, in Nablus on the 20th and certainly not at Huwara checkpoint;  it was the second day of an invasion of the Old City.
 
I did a number of interview with press while I was detained at Huwara military base, including on with Denis Bernstein during which I explained the situation in the Old City and how I was detained.
 
The third accusation that I "stayed in the houses of suicide bombers who committed terrorist acts as a sign of solidarity" is cleverly worded to mislead judges and others about my activities and intentions and thus I feel it is especially important to address it.
 
ISM activists sleep in the homes of innocent people that the State of Israel punishes for crimes they did not commit.  We stay in homes of mourning families, that have lost a son or brother, and that are threatened with house demolition.  These families go to sleep each and every night in fear that soldiers will come in the night to destroy their home.
 
The Israeli Army's official policy of demolishing the homes of families of suicide bombers is a from of collective punishment that is strictly prohibited according to the 4th Geneva Convention.
 

I am completely opposed to the killing of innocent civilians, which is also illegal according to the 4th Geneva Convention, regardless of where it takes place (Gaza of Tel Aviv) and do not in any way condone any kind of bombing that targets innocent people.
 
The fourth accusation is that I "was involved in demonstrations against IDF soldiers and also provocations".  This is very vague but I have a few comments.
 
Foremost, I am not in anyway against IDF soldiers, nor would I demonstrate against them.  My actions are guided by a desire to better humanity.  I have been part of non-violent demonstrations calling for real justice, lasting peace, an end to collective punishment, closures and "curfews" (24 hour house imprisonment) and for the right to education.  I am not against people, soldiers or otherwise;  I am for fundamental human rights for all of us and an end to oppressive systems of power.
 
In terms of provocations, I have been involved in humanitarian work during invasions, operations and sieges, working largely with medical volunteers, attempting to protect innocent civilians, evacuate people from dangerous areas and homes, provide food and medicine to people imprisoned in their homes and have talked and negotiated with many soldiers to do this.  I don't think helping innocent civilians get necessary food and medicine is provocative. I think it is basic.
 
The 5th accusation is that I have "ties with Palestinians suspected of terrorism".  This is a very vague accusation but I nevertheless have an initial response.
 
I have worked with and know many Palestinians in Nablus and have participated exclusively in non-violent resistance to the Israeli Occupation.
 
I have also witnessed the arrests of hundreds of men in the past months that the State of Israel justifies by claiming that they were "security threats".
 
A Palestinian can be arrested without charge or trial and imprisoned for up to 6 months.  At the end to this period his or her term of imprisonment can be renewed, again without charge or trial. The Shabak present a secret file to a judge in private about the defendant, claiming he or she is a "security threat" and the judge makes a decision about imprisonment after hearing from a lawyer who represents a client without charge and without access to the evidence against him.
 
The State of Israel never explains or presents evidence openly as to what exactly a "security threat" is.
 
My case is unique in that the State is actually presenting allegations about why I constitute a "security threat".
 
If non-violent peace activists who opposed war crime, collective punishment, the killing of innocent civilians, excessive use of force and human rights abuses, who attempt to de-escalate situations and weave humanity into a land numbed by 36 years of military occupation can be called a "security threat", then of course the State of Israel can claim that I have ties with Palestinians suspected of terrorism.  Almost every single Palestinian man between the ages of 15-50 is suspected of "terrorism".  What this "terrorism" is remains unexplained, secret and therefore irrefutable.
 
I would really like to see the State of Israel present specific evidence about the "terrorism" Palestinians I have ties to are involved in.  I a non-violent American peace activist is a threat to Israel's security, then who isn't?
 
Ultimately, I have ties to many innocent civilians who attempt to live normal lives under military occupation, who are suffering from gross human rights violations, and who wholeheartedly want real peace.
 
The sixth and final accusation as to why I constitute a security threat is that I have been collecting information about an IDF officer.  This is true.  The officer's name is Ariel Ze'ev. He was in the Nablus area, living in a civilian home that the Israeli Army has occupied in Msakken Shabiya (a neighborhood) and spending his days at a checkpoint near three villages south east of Nablus called Az'mut, Deir Hatib and Salem.
 
Internationals filed an official complaint about Ariel Ze'ev after countless interactions in which he was violent, ruthless, admitted and even boasted about his inhumanity ("I am not human") and his pleasure in making people suffer.  I personally witnessed him physically assault international non-violent activists, threaten my and other activists lives, put his M-16 assault rifle to a number of our heads and fire live ammunition very close to our feet and legs. Ariel Ze'ev uses physical and verbal violence to terrorize everyone who crosses his path and is obviously disturbed.  Many concerned citizens around the world have enquired about this soldier and many more (including Israelis) made complaints.
 
Ariel Ze'ev is one soldier who has certainly been witnessed callously abusing human rights and internationals have been observing his actions and attempting to inform the Israeli Army and the world about his unstable mental health and irresponsible, dangerous behavior.
 
My name is one of many on an official complaint sent to the IDF documenting Ariel Ze'ev's behavior and this is certainly nothing the state of Israel should consider secret of suspect.
 
Having written all this and responded to each allegation against me, I would like to add one comment.
 
I am not on trial.  I am the plaintiff in a civil law suit against the State of Israel because I was unlawfully arrested and imprisoned and I want to testify in court of law.
 
Here is an earlier account by Susan of her arrest and treatment:


I am finally taking advantage of a little quiet time to write the story of my arrest and imprisonment.  It is a long story that has many important details but I want to send out a brief summary immediately. 


On Thursday, February 20th at approximately 6 p.m. I was escorted from Huwara checkpoint to Huwara military base because soldiers had said there was a problem, "You have interfered in something." 

We (Robin and I) waited for approximately two hours for the Border Police with no further explanation as to what I had done.  The Border Police arrived, were given my passport by the soldier,  and then told me that my VISA had expired.  I informed them that I was in a process for an extension, waiting to hear the answer and showed a blue receipt that I had from completing the application.  The soldier who had detained us, who had seen me a number of times, said, "Wow Susan, none of us in Nablus knew about your VISA." and casually informed me on the stairs after my interrogation, "Oh, yeah, you are arrested now, so you can't make anymore calls." The blue receipt changed nothing; we were taken to Ariel police station between Ramallah and Nablus


I was interrogated, told that my VISA extension had been denied, refused a lawyer  (Ami, the interrogator, said he would not wait for my lawyer although he had spoken with him and knew he was on his way), given no answer to my "Isn't the normal process to inform a person that the application has been denied and then give a certain number of days to leave the country?"


I was strip searched by two police women and shortly after my lawyer, Shamai Leibowitz, arrived.  He told me that they were insisting on arresting me, regardless of the amount of money offered as bail and gave me some legal advice that had barely ended when the police officers began putting handcuffs and legcuffs on me and taking me to the police car.  I was transported to Hadera prison for women, north of Tel Aviv where my things were searched again and then I was showed a room and a bed at 2 am


The next morning two men from the Ministry Interior visited and  made a number of phone calls, attempting minimally  to ask me questions after I told them that I would be happy to answer their questions but only in the presence of my lawyer,  and that they had done this enough times to know that my lawyer needed to be present.  One man stamped something and then they said they had finished, he was the same man who initially said "How long have you been here?" and I said "You don't have to ask me.  It's in my passport" and he said smiling "We'll  show you the way out." I was let back upstairs and within 30 minutes a police woman came and asked me to sign a formality (my deportation

order which I recognized as the paper the man had stamped) and I declined of course.


I could say a lot about prison , the police, the time and conditions but I will attempt to abbreviate this account.  I was visited Friday, February 21st by the Minister of Interior and also another police officer in plain clothes that I highly suspect was recording me.  I had two visits from lawyers before my hearing.

The hearing was Tuesday, February 25th and Michael Sfard represented me.  He said there were two issues: my deportation order which was being contested, and my imprisonment ; in the hearing he would try to get me out.  The judge decided to let me out by noon the following day if a number of conditions were fulfilled: 15,000 shekels bail, residing at a specific address in Jerusalem, presenting an airplane ticket to the US, and checking in twice a week at a police station in Jerusalem.  Michael told me that the Ministry of Interior had 24 hours to appeal the decision made by the judge. 


The next day, Wednesday, February 26th, an hour before I was due to be released, Eli, a police officer at Hadera calls me downstairs and says "The decision was appealed so you're not going to be free."  I said "That's' fine; my lawyers informed me that it was a possibility.  They'll just appeal again." 


Thursday, February 27 at 7p.m. I was informed that I was going "home".  I said "Really?" knowing that this means that you are being  put on a plane and deported.


 I got my things together and read.  A little before 10p.m. a police woman came to get me and escorted me out to an unmarked, white police van.  I was driven to Ben Gurion Airport to a police detention area/warehouse and dragged by my arm to  the door.  I said "What kind of a democracy is this?  I have a legal right to appeal this deportation order and you are nonetheless illegally trying to deport me." 


I went through airport security and was put in a room with at least one police officer present at all times. I read and walked, which I had not been able to do for a week, and learned that I was on a KLM flight to Seattle via Amsterdam at 5:40 a.m.  I waited from midnight until 5:15 am when I was called to go.  I was driven to the plane and escorted by a police officer up the stairs to the door of the plane, and then he left. 


I immediately informed the 3 flight attendants at the door that I was being forced on the plane against my will and that I had no intention of co-operating in any way.  "I will not be sitting down.  I will not be putting on my seatbelt and I will not be turning off my electronic devices.  I will go to the extent of screaming and yelling if I have to.  The faster you get me off this plane, the less problems you'll have."

One flight attendant asked why and I explained that I was being denied my legal right to appeal a deportation order. 


I then spoke to the pilot and repeated my story, explained the situation, and he asked how he could call the police back.  When they came, they insisted that I wasn't being deported, that there was no stamp in my passport, that I wasn't being clever and that I just needed to get on the plane and go.  I declined again, even with their threats of putting me on the next plane "in handcuffs with a police man and a gun next to you" and so we returned to the detention area. A few calls were made and I was sent back to Hadera prison where I went to sleep after turning over my phones and jewelry and undergoing another strip search. 


I was woken at 11:30 and told by a police woman that I was going to walk, to be free.  I simply didn't believe it in my sleepy daze and thoughts began racing through my mind.  I was only told that I was going home and to come back downstairs after lunch.  I read, wondered about what the police really intended to do and fell back to sleep before being woken again and called downstairs.  I was allowed to take my jewelry and to make a phone call to someone to pick me up.  I got my things together and came back down, was let out through the padlocked door of iron bars and escorted out to the gate.  I saw my lawyer and for the first time really registered that I was going to be free.


Subsequently I have learned that there was never any appeal from the Minister of Interior.  My release was granted because the original terms  the judge named during the Tuesday hearing were fulfilled.  Eli (the police officer) had lied.  There is also no trace of an arrest warrant which means that I was unlawfully arrested.  I am going to file a civil suit against the State of Israel for damages and I also contesting the deportation order.


I would like to know a few things. Why was I detained and subsequently arrested while doing nothing more than walking across a checkpoint?  Why did the State of Israel disregard its own laws, lie, and attempt to get me out so quickly by buying a $750 plane ticket within a week, when the women I was with in prison frequently wait a month or two for money for a ticket?


"Why do they want you out?"  Someone asked me during the last few days and I said "That is exactly what I would like to know.  Why is a completely non-violent American peace activist so incredibly  threatening to the State of Israel?" 


I would never have been released if it weren't for many incredibly special people.  I have been overwhelmed by the support and the efforts of hundreds.  There are no words that could accurately capture my gratitude and simply no way to say thank you. 


=======================================
Michael
ISM Media Coordinator
Beit Sahour
Occupied Palestine
web: http://www.palsolidarity.org