World

In rare ruling, Israeli Supreme Court says Israel deprives Palestinian prisoners of food

The three-judge panel ruled unanimously that the Israeli government had a legal duty to provide Palestinian prisoners with three meals a day to ensure “a basic level of existence”

Updated 10 months ago · Published on 08 Sep 2025 9:37AM

In rare ruling, Israeli Supreme Court says Israel deprives Palestinian prisoners of food
“We are not speaking here of comfortable living or luxury, but of the basic conditions of survival as required by law,” the ruling said - Sept 8, 2025

IN a highly rare exercise of wartime legal restraint, Israel’s Supreme Court ruled Sunday that the Israeli government has deprived Palestinian detainees of even a minimum subsistence diet and ordered authorities to increase the amount and improve the quality of food served to deprived Palestinian inmates.

Although it’s the job of the Supreme Court to advise the government of the legality of its policies, the Israeli judiciary has seldom taken issue with its actions in the 23-month Israel-Hamas war.

Since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, Israel has largely rejected growing international criticism of its conduct by arguing that it was doing what was necessary to defeat Hamas.

AP reported on Monday that the Israeli army has detained large numbers of Palestinians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank on suspicion of militant ties. Thousands have been released from months of detention in camps and jails without charge to tell of brutal conditions, including overcrowding, scant food supplies, inadequate medical attention and scabies outbreaks.

As Israel’s highest tier of accountability, the Supreme Court hears complaints from individuals and organizations against Israeli government actions, such as its practice of restricting food and medical supplies to Gaza or, in this case, what two Israeli human rights groups described in their complaint as the security establishment’s “systemic policy” of depriving Palestinian prisoners of food.

The three-judge panel ruled unanimously that the Israeli government had a legal duty to provide Palestinian prisoners with three meals a day to ensure “a basic level of existence” and ordered authorities to fulfil that obligation.

In an unexpected 2-1 decision, the court furthermore accepted the petition filed last year by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, or ACRI, and the Israeli rights group Gisha, siding with their allegations that the government’s deliberate restriction of prisoners’ food in Israeli detention facilities has caused Palestinians to suffer malnutrition and starvation during the Israel-Hamas war.

“We are not speaking here of comfortable living or luxury, but of the basic conditions of survival as required by law,” the ruling said. “Let us not share in the ways of our worst enemies.”

Palestinian authorities have recorded the deaths at least 61 Palestinians in Israeli custody since the war started. In March, a 17-year-old Palestinian in Israel prison died of what doctors said was likely starvation.

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who oversees the prison system, boasted last year that he degraded the conditions of security prisoners to the bare minimum required by Israeli law.

Ben-Gvir, who leads a small far-right ultranationalist party, lashed out at the court ruling Sunday.

“Are you from Israel?” he asked the judges, arguing that while Israeli hostages in Gaza have no one to help them, Israel’s Supreme Court defends Hamas “to our disgrace.” He vowed the policy of providing prisoners with “the most minimal conditions stipulated by law” would continue unchanged.

ACRI called on authorities to implement the verdict immediately. In a post on social media platform X, the rights group said Israel’s prison service has “turned Israeli prisons into torture camps.”

“A state must not starve people,” it said. “People must not starve people — no matter what they have done.” - Sept 8, 2025

Spotlight

Opinion

When bullying turns violent, Malaysia must confront what is happening inside schools

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

Malaysia

EPF members withdraw RM19.87 billion from Flexible Account as of May 31

Malaysia

Melaka: Student who was allegedly bullied chases schoolmate with box cutter

World

Fresh US-Iran strikes deepen Middle East crisis as ceasefire crumbles

You may be interested

World

Cargo plane wreckage found off Pakistan as search for 5 crew members continues

World

Fujian shoe factory fire kills 28 as China orders full investigation into deadly blaze

World

China flood death toll rises to 39 in Guangxi as rescue teams race against further typhoon threat

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

World

Sri Lanka moves to ease prison overcrowding after deadly Negombo riot kills 28

World

AI set to reshape nearly 80 million jobs across Southeast Asia without mass layoffs

World

Fresh US-Iran strikes deepen Middle East crisis as ceasefire crumbles

World

Fresh US strikes on Iran deepen ceasefire crisis as Trump warns of escalation