The 3,600 Forgotten Palestinian Hostages, or “Administrative Detainees”
Israel currently holds ~3,615 Palestinians hostages, also known as “administrative detainees.” This is the term used to describe them by Israel and the rest of the world, including politicians, the media and even human rights organizations.
Israel currently holds ~3,615 Palestinians hostages, also known as “administrative detainees.” This is the term used to describe them by Israel and the rest of the world, including politicians, the media and even human rights organizations.
“Administrative detention” is a strange way of putting it, though. Did the detainees commit “administrative” violations? Operating a motor vehicle without a driver’s license? Digging a well without paperwork? Traveling without a visa?
No, they have not committed “administrative” offenses. Indeed, Israeli apartheid forces present no reason at all. And since they aren’t being charged with a crime, they cannot present a legal defense. They are detained on the basis of secret evidence that they might commit a crime in the future.
Israel’s apologists insist they have links to “terrorist” organizations or that, simply said, they are “terrorists”. If so, then why aren’t they charged with terrorism? In fact, Israel holds thousands more prisoners it classifies as "security prisoners”, "security detainees” or "unlawful combatants". So Israel could have charged the “administrative detainees” with security offenses, but they didn’t do that.
There’s another reason why the term hostage is appropriate. Palestinian hostages have a lot in common with Israeli hostages:
(1) They were abducted from their homes in the early hours of the morning, just like the Israeli hostages.
(2) They are held captive in abysmal conditions, just like (some of) the Israeli hostages [although, to be sure, while some of the released Israeli hostages reported humane treatment by their captors (1, 2), it is impossible to find similar testimony among the released Palestinian hostages].
(3) Many were taken as bargaining chips in a prisoner swap, just like the Israeli hostages.
Here are 12 of their stories:
Before Oct. 7th, Israeli forces held him in Megiddo prison in the north of Israel. On December 27, six months after his most recent abduction, Israel’s apartheid courts extended his detention for another six months. His whereabouts are currently unknown despite several petitions to the Supreme Court.
Farouq Issa Khateeb
In late August 2023, Israeli forces abducted a healthy young man, Farouq Issa Khateeb and placed in administrative detention for 4 months. He was beaten badly in the stomach by his Israeli captors, then denied medical treatment. Doctors determined he had terminal stomach cancer before he was even released from prison. He was robbed of his life on May 19th, 2024.
Omar al-Khatib
On 1 March 2024, Israeli forces abducted the researcher and activist Omar al-Khatib, a research partner at The Institute of Development Studies, affiliated with the University of Sussex in Brighton, UK. In June 2024, his sentence was just extended for four months. Al-Khatib had previously been beaten and arrested by Israeli forces after having protested the forced displacement of Palestinians in Sheikh Jarrah in May 2021.
Layan graduated from Birzeit University with a degree in nutrition and a minor in business administration, and she worked in a women’s development NGO before her abduction. Her detention was recently renewed for another 4 months. “Layan gives a very positive energy to all the prisoners…one of the prisoners is very sick and Layan helps her."
His iron handcuffs are removed once a week for 1 minute to take a shower. But many prisoners have been refusing to take a shower because “they don’t have watches, and going beyond the allotted minute exposes prisoners to severe punishments, including hours outside in the heat or rain.” Arab has been informed by his Israeli captors that his detention had been extended “indefinitely.”
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