Freed Zionists Say Treated Well by Hamas
AL-KHALIL (KI) -- Palestinian children freed from Israeli jails as part of a prisoner exchange deal between Hamas and the Zionist regime said they were subjected to torture in captivity and that several fellow detainees were beaten to death.
The teens are among 39 Palestinians freed from Israeli detention on Sunday, in the third prisoner exchange, while Hamas released 13 Zionists held in Gaza.
The exchange took place for the third straight day amid a temporary four-day truce in Gaza, the first such halt of fighting since the hostilities began on October 7.
Khalil Mohamed Badr al-Zamaira, 18, was among those released. He was 16 when he was detained by Zionist forces.
He said Palestinian prisoners are being mistreated and beaten in prison, and there is no different treatment for children.
“They didn’t differentiate between old and young,” he told Middle East Eye. “Two teens were transferred from Ofer prison with broken ribs. They were unable to move.”
Likewise, Omar al-Atshan, a freed Palestinian teen, said he was mistreated and tortured in Naqab prison where he had been held prior to his release.
“The mistreatment was indescribable,” he told Al Jazeera during a live coverage of the arrival of released prisoners in the occupied West Bank on Sunday.
He said that they were routinely beaten and humiliated in prison, and that water and food were scarce.
During their release, Zionist troops ordered them to lower their heads, and then beat them, he said.
“Our happiness is not complete because there are other captives still in detention,” he said, adding that one captive, which he identified as Thaer Abu Assab, was beaten to death in custody.
“He was subjected to too much beating. We cried for help, but doctors arrived after an hour and a half after he was already dead from torture.
“He was tortured because of a question; he asked the warden whether there was a truce. Then he got beaten to death.”
Another freed child, Osama Marmash, also gave a similar testimony to Al Jazeera.
The 16-year-old was held in Megiddo prison before his release. He told Al Jazeera that four Palestinian captives were tortured to death in Megiddo.
Marmash said he sustained wounds to his foot and back because of beating. “My prison clothes were white but then turned red from blood stains,” he said. The food was very little, he said, and was often “inedible”.
He added that they were mistreated on their journey to the West Bank. “The road was difficult. They turned off the air conditioner on the bus. We were suffocating,” he said.
The truce between Hamas and the occupying regime of Israel was supposed to see around 150 Palestinian women and children prisoners and 50 Zionists held in Gaza be released over a period of four days.
Hamas, for its part, released 13 Israeli prisoners, including nine children, as well as four foreign nationals - three Thais and one Israeli-Russian.
Testimonies from captives who were held by Palestinian groups in Gaza have been discussed in Israeli media, following the release of dozens of hostages.
Alon Ben-David, the senior military correspondent for Israel’s Channel 13, spoke over the weekend of the treatment of captives by Hamas.
“Hamas tried to provide the required medications every day. But there were days when medicine was provided and others without,” he said during a televised news segment.
He added that food was scarce, and all the captives had noticeably lost weight.
“The majority of captives were together, holding meetings and lectures, sharing stories. Their activities and being together gave them strength to survive those underground conditions,” added Ben-David.
“All the captives were together, speaking of good conditions and treatment by the Hamas men. In addition to the medication, they were not subjected to violent treatment or torture.”
He said that the released captives spoke to the families of other prisoners, stating that their family members were “fine and alive”.
In another Haaretz report, the grandmother of three captives said her loved ones were treated “more or less okay”.
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