google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

Palestinian teenager was starved in prison before death, judge rules | World News

A Palestinian teenager was starved in an Israeli prison before his death, a judge ruled before closing the case.

According to a newly-unsealed court decision, the judge said it was clear 17-year-old Walid Ahmad was starved, but the cause of death was undeterminable.

The case drew attention as he was the first Palestinian under 18 to die in Israeli detention, Palestinian officials said.

Ahmad, described by his family as a healthy teenager, spent six months in Israel’s Megiddo prison before collapsing in March 2025.

His family say he was arrested at his home in the occupied West Bank town of Silwad, during a pre-dawn raid in September 2024, for allegedly throwing stones at soldiers.

Khalid Ahmad holds childhood photos of his son, Walid Ahmad. Pic: AP
Image:
Khalid Ahmad holds childhood photos of his son, Walid Ahmad. Pic: AP

An autopsy did not establish a single, definitive cause of death but starvation was likely to be the leading cause, according to the report of an Israeli doctor who observed the procedure.

Dr Daniel Solomon also noted that the teen was suffering from extreme malnutrition and showed signs of scabies.

In the now-unsealed ruling, first published by Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz, the Israeli judge supervising the investigation ordered that the probe be halted in December.

The judge said evidence of Ahmad’s starvation did not prove the cause of death.

Read more:
Woman pleads not guilty to attempted murder of Rihanna
Social media giants found liable for social media addiction

Judge Ehud Kaplan, according to the ruling shared with The Associated Press by Haaretz, wrote: “The fact that he was apparently starved cannot be hidden and should not be hidden.

“But I cannot determine based on the findings of the expert report that there is a causal connection between his poor physical condition and his death, and therefore I cannot determine that the death was caused by a crime.”

He added: “Given this state of affairs, the investigation into his death is exhausted.”

In Israel, judges can be requested to oversee an investigation into deaths of detainees in custody.

They are able to seek and review evidence to determine the cause of death, and establish if it resulted from wrongdoing by any party.

If evidence of wrongdoing is established, the judge can move toward criminal indictments. Or, as was done in Ahmad’s case, they can order an investigation be stopped.

Haaretz published the ruling after successfully filing for a gag order on the case to be lifted.


Source link

Views: 2

See also  Passengers 'dropping like flies' after suspected norovirus outbreak on P&O cruise ship | UK News

Check Also

Trump plans to build powerful ties with Colombia under new leader

Speaking to reporters on Monday, Trump said that de la Espriella had “won easily”, even …

Kenya Ebola: Health Minister Aden Duale found in contempt of court over US-backed quarantine plan

Kenya’s Health Minister Aden Duale has been found guilty of contempt of court over his …

Begusarai gang rape: Bihar sexual assault revives painful memories of 2012 Delhi case

Thirteen years after the gang rape of an Indian woman on a bus in the …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime
429 too many requests. Link.