EXCLUSIVEFormer detainees detail systematic torture and sexual violence, including rape, while in Israeli custody.
Mohammed Zaki al-Bakri says, 'We were raped after being stripped of our clothes' [
Al Jazeera]Published On 9 Jun 2026Warning: This story contains descriptions of sexual assault that some readers may find disturbing.Muhammad al-Bakri specifically remembers the date of his rape.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4‘Everything is legitimate’: Israeli leaders defend soldiers accused of rapelist 2 of 4Israeli prisons are akin to ‘torture camps’, Israeli rights group findslist 3 of 4Israel systematically torturing
Palestinians in custody, says
UN expertlist 4 of 4Palestinians face ‘systematic’ torture, sexual violence in Israeli prisonsend of listIt was April 10, 2024, during the
Eid al-Fitr holiday, at the end of the holy month of
Ramadan. The Gaza civil servant had been beaten, tortured, bound and forced to soil himself since his arrest by Israeli soldiers a month earlier.The soldiers and their guard dogs surrounded him that day. “There were six soldiers on the right and six on the left,” he recalled. “They would ask your name. If you said ‘Muhammad’, they would say, ‘No, say your name is b****.’”Al-Bakri said he was held with seven other prisoners. They were all stripped, blindfolded and handcuffed.“We were raped after being stripped of our clothes,” he said. “We were shouting, ‘Oh Lord, oh God’, but they were just laughing and filming us.” Al-Bakri then echoed what several rights agencies have also reported – that guards also used dogs during the sexual abuse of prisoners. “The dogs were following commands from the officers to [attack] us,” he said.“There was no mercy. We stayed in that state of sexual abuse and beatings for about 20 minutes to half an hour. Then they told us to get dressed and took us back to the prison.”Al-Bakri is among multiple former prisoners who have given detailed testimonies to
Al Jazeera for Bodies of Evidence:
Israel’s Darkest Weapon, a documentary investigation into what
International Criminal Court (ICC) judges, the United Nations and its special rapporteur on the occupied territories,
Francesca Albanese, say amounts to the widespread and systematic use of rape and sexual torture by the Israeli army against
Palestinians. Rights groups such as the
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) and
Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor have also documented testimonies of prisoners recounting how Israeli soldiers used dogs to rape them.(Bodies of evidence:
Israel’s Darkest Weapon) Allegations of the sexual abuse of
Palestinians in Israeli prisons are not new – they date back decades. But launching its genocidal war on Gaza following the Hamas-led attack of October 2023,
Israel appears to have increased the use of rape as a weapon of war, according to the
Al Jazeera investigation and various reports by the
UN and leading rights groups.A
UN report published in March 2025 found evidence of the “systematic” use of sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence by
Israel since October 7, 2023. In May,
Israel was added to the
UN “blacklist of sexual violence in conflict zones”. Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Israeli rights group B’Tselem and the PCHR have described the pervasive culture of sexual violence within Israeli forces, especially among those charged with overseeing Palestinian prisoners. Many were arrested and held without charge under
Israel’s system of administrative detention.
Mohammed Zaki al-Bakri [
Al Jazeera]No soldiers or guards have been convicted of sexual abuse of
Palestinians.
Israel detained 10 security officers after a video of the rape of a prisoner was leaked from the Sde Teiman detention camp in the Negev desert in July 2024. But gangs of right-wing protesters, including legislators, attempted to storm the facility where the guards were being held in a bid to free them.Last July,
Israel dropped all charges against the guards. The female officer who allegedly leaked the video of the attack, Major-General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, was subsequently arrested. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu termed her “crime” – sharing footage of the rape by Israeli soldiers – as the “most severe public relations attack” on the country since its founding.Right-wing protesters at the Sde Teiman detention facility after Israeli military police arrived as part of an investigation into the suspected rape of a Palestinian detainee in July 2024 [Jill Gralow/Reuters]
UN rapporteur Albanese said the intention behind the sexual abuse of Palestinian prisoners was clear: not simply to inflict pain, but to destroy the victim and their sense of self-worth.“There is something deeper in the sense that torture, especially rape and other forms of sexual torture, destroys the mind of the person, especially in the capacity to rebuild or enjoy his or her intimacy,” she told
Al Jazeera, recounting interviews with two survivors of rape.Asked in the Knesset,
Israel’s parliament, in July 2024 whether it was ever legitimate to rape a prisoner, Hanoch Milwidsky, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, shouted: “Yes.”“If he is a Nukhba [Hamas fighter], everything is legitimate to do, everything.”
Francesca Albanese [
Al Jazeera]Surviving genocide and rapeCasual labourer Job, which is how
Al Jazeera has chosen to credit him, never thought there was anything particularly noteworthy about his life.Like al-Bakri, Job thought he was an everyday middle-aged family man from Gaza. Both placed their children’s future above their own. Both prioritised their families’ safety since
Israel launched its genocidal war in October 2023. Both had become accustomed to shepherding their families through the checkpoints, bombings and forced displacements that defined daily life in the besieged enclave.That changed when both were taken prisoner, tortured and repeatedly raped by Israeli soldiers and guard dogs.As with al-Bakri, Job’s memory of his rape is equally clear. “Female soldiers entered my room,” he told
Al Jazeera. “They put iron handcuffs on my hands behind me. They untied the handcuffs from my legs and put on more handcuffs. Then they stripped me of my clothes.”He was pinned to the ground with boots on his back and neck, while the female soldiers raped him using artificial objects.“The soldiers around them were applauding and filming the scene. They were filming the rape scene.”Job’s rape and sexual torture continued, all while being questioned for any knowledge of the Hamas-led attack of which he knew nothing.Job [
Al Jazeera]RageThe attack of October 7, 2023, during which 1,139 people were killed and about 250 abducted, ruptured much of Israeli society and assumptions about the relationship with
Palestinians in the occupied territory.Through endless loops on rolling news, the trauma of the attacks echoed throughout Israeli society, as the political class sought to amplify the harm inflicted upon
Israel that day.Recalling the events of his capture, Job recalled being blindfolded, tortured, trampled upon and beaten, all the while being questioned on the events of October 7, despite having no connection to what unfolded that day.“They were telling us: ‘You know God and the Quranic verse, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. As you sow, so shall you reap,’” he recalled. Israeli soldiers told him: “You entered our lands, the Israeli lands, and invaded them. You raped and you did this and you did that”.Al-Bakri was given a number for a name and described being beaten when he attempted to identify himself in any other way. “You are here as a prisoner of war,” he recalled being told. “You came here because of the destruction you caused.”In addition to rape, al-Bakri said, he and other prisoners were attacked with dogs, and what he described as sound bombs intended to cause disorientation.“You had to sleep on your stomach, hands tied and eyes blindfolded, while they walked dogs over you and kicked you,” he said.Albanese told
Al Jazeera that similar accounts of mistreatment and torture in the wake of the October 7 attack are common. “Brutality has escalated to an unprecedented level,” she said. “It became vindictive.”