's counsel's question: "The work of a security guard in Israel is identical to the work of a security guard in Judea and Samaria", his answer was: "In much more dangerous territories". When asked to clarify the difference between the work of a security guard in the Land of Israel and a security guard who works beyond the Green Line, he clarified: "There is a difference between a prison guard who works between 500 prisoners who are sentenced to life imprisonment, who have nothing to lose, and a prison guard who works between criminal prisoners who have something to lose. From a security perspective, there is no difference between a prison guard who works within the boundaries of the State of Israel and a prison guard who works beyond the Green Line... There is no difference (between the work of a security guard in the Land of Israel and the work of a prison guard who works beyond the Green Line - A.S.), the difference is only in the working conditions"; 12) In the continuation of his cross-examination, the witness admitted that what is stated in paragraph 8 of his affidavit is his conclusion. And when the witness was referred to paragraph 10 of his affidavit, in which he stated that the plaintiffs were fulfilling the conditions for receiving a supplement by serving in the Occupied Territories, he clarified that service in the Occupied Territories was the only condition for receiving a supplement. To the question - "I'm telling you that the police in Judea and Samaria received the increase in different years. How does this reconcile with what is stated in paragraph 10 of your affidavit?" he replied - "In every public institution distortions happen and they are corrected afterwards, and this is what happened here as well"; 13) When the witness was asked in the continuation of his cross-examination to detail what a Border Police officer was doing, he admitted that he was carrying out chases, catching wanted persons, entering villages, etc., and this was his routine activity.
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