Ringleader in Abu Khdeir kidnapping and murder given life sentence

The lead suspect of a gruesome kidnapping and murder of a Palestinian teen two summers ago was sentenced today by a Jerusalem district court to life in prison, plus 20 years for additional crimes, ending a lengthy criminal trial that shook Palestinian communities across Israel and the occupied territory.

Only July 2, 2014 Yousef Haim Ben-David, 31, and two underage accomplices burned alive 16-year old Mohammed Abu Khdeir from the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Shuafat.

After the sentencing was announced the victim’s cousin Amsam Khdeir told Mondoweiss she was numb.

“It was really emotional. I don’t know what to say. I really have no feelings right now. Suha [the victim’s mother] was really crying out from her heart. She looks awful, but I thank God, I thank God,” Amsam said.

The two minors convicted for assisting in the killing were sentenced in February to a life-term, and 21 years in prison.

Yousef Haim Ben-David, lead killer in the Mohammed Abu Khdeir murder case, in court, July 2015. (Photo: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Yousef Haim Ben-David, lead killer in the Mohammed Abu Khdeir murder case, in court, July 2015. (Photo: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

The criminal trial against the three murderers lasted more than one year. The Abu Khdeir family consistently appealed throughout the proceedings for ‘eye for an eye’ justice. Regularly after court sessions they told media outlets the killers should be burned alive and their homes razed. While Israel does not have the death penalty, punitive demolitions are practiced on the homes of relatives of Palestinians who kill Israelis in nationalistic attacks, but to-date, not this punishment has not been enforced on Israeli killers. State prosecutors did seek the maximum sentence for all three of the defendants.

The murder of Mohammed Abu Khdeir

On the morning of the murder the three assailants drove to East Jerusalem around 4am. They found Abu Khdeir alone, sitting on a ledge behind his home as he waited to greet relatives. It was the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and Abu Khdeir was preparing to attend morning prayers at a mosque across the street from his house.

Feigning they were lost and in need of directions, Ben-David and the minor accomplices waved over to Abu Khdier to approach their car. With the rouse, the three were able to quickly shove him into the back of their vehicle and speed off. They proceeded to beat Abu Khdeir and poured gasoline down his throat. The victim reportedly struggled throughout, and ultimately was set on fire while still conscious.

His body was dumped in a West Jerusalem field and recovered by police after sunrise.

Ben-David then confessed to the crime days after the murder, telling Israeli police and security agents he wanted to “burn something of the Arabs.”

“We said, ‘They took three of ours, let’s take one of theirs,’ and we decided to pick someone up, to kidnap him, beat him up and throw him out,” Ben-David told investigators.

The killing sparked unrest across Jerusalem with the Abu Khdeir home becoming the flashpoint for clashes between Palestinian youth and Israeli forces. Israeli border police patrolled Shuafat and posted officers outside of the victim’s family home to prevent riots.

More than a dozen members of the Abu Khdeir clan were arrested in the weeks after the killing while protesting.

However, on several occasions, without warning, officers shot tear gas into the Abu Khdier’s courtyard where they were receiving condolences, filling with area with plumes of white smoke.

As a result, the grieving Abu Khdeir family quickly become a symbol of the phenomena of settler violence against Palestinians and tensions between East Jerusalem neighborhood and Israeli police. Their case forced these long-time issues into the mainstream Israeli discourse for a first time.

The slaying took place during heightened tensions in the region. Weeks before three Israelis were abducted and killed by Palestinians from a West Bank settlement bus stop while hitchhiking outside of Bethlehem. Ben-David told investigators that incident inspired him to commit murder. He wanted a Palestinian victim—any Palestinian.

Ben-David’s legal representative filed a psychological evaluation claiming his client was not mentally fit to stand trial. The judge rejected the insanity defense last month.

Source Article from http://mondoweiss.net/2016/05/ringleader-kidnapping-sentence/

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