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'If your conscience is clear, there's no reason to resign,' public security minister says

Amir Ohana, who has been criticized for saying he is responsible for, but not guilty of Mount Meron tragedy, says, "Responsibility means doing everything so that incidents like this don't happen again: investigating, learning, drawing conclusions. The question of guilt is a separate legal question."

by  Mati Tuchfeld and Jacob Bardugo
Published on  05-06-2021 11:03
Last modified: 05-06-2021 12:09
'If your conscience is clear, there's no reason to resign,' public security minister saysOren Ben Hakoon

Public Security Minister Amir Ohana | Photo: Oren Ben Hakoon

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Public Security Minister Amir Ohana is sticking to his guns after sparking controversy for saying that while he was responsible for the tragedy at Mount Meron, "responsibility does not mean blame."

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Ohana doesn't believe that he or any other senior Israel Police official is guilty of negligence in enabling the deadly Lag B'Omer stampede to happen, nor does he believe anyone should resign. Nevertheless, he said the Public Security Ministry and senior police officials would cooperate with any investigation that is opened.

Q: In retrospect, is there anything you regret about the management of Mount Meron?

"I think that asking someone if they regret what happened is like asking someone if they had been better off staying home after a car accident. Of course, if that's the outcome, it would have been better not to go. But according to this logic, no one would ever go anywhere ever."

Q: What did you mean when you wrote that 'responsibility did not mean guilt'?

"In the media discourse, there is confusion between responsibility and guilt. This is not the case. I am responsible for everything that happens, and this has something to do with all of the units with ties to my ministry. Responsibility means doing everything so that incidents like this don't happen again: investigating, learning, drawing conclusions. The question of guilt is a separate legal question."

Q: So who is responsible for managing the event?

"Unfortunately, this issue has never been resolved. I've already said that I and all those who bear responsibility will cooperate with whatever assessment mechanism is determined, and we will."

Q: Have you read the state comptroller's report?

"I have read the relevant parts."

Q: The police promised organizers they would be able to regulate the entry of buses when the place started to get packed. Why didn't that happen?

"Of course, that's not a minor issue, and the police took that very seriously. The police made plans so that arrivals to the site would be orderly, and if need be, speedy evaluation."

Q: How is it that 45 people died, and yet no one has resigned?

"I am examining whether there was full and serious preparation to see whether they [the police] functioned properly, whether they dedicated enough forces to this event. Preparations are made for the Mount Meron event for over half a year. I am not familiar with any event like this, [with the participation of] dozens of yeshivas,  almost 5,000 police officers on the ground. I am looking into whether they did all of the drills and made all the necessary preparations, and that's why I can't find a flaw in the conduct of public security bodies."

Q: Do you support calls for a state commission of inquiry?

"I don't oppose them."

Q: Regardless of criminal liability, is there no justification for top brass handing over the keys?

"Absolutely not. If their conscience is clean, and they did all they could to prepare for the event, there's no reason for them to. We have here a terrible tragedy and a difficult disaster. On the day of the event, I visit the wounded to hear what happened. Later, with the beginning of Shabbat, I assisted families in times of difficulty at the Institute of Forensic Medicine, and I'm dedicating these days to consoling the bereaved. I don't hear the things I hear in the studios there. I hear a lot of talk about unity, that that is the will of the deceased. That is the character of the sector they come from. They don't want division.

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Tags: Amir OhanaLag B'OmerMount Meron

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