Moscovia Detention Centre
Location | West Jerusalem, Israel |
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The Al-Moskobiya, Moscobiyeh, Muscovite or Moscovia Detention Centre is an Israeli detention and interrogation facility and prison more commonly known as The Russian Compound, located in West Jerusalem.[1] The center is used to interrogate Palestinian detainees and prisoners from a variety of age groups, including children. It has been described by activists and human rights organizations as being notorious for underground dungeon cells and harsh methods of torture.[2][3]
History
During the British Palestine Mandate the center was known as 'the central prison'. It has been claimed that the prison especially became notorious due to its harsh torture techniques throughout the 1980s.[3]
In 1990, it was reported that the jail was used mainly for Palestinians fighting Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Both the Moscovia Detention Centre and the nearby Museum of Underground Prisoners are yellow brick buildings that were built as part of a complex of hostels and a green-domed church for pilgrims by the Russian Orthodox Church in the 1860s.[4]
Popular culture
In 2017 a documentary by director Raed Andoni was released called Ghost Hunting (Arabic: إصطياد اشباح Iṣṭiyād ʾAšbāḥ). The movie, which explores the trauma of former prisoners of the Detention Center, was first screened in Ramallah for an audience consisting for ninety percent of former prisoners.[5]
References
- ^ Staff of Al-Haq / Law in the Service of Man (December 1988). Punishing a Nation. Israeli Human Rights Violations During the Palestinian Uprising. December 1987 - December1988. Boston: South End Press. p. 71. ISBN 0-89608-379-9.
- ^ Rubin, Jesse (24 December 2017). "Israel has transferred Ahed Tamimi to three different detention facilities in the last five days even though she has not yet been charged with a crime". Mondoweiss. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
- ^ a b "Al-Moscobiyeh (The Russian Compound) Interrogation Center and Prison". Addameer. Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
- ^ Laub, Karin (26 August 1990). "Russian Compound: Symbolic Jails in Holy City". Los Angeles Times. ASSOCIATED PRESS. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
- ^ Abdessadok, Zineb (1 March 2017). "Film recreates notorious Israeli detention centre". Al Jazeera Media Network. Retrieved 10 June 2018.