by Hillel Fendel(IsraelNN.com) Arrested two months ago during the
violent dismantling of a Jewish settlement site, Rivka Meirchik is
still in prison. She refuses to cooperate with the courts, and says the
police beat her.
Ms. Meirchik, 29, was arrested on April 2 in Shvut Ami near Kedumim.
The neighborhood was first built by Jewish pioneers last September,
together with several others in various parts of Judea and Samaria.
Shvut Ami was the last to be destroyed by police and army forces,
remaining on the ground for over a week. Several activists were
arrested when police came to take it down, and two teenaged boys were
beaten by police in the police station, according to the Yesha Civil
Rights organization headed by Orit Strook.
Since then, Shvut Ami has been rebuilt and demolished some six times,
and pioneer activists continue to vow to return and establish a
permanent Jewish presence there.
Meirchik and the Land of Israel
Meirchik, jailed in the N'vei Tirza women's prison, is charged with
trespassing, assaulting a police office and disobeying military orders
after the area was proclaimed a closed military zone. She maintains
that she was beaten by police, but refuses to recognize the authority
of the court to try her. Rivka similarly refuses to accept conditions
for her release - such as paying a bond and agreeing to restrictive
terms - imposed by a court system that she perceives to be working
against Jewish rights in the Land of Israel.
Rivka Meirchik is not the only female to choose to remain in prison of
late for these reasons. This past March, 18 year-old Tzvia Sariel was
released from N'vei Tirza after having been held there for over four
months. She was freed only after she was tried and found innocent of
all charges.
Similarly, this past January, seven teenage girls were released after
being held for three weeks in N'vei Tirza without trial. The 13- and
14-year-olds h ad been arrested during an evacuation of the Givat HaOr
settlement site near Beit El, and also refused to cooperate with the
authorities.
Meirchik's Court Experiences
Meirchik has been in court a few times - always in hand and leg cuffs.
On April 14, Kfar Saba Magistrates Court Judge Nava Bechor refused to
allow her to remove the cuffs. A week later, another judge in the same
court, Clara Rejiniano, ordered Meirchik's continued custody until the
end of judicial proceedings against her.
Last week, Judge Rejiniano sent Meirchik back to jail for yet another
month, deeming her refusal to cooperate with authorities an ideological
crime. "The law allows me to keep a person nine months. These are legal
decisions which we must respect." Rejiniano has scheduled the next
hearing for June 19.
Meirchik appeared to be weak and frail during her latest court
appearance. She is kept mainly in solitary confinement, and is not a
llowed the customary phone and visitation rights.
Trial Likely to be Lengthy
The prosecution plans to call a witness to testify about Arab land
claims to the Shvut Ami property. Defense attorney Aviad Visoly asked
that Meirchik be released from future hearings, as the
cross-examination of the witness is likely be detailed and protracted,
and Meirchik has already spent close to two months in prison.
Visoli later said he would appeal to the Supreme Court to have Meirchik
released immediately. He said it is not a crime under Israeli law to
not recognize court authority of the court. "It's shocking," Visoli
said. "Keeping her in custody until the end of proceedings is simply
illegal."
Another Campaign Gears Up
Organizations such as Women in Green, which have been in the forefront
of campaigns to free other Jewish political prisoners, note that major
Israeli media have barely reported on the Meirchik "travesty of
justice." The grassroots activists are attempting to garner public
support for Meirchik, and ask that supporters in the U.S. "telephone -
rather than e-mail - the Israeli Embassy or the Israeli consulate
nearest you and demand to know why Rivka is still in prison. The
embassy's phone number [in Washington, D.C.] is 202-364-5500."
Supporters are also asked to call Congressmen, as well as the State
Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, and demand an
investigation. The State Department's main numbers are 202-647-4000 and
1-800-877-8339.
Original
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The Latest Prisoner of Zion in Israel: Rivka Meirchik
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