Israeli authorities’ figures show that at least 98 Palestinians have died in detention from October 2023 onwards — but human-rights groups say the true toll is likely much greater given hundreds of missing detainees and limited public data. The deaths occurred in military and civilian holding facilities, with evidence of medical neglect, abuse and disappearance.
Systemic Risks in Detention
According to the released records, Israeli security and prison services reported dozens of deaths of Palestinian detainees over the first eight months of the Gaza-war period — on average one death every four days. Rights investigators documented causes ranging from physical violence to malnutrition and untreated illness. These deaths significantly exceed the typical annual rate of two to three fatalities seen prior to the conflict.
While authorities state that every death is reviewed, detainees, lawyers and families report major obstacles: lack of access to information, absence of proper investigations and minimal accountability.
Missing Detainees and Lack of Transparency
Human-rights organisations emphasise that the publicly available figures only scratch the surface. For some 21 cases, minimal information provided by the Israeli authorities could not be matched with any independently verified death. The authorities had withheld status updates for thousands of detainees, in effect creating a regime of forced disappearance, according to former detainees and legal representatives. The absence of full disclosure and limited monitoring make it difficult to assess the full extent of deaths and mistreatment in custody.





















