A UN committee urged Israel yesterday to set up an independent investigatory commission to probe claims of torture of Palestinians, and warned the situation had "gravely intensified" since the start of the Gaza war.
The UN Committee against Torture said it was "deeply concerned about reports indicating a de facto state policy of organised and widespread torture and ill-treatment" in Israel.
In a report published after a regular review of Israel, it "also expressed its deep concern over the disproportionate nature of Israel's response".
And it decried "a range of policies adopted by Israel in the course of its continued unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory", warning that it risked leading to "cruel, inhuman or degrading living conditions for the Palestinian population".
The experts called on Israel to "establish an independent, impartial and effective ad hoc investigatory commission to review and investigate all allegations of torture and ill-treatment committed during the current armed conflict".
Israel should also "prosecute those responsible, including superior officers, and ensure the immediate entry of necessary humanitarian aid and aid workers into Gaza", the committee members said.
During the review conducted in Geneva earlier this month, committee rapporteur Peter Vedel Kessing told the Israeli delegation the experts had been "deeply appalled by the description we have received... of what appears to be systematic and widespread torture and ill-treatment of Palestinians, including children".
"It is claimed that torture has become a deliberate and widespread tool of state policy... from arrest to interrogation to imprisonment."
The committee report highlighted allegations of widespread use of torture methods, including "repeated severe beatings, dog attacks, electrocution, water-boarding, use of prolonged stress positions (and) physical violations".
During the review, Israel's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Daniel Meron, rejected the allegations presented, branding them "disinformation".