Facility 1391: Israel's secret prison

People say you shouldn’t leave a dog inside a car without proper ventilation, for an extended period of time. i have seen notes left on peoples’ windshields in parking lots, when dogs have been left inside the owner’s car in the sweltering summer heat.

What about humans left inside a darkened, filthy, unhygienic cell, for months at a time, without being told what they are guilty of, having no access to a lawyer during the entire period, and even being threatened that they will be raped? This is what occurs in the Middle East’s greatest democracy. When 2004 rolls around, we will still give $3bn in “aid” to this living, shining embodiment of democracy - a government that experiences no qualms in engaging in psychological torture of innocent civilians.

Not posting the entire article, just excerpts that i chose. Article’s too lengthy to post here.

Facility 1391: Israel’s secret prison, The Guardian, Chris McGreal, 14 November 2003

…] Facility 1391 has been airbrushed from Israeli aerial photographs and purged from modern maps. Where once a police station was marked there is now a blank space. Sometimes even the road leading to it has been erased. But Israel’s secret prison, inside an army intelligence base close to the main road between Hadera and Afula in northern Israel, is real enough. For 20 years or more it has been housed in a large, imposing, single-storey building designed by a British engineer, Sir Charles Taggart, during the 1930s as one of a series of garrison forts designed to contain growing unrest in Palestine. Today, the thick concrete walls and iron gates are themselves protected by a double fence overseen by watchtowers and patrolled by attack dogs.

The prison has held Lebanese abducted by the Israeli army as hostages, Iraqi defectors and a Syrian intelligence officer who tried to defect but was accused of spying and chose to remain in another prison rather than return home and face a firing squad. More recently, scores of Palestinians were incarcerated in 1391 for interrogation, which finally led to the almost accidental disclosure of a prison the state decreed did not exist.

Those who have been through its gates know it is no illusion. One former inmate has filed a lawsuit alleging that he was raped twice - once by a man and once with a stick - during questioning. But most of those who emerge say the real torture is the psychological impact of solitary confinement in filthy, blackened cells so poorly lit that inmates can barely see their own hands, and with no idea where they are or, in many cases, why they are there.

“Our main conclusion is that it exists to make torture possible - a particular kind of torture that creates progressive states of dread, dependency, debility,” says Manal Hazzan, a human rights lawyer who helped expose the prison’s existence. “The law gives the army enough authority already to hide prisoners, so why do they need a secret facility?”

Unlike any other Israeli prison, the International Red Cross, lawyers and members of the Israeli parliament have been refused access. One leftwing MP, Zahava Gal-On, describes Facility 1391 as “one of the signs of totalitarian regimes and of the third world”. The Israeli government declines to discuss the secret prison other than to issue a standard response: “Facility 1391 is situated on a secret military base. The base is used by the security services for various classified activities and thus its location is kept confidential.”

But it is not just human rights lawyers and leftwing MPs who have a problem. Ami Ayalon is a former head of Israel’s intelligence service, the Shin Bet. He was told about 1391 but says he refused to have anything to do with it. “I knew there was a facility not under the responsibility of the Shin Bet, but under the responsibility of the military. I didn’t think then, and I don’t think today, that such an institution should exist in a democracy,” he says.

i'm sure supporters of israel will have their reasons to justify such inhumane treatments. afterall, its only palestinians who are rotting in this prison. so what? they are no more important than cockroaches.

oh well, after all whereelse will they be able to punish so called palestanian terrorists in thier own terms?? But why am i not surprised, after all its democracy at its peak.

What? Israel has been torturing its prisoners? We never knew that? It must be false or must be 50-60 years, Israel is a democratic and one of the best countries around... even better than US.

Man, I never knew that.. how can they hide something like this?
I’m sure glad these nuts don’t have nukes…

:disgust:

who?

I dont believe a word of this so called report. A democratic state of Isreal involved in human atrocities-NO WAY JOSE.

The brutality of the Israelis never fails to surprise me,,, absolutely amazing the things they do.... and the expect there state to be sustainable after creating this kind of hatred?

Sarcasm, Changez, very depressing sarcasm…

I haven’t read all the threads yet so don’t know if this was posted elsewhere, but this kind of commentary from these people is really saying something about Israels state of affairs:

“We must once and for all admit that there is another side, that it has feelings and that it is suffering, and that we are behaving disgracefully,” said Avraham Shalom, who headed the security service from 1980 until 1986. “Yes, there is no other word for it: disgracefully…We have turned into a people of petty fighters using the wrong tools.”

…“Why is it that everyone – [Shin Bet] directors, chief of staff, former security personnel – after a long service in security organizations become the advocates of reconciliation with the Palestinians? Because they were there.” said Yaakov Perry, whose term as security chief between 1988 and 1995 covered the first Palestinian uprising, or intifada. “We know the material, the people in the field, and surprisingly, both sides.”

The security chiefs denounced virtually every major military and political tactic of the Sharon administration, adding their voices to the dissent in Israel against the prime minister’s handling of a conflict that has claimed the lives of more than 2,500 Palestinians and nearly 900 Israelis and foreigners.

…[Ami] Ayalon, who is chairman of an irrigation systems company, said he considered much of Israeli policy in the Palestinian territories “immoral, some of it patently immoral.”

“Terror is not thwarted with bombs or helicopters,” said Shalom, who asked rhetorically: “Why does this increase terror? Because it is overt, because it carries an element of vindictiveness.”

“The problem, as of today, is that the political agenda has become solely a security agenda,” said [Carmi] Gillon, who has also served as an ambassador. “It only deals with the question of how to prevent the next terror attack, not the question of how it is at all possible to pull ourselves out of the mess that we are in today.”

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by spoon: *
...] **The security chiefs denounced virtually every major military and political tactic of the Sharon administration, adding their voices to the dissent in Israel against the prime minister's handling of a conflict that has claimed the lives of more than 2,500 Palestinians and nearly 900 Israelis and foreigners.

....[Ami] Ayalon, who is chairman of an irrigation systems company, said he considered much of Israeli policy in the Palestinian territories "immoral, some of it patently immoral."

"Terror is not thwarted with bombs or helicopters," said Shalom, who asked rhetorically: "Why does this increase terror? Because it is overt, because it carries an element of vindictiveness."

"The problem, as of today, is that the political agenda has become solely a security agenda," said [Carmi] Gillon, who has also served as an ambassador. "It only deals with the question of how to prevent the next terror attack, not the question of how it is at all possible to pull ourselves out of the mess that we are in today."
[/QUOTE]
**

Interesting quotes.

It's really sad, these charges of psychological torture are something i would expect from a dictatorship, something like Saddam Hussein's regime. But from the country governed by the "man of peace" - whatever can be said of contemporary times, atleast history will never judge these human rights violations with a kind eye.