Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Israel locking up more children in isolation
Israel locking up more children in isolation
Jun 18, 2026 11:13 PM

  Jamil was only 16 years old when Israeli soldiers raided his Bir al-Basha home near Jenin late last year. It was a few hours before dawn when he was awakened by a hard nudge, blindfolded and handcuffed, then taken away in his pyjamas and house slippers.

  His ordeal took place in stages: At an Israeli military base, where he was beaten and forbidden from using the bathroom, at a detention centerwhere he was interrogated without a lawyer or parent present, and finally, when he was placed and held in an isolated cell for 13 days.

  Like Jamil, an increasing number of Palestinian children are being subject to solitary confinement specifically for interrogation purposes while in Israeli detention, according to Defense for Children International.

  "The use of isolation against Palestinian children as an interrogation tool is a growing trend," said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, Accountability Program director at DCI's Palestine chapter. "This is a violation of children’s rights and the international community must demand justice and accountability."

  In a recent report, the Geneva-based group said that of the approximately 100 cases it documented of children held in the Israeli military detention system, 21 percent were in solitary confinement during the interrogation process.

  The cases recorded in 2013 affected children aged 12 to 17, and the numbers represented a two percent increase from the prior year. DCI said that minors held in solitary confinement spent an average of 10 days in isolation. The longest period of confinement documented in a single case was 29 days in 2012, and 28 days in 2013, the group said.

  Globally, this measure is often taken to separate juveniles from the adult prisoner population. But in the case of Palestinian children, DCI says, it is being used to either extract confessions or gather intelligence against other individuals.

  "The use of solitary confinement by Israeli authorities does not appear to be related to any disciplinary, protective, or medical rationale or justification," the report said.

  This seemed to be the case with Jamil, who was placed in Cell 36, a solitary holding room in Al-Jalameh Prison in Israel. "[The interrogator] ... accused me of throwing stones several times, but I never confessed," Jamil said. "In later rounds of interrogation [however], I confessed to throwing stones even though I did not. I confessed hoping he would get off my back and get me out from the cell."

  The minor was kept in solitary confinement for 13 days which he describes as "painful". At one point, he was placed in another cell with an older Palestinian man, who later turned out to be an informant. "He asked me to tell him everything," Jamil said. "He showed me a list of people's names and asked me if they threw stones at Israeli cars. I told him that they all did it and I saw them doing it. I did not know he was a snitch."

  The group wants Israeli authorities to cease this practice and military judges to exclude evidence obtained through coercion by the use of solitary confinement. It is also demanding that the prohibition of isolation of juveniles be enshrined in Israeli law.

  The Israeli prime minister's spokesperson was unavailable for comment at the time of publication. The Foreign Ministry declined to address the report's findings.

  DCI had released a comprehensive report two years ago charging that there was a pattern of abuse towards children detained under the Israeli military court system. Back then, an Israeli spokesperson denied that isolation was used as an interrogation technique or as punishment to exert confessions out of minors.

  The Israel Security Agency said that Palestinian children were given special protection because of their age, and that no one, including minors, was kept in isolation to extract confessions or as a punitive measure.

  It also said that the children had a right to legal counsel and Red Cross visits.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinian children hold their national flag during a rally marking the 66th anniversary of what they call the "Nakba," or “catastrophe” the term used by Palestinians to describe the uprooting they suffered at the time of Israel's founding on May 15, 1948, in front the United Nations Headquarters, in Downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, May 15, 2014.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Afghan Taliban: Our enemy is occupation, not the West
  The Afghan Taliban pose no threat to the West but will continue their fight against occupying foreign forces, they said on Wednesday, the eighth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion that removed them from power.   U.S.-led forces with the help of Afghan groups overthrew the Taliban government during a five week...
Israel 'cutting Palestinian water'
  Israel is denying Palestinians adequate access to clean, safe water while allowing almost unlimited supplies to Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, human rights group Amnesty International has said.   "Swimming pools, well-watered lawns and large irrigated farms in Israeli settlements... stand in stark contrast next to Palestinian villages whose...
Lebanon's cluster bomb lessons
  "He was picking grapes when he died," says Khalil Kassem Terkiya, glancing at his wife as he recalls the day their son was killed by a cluster bomb in southern Lebanon.   Graying and slight, Terkiya looks older than his 46 years: "A cluster bomb was caught in the vine and...
Ramadan in Saudi Arabia inspires conversion to Islam
  The Muslim blessed month of Ramadan has become a popular time for many non-Muslims, especially Filipino migrant workers, to convert to Islam.   Everyday in Saudi Arabia, Islamic centers across the country open their arms to non-Muslim migrant workers who decide to join the world's fastest growing religion.   During Ramadan, a...
'Israel apparently buried spy devices in Lebanon'
  A U.N. investigation into explosions in south Lebanon indicated on Sunday that Israel had planted spy devices on Lebanese land in what a senior U.N. official said would be a violation of a ceasefire agreement.   The UNIFIL peacekeeping force in Lebanon said its preliminary probe into two explosions in the...
Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout
  Decades of Soviet nuclear testing on the steppes of Kazakhstan have been blamed for an alarming number of health problems suffered by residents in the area.   Now scientists are trying to determine whether the victims are passing on faulty genes to their children, the BBC's Rayhan Demytrie reports.   "It looked...
Iraqi cancer figures soar
  Doctors in Iraq are recording a sharp rise in the number of cancer victims south of Baghdad. Sufferers in the province of Babil have risen almost tenfold in just three years.   Locals blame depleted uranium from US military equipment used in the 2003 invasion. Some 500 cases of cancer were...
Somali refugees trapped in camps 'barely fit for humans'
  Hundreds of thousands of Somalis fleeing unrest are now living in camps that Oxfam said on Thursday were horrifically overcrowded and unfit for humans.   The fighting has created one of the world's worst humanitarian crises in the Horn of Africa nation, with one million internally displaced people and thousands more...
UN: Israel terrorized Gazans in war
  Israel "punished and terrorized" civilians in Gaza in a disproportionate attack in its three-week war on the territory earlier this year, a United Nations report has found.   Judge Richard Goldstone, who led the inquiry, said he found evidence Israel targeted civilians and used excessive force in the assault, which was...
'False pretext' used in Afghan war
  The leader of an Afghan political group wanted by the US has said that Washington used a false pretext to launch its war on Afghanistan, on the eve of the eighth anniversary of the conflict.   Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who leads a faction of the Hizb-e Islami group, said that the war...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved