The Palestinian leader held in solitary confinement reportedly suffers numerous injuries in the September 9 attack.
Palestinian prisoner support groups have accused Israel of “brutally assaulting” Marwan Barghouti, the most prominent Palestinian detainee in Israeli custody, leaving him with numerous injuries.
In a joint statement on Monday, the Commission for Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said on Monday that Barghouti was assaulted on September 9 while held in solitary confinement in Israel’s Megiddo Prison.
As a result of the assault, Barghouti, called the “Palestinian Nelson Mandela” by his supporters, was left with numerous injuries, mainly to the upper body, the statement said.
The Fatah politician, who has been in jail for more than two decades, suffered injuries on the head, ears, ribs, right arm and back, said the statement, which quoted a lawyer who was only able to gather the information after months of being barred from contacting prisoners.
Barghouti suffered bleeding in the right ear, which later turned into an infection as a result of medical negligence, according to the statement.
The 64-year-old was reportedly assaulted along with a group of other Palestinian detainees.
Prisoner rights groups and the United Nations have shed light on the systematic abuse being committed against prisoners held in Israeli jails, including beatings, hunger, a halt in visitations and medical negligence.
In its statement, the commission said it perceives the assaults against Barghouti and other prominent Palestinian figures in detention as an attempt to “assassinate” them.
Barghouti is extremely popular among Palestinians with polls suggesting that he could win the Palestinian presidency.
He has been subject to at least two other previous attacks, the statement said.
Intensified arrests
Barghouti was a prominent leader in the first and second Intifadas (uprisings) and was convicted by an Israeli court on five counts of murder in 2004, two years after he was imprisoned.
Barghouti offered no defence, refusing to recognise the authority of the Israeli court.
According to Addameer, a Palestinian rights and prisoner support group, more than 10,000 Palestinians are currently held in Israeli jails with at least 3,390 of them held under administrative detention, a widely criticised practice in which they are held without charge or trial.