ق.ض 𓂆
ق.ض 𓂆

@jalestinian

7 Tweets 4 reads Oct 27, 2023
Al Naqab Prison; One of the largest occupation detention camps in the middle of a barren desert in far south of Palestine.
The camp was divided into sections which contained tents. Prisoners were detained in tents and were exposed to extreme weather conditions day and night.
It was opened in 1988, and thousands of detainees were placed in conditions unfit for humans.
Less than 6 months after its opening,
Two prisoners, Asaad Al-Shawa and Bassam Al-Samoudi, were executed by prison guards during their protest against the conditions of their detention.
The prison was closed for 6 years and reopened again with the outbreak of Intifada Al-Aqsa in 2002, and it was under the supervision of the occupation army until 2006, after which it was taken over by the Prison Service and repression units; Nahshon and "Masada.
The prisoners witnessed various types of torture, oppression, and starvation until the leaders of the prisoner movement were isolated inside “cages,” which are sections surrounded by high walls from all directions, with a wire mesh ceiling with small openings.
Through collective strikes and steps that continued for years, prisoners were able to build up their organizational, cultural, inside the detention until they able to raise young imprisoned children and to confront the prison and the jailer.
Since the beginning of Al-Aqsa blood battle, the occupation launched unprecedented attacks on our prisoners with the aim of taking revenge on them.
They were assaulted and abuse until their limbs, legs, and hands were broken.
Jailers also isolating and repressing the leaders among prisoners, and imposed sanctions, including dissolving organizations, cutting off water and electricity, and preventing visits, with the aim of taking revenge on them.

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