PCHR Requests Investigation of Arrest and Torture
PCHR Requests Investigating the Arrest and Torture
of a Person Until he Lost the Ability to Speak In PSS Office
In Doura
The Palestinian Centre for Human
Rights (PCHR) calls upon the Attorney General in West Bank
to seriously investigate the circumstances related to the
detention and alleged torture of Mohammed Abdul Karim Dar
Mohammed (44), from Tarama village in Hebron. According to
information available to PCHR, Mohammed was tortured while
being interrogated in the Palestinian Preventive Security
Service’s (PSS) prison in Doura, and as a result he has
lost the ability to speak.
PCHR's fieldworker met
with the Mohammed, who presented his testimony in writing,
as he was unable to speak. Mohammed told PCHR that he was
arrested by the PSS on 27 April 2013 without any arrest
warrant. He also told that he was tortured during the
interrogation, and the interrogators hit his head against
the wall, because of which he cannot speak any
more.
In his written testimony, Mohammed
said:
"I was ordered to stand against the wall, while
the guards were still there. They addressed one of the
persons present there as “boss”. I later learnt that he
was the chief interrogator. Other than him, there were 4
other interrogators. They beat me by hitting me on the face
with their hands. Then the "boss" held my head and hit it
against the wall 5 times until I lost consciousness
completely. They beat me without asking me any questions
or interrogating me. After a while, I woke up at the
Hebron governmental hospital. I stayed in the hospital for
half an hour. I was then returned to the prison. The next
morning, I realized that I was having difficulties
speaking. As a result, they took me to the hospital
again. I tried to describe to the doctors what had
happened with me by writing on a paper, but they refused and
asked me to speak out. They conducted some medical tests
and sent me back to the prison…"
Mohammed
added that the PSS members took him to the prison after he
was discharged from the hospital. He was questioned for
half an hour, during which, he wrote on a paper without
saying a single word. He was released at approximately
16:00, on 28 April 2013. Mohammed’s brother Riyadh
received him at the gate of the PSS office and took him to
Dr. Emad Talahma’s neurology clinic. Dr. Talahma
informed Riyadh of the necessity to transfer his brother to
the hospital. Mohammed explained that the administration of
Hebron governmental hospital refused to give him a report to
confirm his admission to the hospital as he was referred
from the PSS prison, despite being admitted twice in 24
hours to the hospital.
PCHR condemns PSS members’
conduct and:
1. Calls upon the Attorney General to seriously initiate investigations in this incident, and prosecute the perpetrators to bring them to justice;
2. Reminds that torture is prohibited under the Palestinian Basic Law and forms a grave violation of human rights, which are guaranteed in the international conventions and standards, particularly the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment 1984. PCHR highlights that torture crimes do not fall under the statute of limitation to ensure that the perpetrators do not escape justice;
3. Calls on PSS members to immediately stop torture practices.
ENDS