MKs pushed to prevent visitation from the International Committee of the Red Cross to Israeli prisons during a Knesset National Security Committee meeting on Tuesday, as representatives from the Israel Prison Service (IPS) said that allowing such visits could harm the security of the state.
Since the October 7 massacre and the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas War, Red Cross visits to Israeli prisons have been terminated, along with the transfer of information.
A High Court ruling in August 2024 called on the state to explain its refusal to allow the Red Cross to see Palestinian prisoners.
MKs in the committee meeting said that because the Red Cross was not doing enough to bring aid or visit the hostages held in Hamas captivity, visits to Palestinian prisoners could not be reciprocated.
Head of the committee MK Zvika Fogel (Otzma Yehudit) said that “no effort” was being made by the Red Cross on behalf of the hostages.
“Reciprocity must be preserved and conditions kept equal. I will do everything to ensure the Red Cross visits our hostages, and until that happens, I will stand at the prison gates and prevent their visits,” Fogel told those at the meeting.
<strong>A delusional request </strong><br>
“Allowing visits to those murderers in our prisons is a delusional request that is unfair, unjustified, and unacceptable,” Kallner added.
Bereaved hostage family members spoke at the committee meeting as well.
Hannah Cohen, aunt of slain hostage Inbar Haiman, whose body is still held by Hamas, told the committee that “Our daughter was kidnapped by those who sit in prison and are now requesting Red Cross visits.”
“In a normal country, they should have been executed,” she added.
“I don’t know where our daughter is. The law obligates the Red Cross to check where she is. My family is tortured,” she said.
At the end of the discussion, Fogel told those at the committee, “We must act as a state with a backbone. The cabinet must decide: no Red Cross visits until information on our hostages is received.”