Israeli military drops charges against soldiers accused of sexually
assaulting Palestinian detainee
[March 13, 2026]
By JULIA FRANKEL
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel's military on Thursday said it was dropping
charges against five soldiers accused of beating and sexually abusing a
Palestinian detainee in an alleged assault partially caught on camera.
The decision, which came as much of the country’s attention was focused
on the war with Iran, closed a flashpoint case that has bitterly divided
Israel since the soldiers were arrested in 2024 at the notorious Sde
Teiman military prison, prompting anger from members of the far-right
government and hard-line ultranationalists who violently overran the
prison in protest.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the announcement, while human
rights groups accused the military of ignoring one of the gravest
instances of abuse in the country’s network of wartime prisons.
“Israel’s military advocate general just gave his soldiers license to
rape -- so long as the victim is Palestinian,” said Sari Bashi,
executive director of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel,
after the case was dismissed. She said the decision was “the latest in a
long line of actions that whitewash abuses against detainees whose
frequency and severity have worsened since Oct. 7, 2023.”
Netanyahu welcomed the decision, saying that “the state of Israel must
pursue its enemies, not its heroic fighters.”
The now-dismissed indictment against the soldiers accused them of an
assault that included dragging a Palestinian prisoner along the floor,
stepping on him, tasering him, and sexually assaulting him by stabbing
him in the rectum. The Palestinian was taken to an Israeli hospital with
fractured ribs and a perforated rectum that required surgery before he
was returned to the prison.

The allegations of abuse at the facility gained steam when, in August
2024, Israeli news broadcast a leaked video of the alleged assault.
The video showed a group of masked soldiers wresting a detainee from the
ground, where he and other Palestinians were lying face down and
handcuffed in a fenced-in pen, and taking the detainee to an area of the
pen they cordoned off using shields.
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A protester waves the Israeli national flag in support of soldiers
being questioned for detainee abuse, outside of the Sde Teiman
military base on July 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsafrir Abayov, File)

In its Thursday decision dismissing the case, the military’s top legal
officers said the charges against the soldiers were being dropped
because the video did not show abuse violent enough to merit a criminal
conviction and had been improperly leaked to the media. The decision
added that the Palestinian victim had since been released back to Gaza,
creating an “absence of certainty” he would be able to testify in a
trial.
In November 2025, after much speculation about how the leaked video got
out, Military Advocate General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi — the top legal
official in the military — admitted that she had approved its release,
saying she had wanted to show how serious the abuse was and convince
people the military had a duty to investigate.
Facing an uproar from Netanyahu’s government, she abruptly resigned and
then disappeared, only to be found phoneless on a Tel Aviv beach after a
frantic search by authorities. The phone, believed to hold possible
evidence against her, was later recovered in the sea.
The Associated Press investigated allegations of inhumane treatment and
abuse at Sde Teiman before the surveillance video.
The prison was set up after Oct. 7, 2023, to hold Palestinians rounded
up in Gaza during Israel’s war against the Hamas militant group. The
secretive facility quickly gained notoriety as employees and
Palestinians freed from detention described scenes of abuse and torture
and Israeli rights groups petitioned the country’s top court for it to
be shuttered.
Israel has long been accused of failing to hold its soldiers accountable
for crimes committed against Palestinians. The allegations have
intensified during the war in Gaza. Israel says its forces act within
military and international law and says it thoroughly investigates any
alleged abuses.
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