
Knesset Passes “Shai Daromi Law”
Tuesday, June 24 — The Knesset
passed the “Shai Daromi
Law” on its second and third readings, completing the legislative process. The
law is now on the books.
The law determines that deadly
force may be used against intruders into a person’s home or property without
rendering the homeowner liable to prosecution.
The law was passed in response to
the Shai Daromi case. Daromi, a Jewish rancher in the Negev,
shot at two Bedouin breaking into his ranch to steal livestock, killing one and
wounding the other. Like other Jewish farmers in the area, Daromi
suffered repeated break-ins and thefts from burglars who frequently bore arms.
The State Prosecution indicted Daromi for
manslaughter. With the passage of the “Shai Daromi Law” the case against Daromi
is expected to be dismissed.
The Daromi
affair has nationalist overtones, due to widespread perceptions that Beduin in the Negev, beside engaging in widespread illegal seizures of public
land, are victimizing Jewish farmers. The indictment of Daromi
was widely perceived as signaling that Jewish farmers could expect the State
Prosecution to be hostile to their attempts to defend themselves and their
property. The Daromi law is aimed as much at the
policy of the State Prosecution as at intruders and housebreakers..