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Analysis

Hebron verdict widens growing chasm in Israeli society

Benjamin Netanyahu sides with those accusing army commanders of dereliction of duty towards a lone soldier

January 5, 2017 14:38
ELIOR AZARIA TRIAL
2 min read

The reading of the verdict on Wednesday morning in Room A of the IDF General Command’s military courthouse in Tel Aviv was an excruciating affair. Colonel Maya Heller, president of the court, spent nearly three hours reading the decision she had reached with her two colleagues in the case of Sergeant Elor Azaria. 

From the outset, it was clear that the judges had not accepted any of the claims of the defence. They had argued that on March 24, 2016, when Sgt Azaria had shot a motionless and critically wounded Palestinian assailant in Hebron, he was acting in self-defence and in the belief that Abdel Fatah al-Sharif, who 11 minutes earlier had tried to stab his fellow soldiers, had also been carrying a bomb. It was, the colonel said, an action committed “calmly, without urgency and with calculation”. 

The judges accepted the testimony of one of Sgt Azaria’s friends, who had told the court the accused had said that Al-Sharif “deserves to die”. 

The court unanimously found Sgt Azaria guilty of manslaughter and tried very hard to make it clear, not just to the defendant, but to the entire Israeli public, why its verdict was so damningly thorough.