A Border Police officer who was recorded throwing a stun grenade at a vehicle carrying Arab residents in the Qalandia refugee camp is being investigated by the Police Internal Affairs Department (Mahash), Israeli media report. The investigation comes after the footage sparked public outcry; police previously said the officer's actions were not in accordance with procedures.
In a formal escalation of the disciplinary process, a Border Police officer filmed throwing a stun grenade at a vehicle carrying Arab residents in the Qalandia refugee camp was questioned Monday by the Police Internal Affairs Department (Mahash), according to Israeli media reports. The development follows Sunday's confirmation by police that the officer's actions were 'not in accordance with procedures' and that the case had been referred to Mahash for investigation.
As The Zioneer reported from the outset Sunday evening, the incident—first documented through unverified Palestinian footage circulated by journalist Ganem Ibrahim—showed the officer hurling a stun grenade into a vehicle and preventing the driver from exiting. Over the course of Sunday's reporting, the thread built: by 22:04 Jerusalem, Mahash had opened a formal probe (Galei Tzahal), the officer was suspended, and police acknowledged the investigation. Multiple Israeli newsrooms (N12, Ynet, Galei Tzahal) subsequently corroborated the footage and the suspension.
The Zioneer reported on Saturday June 27 that Israeli forces had conducted an overnight raid on the Qalandia camp; the current incident occurred during a separate operation in the same area. The officer's identity and potential charges remain undisclosed.
No further details have been released on the specific timeline of the questioning or whether the officer has responded to the allegations.
10 developments
- DevelopingPolice officers to face Justice Ministry investigation over exceptional Haredi protest footage
- DevelopingPolice investigate criminal grenade throwing in Ashdod, no injuries
- StrongIsraeli police fire stun grenades to disperse protesters
- StrongBen Gvir says he spoke with police commissioner, stun grenade use may be restricted or removed
Source and signal
- Internal intake
