By Staff, Agencies A Palestinian prisoners’ rights group announced that “Israeli” forces have abducted a total of 108 journalists during violent raids across the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip ever since the entity’s onslaught on the besieged coastal territory started more than a year ago. The Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, which is also known as Addameer, said in a statement on Monday that at least 58 journalists remain in “Israeli” custody, including six female journalists and 22 journalists from Gaza whose identities have been confirmed.
Addameer added that at least 16 of the journalists are being held under administrative detention.
An overwhelming majority of Palestinian prisoners are arrested under a quasi-judicial process known as administrative detention, under which Palestinians are initially jailed for six months.
Their detentions can then be repeatedly extended for an indefinite period without charge or trial.
Neither the administrative detainees, who include women and children, nor their lawyers are allowed to see the “secret evidence” that “Israeli” forces say form the basis for their arrests.
Addameer noted that more than 9,000 orders of administrative detention have been issued since October 7 last year, ranging between new orders and renewals, including orders against children and women.
The report comes as another Palestinian journalist was martyred in an “Israeli” airstrike in the northern Gaza Strip on Sunday, bringing the total death toll of journalists killed since October 7 last year to 175.
The government media office in the Gaza Strip in a statement identified the victim as Hassan Hamad, without giving details about the circumstances of his death.
“We condemn in the strongest terms the targeting, killing, and assassination of Palestinian journalists by the ‘Israeli’ occupation,” it said.
The media office also called on the international community and international organizations to “deter the occupation and prosecute it in international courts for its ongoing crimes.” Journalists operating in the Palestinian territory are faced with increased dangers as they report on the conflict amidst “Israeli” ground assaults and airstrikes, disrupted communications, supply shortages, and power outages