Detention without trial prolonged for Jewish extremist

Amid Shin Bet crackdown on far-right activists, court extends Meir Ettinger’s administrative imprisonment by 4 months

Meir Ettinger, the head of a Jewish extremist group, stands at the Israeli justice court in Nazareth Illit on August 4, 2015. (AFP PHOTO / JACK GUEZ)
Meir Ettinger, the head of a Jewish extremist group, stands at the Israeli justice court in Nazareth Illit on August 4, 2015. (AFP PHOTO / JACK GUEZ)

An Israeli court on Tuesday extended the detention without charges of a suspected Jewish extremist, after a request from the Shin Bet domestic security agency, his lawyer said.

Meir Ettinger, a 23-year-old accused of being a key figure in a loose band of youths suspected of a string of nationalist hate crimes targeting Palestinians, Christians and even Israeli soldiers, has already been in administrative detention for seven months.

He was placed under the controversial measure in August, just days after a lethal firebomb attack on a Palestinian home in the West Bank that resulted in the death of a couple and their toddler.

Israel has charged a man and a minor over the attack but Ettinger has not been directly linked to the incident, which prompted a crackdown on Jewish extremists.

A number of Jews were arrested following the attack, but as of Tuesday only Ettinger is still in administrative detention after some were released and others charged, a legal group said.

A statement from Honenu, a legal organization that defends right-wing extremists, said a district court judge approved the Shin Bet’s request — also accepted by Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon — to extend Ettinger’s detention by four months.

Ettinger’s lawyer, Yuval Zemer, said the extended detention “just because of one’s opinions” marked “a sad day for democracy.”

“Today Ettinger’s opinions don’t have a pleasant ring to the regime’s ears, tomorrow it could be my opinions or those of any citizen,” he said in a statement relayed by Honenu.

In this file photo of August 4, 2015, alleged head of a Jewish extremist group Meir Ettinger appears in court in Nazareth Illit, Israel. (AP/Ariel Schalit, File)
In this file photo of August 4, 2015, alleged head of a Jewish extremist group Meir Ettinger appears in court in Nazareth Illit, Israel. (AP/Ariel Schalit, File)

Ettinger’s grandfather Rabbi Meir Kahane founded Kach, a far-right movement that wanted to chase Arabs from Israel. Kahane was assassinated in New York in 1990.

Administrative detention is intended to allow authorities to hold suspects while continuing to gather evidence, with the aim of preventing further attacks in the meantime. It also allows authorities to avoid divulging sensitive intelligence in court proceedings.

The Israeli human rights group B’Tselem said at the start of the year that Israel was holding 584 Palestinians under the controversial measure, including journalist Mohammed al-Qiq, who is three months into a hunger strike to protest his arrest. Israel’s Shin Bet says he is a Hamas activist. He denies this.

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