Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, who has been in Israeli detention since December 2024, is in a “dire” health condition, United Nations experts warned as they called for his immediate release.
By Chantal Da Silva, Reposted from NBC News, March 25, 2026
United Nations experts are calling for Israel to immediately release Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, a prominent doctor from the Gaza Strip who has been held without charge for more than a year, saying they had received reports that he’s endured “severe torture.”
“Dr. Abu Safiya, a highly respected Palestinian medical administrator and pediatrician, has suffered an arbitrary deprivation of liberty” and “violation of his human rights, including the right of every human being to be free from torture,” the experts said in a statement released this week.
Calling for his immediate release, the experts, U.N. special rapporteurs Tlaleng Mofokeng and Ben Saul, warned they had received reports that Abu Safiya, head of the Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, was facing “cruel and degrading treatment” in Israeli custody and that his health condition remained “dire.”
They accused Israel of violating the Mandela Rules, which establish the obligation of states to ensure prisoners have access to health care.
The Israel Prison Service said in a statement to NBC News that it “operates in accordance with Israeli law and under the supervision of the courts and other official oversight bodies.”
It said it was not “familiar with the specific allegations described,” but that “due to privacy and security considerations” it would not comment on the “detention status or personal details of specific individuals.”
The Israeli government and military did not immediately respond to requests for comment, including on whether any charges have yet been made against Abu Safiya.
The Israel Defense Forces have previously alleged without evidence that he held “a rank” within Hamas.
The U.N. experts said his detention continued to “appear to be flagrantly arbitrary.” They said they had been in contact with the Israeli government regarding his case, but did not expand further. They did not elaborate on the source of the reports they said they had received on his condition.
Abu Safiya’s family and the legal team representing him, both of which have previously said he reported being tortured, could not immediately be reached for comment.
Abu Safiya became a voice for besieged Palestinians in Gaza during Israel’s more than two-year assault on the enclave following the Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7, 2023. The doctor, whose son was killed during Israel’s offensive, made headlines around the world in December 2024 after footage captured the final moments before he was detained.

In the haunting video, Abu Safiya could be seen walking down a rubble-strewn road toward Israeli tanks, his white medical coat standing out in stark contrast against the debris surrounding him.
The Israeli military had initially denied that Abu Safiya was in its custody, but later alleged without providing evidence that he had been involved in “terrorist activities” and held “a rank” in Hamas.
It has alleged that Hamas militants operated in the area of the Kamal Adwan Hospital, one of many across Gaza that the Israeli military attacked after claiming it was a hub of Hamas activity.*
*IAK NOTE: To understand how wrong Israel was in their relentless accusations of Hamas use of hospitals, read this by the Associated Press. In spite of the lack of evidence, Israel continued destroying medical facilities and killing medical personnel throughout the war on Gaza (and is doing the same in Iran and Lebanon today).
Abu Safiya’s son and colleagues, including at the nonprofit MedGlobal, have staunchly rejected the allegations against him. U.N. experts and human rights groups have accused Israel of a targeted destruction of Gaza’s health care system.
Before his detention, Abu Safiya was the lead physician in Gaza for MedGlobal, a Chicago-based organization that has partnered with local health care workers in Gaza for years and arranges medical missions to the enclave.

“I would say that his torture and imprisonment is unimaginable,” John Kahler, a co-founder of MedGlobal who has worked alongside Abu Safiya during visits to Gaza, told NBC News. But “unfortunately it isn’t,” Kahler said, pointing to a growing body of reports of alleged abuse suffered by Palestinians held in Israeli custody.
“Dr. Abu Safiya committed the unforgivable ‘crime’ of standing up for his patients over and over,” he said, adding that instead of a prisoner, he should be seen as a “beacon of moral clarity for the world.”
“I don’t really have many words to describe the anger that sort of builds up knowing that he’s still languishing away in these prisons,” said Dr. Thaer Ahmad, an emergency physician who serves as a board member for the Palestinian American Medical Association and who worked alongside Abu Safiya prior to the war in Gaza.
He said in a phone interview that it was “ridiculous” for Israel to suggest Abu Safiya was “working in a pediatric ICU by day and that at night he’s some military warrior” and accused Israeli authorities of conflating work under Gaza’s health ministry, which would have been run by Hamas as the ruling authority in the territory, with the group’s militant operations.
After Abu Safiya’s detention was upheld by an Israeli court in March 2025, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights, which was representing the detained doctor, maintained his innocence, saying in a news release that he was “solely performing medical and administration duties at Kamal Adwan Hospital.”

There had been hopes that Abu Safiya might be released in the final exchange of hostages held in Gaza for the freedom of Palestinians held by Israel at the start of the current ceasefire. But his family saw their hopes dashed when it was announced in October that his detention had been extended, without charge.
Dozens of Palestinian health care workers are believed to remain in Israeli custody, while six are known to have died in detention since Oct. 7, 2023, according to Healthcare Workers Watch, an initiative that documents detentions from Gaza. As many as 1,200 health care workers were killed overall under Israel’s offensive in the enclave as of February 2025, according to the organization.
Those who remain held in Israeli custody are among more than 9,400 people detained by Israel as of this month, including more than 3,400 held under “administrative detention,” according to data published by HaMoked, an Israeli human rights organization.
Under the widely condemned practice, Israeli authorities hold people indefinitely without trial or other usual legal proceedings, often based on alleged secret evidence they do not share with detainees, their families or legal representatives.

Around 1,200 people were killed and 250 taken hostage in the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Since then, more than 72,200 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the Palestinian health ministry in the enclave, with thousands more injured.
That toll has continued to rise amid Israeli strikes despite the current ceasefire, while the process of rebuilding the territory and accompanying peace efforts have been overshadowed by the war with Iran.
Chantal Da Silva reports on world news for NBC News Digital and is based in London.
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