Reuters - Anat Kamm (C) is seen inside a courtroom in Tel Aviv District Court October 30, 2011.
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel's Supreme Court
on Monday shortened by a year the 4-1/2-year prison term of a soldier
who gave a journalist classified military documents, some relating to
operations against Palestinian militants.
Ruling on Anat Kamm's
appeal against the length of her sentence, the court said it was
disproportionate to the penalty of four months of community service
imposed on Uri Blau, a reporter for Haaretz, an Israeli left-wing daily.
Some of the 700 classified documents copied by Kamm, a clerk in a general's headquarters during her 2005-2007 army service, were the basis for reports by Blau that some assassinations of Palestinian militants authorized by senior officers may have violated Israeli law.
In 2006, the Supreme Court ruled the military had the right to assassinate members of Palestinian groups that Israel classifies as terrorist organizations. But the court said planners must have "strong and convincing" information that a killing is necessary and always try to avoid harming bystanders.
Although Blau's reports were submitted to the military censor, who approved their publication, he was accused of illegally possessing classified documents and agreed to a plea bargain in July.
Kamm, who cited
ideological motives for her actions, admitted in a plea bargain to
charges of espionage, collection and possession of secret information
and passing it onwards. She began serving her sentence in November 2011.
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