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Israeli military halts controversial 'intelligence mapping' of Palestinian homes

WION Web Team
JerusalemUpdated: Jun 16, 2021, 08:10 PM IST
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A picture shows an Israel military drill near Kibbutz Merom Golan in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights Photograph:(AFP)

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Even though human rights groups say the policy served only to intimidate civilians, the Israeli military has in the past defended the practice, known as 'intelligence mapping,' as a necessary measure to counter militant groups

The Israeli military is reining in a controversial practice of conducting late-night raids of Palestinian homes in the West Bank aimed at gathering information about the houses and their inhabitants.

Even though human rights groups say the policy served only to intimidate civilians, the Israeli military has in the past defended the practice, known as 'intelligence mapping,' as a necessary measure to counter militant groups.

Under the practice, soldiers would rouse families in the middle of the night to document the dimensions and inhabitants of homes in the occupied territory. Rights groups said the raids, conducted in homes where no one was suspected of illegal activities, served no strategic purpose and caused deep psychological trauma.

The change in policy came half a year after Yesh Din, Physicians for Human Rights Israel, and Breaking the Silence, three Israeli activist groups, published a report on what they described as 'arbitrary invasions' of private Palestinian homes.

They said the practice ''effectively serves as a means to oppress and intimidate the Palestinian population and increase control over it.''

Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war. While the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority administers autonomous zones within the territory, Israel retains overall control and frequently conducts military raids even in Palestinian-controlled areas.

Today, almost 3 million Palestinians live in the West Bank, according to official Palestinian figures, alongside nearly half a million Israeli settlers.

The Palestinians seek the entire West Bank as the heartland of an independent state, along with the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem. Israel says the West Bank is a disputed territory whose fate should be resolved through negotiations. Most of the international community considers the West Bank-occupied territory and Israeli settlements to be illegal and obstacles to peace.

In a letter to Yesh Din on Tuesday, the army said its raids were not ''random operations" and were "intended for an operational-intelligence purpose.''

It said there were strict guidelines for such operations ''in order to minimize the damage and disturbance to the residents' quality of life.''

The announcement came less than a month after widespread unrest in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and within Israeli cities during May's 11-day war between the Israeli military and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

The conflict erupted after Hamas launched rockets at Israeli cities following weeks of mounting tensions and violent clashes between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters in the contested city of Jerusalem. 

(With inputs from agencies)