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Readers Number : 96
13/10/2009 The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on Tuesday that the Israeli occupation police have recently started operating an undercover unit among Israeli settlers. Some two months ago, Police Commissioner David Cohen said the force had "no intelligence infrastructure to deal with the Arab community."
A police "mistaravim" unit, in which officers go deep undercover, has been operating in occupied East Jerusalem and the adjacent Arab villages for the past few years, mainly with the goal of thwarting “terror attacks”. At a later stage, the scope of the operation was expanded to include other areas and other “security-related” matters.
“Some two years ago, when the police were establishing a national investigations unit known as Lahav 433 to tackle organized crime, the original undercover unit was incorporated into Lahav 433 and became the police's operational branch in its fight against Israeli crime families,” the daily said.
Cohen testified in August before State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss as part of the investigation into police-ordered wiretaps under the auspices of the State Prosecutor's Office, in which the police were accused of acting improperly.
According to Cohen, the new undercover unit would help the police "make an intelligence breakthrough in the coming years. He also said that "it's very hard for us to work in Umm al-Fahm, it's very hard for us to deal with crime in [Ramle neighborhood] Juarish and Ramle, and this unit is going to grow."
Readers Number : 96
13/10/2009 The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on Tuesday that the Israeli occupation police have recently started operating an undercover unit among Israeli settlers. Some two months ago, Police Commissioner David Cohen said the force had "no intelligence infrastructure to deal with the Arab community."
A police "mistaravim" unit, in which officers go deep undercover, has been operating in occupied East Jerusalem and the adjacent Arab villages for the past few years, mainly with the goal of thwarting “terror attacks”. At a later stage, the scope of the operation was expanded to include other areas and other “security-related” matters.
“Some two years ago, when the police were establishing a national investigations unit known as Lahav 433 to tackle organized crime, the original undercover unit was incorporated into Lahav 433 and became the police's operational branch in its fight against Israeli crime families,” the daily said.
Cohen testified in August before State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss as part of the investigation into police-ordered wiretaps under the auspices of the State Prosecutor's Office, in which the police were accused of acting improperly.
According to Cohen, the new undercover unit would help the police "make an intelligence breakthrough in the coming years. He also said that "it's very hard for us to work in Umm al-Fahm, it's very hard for us to deal with crime in [Ramle neighborhood] Juarish and Ramle, and this unit is going to grow."
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