Arab-Palestinian Community Protests Appointment of Acting Israel Police Chief

Leading figures in the Arab-Palestinian community in Israel said they will not cooperate with the new acting police commissioner, because of his link to events in October 2000 that left 13 Arabs dead following violent clashes with the Israel Police. The Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, the heads of Arab local council leaders, and Joint List chairman MK Ayman Odeh (Hadash) called the planned appointment of Maj. Gen. Benzi Sao an insult to the Arab community. Sao was commander of the Wadi Ara region in October 2000.

Police Maj. Gen. Benzi Sao

Police Maj. Gen. Benzi Sao (Photo: Al Ittihad)

In a letter written on behalf of the council heads and sent to Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan, the mayors wrote, “The Arab community and all its representatives cannot accept this appointment, and view it as [an act] of great disrespect and scorn for the lives of Arab citizens. It grants official legitimacy, on the part of the authorities, to someone who acted in an illegal manner and even in contradiction to the police regulations required of him at the time in October 2000.” The letter was signed by the mayor of Sakhnin, Mazen Ghanaim, chairman of the committee of Arab local council leaders in Israel, who is also deputy chairman of the Arab Higher Monitoring Committee.

MK Odeh said that Hadash may petition the Supreme Court against Sao’s appointment, citing the official government report into the October 2000 deaths. “The Or Commission determined in an unequivocal fashion that [Sao] was a partner in the crime, and recommended that he not be promoted within the police for four years,” said Odeh. Sao was found innocent “not because of a lack of guilt, but because of a lack of evidence,” alleged Odeh. Sao’s appointment as acting police commissioner was brought to the cabinet on Sunday, in preparation for Wednesday’s retirement of police chief Yohanan Danino.