MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The Judea and Samaria District police have recommended pressing charges against a Jewish settler who is suspected of selling goats that were stolen from a Palestinian man, who previously sued the Beit Hagai resident.

The Judea and Samaria District police spokeswoman told Haaretz last week that the case file now goes to the district's prosecution department for its decision.

Yousef Hersh, who lives near the southern Hebron Hills settlement, filed a claim against Yitzhak Nir for damages in the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court through his attorney, Eitay Mack.

Communicating through his own lawyer, Itamar Ben Gvir, Nir has denied any connection to the theft. Calling the lawsuit a part of the ongoing "harassment by leftist organizations of settlers in the southern Hebron Hills," the Beit Hagai resident said he was in these organizations' "crosshairs."

On April 14, 2012 a group of around eight Israelis who had come from Beit Hagai threw rocks at Hersh, his 12-year-old son and a 13-year-old cousin as they grazed their flock on private territory between their village, which was not named, and the settlement. Hersh and the two boys left the herd and took up a position from which they could still see the animals. In his suit Hersh claims he saw the settlers, whom he did not recognize, cut 14 nanny goats out of the flock and lead them to Beit Hagai using force. According to Hersh the nannies were from a particularly fine breed and in their prime reproductive years, being in the early stages of gestation. Police officers called to the scene arrived after the Israelis returned to Beit Hagai.

Nir's defense statement indicated that police searched his home and livestock pen soon after the day in question and interviewed him twice at the police station. In the statement Nir claimed the police found nothing in the course of the search, and he was released after denying all the allegations against him.

Hersh, in his complaint, claimed that two weeks after the alleged theft he identified two of his nanny goats at the Hebron livestock market by the distinctive markings he shaved into their coats. They were in the possession of a Bethlehem-area man who agreed to be identified only by a single initial, A.

According to the complaint filed by Hersh, A. told him that at 1 A.M. on April 15, several hours after the alleged theft, Nir had called A. and offered to sell him nanny goats, to which A. replied that he did not make purchases at night.

In his deposition to Mack, Hersh's attorney, A. related that Nir called him later the same day and the two men arranged to meet. The man who turned up at the appointed location, driving a van with the goats inside, was "a different Israeli" (with the skullcap, sidelocks and ritual fringes of an Orthodox Jew), A. said.

In his statement A. said that both men assured him, in answer to his direct questions, that the nannies were "legal," adding, "The whole time Yitzhak [Nir] said the goats were legal." In his deposition A. said he paid Nir himself NIS 500 each for the nannies the following day.

A. said in his statement that he was called in for questioning by police after Hersh tracked down the goats. A. went on to say that Nir called him several times after that, offering to return the money A. had paid him if Hersh would withdraw his suit. When Nir stopped calling, A. told Mack in his statement, he concluded that the police had warned Nir not to call A. again.

In his defense statement Nir admitted that he knows A., that they have a business relationship and that for an extensive period of time Nir's flock was in the possession of a partner of A.'s named Gadi.

But according to Ben Gvir, writing in the same statement, "The defendant maintains that he did not steal the goats in question, has no knowledge of this event and did not sell them to A."

 
 
Read More...
 
 
By the Same Author
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required