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Israel Holds Palestinians in Secret Underground Prison Without Charges

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Israel is detaining dozens of Palestinians from Gaza in underground facilities where detainees are denied sunlight, adequate food, and contact with family, raising serious human rights concerns.

Dozens of Palestinians from Gaza are being held in Israel’s underground Rakefet Prison, where they are deprived of sunlight, sufficient food, and communication with the outside world. Human rights lawyers report that some detainees, including civilians, remain imprisoned for months without any charges or trial, according to sources cited in The Guardian.

Civilians Held Without Charges

Lawyers from the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI) stated that among the detainees are at least two civilians: a nurse detained in a surgical gown in December 2023, and a young food vendor arrested at an Israeli checkpoint in October 2024. Both were transferred to the Rakefet complex in January, where they report experiencing regular beatings and other forms of abuse.

Initially built in the early 1980s to house Israel’s most dangerous organized crime figures, Rakefet was closed a few years later due to its inhumane conditions. Far-right Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir ordered its reopening in 2023 following the October 7 attacks.

The prison’s underground cells include only a small exercise yard and a lawyers’ meeting room, leaving detainees entirely deprived of natural light.

Rising Numbers Amid Partial Releases

Rakefet was designed to hold 15 high-security prisoners individually. However, PCATI’s official data shows that nearly 100 detainees are currently held there.

Following a mid-October ceasefire, Israel released 250 Palestinians convicted in Israeli courts and 1,700 Gazans held indefinitely without charges, including the young food vendor. Still, over 1,000 Palestinians remain in underground detention, including the nurse represented by PCATI.

“Even though the war is officially over, Palestinians in Gaza continue to be held under legally questionable, violent conditions that violate international humanitarian law and amount to torture,” PCATI said.

Conditions Described as Extreme

PCATI Executive Director Tal Steiner described the conditions in all Israeli prisons as “intentionally horrific,” with Rakefet presenting a uniquely extreme form of abuse. Detainees are kept underground for months without sunlight, affecting both psychological and physical health, disrupting circadian rhythms, vitamin D production, and sleep.

PCATI lawyers first visited the underground prison this year. Detainees were escorted by heavily armed, masked guards down dirty staircases into a room filled with insect remains. Toilets were nearly unusable, and surveillance cameras violated confidential attorney-client communication rights.

Physical and Psychological Abuse

Detainees reported regular physical abuse, including beatings, attacks by muzzled dogs, and guards stepping on them, as well as inadequate medical care and starvation-level rations. Outside their cells, they are allowed minimal time in a small underground chamber, sometimes only a few minutes every two days. Beds are removed early in the morning and returned late at night, leaving prisoners on metal frames in empty cells.

Statements from detainees align with public remarks by Ben-Gvir, who described Rakefet as a facility for “terrorists’ natural environment—underground” during a televised visit.

Limited Contact With Family

The nurse has not had contact with her family since detention, and the only personal information available to lawyers came from a relative who authorized PCATI to represent her. The young food vendor was similarly cut off; guards terminated a conversation when he asked about his pregnant wife’s safety.

Both detainees have been held without evidence or representation during brief, video-monitored hearings, with judges stating they would remain in detention “until the war ends.”

Official Responses

The Israel Prison Service (IPS) declined to comment on the status and identities of other detainees at Rakefet. The Ministry of Justice redirected questions about Rakefet to the Israeli military, which in turn referred them back to IPS.

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Middle East

Israel’s Finance Minister: Trump Supports West Bank Annexation

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Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said West Bank settlement expansion is coordinated with & backed by the Trump administration. Over 51,000 housing units have been approved since 2022, with the IDF expanding demolition to neighbourhoods in Lebanon.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich’s asserted “full backing” from the United States for West Bank settlement expansions, even as formal U.S. support for annexation remains unconfirmed.

Smotrich said Israel had “full coordination and full backing” from the U.S. administration for construction, regulation, and security in the West Bank, including engagement with U.S. President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Ambassador Mike Huckabee.

He also acknowledged that Washington has not endorsed full annexation, adding, “we will also succeed in that.”

Since 2022, more than 51,000 housing units have been approved for deposit or final authorization, according to his office.

Israel’s approximately 500,000 settlers are concentrated largely in Area C, which remains under full Israeli control under the 1990s Oslo Accords framework.

Smotrich emphasized alignment within Israel’s leadership, stating, “Do you think I could do anything without Netanyahu?” and describing settlement expansion as official government policy.

The re-establishment of the Sa-Nur settlement more than 20 years after its evacuation illustrates renewed efforts to consolidate presence, with over a dozen families already relocated.

Channel 14 reporter Eliya Aviv said a new enforcement unit created under Smotrich operates “without delays, without petitions – they arrive and uproot everything,” accelerating demolitions and land control measures.

Smotrich described Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank as part of an Iranian “axis of evil,” stating Israel is “fighting for our right to live.” He linked settlement expansion to security doctrine, arguing that “the 1967 lines are not defensible.”

In earlier remarks on March 23, he said, “We will continue to strike the regime,” and called for extending borders to the Litani River in Lebanon, adding, “The Litani River should be the border between us and Lebanon.” He had also outlined a broader vision of territorial expansion into Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria previously.

Smotrich said international condemnation has decreased, noting that even large-scale construction now draws less reaction than smaller projects did in the past.

He attributed criticism from some European countries to political considerations, claiming they “stand on the wrong side of history.”

At the same time, proposals for annexation continue to face global opposition, while tensions remain linked to wider regional conflict dynamics involving Gaza, Lebanon, and Iran.

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Search for the Pilot Continues: Iran Offers $ Bounty – Trump Threatens

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Iran called on civilians to capture the missing pilot shot down from U.S. aircraft, offering bounty money, as Trump threatened 48 hours remain before “hell will reign down” on Iran if they don’t accept the deal.

Downed US warplanes and a missing pilot have turned Washington’s air war over Iran into a high-stakes crisis for U.S. president Donald Trump. The U.S. military launched a search over southwestern Iran after an F-15E Strike Eagle was shot down, with one crew member rescued and another missing.

The incident marks the first confirmed loss of U.S. aircraft over Iranian territory in a war now in its sixth week, which began on February 28.

Iran also claimed an A-10 Thunderbolt II was hit, though a U.S. official said the cause of the crash remained unclear.

Iranian state media urged civilians to hand over any “enemy pilot,” while authorities searched mountainous terrain in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province.

The Pentagon acknowledged “an aircraft being shot down” but released limited details, underscoring operational sensitivity. Trump said in an NBC interview the incident would not affect negotiations.

The conflict continues to widen geographically. An Iranian drone damaged the Dubai headquarters of Oracle, while earlier strikes hit Amazon Web Services facilities in the UAE and Bahrain.

At Iran’s Bushehr nuclear facility, an airstrike killed 1 security guard and marked the fourth strike on the site during the war.

In Dubai, officials described the Oracle damage as a “minor incident” caused by debris, with no injuries reported.

Iran signaled potential disruption of the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, a 32 km-wide corridor through which over 10 percent of global oil and a quarter of container shipping passes.

The Strait of Hormuz has already seen reduced flows, contributing to rising fuel prices and market volatility. Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf questioned global reliance on the route, highlighting its strategic leverage.

The war has killed more than 1,900 people in Iran, alongside 13 U.S. service members, 19 in Israel, and over 1,300 in Lebanon, where more than 1 million have been displaced.

Despite escalation, Iran signaled openness to talks, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stating they “have never refused to go to Islamabad.”

Mediators from Pakistan, Türkiye, and Egypt are working toward a ceasefire framework, including a temporary halt in hostilities.

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Downed Jets Become Trump’s New Headache as Iran Defends Airspace

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Downed US warplanes & a missing pilot have turned Washington’s air war over Iran into a high-stakes crisis for Donald Trump, exposing vulnerabilities in claimed air dominance amid humongous military cost.

The downing of multiple US aircrafts over Iran and the Gulf highlights growing operational risks and challenges claims of air superiority as the conflict enters its sixth week.

Iranian forces brought down a US F-15E two-seat strike fighter, with one crew member rescued and another unaccounted for, according to officials from both sides.

A separate A-10 Warthog was also hit by Iranian fire, with the pilot ejecting before the aircraft crashed in Kuwait. Two additional US airmen were rescued.

The incidents come despite assertions by President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth that US forces had achieved control of the skies.

Two HH-60W Black Hawk helicopters dispatched to locate the missing pilot were themselves hit by Iranian fire but exited Iranian airspace. The extent of injuries to crew members remains unclear.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps said it was searching a southwestern region for the downed pilot, while a local official promised rewards for capturing or killing “forces of the hostile enemy.”

Between April 2 and April 3, multiple US aircraft incidents were recorded. An F-15E was shot down, an A-10 was hit, and two HH-60W helicopters sustained damage during rescue operations.

Additional incidents included an F-16 declaring an emergency (7700) and landing safely, alongside 1–2 KC-135 refueling aircraft issuing emergency alerts, according to Evergreen Intel.

Iranian officials framed the incidents as a shift in momentum. Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said the war had been “downgraded from regime change” to a hunt for pilots.

The missing pilot scenario raises political and military stakes for Washington, particularly amid limited public support for the war.

The war, which began on February 28, has killed thousands and 13 US service members, with more than 300 wounded, according to US Central Command.

Regional spillover continues, with Iran launching drones and missiles at Israel and Gulf states, including a strike on a power and water plant in Kuwait.

Oil markets reacted sharply, with US crude prices jumping 11% on Thursday.

President Trump signaled further escalation, writing: “Our Military… hasn’t even started destroying what’s left in Iran. Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants!”

US strikes have already targeted infrastructure, including the B1 bridge linking Tehran and Karaj, while Iran has struck energy facilities across the Gulf.

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