Subscribe to Print Edition | Tue., January 16, 2007 Tevet 26, 5767 | | Israel Time: 05:30 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
Search site 
  Back to Homepage
Print Edition
Diplomacy
Defense Opinion National Arts & Leisure Anglo File Sports Travel  
Magazine Week's End
Q&A
Business Underground Jewish World Real Estate Advertising  
Bookmark to del.icio.us
Last update - 05:30 16/01/2007
Identity of outgoing police anti-terror unit chief declassified
By Roni Singer-Heruti, Haaretz Correspondent

The identity of the head of the police's special anti-terror unit (Yamam) was released for publication for the first time this morning, on the occasion of his departure.

Zohar Dvir, who headed the Yamam for the past five and a half years, joined the unit seven and a half years ago, after years of serving in the career army, where he commanded the Golani unit, among other things.

"During the last intifada, we initiated hundreds of thousands of operations," he told reporters last week.

Advertisement

"The unit's achievements include killing some 50 suicide bombers before they were able to carry out their attack, killing 129 suspected terrorists on the wanted list, arresting 550 people wanted as terrorists and wounding 44 others. We also arrested 93 people for criminal reasons," he said, summing up Yamam's activity during the last intifada years.

"Most cases are not even reported in Israel. All the public hears about is traffic jams, but we act everywhere," he said.

Yamam was established in 1974 after the terror attack in Ma'alot (when members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine attacked a school and killed 26), and engages mainly in special anti-terror activity, cooperating closely with Israel Defense Forces' commando units, mainly the general staff's "reconnaissance unit" (Sayeret Matkal).

All Yamam fighters are former IDF combatants, many of them officers, who undergo a seven-month training course before joining Yamam.

The combatants, most of whom join Yamam in their late twenties, specialize in climbing and skiing, shooting, neutralizing bombs, working with dogs and other activities instrumental to release hostages.

They also train in advanced technology for their secret police work.

About four years ago, Dvir was critically injured in a traffic accident on the coastal road. He recovered against all odds and returned to his unit on crutches two and a half months later.

Dvir stopped by the roadside to help a man caught in a car that had overturned. He managed to extract the injured man with the help of another driver who joined him, but was then hit by a passing truck.

"They saved my life in Hillel Yaffe [hospital], where I was brought with my entire body crushed," he recalled.

"One of the things that motivated me to rehabilitate myself was my desire to return to the unit as fast as possible. I always believed in living the moment and experiencing life intensely, and the injury taught me how transient everything is. You never know how your day will end," he said.

The November 2002 murder of Revital Ohayon and her two children in Kibbutz Metzer by a member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades was the most difficult experience he had on the job.

"We saw the mother hugging her children and it pinched my heart," he said.

A year later, when his men apprehended the murderer, Dvir called the children's father and told him "the circle had closed."

Dvir will soon begin his new job as Amakim district police commander. The appointment of his successor, who had led a rebellion in the Yamam and fell out with his commanders, was controversial.

Bookmark to del.icio.us
Marking the disaster
20 Safed residents gather to remember the 1837 earthquake that killed 2,000 in the town.
How high can it go?
Real estate speculation of foreign residents is leading to fears the bubble will burst.
 Today Online
Shmuel Rosner: Carter's lies, and his Jewish critics
Responses: 313
Haniyeh: Rice is bringing 'perilous vision' to Mideast
Responses: 180
IDF curbs West Bank raids for duration of Rice visit
Responses: 90
Editorial: Down with racism
Responses: 101
Gov't planning 44 new housing units in Ma'aleh Adumim
Responses: 131
Rosner's Domain
* Has the war with Iran already started?
* Michael Oren: America's most fateful decision in the Middle East
* The Carter trap
* Poll: Does Barak deserve a second chance?


More Headlines
04:05 Secret understandings reached between representatives of Israel, Syria
04:09 BACKGROUND: From Turkey, via Europe, to Damascus
04:26 EXCLUSIVE: Full text of document drafted during secret talks
03:45 Haniyeh blasts Rice for bringing 'perilous vision' to Middle East
04:45 Sneh: Law not enforced with regard to Hebron settlers
22:32 Knesset plenum rules to extend 'Citizenship Law' by 3 months
20:10 Iran says expansion of uranium enrichment facilities is imminent
21:50 Two IDF officers get probation over deaths of Palestinians in 2002
22:49 Prosecution asks IDF to strip ex-Hezbollah captive of officer rank
23:11 Accountant General: Israel is the most corrupt country in the West
05:20 Leszek Kolakowski to receive Jerusalem Prize for Literature
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Skin Care Products
Shop high-class skin care cosmetics with Dead Sea minerals. Coupon code "haaretz" for 10% off.
JOIN FREE AT JDATE.COM
The most popular online Jewish dating community in the world! Explore the possibilities! Click Here!
ZAKA
Saving those who can be saved, honouring those who cannot
CAMP KIMAMA ISRAEL
Israel's international summer camps!
Learn Hebrew Online
Learn Hebrew from the best teachers in Israel live over the Internet
Home| Print Edition| Diplomacy| Opinion| Arts & Leisure| Sports| Jewish World| Underground| Site rules|
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved