No Script

Please Wait...

Battle of the Mighty

 

Former Palestinian Detainee Diagnosed with Leukemia A Week after Release

Former Palestinian Detainee Diagnosed with Leukemia A Week after Release
folder_openPalestine access_time2 months ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

A former Palestinian detainee has been diagnosed with leukemia only a week after his release from “Israeli” prisons where he spent five months behind bars, according to two Palestinian prisoners’ rights groups.

The Palestinian Commission of Prisoners’ Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoners Society [PPS] said in a joint statement that final medical examinations of 40-year-old Ismail Yousef Taqatqa confirmed that he was suffering from blood cancer.

The statement added that Taqatqa, a father of four children, did not have any health problems prior to his arrest last March.

The advocacy groups noted that his health condition sharply deteriorated during detention at the notorious “Ofer” Prison in the occupied West Bank, and was subsequently transferred to Hadassah Medical Center in al-Quds.

He was then discharged from “Hadassah” Hospital on August 29, on a bail of 10,000 “Israeli shekels” [nearly 3,000 US dollars], and was immediately shifted to an-Najah University Hospital in the northern West Bank city of Nablus.

The two Palestinian prisoners’ rights groups described Taqatqa as the latest victim of the systematic medical crimes that the “Israel” Prison Service [IPS] is perpetrating against Palestinian prisoners, noting that the crimes have escalated dramatically following the onset of the “Israeli” genocidal war against Gaza on October 7 last year.

The groups held the IPS fully responsible for the critical health situation facing Taqatqa and for the fate of thousands of prisoners who face systematic abuses.

They said that these “Israeli” measures are aimed at killing Palestinian inmates or causing them chronic and serious health problems that are difficult to treat later.

Palestinian detainees have continuously resorted to open-ended hunger strikes in an attempt to express outrage at their illegal detention.

According to the Palestine Detainees Studies Center, around 60 percent of the Palestinian detainees behind “Israeli” jails suffer from chronic diseases, a number of whom died in detention or after being released due to the severity of their cases.

Comments