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Date: March 22, 2024 at 09:35:58
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: New Yorker: The Brutal Conditions Facing Palestinian Prisoners

URL: https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/the-brutal-conditions-facing-palestinian-prisoners?s=09


The Brutal Conditions Facing Palestinian Prisoners

Since the attacks of October 7th, Israel has held thousands of people from
Gaza and the West Bank in detention camps and prisons.

By Isaac Chotiner
March 21, 2024

"Since the October 7th attacks, Israel has waged a devastating war in the
Gaza Strip, which has led to the deaths of more than thirty thousand
Palestinians. As part of that campaign, Israel has also detained thousands of
Palestinians from Gaza; prisoners who have been released have described
extensive physical abuse from Israeli forces, and, already, at least twenty-
seven detainees from Gaza have died in military custody. At the same time,
Israeli forces have arrested thousands more Palestinians, mostly from the
West Bank, at least ten of whom have reportedly died in Israel prisons.

The Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (P.C.A.T.I.) is an non-
governmental organization that was established in 1990, and represents
Palestinians and Israelis who claim to have been tortured by Israeli
authorities. I recently spoke by phone with Tal Steiner, its executive director.
During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, Steiner
and I discussed why so many prisoners have died in Israeli custody since
October 7th, the details of the harsh Israeli crackdown in the West Bank, and
how P.C.A.T.I.’s work is seen in Israel.

What do we know about what’s been happening in Israeli prisons since
October 7th?

We’re currently looking at almost ten thousand Palestinian detainees from
the West Bank and Gaza. Of those, we are looking at two groups of concern.
The first one consists of more than nine thousand “security” detainees,
mostly from the West Bank, who are being held in regular Israeli prisons—not
a new phenomenon but one that has changed since the start of the war.
That’s an increase of roughly a hundred per cent from normal years. It’s a
result of mass-arrest campaigns related to the war.

We know that this means extreme overcrowding of prisons. We’ve heard and
collected reports of cells that are designed to hold five or six people holding
as many as twelve, or more. We know that this has led to severe shortages of
food, of electricity, of sanitary conditions, of being able to walk outside. We
know that the International Committee of the Red Cross (I.C.R.C.) has been
banned from visiting all Israeli prisons since October 7th. We also know—
through evidence that P.C.A.T.I. and other N.G.O.s have collected—of what
we view as systemic abuse and violence by prison guards toward Palestinian
detainees since October 7th. We’ve documented nineteen different incidents
of torture and abuse in seven different Israel Prison Service (I.P.S.) facilities
by different I.P.S. units, all of which have led us to believe that we’re looking
at a policy rather than just isolated incidents. [A spokesperson for the I.P.S.
said that “all prisoners are detained according to the law” and that “all basic
rights required are fully applied by professionally trained prison guards.”]

When you said there was a hundred-per-cent increase, what is the time
period for that?

There is a dashboard at HaMoked, a partner N.G.O. here in Israel which
monitors incarcerations. In normal years, at any given moment, what you see
is between four thousand and five thousand security detainees, mostly from
the West Bank, in Israeli prisons. And, as I’ve said, since October 7th, the
most recent figures are currently more than nine thousand. So this is about a
hundred-per-cent increase. And we also see this through reports that the
I.P.S. has provided, during Knesset committee hearings, which report
overcrowding.

We have actually petitioned the Israeli Supreme Court, because we think this
overcrowding violates prior decisions by the Israeli Supreme Court that have
ordered the I.P.S. to provide minimum living space. Even before the war, we
were looking at less than four metres per person, which is below the
international standards of incarceration. But, since the start of the war, the
I.P.S. has actually been allowed both by legislators and, later on, by the
Supreme Court, to decrease even that, which means that people are now
being made to sleep on the floor. The I.P.S. doesn’t have the capacity to even
take the people it has detained out for regular walks outside. Prison
visitations have been limited.

You said that in normal times there are four thousand to five thousand
security detainees, mostly from the West Bank. These are prisoners that are
being held in Israel proper?

Yes, most of those prisons are within Israel proper, which in itself is a
violation of humanitarian international law. According to humanitarian law, an
occupying power cannot take residents of the occupied territory and
incarcerate them in its own territory, in the occupying power’s territory. It’s
part of the Geneva Conventions, but Israel has not been following that since
forever. The vast majority of Palestinian detainees from the West Bank are
incarcerated in prison facilities that are inside Israel proper.

Now, that is problematic for many reasons. Firstly, because it means that
detainees’ families are quite immediately disconnected from them. It makes it
much harder for families to visit. You have to remember that most Palestinian
detainees don’t have phone privileges, so they’re absolutely disconnected
from the outside world. Since October 7th, both visitations by the
International Committee of the Red Cross (I.C.R.C.) and family visitations that
the I.C.R.C. facilitates have been blocked. Beyond the very limited visits by
lawyers of N.G.O.s such as P.C.A.T.I., which have also been increasingly hard
to arrange, those people don’t see any visitors from the outside, and nobody
can learn of their situation. This is why collecting the evidence on the abuse
that they’ve been suffering is so crucial: because they cannot report it
otherwise.

So most of these people are being arrested by the military, but then going
into civilian prisons?

Yes. They’re taken into civilian prisons, but in different sections or wards of
the prison designated for what are called “security prisoners.” They can be
held there, sometimes with Israeli citizens who are also defined as security
inmates, or people suspected or charged or convicted for security-related
offenses.

So how does your group learn about, say, a Palestinian man arrested in the
West Bank by the Israeli military and brought into the I.P.S.?

We have a field worker in the West Bank, and families whose members have
been detained can reach out and give details. We also coöperate with
different Palestinian organizations representing prisoners. We can also learn
about it from the media. When there are wide-scale arrests in the West Bank,
it usually gets reported on. We compile a profile of the people who are most
likely to become victims of torture. We trace them, which means we
understand which prison they’ve been moved to, because one of the
problems is that the Israeli military doesn’t give Palestinians information
about the whereabouts of their family members.

The second thing is to arrange for a visit. We visit them as lawyers based on
their right to counsel. We take their narrative from the moment of the arrest,
subsequent interrogation, and incarceration, and identify if they’ve been
victimized; then we decide together with them what kind of representation
they want.

When you said you were concerned that in some of these cases torture was
a policy; what makes you think that?


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If a person is detained in an arrest that also has the presence of the Israeli
Security Agency (I.S.A.), for example, that means that, most likely, he’ll be
taken into interrogation. Again, I would say this is one of the things that make
this period of time unusual. Typically, P.C.A.T.I. would document cases of
torture within the framework of the I.S.A. interrogations. Since the start of the
war, the abuse that we’ve been documenting comes mostly from I.P.S. prison
guards, but that was not the case before this. I think that, before the war, the
Israel Prison Service understood its mission to be a professional custodial
agency. And, since October 7th, what we’ve been looking at—the type of
abuse, how random it is, how brutal it is—we see that as giving rise to a more
vengeful sentiment allowing prison guards to lash out at prisoners more
brutally and randomly than before.

You said you thought that, before October 7th, the I.P.S. was a professional
agency to some degree. But you’ve also documented a lot of torture in Israeli
prisons before October 7th. So how do you sort of synthesize this?

No, not to the same scale. Most cases of actual torture that we would
document were during interrogation—not so much during I.P.S. custody. I.P.S.
custody had different problems. The living conditions were not good, but we
didn’t see many cases of torture. There were a few a year, but not as many as
we’re seeing now. And I want to say that the incidents which we and our
partner organizations have documented are of extreme physical violence.
And we also have to note that, at the time of a report we and our partner
organizations sent, last month, to the U.N. special rapporteur on torture, at
least six Palestinian detainees had already died in I.P.S. facilities. Since then,
there have been reports of at least ten deaths in prison. That is also another
figure which is unprecedented. And, at least for some of those cases, there is
evidence leading to concerns that the deaths were linked with violence and
with medical negligence. This is a phenomenon that is new.

I want to ask you about the deaths, but when you say that, previously, abuses
happened while detainees are being interrogated by the Israeli Security
Agency, not held by the I.P.S., does that mean that these prisoners who are
deemed security risks are interrogated before they land in the prisons or
they’re taken out of the prisons and they undergo some sort of military
interrogation? What’s the distinction there?

Again, in normal times, a person who is targeted by the Israeli Security
Agency, is arrested by the military, then taken into interrogation in a specific
location operated by the I.S.A. And then, finally, he’s moved to I.P.S. facilities
to await his trial or to be detained administratively. It could also be the case
that a person, even after being convicted, would be taken into interrogation
again.

I’m not saying that torture in interrogations is not happening right now. It’s
likely that, as a result of this emergency situation and the attack on Israel,
many such detainees would be characterized as what we, in Israel, call a
“ticking time bomb” situation or people withholding information that may
jeopardize lives, which, in P.C.A.T.I.’s analysis, is a way of enabling and
legitimizing the use of torture. But those are the cases that we would learn
about only months from now because all of them are still denied counsel.
The I.S.A. does not allow visitors, and we’re unable to reach them. But the
cases that have emerged so far are those that have already concluded their
interrogation or perhaps were never interrogated in the first place and were
just placed in administrative detention or otherwise.

You mentioned reports of at least ten Palestinian detainees who died in I.P.S.
facilities in the past five months. Do you have some idea of how many
Palestinian detainees might die in I.P.S. facilities in a normal year?

One to two cases, usually of veteran detainees or prisoners, or elderly people
with prior medical conditions. The number of deaths we’re seeing in five
months is unprecedented. And many of them, by the way, have been younger
detainees, recently detained. All of those lead to the concern that violence
was involved in their deaths.

Do we have evidence about how they died?

There have been autopsies conducted on at least some of the deceased. We
know that our fellow-organization, Physicians for Human Rights—Israel, has
attended some of those autopsies.

In one other case, of a detainee who died in Ktzi’ot Prison, a police
investigation has been opened in regard to his death, and it has been
reported that nineteen prison guards have been removed from service and
will stay out of service until that investigation has concluded.

Let’s turn to Gaza, which you said in your very first answer was the second
part of this. What do we know about Palestinian detainees from Gaza since
October 7th?

A portion of them, more than six hundred, are people who were captured on
or after October 7th. They’re being held in the I.P.S. as well. Beyond that,
after cross-referencing some reports, we estimate that there are between a
few dozens and a few hundreds detainees from Gaza in military camps at any
given moment. Those are people who’ve been detained during the military
operation. The military invades a neighborhood, a hospital, some other
facility, and arrests many of the people there. And we’ve all seen the pictures
of men on trucks naked, often in very humiliating ways, and they’re taken into
three military camps that have been turned into detention camps.

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And I know this because the military commander had to make an
announcement that those military camps were serving as detention centers.
One is Sede Teiman, in the south of Israel. And the other two are Anatot and
Ofer, in the occupied territories. Those are military camps that have been
turned into ad-hoc detention centers. We don’t know the exact numbers
because the Israel Defense Forces (I.D.F.) would not release them. Many
people are detained, questioned. The ones who are identified as suspects
are held; the others are released or deported back into Gaza. This is how
we’ve learned of the very difficult conditions that the detainees are held in,
according to multiple reports in international media. They’re held in open-air
cages, and blindfolded and handcuffed; they can be subjected to physical
punishment, humiliation, and abuse. They’re made to sleep on the floor. It
gets very cold in the Israeli desert at night right now. It has been confirmed
that, already, twenty-seven people have died in those military camps. Now
those military camps are barring N.G.O.s and the media from entering. The
I.C.R.C. doesn’t visit, and our lawyers can’t visit. As far as we know, nobody
from the outside world has entry into these detention sites. [A spokesperson
for the I.D.F. cited security reasons for not disclosing the number of
detainees. The spokesperson said that “detainees who return to the Strip are
subject to the control of the terrorist organization which can harm them and
force them to speak out against the State of Israel against their will.” The
spokesperson added that the military acts in accordance with Israeli and
international law, and could not comment on pending investigations into the
deaths of the detainees.]

And we can also tell you that the people held in those military camps are
defined under a legal framework that’s totally different from that of West
Bank detainees. This is the legal framework that allows for them to be so far
removed from any access; it’s called the unlawful-combatants law.

Is this the 2002 law that allows Israel to detain people it deems to be unlawful
combatants?

Yes. The initial law was legislated in 2002 and has since been applied to a
few people each year, initially to Hezbollah combatants who had been
captured in Lebanon and brought to Israel. It has never been applied to so
many people at the same time. Again, we’re looking at possibly hundreds of
people being defined as illegal combatants. The more than six hundred
people from Gaza in I.P.S. custody are unlawful combatants, and so is
everybody else in the military camps.

On December 18th, the Knesset amended the law, basically eroding all the
minimal procedural safeguards that were there in the first place. So, right
now, according to this law, a person can be arrested without so much as an
arrest warrant for up to forty-five days. This detention can go up to seventy-
five days without judicial scrutiny, and, if a court judge decides it, a detainee
can be held for up to a hundred and eighty days without counsel. That’s six
months that a person can be held without having the right to visitation by a
lawyer.

What do you think about this number of twenty-seven Palestinians from
Gaza being killed or dying since October 7th? One of the reasons I wanted to
call you was that number jumped out at me.

This whole context is a new one for us. The number of deaths in regular
prison is way beyond any figure that we had seen a year ago. Twenty-seven
deaths in military camps in a span of five months is alarming because we
understand it in the context of the living conditions. People are brought into
those camps, and many of them could have been wounded because they’d
been captured in combat. They could have been elderly or unwell. Many of
them were captured in hospitals. We don’t have the exact numbers of the
age differentiation, but we do know from multiple reports that the living
conditions have been subhuman. Being forced to kneel most hours of the
day, blindfolded and handcuffed; being afforded very minimal medical care, if
at all.

This is also based on a procedure that was published by the Israeli Ministry
of Health stipulating in what manner detainees would receive medical
attention in those facilities—a procedure that disregards very basic ethical
standards of health care. Then you factor in the abuse, the physical
punishments, the fact that many Israeli hospitals have refused to give them
care since the onset of the war. This is the context in which we understand
those twenty-seven deaths.

How will you go about finding out how much torture occurred? What will you
be looking for, going forward?

Once this war ends and the emergency situation subsides, there will still be a
lot of work ahead of us. We will still need to gain access to prisons that are
for now limiting entry. We will need to gather more evidence, more testimony,
to gain the trust of victims to file complaints on their behalf. We’re not very
optimistic because Israel already had a huge accountability gap with
incidents of torture. We know that, even prior to the war, out of fourteen
hundred complaints of torture filed to the Ministry of Justice, zero cases
have resulted in indictments. And, again, those are numbers up to 2023.

Going back how far?

To 2001.

There have been fourteen hundred cases of torture complaints and zero
indictments?

So Israel already has a huge accountability gap which is perpetuated by the
Israeli judiciary and legislators. So of course the challenge, once the current
war is over, will even be bigger. We also understand that this is not solely our
responsibility. The responsibility is firstly for the Israeli legal system to
investigate those cases, and we expect and demand them to do exactly that.
To open public and thorough and sincere investigations into each incident of
death, and, where appropriate, to place criminal charges.

I imagine that, before October 7th, there was not always full-throated
support for your work within Israel. Do you feel a little bit like you’re howling
at the wind after October 7th?

Well, I would say that we are an Israeli N.G.O. which does a lot of protection
of Palestinian detainees, and our work has never been popular in Israel.
There’s been much criticism over our very uncompromising moral standard
that torture is absolutely prohibited under any circumstances. But of course,
since October 7th, since the tragedies that Israelis have experienced, the
atrocities that have been committed, I would say whatever little empathy the
mainstream Jewish Israeli audience had for our cause has been eroded to a
great extent. I can’t say that most Israelis or even a few of them support what
we do right now. We understand that, for Jewish Israelis, the empathy for the
conditions of these people is all but gone. "♦


Responses:
[53469]


53469


Date: March 23, 2024 at 15:15:52
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Free the Palestinians from Hamas while you are at it

URL: https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/10/23/palestine-authorities-crush-dissent



The 149-page report, “‘Two Authorities, One Way, Zero
Dissent:’ Arbitrary Arrest and Torture Under the
Palestinian Authority and Hamas,” evaluates patterns of
arrest and detention conditions in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, 25 years after the Oslo Accords granted
Palestinians a degree of self-rule over these areas and
more than a decade after Hamas seized effective control
over the Gaza Strip. Human Rights Watch detailed more
than two dozen cases of people detained for no clear
reason beyond writing a critical article or Facebook
post or belonging to the wrong student group or
political movement.

“Twenty-five years after Oslo, Palestinian authorities
have gained only limited power in the West Bank and
Gaza, but yet, where they have autonomy, they have
developed parallel police states,” said Tom Porteous,
deputy program director at Human Rights Watch. “Calls
by Palestinian officials to safeguard Palestinian
rights ring hollow as they crush dissent.”

Human Rights Watch interviewed 147 witnesses, including
former detainees and their relatives, lawyers, and
representatives of nongovernmental groups, and reviewed
photographic evidence, medical reports, and court
documents. The report reflects substantive responses to
the findings from the main security agencies implicated
in the underlying abuses.

Systematic arbitrary arrests and torture violate major
human rights treaties to which Palestine recently
acceded. Few security officers have been prosecuted and
none have been convicted for wrongful arrest or
torture, as far as Human Rights Watch has been able to
determine.

The European Union, the United States, and other
governments that financially support the Palestinian
Authority and Hamas should suspend aid to the specific
units or agencies implicated in widespread arbitrary
arrests and torture until the authorities curb those
practices and hold those responsible for abuse
accountable.

“The fact that Israel systematically violates
Palestinians’ most basic rights is no reason to remain
silent in the face of the systematic repression of
dissent and the torture Palestinian security forces are
perpetrating,” said Shawan Jabarin, executive director
of the Palestinian human rights organization al-Haq and
a member of the Human Rights Watch Middle East and
North Africa Advisory Committee.



Responses:
None


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