A Haredi man filed a lawsuit to the sum of NIS 200,000
($57,000) against the State of Israel and a Border Guard officer, who allegedly
assaulted the plaintiff during a demonstration in Beit Shemesh.
The man, Gadi Raz, 24, was attending a protest against the
construction of a new neighborhood in the city, which according to the
religious sect he belongs to, will be raised on the site of ancient Jewish
tombs.
Raz filed a civil lawsuit with the Jerusalem Magistrate's
Court against the officer, the police and the Prison Service, claiming the
officer assaulted him "mercilessly, while he was helpless."
According to him, the assault could have ended in
irreversible damage. The plaintiff said suffered great damage and distress, as
well as humiliation.
The incident was caught on tape, in a video which allegedly
shows the accused chasing Raz after the latter opened the police cruiser's door
in which he was sitting.
In the video, the officer is seen punching him while he was
lying on the ground, until he is restrained by a fellow officer. Later, the
officer is seen again punching Raz in the face while other officers are holding
him, trying to get him into the cruiser. By the end of the video, Raz is seen
sitting in the car, his face bleeding.
According to the indictment, Raz claimed he opened the
cruiser's door because he wanted to pick up a hat which one of his fellow
protesters dropped while he himself was arrested. But according to the police,
Raz attempted to let one of his friends escape.
Raz also claims that after he was rushed to a hospital, it
was decided to jail him in spite of his condition and though there was no cause
for arrest. He also said that before he was jailed he was forced to undress,
and was threatened also facing his refusal to be treated in the hospital.
Finally, Raz was treated, and some bruises were found on his
face.
Raz's lawyer, Attorney Itamar Ben-Gvir, said as he filed the
lawsuit: "I've no doubt that if the Border Guard officer would have
attacked a Tel Aviv resident, all the established would have sprung up until he
was suspended, and rightly so.
"The feeling is that because these are haredim,
everything is allowed, there is no judge and no justice. You can disagree with
the protesters but you can't brutally assault a citizen who's only crime was
protesting grave demolition."
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