Saturday, July 11, 2026

UN Panel Reaffirms Israel Commits Genocide; Calls for Palestinian Doctor’s Release



Consortium News
Volume 31, Number 185 — Friday, July 10, 2026


UN Panel Reaffirms Israel Commits Genocide; Calls for Palestinian Doctor’s Release


A U.N. commission has called on Israeli authorities to free Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, provide him with medical care and free all other arbitrarily detained Palestinian medical personnel, Jessica Corbett reports




U.N. headquarters in New York. (LPulecio-WMF/ Wikimedia Commons/ CC BY 4.0)

By Jessica Corbett
Common Dreams


Just over 1,000 days into Israeli forces’ genocidal violence against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, a United Nations commission has forcefully denounced Israel’s treatment of health workers from the besieged territory and specifically demanded “the immediate, unconditional, and safe release” of Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya.

Israel has detained Abu Safiya without charge since capturing him at Gaza’s Kamal Adwan Hospital, where he was the director, in December 2024. Renewed calls for Abu Safiya’s release have mounted in recent days following his transfer to the underground Rakefet interrogation facility at Nitzan Prison, where his lawyer, Nasser Odeh, said that his life is at risk.

“I have visited Dr. Abu Safiya several times since his detention, but the individual I encountered during this latest visit was not the same person I had previously met,” Odeh said after visiting the prison last week.


“His physical and psychological state, the severe injuries visible on his body, and his personal testimony leave no room for doubt: his life is in immediate danger.”


The U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel — established in 2021 by the U.N. Human Rights Council — on Wednesday urged Israeli authorities to immediately free the doctor and provide him with independent medical care.

Abu Safiya “has been subjected to continued and severe abuse” throughout his detention, and his current grave condition “is the direct result” of reported actions by Israel Prison Service guards, the panel said. It “reflects a broader pattern of violations previously identified in the commission’s reports.”

The U.N. experts pointed to their 2025 conclusion that Israel is carrying out a genocide in Gaza and a 2024 publication that found


“Israeli security forces deliberately killed, wounded, detained, and severely mistreated medical personnel, constituting the war crimes of wilful killing and torture and the crime against humanity of extermination.”

They further demanded freedom for all arbitrarily detained Palestinian medical personnel, declaring that their continued detention “and the severe mistreatment they are subjected to are deplorable and flagrant violations of international law.”

In addition to Abu Safiya, Israel is holding at least 13 other senior doctors without charge — and they are among around 9,300 Palestinians “currently in Israeli custody, including thousands held arbitrarily without charge or trial,” according to the U.N. Human Rights Office in the territory. At least 91 Palestinians have died in Israeli detention since Oct. 7, 2023.

Since the Hamas-led attack that day, the U.S. government has stood by Israel under both the Biden and Trump administrations, even amid growing alarm among the American public and civil society over mounting civilian deaths in Gaza.

Amnesty InternationalUSA Executive Director Nadia Daar urged U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio to intervene to free Abu Safiya.

Noting research that Amnesty previously sent to the State Department in July 2024, suggesting that “US assistance may be funding units of a foreign security force implicated in the commission of gross violations of human rights,” Daar wrote:


“In addition to reviewing US security assistance for Leahy violations, we call on you to swiftly take action to secure the immediate and unconditional release of Dr. Abu Safiya. Pending his release, we further call on you to ensure that he is fully protected from further abuses and is provided with adequate access to medical care, food, and hygiene.”

The local UN Human Rights Office urged Israel to either free Abu Safiya, or “promptly charge him with a recognizable criminal offense and grant him a fair trial,” and either way, ensure he is transferred to a civilian hospital to receive necessary medical care.

“Israel must ensure that its laws governing the detention of Palestinians living under occupation comply with international legal norms and standards, including the prohibition of arbitrary detention and fair trial guarantees, and that its detention officials abide by those standards,” the office also said. “All arbitrarily detained Palestinians must be released with immediate effect.”

Efforts to secure their freedom through Israeli courts have been unsuccessful. Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) said “in its response to the High Court petition on the 14 detained Gaza doctors, the state says that Dr. Abu Safiya has been examined by medical personnel several times since being transferred,” but “does not explain why those examinations were necessary, what their findings were, or how they are consistent with its claim that his life is not in danger.”

“The response also does not address the serious allegations detailed in the sworn affidavit of Dr. Abu Safiya’s lawyer, including severe injuries, repeated loss of consciousness, and a serious concern for his life,” the group detailed. “At the same time, the state asks the court to dismiss, without a hearing, the petition by Physicians for Human Rights Israel petition seeking the release of 14 doctors from Gaza who are being held in Israel without charge.”


PHRI said that the group

“rejects the state’s position, arguing that its response fails to address the central issue raised by the petition: The continued detention of 14 doctors without charge or trial despite the catastrophic shortage of medical personnel in Gaza and the ongoing collapse of its healthcare system.”

Israel faces a South Africa-led genocide case at the International Court of Justice — the U.N.’s top tribunal — over its mass slaughter in Gaza.

Additionally, the International Criminal Court has issued warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for crimes against humanity and war crimes in the territory.


The U.N. commission nodded to those cases in its statement, stressing that

“Israel must adhere strictly to international humanitarian law and international human rights law,” and reiterating panel’s “intent on ensuring legal accountability, including individual criminal and command responsibility.

To that end, the commission is committed to investigating alleged violations of international law and identifying those responsible,” it said, “and will continue sharing information collected with relevant judicial authorities.”



Jessica Corbett is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

This article is from Common Dreams.


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