NYT columnist details allegations of sexual abuse in Israeli detention system

Israeli foreign ministry calls it libel without providing any concrete counter-evidence

A Palestinian man reacts to the destruction after an Israeli strike on the Sheikh Radwan Health Centre run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in the north of Gaza City on August 6, 2025. Photo: AFP

A New York Times opinion columnist has reported that Palestinian detainees have been subjected to sexual violence and other forms of abuse in Israeli detention facilities, citing interviews with former detainees and findings from rights organisations.

In a column published on Sunday, columnist Nicholas Kristof said he interviewed 14 Palestinian men and women who described alleged sexual assaults, beatings, threats of sexual violence and humiliation during detention or encounters with Israeli forces and settlers.

Kristof noted that there was “no evidence that Israeli leaders order rapes,” but argued that Israeli authorities had created “a security apparatus where sexual violence has become,” citing a United Nations report.

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The article also referenced testimonies from former detainees who alleged abuse during imprisonment, as well as reports by organisations including Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, Save the Children, B’Tselem and the Committee to Protect Journalists documenting alleged mistreatment of Palestinian detainees.

Kristof further cited a 49-page UN report published last year that accused Israel of “systematically” subjecting Palestinians to “sexualised torture.” The report also alleged that some former detainees were warned by Israeli authorities not to speak publicly about their treatment after release.

The Israel Prison Service (IPS), however, rejected the allegations. Quoted by The Times of Israel, the IPS described the claims as “false and entirely unfounded,” adding that it operates “in accordance with the law and under the strict oversight of numerous official inspectors.” It said all prisoners are held in accordance with legal standards and their basic rights are safeguarded under professional supervision.

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