Front Burner

Israel accused of turning prisons into 'torture camps'

A months-long investigation from Israeli-Palestinian human rights group B'Tselem says Israel has turned its prison system into “a network of torture camps”. We speak to the group’s director about the harrowing accounts from inside those facilities.
A 42 year old man with short grey hair and one leg amputated at the knee sits on a chair inside a tent.
Sufian Abu Saleh, from Khan Younis, Gaza, had to have his leg amputated after physical abuse and medical neglect he was subjected to in prison in Israel, according to rights group B'Tselem. (Courtesy of B'Tselem)

Israeli prisons have been making headlines in recent weeks, after far-right protesters stormed the gates of the notorious Sde Teiman detention facility to protest the arrest of nine soldiers accused of sexually assaulting a Palestinian prisoner. The incident reportedly left the man in life-threatening condition, and it has led to a furious debate within Israeli society, with some defending the use of torture against Palestinian detainees.

But the case is far from isolated, according to investigations by several media outlets, who in recent months have documented numerous incidents of abuse, medical neglect and deaths in Israeli prisons.

Now, a new report by the Jerusalem-based human rights group B'Tselem goes further, accusing the Israeli government of turning its prisons into a "network of torture camps" in the wake of October 7th. B'Tselem interviewed 55 former detainees, the vast majority of whom had not been charged with a crime.

Today, B'Tselem's executive director, Yuli Novak, speaks to us about their findings.

You can read the report, Welcome to Hell, here.

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