Gaza detainees at a notorious camp report being handcuffed while sleeping, eating and using the bathroom
‘When the Lord your God brings you into the land you are to possess and drives out the many nations larger and stronger than you, and when the Lord your God has delivered them over to you and you have defeated them, then you must destroy them totally. Make no treaty with them, and show them no mercy. Do not save alive anything that breathes…for you are a people holy to the Lord your God who has chosen you out of all the peoples on the face of the earth to be his people, his treasured possession…’ –Book of Deuteronomy
Israeli authorities are accused of torturing Palestinians at the Ofer detention camp, which was established during the ongoing war to hold detainees from Gaza, a new report has revealed.
The camp, a military-administered facility, is located next to a prison with the same name, between Jerusalem and Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
According to 19 testimonies given to +972 and Local Call, the site has witnessed torture and ill-treatment of Palestinian detainees, mirroring what has been reported at the notorious Sde Teiman prison.
Rami, a former Palestinian detainee at Ofer, described the facility as no less brutal than Sde Teiman.
‘I was severely tortured,’ Rami said. ‘We were forced to kneel with our hands tied from sunrise until midnight. Guards beat us on every part of our bodies. I was given electric shocks every two days.’
The torture was carried out against all inmates without exceptions, he added.
‘All detainees at Ofer were tortured, beaten and humiliated. We received food only once a day.’
Rami, a 42-year-old, was first arrested by the Israeli army at al-Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza in February and was then held at the Sde Teiman detention centre, the report said.
He was later transferred to Ofer. ‘I thought I was being returned to Gaza, but I found myself in another prison,’ he said.
According to testimonies from current and former prisoners, Palestinians in Ofer report severe mistreatment, including being handcuffed and shackled 24 hours a day, seven days a week – even while sleeping, eating and using the bathroom. Inmates are allowed only brief weekly showers.
Testimonies also describe regular beatings by guards, extreme overcrowding, humiliation and inadequate hygiene and with at least beating resulting in death.
Those held at the camp are classified as ‘unlawful combatants’ and do not enjoy due process. They are charged with supporting terrorism and are held indefinitely.
According to the Israeli human rights group HaMoked, as of December 2024, Ofer holds 1,772 Palestinians who are classified as ‘unlawful combatants’.
They are under the authority of the Israel Prison Service (IPS).
Hands paralysed due to torture
The Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs, a Palestinian prisoner’s organisation, reported in July incidents of abuse in Ofer prison targeting Palestinians transferred from Sde Teiman.
Sde Teiman has also come under scrutiny after investigations and reports earlier this year exposed severe torture inflicted on prisoners abducted from Gaza after October 2023.
Following the revelations, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir confirmed that conditions inside Israeli prisons ‘have indeed worsened’ since the war on Gaza began, adding: ‘And I am proud of that.’
Rafiq, a former Palestinian detainee held at both Sde Teiman and Ofer, compared the two prisons. He noted that Ofer allowed detainees to stand and pray with access to a Quran, whereas at Sde Teiman, prisoners were forced to kneel all day.
However, unlike Sde Teiman, Ofer has largely been overlooked by international media.
Rafiq, a 59-year-old from Gaza, recounted harrowing experiences at both facilities, describing torture, humiliation and the constant fear of never seeing his family again.
‘One of the young men detained with us was killed during his release. The soldiers struck him on the head, and he died immediately,’ he said.
‘I lost 43kg during my detention due to the lack of food. The only comfort I had was thinking about my family, which helped me dissociate myself from the reality of imprisonment.’
Rafiq was released after a month in detention, but the torture has left him physically and mentally bruised.
‘My hands are paralysed because of the torture, and I am taking heavy psychiatric medications. I walk dozens of kilometres every day to exhaust myself so I can sleep. I lost my life because of that detention.’