Do you remember operations with soldiers disguised as Palestinians? Yes.
And they would come back with people they’d arrested? Yes. I remember especially because they gave them medical exams, examinations before detention. I remember one that was near Karmey Zur.
Beit Ummar? That’s already in the domain of the Etzion brigade, isn’t it? It was in the brigade’s area of jurisdiction. We made a front command team there, the brigade commander and the officers. There were really trucks and 'Safaris' (troop carriers) and all kinds of things there, and they did their operation somewhere, they brought detainees. It was a night with really quite a few, quite a few detainees were there, so that every so often, some detainee would come and they’d examine him, the doctor examined him. And I was also there all night, an all-nighter with coffee and cigarettes, and every so often a situation assessment and checking, you know. And I went to see what the situation was, how it really looked, the examination of the detainees. So they were sitting there in some Safari, a few of them, with blindfolds and plastic handcuffs, a few guys were guarding them, and the medics were there too. And I don’t remember this bit specifically, as in, I can’t really tell you the details, but [there was] someone who looked like he’d been beaten up and the doctor said: Okay, what is this? Like, he got a bit annoyed with them. And they said to him: You know, okay, that’s how it goes, or: It happened during the, you know. It wasn’t clear if it was during the arrest or afterwards. And he approved his medical examination and said: Okay, you can transfer him to detention.