Israeli nuclear whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu went on trial today on charges of violating terms of his release from prison by talking to foreign reporters and trying to visit the West Bank.
Vanunu (50) was released last April after serving an 18-year term for revealing secrets about the Dimona nuclear reactor to a British newspaper. The revelations of the former technician led experts to conclude that Israel had nuclear weapons.
Mordechai Vanunu
"It is shameful to Israeli democracy to bring me back to court after all those years in prison," Vanunu said outside the Jerusalem court. "This case is proving to the world that Israel is not a real democracy.
"As a human being, I have the right to express my political views and my ideas. I have no more secrets," he said.
Under the terms of Vanunu's release, he was forbidden from speaking to foreign media and had to remain inside Israel. If convicted of violating the bans, he could be jailed for up to two years.
Vanunu did not enter any plea in court as his lawyer challenged the validity of the case. The next hearing is due on May 19th.
The bans are due to be reviewed this month. The Justice Ministry said in a statement that an extension was being considered but that Vanunu would be allowed to plead his case and a final decision had yet to be made.
An indictment filed in a Jerusalem court last month charged him with 21 counts of violating the restrictions.
It quoted Vanunu as saying Israel had assembled hydrogen and neutron bombs at Dimona and was annually producing 40 kg (88 lb) of plutonium, enough to make 10 atomic bombs, at the facility.
Last November, police arrested Vanunu, a convert to Christianity, at the Jerusalem church where he has lived since he left jail, on suspicion of having spilled more state secrets to the foreign press.
He was later released to house arrest and has remained under constant surveillance by Israeli security services.
The indictment also charged him with violating a ban on travel overseas or to the Palestinian territories.