Saturday, September 14, 2024

Rape, torture and murder: Inside Israel’s concentration camps

Tamara Nassar The Electronic Intifada 13 September 2024
Palestinians released from Israeli detentions are taken for medical examination at al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital in Deir al-Balah on 17 July 2024. Ali HamadAPA images

When Israelis rioted in July in support of 10 soldiers accused of gang-raping a Palestinian prisoner, there was disgust and shock around the world.

But the horrifying sexual attack was far from an aberration.

Firsthand testimonies reveal that Israeli personnel are systematically inflicting rape and other forms of sexual violence, torture and cruel abuse on thousands of Palestinians held in a network of prison camps.

While Israel has perpetrated these kinds of attacks on Palestinians in its prisons for decades, they have increased dramatically in quantity and intensity since 7 October, amid an atmosphere of state-sanctioned and directed revenge.

B’Tselem is aware of at least 60 Palestinians deaths in Israeli detention since 7 October, though the figure could be higher.

And while Israel’s claims of rapes and sexual assaults by Palestinians on 7 October lack even a single identified victim or firsthand testimony, any forensic evidence or credible eyewitnesses, the rapes and other sexual attacks on Palestinians are documented with a large and growing body of horrifying and consistent victim accounts and witness statements.

In the case that prompted the so-called “right to rape” riots, a Palestinian detainee at the notorious Sde Teiman concentration camp in the Negev desert, east of the Gaza Strip, had been gang-raped and severely injured by a group of Israeli soldiers.

Ten soldiers were initially arrested on suspicion of participating in the assault. Five of them have been released. Five are in home detention.
Ruptured bowel, broken ribs

The Palestinian detainee, who has not been identified, is from Gaza.

He had “suffered from a ruptured bowel, a severe injury to his anus, lung damage and broken ribs,” Tel Aviv daily Haaretz reproted, citing information it had obtained.

The doctor who treated the detainee, Yoel Donchin, “confirmed that something round had been inserted deep into the detainee’s rectum,” according to The Times of Israel.

The prosecutor in the case said that two reservists and their commander woke the detainee up from sleep and beat him for at least 15 minutes before dragging him across the floor.

The detainee was electrocuted with a taser, according to Haaretz.

One of the soldiers then inserted an object into his rectum. Haaretz said 100 different testimonies contributed to the evidence.

This appears consistent with leaked surveillance footage from Sde Teiman shows over 30 people lying face down, some shirtless, in what appears to be a warehouse-like area surrounded by barbed wire. Their hands appear restrained behind their heads.

Two Israeli soldiers lift one of the men lying face-down and move him to another side of the room, where other soldiers are holding transparent anti-riot shields. Another camera angle shows at least five soldiers, three of them holding shields, doing something to the man, though exactly what is unclear as the video is blurred.

The video is said to show the rape of the Palestinian detainee.

The arrest of the soldiers ignited protests at the Beit Lid military base where they were held for questioning. Lawmakers and members of the public rallied to defend the accused soldiers and their right to rape and torture Palestinians.

Far from representing only an extreme fringe, in Israel’s already radically anti-Palestinian society, the protests represent broader public sentiment among Israeli Jews that abuse of Palestinians in Israeli captivity, including sexual assault, is justified, or at least excusable.

Two-thirds of Israeli Jews believe that the soldiers should only be disciplined at the military command level, not criminally prosecuted, even if there is strong evidence of their guilt, according to a poll published by the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) at Tel Aviv University on 18 August.

Israelis, including masked reservists, hold signs reading, “The hero soldiers should be released,” as they rally in support of soldiers accused of raping a Palestinian detainee, at Beit Lid military base, 30 July 2024. Matan GolanSIPA USA

One of the Israeli rape suspects went on live national television to defend his actions. He was wearing his military uniform and a mask showing only his eyes.

He then posted a video online proudly revealing his face to the world.




“Welcome to hell”

As noted, this case is far from unique.

Israeli guards repeatedly inflicted sexual violence on detainees, according to a number of testimonies since 7 October. Though they echo previous allegations as well.

This includes blows to the genitals and bodies of naked prisoners, including with metal tools and batons, photographing them naked, grabbing genitals and performing strip searches “for the sake of humiliation and degradation,” B’Tselem found in its report, titled “Welcome to Hell.”

The report’s title is derived from a remark made by an Israeli soldier to a Palestinian prisoner upon his arrival at Megiddo prison. The same phrase was also posted on a sign at the entrance of a wing at Ketziot prison, according to another testimony.
Testimonies also detailed gang sexual violence and assault against prisoners by guards or soldiers.



In multiple cases, as per firshand and witness testimonies, Israeli authorities attempted to, or did in fact, rape detainees using different objects.

The many testimonies documenting torture and sexual violence at Sde Teiman reveal a “grim pattern of abuse,” Palestinian prisons group Addameer said.

One 41-year-old man told of his sexual assault by Israeli personnel to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA.

“They made me sit on something like a hot metal stick and it felt like fire – I have burns [in the anus],” he told UNRWA under the condition of anonymity.

“They asked us to drink from the toilet and made the dogs attack us,” he added.

“There were people who were detained and killed – maybe nine of them. One of them died after they put the electric stick up his [anus]. He got so sick; we saw worms coming out of his body and then he died.”

The man featured in a now infamous picture published by CNN told reporters he had also been raped by his Israeli captors at Sde Teiman.

Ibrahim Atif Salem said female soldiers touched his private parts, according to Middle East Eye, and he had objects inserted into his rectum.

Salem said this was not uncommon, but that it was tough for Palestinians to speak about this – as it would be for anyone – especially when detainees were raped by female Israeli soldiers, often teenagers.



Israeli female personnel participate in sexual attacks

Salem told the story of a fellow prisoner in his forties who opened up to him about his own rape by a female Israeli soldier.

“It was common practice for soldiers to strip detainees naked, insert objects into their rectum and grab their genitals aggressively when they changed,” MEE reported.

“He told me he was raped by a female soldier,” Salem told MEE.

The prisoner told Salem that he would be handcuffed and bent over a desk. A female Israeli soldier would insert her fingers and other objects into his rectum in the presence of another soldier.

A Palestinian resident of Hebron who had been detained since April 2022 told B’Tselem how his Israeli captors tried to rape him with a carrot.



Identified as A.H., the husband and father had been held in Ketziot prison in the southern Naqab region. He described an incident on 29 October 2023 when a special Israeli prison force raided his wing.

He said prisoners had poured water on the floor of the cell to mop, but Israeli forces assumed they had done so in order that guards would slip. They dragged detainees out of the cell and beat them.

“Two of them stripped me like the other prisoners, and then threw me on top of the other prisoners. One of them brought a carrot and tried to shove it in my anus,” A.H. told his B’Tselem interviewer.

“While he was trying to shove the carrot in, some of the others filmed me on their cell phones. I screamed in pain and terror. It went on like that for about three minutes.”

Buried deep in a New York Times report is a firsthand testimony describing a female soldier ordering a metal rod to be inserted into the rectum of a Palestinian detainee.

Younis al-Hamlawi, 39, a senior nurse abducted by Israeli forces in November after leaving al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, told the Times how he was raped by his Israeli captors

A female Israeli officer ordered two soldiers to lift al-Hamlawi and “press his rectum against a metal stick that was fixed to the ground,” The New York Times reported.

“Mr. al-Hamlawi said the stick penetrated his rectum for roughly five seconds, causing it to bleed and leaving him with ‘unbearable pain.’”
Systemic abuse

Since 7 October, Israeli authorities converted “more than a dozen Israeli prison facilities, both military and civilian” into a “network of camps dedicated to the abuse of inmates,” B’Tselem said.

While extensive reports highlighted abuse at Sde Teiman, the B’Tselem report reveals that a similar pattern of abuse was widespread in Israeli detention centers across historic Palestine.

Testimonies by former detainees “uncover a systemic, institutional policy focused on the continual abuse and torture of all Palestinian prisoners.”

Prisoners are “treated as a homogenous, faceless mass,” whether they are doctors, teenagers or members of the armed wing of a Palestinian group.

“All are deemed ‘human animals’ and ‘terrorists’ simply because they are behind bars, whether their detention was justified or arbitrary, lawful or not. This is how abuse, degradation and the violation of rights becomes permissible,” B’Tselem wrote.
It is “worst time in the history of Palestinians in Israeli prisons,” said Sami Khalil, a 41-year-old resident of Nablus in the northern occupied West Bank who had been imprisoned since 2003. He was held in the Ketziot prison in the southern Naqab region.



The abuse consistently described “is so systemic, that there is no room to doubt an organized, declared policy of the Israeli prison authorities,” B’Tselem said.

After 7 October, “the prison administration collectively punished us on a regular basis,” S.B., a resident from Jerusalem, told B’Tselem.

Detainees are held in severely overcrowded cells and rarely let out to shower. They are denied access to the yard, some “for their entire incarceration, which sometimes lasted six months or more,” B’Tselem reported.

“For 191 days, I didn’t see the sun,” Thaer Halahleh, a 45-year-old father of four from Kharas, near Hebron in the West Bank, told B’Tselem.

Increasingly frequent roll calls and searches provide guards an opportunity to carry out beatings. But guards need no excuse to abuse prisoners.
“Prisoners are brutally attacked at every stage of detention and incarceration,” B’Tselem found.



Israeli soldiers, prison guards and prison special forces all participated in this violence, beating prisoners with clubs, metal batons, gun barrels, brass knuckles and sticks. They punched, kicked and set dogs on prisoners. These attacks caused severe injuries, including loss of consciousness, broken bones and death.

A 53-year-old father of five from Hebron, Ashraf al-Muhtaseb, described an attack by members of a special unit under the pretext of searching the cell for a radio.

“I couldn’t move or breathe for half an hour. Everyone around me was screaming in pain, and some inmates were crying. Most were bleeding. It was a nightmare beyond words,” he told B’Tselem.

A 30-year-old father of two from Gaza City, said he was electrocuted in the neck by a female soldier during interrogation.

Israel used sleep deprivation, a form of torture, as part of the routine abuse of Palestinians as well. Prison authorities also established an environment of systemic abuse by isolating Palestinian prisoners from the outside world.

Family visits were barred, access to lawyers was restricted and media coverage was effectively prohibited, leaving prisoners with almost no external contact.

This created a climate of isolation: prisoners received minimal news of the outside world, often relying on newly detained Palestinians for updates.

At the same time, the isolation created a blackout: Conditions inside Israeli detention centers were largely hidden from external observation, enabling prison authorities to mistreat, torture and abuse detainees with minimal oversight and maximum impunity.

“Prisoners seem to vanish off the face of the earth once taken into custody,” B’Tselem said.
As hearings were primarily conducted remotely, Israeli judges were seldom exposed to signs of abuse on Palestinian prisoners. In the rare instances when prisoners dared to tell the judges, Israeli guards beat them in revenge, testimonies given to B’Tselem document.



Before 7 October, there were nearly 5,200 Palestinians in Israeli detention.

By last month, the number of Palestinians in Israeli captivity exceeded 9,600 Palestinians, with almost half held without charges, without trial, without being informed of the evidence or allegations against them and without access to legal defense.

Israel in recent months “disappeared thousands of Palestinians,” B’Tselem said, and “many of them are still missing at the time of publication.”
The struggle of prisoners

In July, Israel’s high court issued a conditional order to shutter the Sde Teiman camp in connection with another lawsuit.

The state reportedly responded to the high court by saying there were now only 28 Paletinians remaining at the Sde Teiman camp.
The terrible reality endured by Palestinian prisoners underscores why Hamas insists on securing the release of a number of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli custody in exchange with Israeli captives taken on 7 October.



“The prison system is one of the most violent and oppressive state mechanisms that the Israeli regime uses to uphold Jewish supremacy between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea,” B’Tselem said.

The numbers speak for themselves.

“Since 1967, Israel has imprisoned over 800,000 Palestinian men and women from the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and the Gaza Strip, which accounts for about 20 percent of the total population and about 40 percent of all Palestinian men,” B’Tselem stated.

Independent UN human rights experts said in August that “most Palestinian detainees are de facto hostages of an awful occupation,” referring to the legal opinion of the International Court of Justice on Israel’s occupation.

Israel’s policy of mass detentions since 7 October has undoubtedly been partly spurred by a desire to increase the number of prisoners to use in any exchange.

Indeed, “an amiable police officer” admitted as much during a briefing to recruited Israeli soldiers, according to a female reservist who spoke to Haaretz on condition of anonymity.

“It’s important for you to understand, for the return of the hostages we need to return prisoners, so we’re holding them for the deals. At the moment, they are a strategic asset of the [Israeli military],’” she recalled the officer saying.

Tamara Nassar is associate editor of The Electronic Intifada.
Third man 'self-immolates' to protest Israel's Gaza genocide, US complicity

Matt Nelson of Boston reportedly sets himself on fire outside Israeli consulate, becoming latest individual in US to self-immolate to protest Israel's genocidal war in Gaza being carried out with American weapons.



Matt Nelson recorded this video before he reportedly self-immolated outside of the Israeli consulate in Boston. / Photo: YouTube

Matt Nelson, an anti-war activist, has reportedly self-immolated in protest against the US complicity in Israel's genocidal war on Gaza and its impact on the Palestinian people.

On Wednesday, before the self-immolation, a video surfaced on YouTube in which Nelson condemned the Biden administration for its material and political support of Israel's brutal siege and carnage in Gaza.

"My name is Matt Nelson and I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest," he says in the video.

"The protest I’m about to engage in is a call to our government to stop supplying Israel with the money and weapons it uses to imprison and murder innocent Palestinians, to pressure Israel to end the genocide in Gaza, and to support the ICC indictment of Benjamin Netanyahu and other members of the Israeli government," he says.

He continues, "We call ourselves the greatest nation in history yet we spend more on weapons of war than we do on educating our children helping the homeless and ensuring all Americans have equal rights and protecting the environment combined."

At the end of the video, he calls upon those who "are of the same mind" to demand American members of Congress to act on the stated goals of his act of protest.

"A democracy is supposed to serve the will of the people, not the interests of the wealthy."

He concludes by leaving viewers with a succinct urge: "Take the power back [and] free Palestine."






TRT World contacted the media relations bureau of the Boston Police Department but received no comment thus far.




'Free Palestine': Self-immolators' final message

Nelson's is the third reported case since October 7 of an American citizen self-immolating outside an Israeli embassy or consulate to protest the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people and the Biden administration's complicity.

In December of 2023, an unknown protester set herself on fire outside of the Israeli Consulate in Atlanta. Officials who arrived at the site recounted it as an "act of extreme political protest". A Palestinian flag was found near the site of the self-immolation.

On February 25 of this year, Aaron Bushnell, an active duty US Air Force member, self-immolated in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC. He died of his injuries after being taken to a hospital; until he was no longer able, he repeatedly yelled, "Free Palestine."


Israel's genocide in Gaza

Israel has killed more than 41,000 Palestinians and wounded nearly 100,000 others in nearly 11 months of war.

But experts and some studies say this is just a tip of the iceberg and the actual Palestinian death toll could be around 200,000 or higher.

Some 10,000 Palestinians are feared buried under the rubble of their bombed homes. Another 10,000 have been abducted by Israel and put in Israeli jails and torture chambers.

Israeli bombardment has laid waste to much of Gaza and displaced almost the entire 2.4 million population. Israel is accused of carrying out genocide in Gaza in the International Court of Justice while prosecutors at the International Criminal Court are seeking arrest warrants for extremist Israeli leaders including Benjamin Netanyahu.


SOURCE: TRT World
Lead author of Israeli Army's ethics code says troops violating it in Gaza

Asa Kasher, 84-year-old originator who authored Israeli military's Code of Ethics, says "many thousands of non-involved Gazans" have been killed by Israel, challenging the ethical commitment of invading troops.




REUTERS

Israeli army’s so-called ‘moral code’— which pledges to protect civilians — has been brazenly disregarded time and again. / Photo: Reuters

As Israel's relentless bombing of besieged Gaza drags on its 344th day, the integrity of the Israeli Army's ethical standards continues to face intense scrutiny.

In a sharp piece in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Asa Kasher, an 84-year-old originator who is the lead author of the Israeli Army’s Code of Ethics and a known supporter of Israel's policies in the region, asked a pointed question: Are Israeli soldiers disregarding the very code they were meant to uphold?

"Many thousands of non-involved Gazans have died, a fact which has to be considered by anyone whose principles include the sanctity of human life," Kasher warned.

While the moral implications of Israel's nearly year-long war and the actions of its troops in Gaza are deeply troubling, Kasher's concern revolves around the principle of preserving human life — a core tenet missing from the Israeli Army’s doctrine.



"There are many aspects to the principle of preserving human life, including safeguarding the lives of citizens, residents, and soldiers, and taking care not to harm Gazans who are not involved…," he wrore in the essay.


Kasher argued that this requires military operations to minimise harm to civilians who are not engaged in hostilities. However, the fact remains that colossal civilian casualties in Gaza starkly challenge this ethical commitment.

A CNN investigation in May this year uncovered that Israeli troops routinely subjected Palestinian detainees to restraint and blindfolding, forcing them to sit or stand under floodlights. Additionally, wounded Palestinians were strapped to beds, made to wear diapers, and fed through straws.


"Every aspect of intentional harm to non-combatants is wrong: It violates the duty to preserve human dignity, it violates the principle of distinguishing between hostile forces and non-combatants according to the just war theory, and it violates the IDF (Israeli Army's) value of the purity of arms," Kasher opined.

Nine Israeli soldiers were arrested last month for the rape of a Palestinian detained in Sde Teiman, a facility in southern Israel's Negev desert. Since Israel's genocidal war on Gaza began in October, many Palestinians detained by Israeli forces have said they were sexually abused by troops at Sde Teiman.


Kasher highlighted that media has uncovered unsettling footage depicting actions by Israeli soldiers that "seem to breach" Israeli Army’s "core values."

Earlier this year, Israeli soldiers posted photos and videos of themselves toying with lingerie found in Palestinian homes, creating a visual record of their crimes. Others posted videos showing them playing or destroying toys of the displaced Palestinians kids.

Israeli soldiers have posted videos of themselves stealing from Palestinian homes in Gaza, where officials say that at least $25 million in cash, gold and valuables was looted in the first 3 months of the war.

In May, Israeli soldiers stationed in Rafah posted a video on social media of them cooking with stolen UN aid when millions of Palestinians were starving.

In a video, an Israeli soldier is seen bragging about stealing a silver necklace to take back to his girlfriend in Israel. Another soldier took a rug from a Gaza home.


These revelations, Kasher said, cast serious doubt on the adherence to principles of human dignity and the purity of arms within the Israeli military.


Kasher also underscored the necessity for genuine accountability, arguing that calls for the resignation of military leaders must go beyond symbolic gestures.



A catalogue of crimes

Instead, there must be a thorough and substantive process involving comprehensive investigations and reforms to address and correct ethical violations, rather than merely replacing top commanders.

There have been multiple reports of Israeli army systematically abusing Palestinian civilians, as using them human shields during its invasion of besieged Gaza.

According to a report published last month, this practice is conducted with the knowledge of senior military officials, including the Army Chief of Staff, Herzi Halevi.


Since October last year, Israel has heavily bombarded Gaza from air, land and sea, killing more than 41,000 Palestinians, mostly children and women, wounding more than 95,000 and displacing most of 2.4 million people in the tiny coastal enclave.

Analysts say the estimates are conservative and the actual death toll could be around 200,000.

For their complicity in the Gaza massacres, the International Criminal Court is likely to issue arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, and senior military officials, according to multiple media reports. Already, the International Court of Justice has found it is plausible that Israel has committed acts that violate the Genocide Convention.

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, says there are reasonable grounds to believe Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza.

 

Family of executed hostage authorizes release of final video from Hamas captivity

Alex Lobanov describes difficult conditions in which he was held by terror group, tells relatives he loves them; hostage families forum says video ‘demonstrates Hamas’s cruelty’


Executed hostage Alex Lobanov is seen in a propaganda video released by the Hamas terror group. Lobanov's family published the video on September 13, 2024 (Screencapture)
Executed hostage Alex Lobanov is seen in a propaganda video released by the Hamas terror group. Lobanov's family published the video on September 13, 2024 (Screencapture)

The family of slain hostage Alex Lobanov authorized on Friday the publication of parts of the final video of him recorded by Hamas, giving a glimpse into the dire conditions he endured before being murdered by the terror group.

Alongside Lobanov, hostages Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Eden Yerushalmi, Ori Danino, Carmel Gat, and Almog Sarusi were executed in a Rafah-based tunnel by their captors on August 29, before being discovered by troops on August 31.

In the days following the discovery of their bodies, Hamas released several propaganda videos of the hostages. Israeli authorities and human rights groups, and several freed hostages, have said that hostages are coerced into making their remarks in such videos. Israeli media outlets generally publish them only if their families request that they do so.

In the 90-second, heavily edited video, Lobanov said the hostages are being held “in very very difficult circumstances. There are no basic supplies, like water, food, electricity and hygiene.”

“There are bombings all the time, we are afraid and have difficulty sleeping,” he said, adding that Hamas has moved him from hideout to hideout ten times during his time in captivity.

Appealing to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the government, Lobanov said they failed the people on October 7 and have failed the hostages since “in all efforts to release us alive.”

He accused the government of trying to kill them so they would not have to make a deal.

He called on the Israeli public to help his pregnant wife and two-year-old child make their voices heard. “Go out to the streets, protest, do everything so that we will come out of here alive.”

“I would just like to remind you that in [the 2011 deal to release IDF soldier Gilad Shalit], over 1,000 terrorists were released,” he said.

The clip ends with Lobanov saying: “To my family, Michal, Tom, Mom, Dad — Remain strong and united, I am doing well, miss you and love you.”


Following the release of the video, the Hostages Families Forum said Lobanov’s final plea only makes it more urgent to bring the rest of the captives home.

“This horrific video further demonstrates Hamas’s cruelty. Alex and five other hostages managed to survive in nightmarish conditions for over 10 months before being brutally executed. Recently released footage from their underground prison offered only a glimpse of the unimaginable horrors they endured in captivity. Time is running out for the remaining 101 hostages. A deal must be struck immediately to save them,” the Forum said.

Hamas has already released footage of Goldberg-PolinYerushalmi and Gat giving coerced testimony, which their families agreed to have published.

This combination of six undated photos shows hostages, from top left, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Ori Danino, Eden Yerushalmi; from bottom left, Almog Sarusi, Alexander Lobanov, and Carmel Gat. (The Hostages Families Forum via AP)

On Tuesday, the IDF published footage of the tunnel where the six hostages’ bodies were found.

Additionally, the IDF released new details on the tunnel and the operation to find the bodies of the six murdered Israelis, including that they were being held only some 700 meters away from where another hostage was rescued alive days earlier.

The tunnel where their bodies were found is a narrow 120-meter-long passageway — not tall enough to stand in without bending over — that connected parts of a large underground network in the Tel Sultan neighborhood, which according to the IDF belonged to Hamas’s Rafah Brigade.

The tunnel network was one of the largest underground complexes found by the army in Gaza to date, military sources said.

Lobanov was kidnapped on October 7 while working at the Supernova Festival where terrorists killed some 360 people and kidnapped about 40. In total, the October 7 massacre saw terrorists kill some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and kidnap 251.

It is believed that 97 of the hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7 remain in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 33 confirmed dead by the IDF.

This image released by the IDF on September 10, 2024, shows bloodstains inside of a tunnel in southern Gaza’s Rafah where six Israeli hostages were murdered by Hamas terrorists (Israel Defense Forces)

Hamas released 105 civilians during a weeklong truce in late November, and four hostages were released before that. Eight hostages have been rescued by troops alive, and the bodies of 37 hostages have also been recovered, including three mistakenly killed by the military as they tried to escape their captors.

Hamas is also holding two Israeli civilians who entered the Strip in 2014 and 2015, as well as the bodies of two IDF soldiers who were killed in 2014.

Emanuel Fabian contributed to this report.