Israel's Supreme Court will review the army's proposed punishment for two soldiers who were filmed abusing a Palestinian. The court said it would look at the case Tuesday in response to a request from a human rights group that thinks the army's indictment is too lenient. The video was released by Israeli rights group B'Tselem last month. It shows a soldier firing a rubber bullet toward the foot of a West Bank man whose hands were bound and eyes were blindfolded. The bullet bruised the 27-year-old man's toe. After the incident became public, the commanding officer at the scene and the sergeant who fired the bullet were indicted on the relatively minor charge of “unbecoming conduct.” The officer also resigned and was reassigned. The military has until the end of September to respond. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is to be questioned this week over allegations of graft, for the sixth time since May, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said on Tuesday. Friday's questioning, to take place at Olmert's official residence in Jerusalem, should last two and a half hours, Rosenfeld said. It will be the third such interview since the beleaguered premier announced on July 30 he would step down after his centrist Kadima party holds primary elections in mid