Imagine if you live in Palestine instead of in Singapore?
Leemember Singapore is also part of Malaysia but you are lucky because the Malays are gentle people and not like the jews
You want to live here?
9 months ago
i have never witnessed such evil in my entire life.
9 months ago
27:15 even animals aren’t safe from these psychopaths…
History of Israeli torture of Palestinians in last 78 years
Allegations and documentation of the systematic torture and ill-treatment of Palestinians by Israeli security forces date back to the founding of the State of Israel in 1948. Over the last 78 years, human rights organizations, United Nations bodies, and legal watchdogs have compiled extensive evidence detailing how physical and psychological abuse has been embedded within Israel's military and security structures.
The history of these practices can be divided into four distinct phases, characterized by changes in interrogation methods, legal frameworks, and political environments.
1. Post-Independence and Early Occupation (1948–1987)
Following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and the subsequent military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967, reports of torture primarily emerged from military detention camps and prisons.
- Early Methods: Documentation from international watchdogs and diplomatic cables in the 1970s revealed that suspects were subjected to severe beatings, prolonged isolation, exposure to extreme cold or hot water, sleep deprivation, and suspension by the limbs.
- International Exposure: In June 1977, a high-profile investigation published by The Sunday Times exposed routine torture methods used by Israeli interrogators. Concurrently, U.S. consulate officials documented systematic physical degradation inside facilities across Nablus, Ramallah, and Hebron.
2. The Landau Commission and "Moderate Physical Pressure" (1987–1999)
The outbreak of the First Intifada in 1987 led to mass arrests, prompting Israel to formalize its legal stance on interrogation tactics.
- The Landau Report (1987): Following public scandals, an official Israeli government inquiry led by former Supreme Court Justice Moshe Landau legalised the use of "moderate physical and psychological pressure" by the General Security Service (GSS/Shin Bet).
- Sanctioned Abuse: This framework effectively sanctioned methods such as shabach (forcing detainees to sit in painful, contorted positions on small stools while hooded), violent shaking (taltalut), sleep deprivation, and exposure to loud noises. Human rights groups like Human Rights Watch argued this standard directly violated international bans on torture.
3. The 1999 Supreme Court Ruling and the "Necessity Defence"
In September 1999, the Supreme Court of Israel issued a landmark ruling following petitions by organizations like the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI).
- The Ban: The court explicitly ruled that the GSS did not possess the legal authority to use physical interrogation methods like shabach or shaking.
- The "Ticking Time Bomb" Loophole: Crucially, the court left open a legal loophole known as the "necessity defence." It ruled that interrogators who utilized physical pressure in immediate, life-threatening scenarios ("ticking time bomb" cases) could be exempt from criminal prosecution. Human rights groups note that this loophole has been used for decades to protect interrogators from legal accountability, resulting in virtually zero criminal indictments despite thousands of complaints filed.
4. Severe Escalation and Present-Day Context (2023–2026)
Following the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023, the scale and severity of institutional abuse underwent what international observers term an unprecedented escalation.
- Mass Incommunicado Detention: Tens of thousands of Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank have been held under administrative detention or inside makeshift military encampments (such as Sde Teiman) without trial or access to legal counsel.
- Documented Abuses: Investigative reports by international media outlets, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), and groups like Amnesty International have verified widespread physical trauma. Detainees have reported severe beatings, starvation, prolonged blindfolding, denial of medical attention, and documented instances of sexual violence and rape.
- "State Doctrine": UN Special Rapporteurs have warned that torture has evolved into an institutionalized "state doctrine" within Israel, functioning under an environment of total legal impunity where independent medical oversight and international monitoring are systematically blocked.