A young Palestinian prisoner has reportedly lost hearing in one ear after violent treatment inside an Israeli detention facility, highlighting the growing toll of a genocidal war on those held behind bars. The 24-year-old, detained since the spring of last year, was injured while confined alongside other prisoners, according to accounts from monitoring bodies that track prison conditions. Requests for urgent medical care have gone unanswered, leaving his condition untreated and permanent damage unaddressed.
Former detainees and legal advocates describe a detention environment marked by escalating punitive measures. Prisoners have been stripped of most personal belongings and clothing, left with minimal protection against cold conditions, and subjected to restrictions that compound physical suffering with psychological pressure. These practices, they say, form part of a wider pattern in which basic dignity and health are routinely denied during a genocidal war that extends beyond the battlefield and into places of confinement.
The case emerges amid mounting evidence of severe outcomes inside prisons. Over the past year alone, dozens of prisoners have died in custody, including at least one minor, while many others, particularly those seized from Gaza, remain unaccounted for, with families denied information about their whereabouts. Bodies of deceased prisoners continue to be withheld, deepening anguish and uncertainty for relatives.
Rights groups argue that these incidents are not isolated but reflect a systematic approach that exposes prisoners to harm through violence, deprivation, isolation and the withholding of treatment. With the overall prison population now exceeding nine thousand, and unknown numbers held in military-run facilities beyond public scrutiny, concerns are growing that the human cost of the genocidal war is being borne quietly and invisibly by those held behind bars.
Source : Safa News