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53141


Date: March 08, 2024 at 03:57:03
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: 2 dozen + Palestinian captives have ‘died’ in Israeli detention camps

URL: https://mondoweiss.net/2024/03/operation-al-aqsa-flood-day-153-over-2-dozen-palestinian-captives-have-died-in-israeli-detention-camps/



‘Operation Al-Aqsa Flood’ Day 153: Over 2 dozen Palestinian captives
have ‘died’ in Israeli detention camps

At least 20 Palestinians have died as a result of malnutrition and
dehydration in Gaza, health officials say. Meanwhile, new reports from
Israeli media say 27 Palestinian captives who were being held in Israeli
"makeshift cages" have died.

BY LEILA WARAH MARCH 7, 2024

Palesitnian first responders pull an injured girl out of the rubble of a home
that was targeted in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza

PALESTINIANS RECOVER AN INJURED GIRL FROM THE RUBBLE OF A
DESTROYED HOUSE FOLLOWING AN ISRAELI AIR STRIKE, SOUTH OF DEIR
AL BALAH IN THE CENTRAL GAZA STRIP, ON MARCH 7, 2024. (OMAR
ASHTAWY APAIMAGES
Casualties

30,800+ killed* and at least 72,298 wounded in the Gaza Strip.
424+ Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.**
Israel revises its estimated October 7 death toll down from 1,400 to 1,147.
587 Israeli soldiers killed since October 7, and at least 3,221 injured.***
*Gaza’s Ministry of Health confirmed this figure on Telegram channel.
Some rights groups put the death toll number closer to 35,000 when
accounting for those presumed dead.

** The death toll in West Bank and Jerusalem is not updated regularly.
According to PA’s Ministry of Health on March 6, this is the latest figure.

*** This figure is released by the Israeli military, showing the soldiers
whose names “were allowed to be published.

Key Developments

27 Gaza detainees have died in custody at Israeli military facilities since
October 7, reports Haaretz.

Gaza Health Ministry: Two more people have died of starvation, bringing
the official death toll of those who have succumbed to malnutrition and
dehydration in Gaza to 20.

HaMoked: Israel is imprisoning 9,077 Palestinians, including over 3,500
without charge in administrative detention.

South Africa asks ICJ for additional emergency measures against Israel.
Israeli army says they assassinated Hamas commander Ammar Attiya
Darwish.

Poll: 72 percent of U.S. Muslim voters “disapprove” of Biden’s stance on
Gaza war.

Palestinian teenager shot by Israeli forces in Burin succumbs to injuries,
reports Wafa.

DCI: Israeli forces confiscate body of teen shot dead in the West Bank.
DCI: 108 Palestinian children have been killed in the West Bank since
October 7.

Israeli forces assault and arrest female Palestinian journalist Bushra al-
Tawil in Ramallah.

Palestinian Health Ministry: Israeli forces kill 83 people and wound 142
others in Gaza over 24 hours.

UNRWA to test Israeli military road as means of getting aid to northern
Gaza, reports Reuters.

In Gaza, death by starvation is on the rise

Palestinians inside besieged Gaza have been actively starved by Israel for
months, resulting in dire consequences. The situation is especially
difficult in the north of Gaza, where only trickles of aid are delivered, and
Palestinians are attacked by Israel when seeking out aid shipments.

The Gaza Health Ministry reported two more people dying of starvation on
Wednesday, bringing the official death toll of those who have succumbed
to malnutrition and dehydration in Gaza to 20.

In opposition to the lack of food and water entering the besieged enclave,
the children of Gaza are protesting, demanding swift action on the part of
Arab countries and the international community, reported Al Jazeera
Arabic on X.

In the southern city of Rafah, children marched with a banner saying,
“Stop our daily death.” Some carried burial shrouds on stretchers to
symbolize those who have died of hunger.

Amid the shocking image, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the World
Health Organization’s chief, has once again called for more aid to enter
Gaza amid reports of children dying from malnutrition in the besieged
enclave.

He said on X, “Children who survived bombardment may not survive a
famine. Allow more aid for Gaza. Ceasefire.”

UNRWA spokesperson Tamara Alrifai told Al Jazeera the situation in Gaza
is “so dire” and the despair “so high” that any passage of trucks becomes
an attraction to those who are starving.

“Ninety percent of the population today in Gaza is facing a high level of
acute food insecurity,” Alrifai said.

“Therefore anyone seeing a convoy of aid trucks going through their part
of Gaza will jump on these trucks out of hunger, despair and fear and will
try to help themselves onto these convoys — especially as we’re hearing
more and more about children under the age of two now dying of hunger-
related diseases and dehydration,” Alrifai added.

Accessing northern Gaza has been “a real challenge,” Alrifai said.

“More than half the requests by the UN altogether to bring much-needed
food, medical supplies, and clean water to the north have been rejected
by the Israeli authorities,” she explained, adding that UNRWA has not
been permitted to reach the area since January 23. “That’s almost six
weeks of us not being able to bring food and medical supplies to people
who are desperate and isolated in the north of Gaza.”

Jamie McGoldrick, the UN aid coordinator for Palestinian territories, says
the UN has been pushing the Israeli military for weeks to use an Israeli
military road bordering Gaza for humanitarian aid deliveries, reported
Reuters.

Israel has allegedly become “more cooperative” following an incident in
which its forces opened fire on Palestinian aid seekers in Gaza City, killing
more than 100 people, he said. Monodoweiss Gaza Correspondent Tareq
Hajjaj reported on the incident, which is known as the “Flour massacre.”

“Since the incident last week, I think Israel saw quite clearly how difficult
it is to deliver assistance,” McGoldrick said, adding that the UN had seen
“much more cooperation from Israel as a result of that realization.”

However, reports of Israeli forces attacking Palestinians waiting for aid
have continued.

On Wednesday morning, Al Jazeera reported Israeli forces opening fire on
people waiting for humanitarian aid, wounding eight people. The attack
took place at the Nabulsi roundabout in the southwest of Gaza City, the
same location as the attack which killed over 100 people, nicknamed the
‘flour massacre.’

Currently, aid is delivered to northern Gaza from Rafah in southern Gaza
and driven through the besieged Palestinian territory. The proposed new
route would see aid trucks escorted through Israeli territory, avoiding
fighting and insecurity.

27 Palestinians mysteriously die in Israeli custody

Since October 7, 27 detainees have died at military facilities in Israeli
custody, according to a new report from Haaretz. The circumstances
which the prisoners died in is not disclosed, however Palestinians have
been sharing testimonies of severe torture at the hands of Israeli military
and prison authorities for months.

The police are holding Palestinians in makeshift cages made of bars, with
no walls, beds or toilets, due to a shortage of prison cells, the report
states. The makeshift cage-like installation, which is surrounded by
improvised fences and has been in use for several weeks, has not been
“approved as a detention facility,” unlike formal Israeli prisons, which are
also notorious for their inhumane conditions.

Justice Gad Ehrenberg from the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court has
described the conditions as “unsuitable for humans,” and demanded that
this matter be addressed by the commander of the police’s Jerusalem
District.

In February, reports of torture and cruel treatment of Palestinians in
Israeli custody, including reports of sexual violence against Palestinian
women and girls surfaced, reaffirming the testimonies and claims of
Palestinian detainees and prisoners.

Thousands may be buried alive

The death toll in Gaza has surpassed 30,000 people, not including
thousands of people missing, likely trapped under the rubble of Israeli
attacks.

Hala Hazem Hamada, a 15-year-old girl in Gaza, was lucky enough to be
rescued after being trapped for three days in the rubble of an Israeli
attack that killed six of her relatives, including her parents and sister.

Hamada told AFP, as cited by Al Jazeera, that the bloodshed began on
Saturday when Israeli troops descended on the residential complex in
Khan Younis where her family – originally from northern Gaza – had
sought refuge.

“The Israeli soldiers shouted and asked us to evacuate, saying that the
Hamad area is a military zone and they are here to free the captives. But
we didn’t know where to go. My father said ‘Let’s wait for them to instruct
us where to go’,” she said.

“After a quarter of an hour, the house started collapsing on us [leveled by
bulldozers]. They started with the rooms, and we ran to other rooms and
were telling them we surrender and lift our hands, get us out! But no one
answered us back,” she said.

“All my family members were martyred except my sister Basant. She told
me, ‘I’m scared, save me. If you have a room, save me.’ I tried to find a
way to pull her out, but I couldn’t move, because the rubble is on my feet,
and my father is on my leg. I couldn’t move.”

Then Basant went silent, leaving Hala alone to wait out the long hours
before her rescue. Hala was finally pulled out of the rubble on Tuesday.

“I survived, but I want to see my family for the last time,” she told AFP.

“I saw my sister and father, but they have not been pulled out yet. They
are still under the rubble. I want to see them to at least say goodbye.”

Nothing left in Gaza

Israel has turned the besieged enclave into an open cemetery unfit for
people to live in. So much of the territory has been destroyed, and people
lack even the most essentials for survival. All the while, Israel continues
attacking the civilian population.

After five months of the war, top EU diplomat Josep Borrell says: “The
actions of the Israeli government in Gaza give the impression that its
objectives go beyond destroying Hamas,” quoting an Israeli general who
pledged to “turn Gaza into a place that is temporarily or permanently
impossible to live in.”

In a statement, Borrell has expressed concern over Israel’s killing of more
than 100 Palestinian aid seekers and said the incident shows that “the
international community needs to take decisive steps to save Gazan
civilians from both starvation and violence.”

“And indeed,” Borrell continued, “almost everything that allows a human
society to function has been destroyed: the civil register, property
register, cultural and health infrastructure, and most of the schools built
by UNRWA.”

The UN special rapporteur on the rights of internally displaced persons
(IDPs), Paula Gaviria Betancur, believes the Israeli government has “lost
all credibility” in its claims to protect civilians in the besieged territory.

To make matters worse, Netanyahu’s administration has continued to plan
a full-blown ground attack on Gaza’s southernmost city, Rafah, where
over half of the besieged enclave population is seeking shelter.

In a UN statement, Betancur appealed for an urgent end to the
“dehumanization of displaced Palestinians.”

Betancur said that Israel had used its evacuation orders to forcibly
transfer and confine civilians in “unlivable conditions” and that any
assault on Gaza’s Rafah city, where some 1.4 million Palestinians are
sheltering, would force people to flee to “conditions of certain death.”

“Although Rafah has already come under periodic attack by Israeli forces,
a full-scale ground assault would lead to unimaginable suffering,”
Betancur continued.

“Any evacuation order imposed on Rafah under the current conditions,
with the rest of Gaza lying in ruins, would be in flagrant violation of
international humanitarian and human rights law, forcing people to flee to
conditions of certain death – deprived of food, water, healthcare and
shelter,” the expert said.

Betancur has also said the world “must abandon the fiction that Israel will
respect the principles of international humanitarian and human rights law
in its military operations,” as cited by Al Jazeera.

“An immediate and permanent ceasefire, coupled with meaningful
measures to document and ensure accountability for atrocities as well as
secure the fundamental rights of Palestinians in Gaza, is the only path
forward for the sake of our shared humanity,” Betancur concluded.

Occupied West Bank: Illegal settlement expansion soars

As the world is focused on Israel’s attacks on Gaza, the Israeli government
has taken the opportunity to expand its illegal settlements in the occupied
West Bank. Israel has approved 3,500 housing units in three different
illegal settlements across the occupied West Bank for the first time since
October 7th.

The development follows an announcement from far-right settler and
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who said Israel would expand its
settlements in retaliation for a shooting that Palestinian gunmen carried
out at a settlement in February.

Meanwhile, Nablus Governor Ghassan Daghlas told Al Jazeera attacks by
settlers have risen since October 7, citing the killing or injuring of
residents, expansion of settlements, and expropriation of land, as well as
the looting and vandalizing of Palestinians’ property.

“This is all happening under the watchful eye of Israeli soldiers,” Daghlas
said.

“Nablus is also being subjected to a large-scale siege – one that is driven
by politics and not security. It is happening because of settler pressure to
break the city of Nablus because it is the economic capital of the West
Bank,” he continued.

“The international community must adhere to its laws and expose Israel as
criminal. If there is no real international pressure on the occupying state,
the situation is liable to explode,” he added.

Omar Ashour, a professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, told
Al Jazeera that the Israeli announcement of building 3,500 settlement
units in the occupied West Bank only seeks to increase violence against
Palestinians.

“We know that October 7 happened partly because of settlement
activities, escalations in Jerusalem, and the unresolved history of this
conflict,” Ashour said.

“This is basically taking us into a similar round of escalation. It means that
a peaceful resolution for this conflict is just getting further and further
away.”

Ashour added that an increase in settlement activities will face more and
more Palestinian resistance.

“Some of that will be violent, and we will see another cycle,” he said.
“We’re seeing a cycle at the moment, it will just escalate in terms of its
intensity, scale and scope.”

The Qatari foreign ministry, among several other countries, have
condemned Israel’s plans for settlement expansion.

In a press release shared on X, the Qatari ministry said Israel’s efforts to
“Judaize large parts of the West Bank” constitute a “flagrant violation of
international law” and undermine a potential two-state solution. It called
on the international community to pressure Israel to halt such settlement
policies.

Betancur has also said the world “must abandon the fiction that Israel will
respect the principles of international humanitarian and human rights law
in its military operations,” as cited by Al Jazeera.

“An immediate and permanent ceasefire, coupled with meaningful
measures to document and ensure accountability for atrocities as well as
secure the fundamental rights of Palestinians in Gaza, is the only path
forward for the sake of our shared humanity,” Betancur concluded.

South Africa asks ICJ for emergency measures against Israel

South Africa has asked the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to order
additional emergency measures against Israel to prevent the starvation of
Gaza’s population.

“The urgent application has been necessitated by widespread starvation
in Gaza, which has claimed the lives of at least 15 children in the past
week alone, with the actual numbers believed to be much higher,” the
South African presidency said in a statement, as reported by Independent
Press.

“United Nations experts warn that the number of deaths will increase
exponentially unless military activities are halted and the blockade is
lifted,” the statement continued, demanding that the court order an
immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

“The situation is urgent. South Africa has no choice but to approach the
Court for the strengthening of the Provisional Measures in place to try [to]
prevent full-scale famine in the Gaza Strip.”

South Africa added that Israel is breaching the measures the ICJ put in
place in January when it ordered Israel to refrain from any acts that could
fall under the UN’s Genocide Convention and to ensure its troops commit
no genocidal acts against Palestinians after South Africa accused Israel of
state-led genocide.

In February, South Africa had lodged an “urgent request” with the ICJ to
consider whether Israel’s military operations targeting Rafah breached
provisional orders the Court handed down on January 26, which was
rejected by the World Court.

Jonathan Kuttab, co-founder of Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq,
told Al Jazeera that South Africa’s latest request is “very proper under
international law.”

“People seem to forget that it is the obligation of Israel under international
law to provide food and basic services to the people under its
occupation,” he said.

“Not only has Israel failed to meet that obligation, it has also obstructed
and prevented others from bringing food in as part of a deliberate
strategy to starve the Palestinian people.”

However Al Jazeera’s Senior Political Analyst Marwan Bishara says any
efforts by South Africa or the International Court of Justice to push Israel
to take extra measures to protect civilian life in Gaza are unlikely to have
any effect.

“It seems like they can rest assured that the United States will protect
them as it has in the past,” he said.

“It’s been five months or more of the same. The Israelis, the Americans
tell us, give them assurances that they will allow humanitarian aid that will
reduce the casualties among the Palestinians, but they don’t do that. They
don’t follow through. If anything, it is turning into an insult to injury.”

“Israel is humiliating its allies. It’s embarrassing its partners in the West,
and it continues to carry on with his genocide.”

Still, Francesca Albanese, UN special rapporteur on the human rights
situation in the occupied Palestinian territories, has expressed “pure
gratitude and admiration” on X for South Africa’s new appeal to the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) over Israel’s war on Gaza.


Responses:
[53169] [53146] [53156] [53161] [53171] [53175] [53147] [53168] [53184] [53157]


53169


Date: March 09, 2024 at 03:42:37
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Haaretz: 27 Gaza Detainees Have Died in Custody at Israeli Military Fa

URL: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2024-03-07/ty-article/.premium/27-gaza-detainees-died-in-custody-at-israeli-army-facilities-since-the-start-of-the-war/0000018e-1322-d950-a18e-f3bbaa370000?lts=1709983828732


Israeli soldiers arresting Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, in December

Haaretz Exposé | 27 Gaza Detainees Have Died in Custody at Israeli Military
Facilities Since the Start of the War

Detainees who have been returned to Gaza have testified about harsh
treatment, including beatings and abuse by soldiers and during questioning.
IDF spokesperson says the military has opened investigations into the deaths

Hagar Shezaf
Mar 7, 2024

27 Gaza detainees have died in custody at Israeli military facilities since the
outbreak of the war, according to figures obtained by Haaretz.

The detainees died at the Sde Teiman and Anatot facilities or during
questioning in Israeli territory. The IDF Spokesperson's Office said the
Investigative Military Police has opened investigations into the deaths. The
IDF did not detail the circumstances of the deaths, but said that some
suffered from prior health conditions or were wounded during the war.

Some detainees have been released and returned to Gaza. In addition, Gazan
workers with permits who were in Israel at the outbreak of the war were held
at the Anatot detention camp until most were released back to the Strip. A
source told Haaretz that at least one of them, a diabetic, died there, after not
receiving medical treatment. In December, Haaretz revealed that detainees at
Sde Teiman were held while handcuffed and blindfolded throughout the day.

Pictures later published by Haaretz revealed what the location where the
detainees were held looked like, and a source there said that soldiers tended
to punish and beat detainees, which matches testimonies of Palestinians
who were later returned to Gaza.

They testified about beatings and abuse by soldiers and during questioning.

Pictures of released detainees showed bruises and marks on their wrists
from prolonged handcuffing. According to a UNRWA report published by The
New York Times on Tuesday, detainees released to Gaza testified that they
were beaten, robbed, stripped, sexually assaulted and prevented access to
doctors and lawyers.

In late February, Azzadin Al Bana, a 40-year-old man from Gaza who suffered
from serious illness before his arrest, died at a Prison Service clinic. The
Committee on Prisoner Affairs stated that Al Bana was arrested at his home
in the Gaza Strip about two months ago. Haaretz learned that Al Banna was
first brought to the Sde Teiman base and initially held in regular detention
there, and only transferred to the Sde Teiman medical facility two weeks
later. About a month ago, he was transferred to a Prison Service clinic.

The Sde Teiman base where Gazan detainees are held.Credit: Eliyahu
Hershkovitz

A lawyer who recently visited the clinic said that prisoners there said he
suffered from paralysis and had serious pressure wounds. According to the
lawyer, one of the prisoners said Al Bana appeared yellow and made dying
sounds but did not receive proper treatment. Prison Service data sent to
HaMoked Center for the Defense of the Individual shows that, as of March 1,
793 Gaza residents were held in jails administered by the prison service
under the status of unlawful combatants. This is in addition to an unknown
number of Gazans held in military detention facilities.

The IDF Spokesperson's Office said in response, "Since the start of the war,
the IDF has been operating a number of detention facilities, which are
holding detainees, who were arrested during the Hamas assault on October 7
or during the ground campaign in the Gaza Strip. The detainees were
brought to the detention facilities and questioned. Anyone found to have no
connection to terrorist operations was released back to the Gaza Strip.

Since the outbreak of the war, there have been a number of cases of deaths
of detainees held at prison facilities, including detainees who arrived to
detention wounded or suffering from complex medical conditions. Every case
of death is investigated by the Investigative Military Police, and the findings
are sent to the Military Advocate General at the conclusion of the
investigation."


Responses:
None


53146


Date: March 08, 2024 at 13:58:12
From: Mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Pay attention ...



"The Israeli soldiers shouted and asked us to evacuate,
saying that the
Hamad area is a military zone and they are here to free
the captives. But
we didn’t know where to go. My father said ‘Let’s wait
for them to instruct
us where to go’,” she said."

That is a civilian response to a military order and it
is life-threatening misunderstanding.

Some years ago the Israelis began training policeman in
the US and Iraqi war soldiers came home and became
policeman. People died thinking they had time to
comply with an order, that they could bully their way
out of it or had choice in how to obey.
They didn't. Non-compliance is a killing/suicidal
offense in the military. Never, never, ever make that
mistake.

My earliest words included " max shnell".



Responses:
[53156] [53161] [53171] [53175] [53147] [53168] [53184] [53157]


53156


Date: March 08, 2024 at 17:57:38
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: I'm not stopping you


reading comprehension issues?

"Since October 7, 27 detainees have died at military facilities in Israeli
custody, according to a new report from Haaretz. The circumstances
which the prisoners died in is not disclosed, however Palestinians have
been sharing testimonies of severe torture at the hands of Israeli military
and prison authorities for months.

The police are holding Palestinians in makeshift cages made of bars, with
no walls, beds or toilets, due to a shortage of prison cells, the report
states. The makeshift cage-like installation, which is surrounded by
improvised fences and has been in use for several weeks, has not been
“approved as a detention facility,” unlike formal Israeli prisons, which are
also notorious for their inhumane conditions. "


Responses:
[53161] [53171] [53175]


53161


Date: March 08, 2024 at 19:23:28
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: I'm not stopping you




No. I don't have reading comprehension issues, although
I will occasionally make mistakes, not this time.

These people were in a "residential complex " not a
prison facility with no walls.

But that wasn't the point of my post, anyway.

Just so your "reading comprehension issue" can be
corrected, here is a more extensive cut from your
original post of which I took the middle paragraph.

"Hamada told AFP, as cited by Al Jazeera, that the
bloodshed began on
Saturday when Israeli troops descended on the
residential complex in
Khan Younis where her family – originally from northern
Gaza – had
sought refuge.

“The Israeli soldiers shouted and asked us to evacuate,
saying that the
Hamad area is a military zone and they are here to free
the captives. But
we didn’t know where to go. My father said ‘Let’s wait
for them to instruct
us where to go’,” she said.

“After a quarter of an hour, the house started
collapsing on us [leveled by
bulldozers]. They started with the rooms, and we ran to
other rooms and
were telling them we surrender and lift our hands, get
us out! But no one
answered us back,” she said."






Responses:
[53171] [53175]


53171


Date: March 09, 2024 at 04:50:47
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: you've conflated war crimes(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
[53175]


53175


Date: March 09, 2024 at 10:56:16
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: you've conflated war crimes(NT)


knock it off...you're gonna make yourself sick...


Responses:
None


53147


Date: March 08, 2024 at 14:51:37
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Pay attention ...


those were prisoners in custody. God knows.


Responses:
[53168] [53184] [53157]


53168


Date: March 08, 2024 at 21:54:11
From: Mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Pay attention ...




It was the Palestinians' story. They gave civilian
response ( wait instead of act ) to military orders.
Some died.

The point is: To survive a military order, snap to and
offer no resistance, obey immediately.

They have a mission, it will be accomplished and if you
are between the soldier and his mission, move!

Max shnell.




Responses:
[53184]


53184


Date: March 09, 2024 at 15:24:28
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Pay attention ...


how about the elderly man hiding under his bed and the
isralie shot him. i saw the isralie cam video of it.
God know who was responsible for the mans death. i am
praying for israel but i have no sympathy for her
leaders. they are lying to the common folks.


Responses:
None


53157


Date: March 08, 2024 at 17:58:50
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Pay attention ...


a sane person who can read! thank you Charles.


Responses:
None


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