The UK government is calling for an investigation after Palestinian medical staff told the BBC they were beaten and humiliated in an Israeli hospital raid.
Responding to a question in the Commons, a foreign office minister said a “full explanation” was required.
Three medical staff said they were humiliated, beaten, doused with cold water, and forced to kneel for hours. They said they were detained for days.
Israel said “any abuse of detainees is… strictly prohibited”.
Asked in the House of Commons about the BBC report, Foreign Office minister Andrew Mitchell said: “We have seen these reports. I think that a full explanation and investigation is required and that is what the British government is pressing for.”
He added that “Israel must comply” with Article 18 of the Geneva Convention which states that: “Civilian hospitals organised to give care to the wounded and sick, the infirm and maternity cases, may in no circumstances be the object of attack, but shall at all times be respected and protected by the parties to the conflict.”
Mr Mitchell said there were lawyers embedded in the Israeli and the IDF command that should ensure the “acceptance and honouring of international humanitarian law is kept”.
He was responding to Cynon Valley MP Ms Winter who had earlier highlighted the “shocking reports” and asked what the UK government was going to do about this.
She asked: “Does the UK government believe that the Israeli government is responsible for the conduct of its forces and that this clearly appears to be torture and is in breach on international law, including the universal declaration of human rights and the Geneva Convention article 18?”
The report relates to an IDF raid on the Nasser hospital in the southern Gazan city of Khan Younis – which was one of the few in the Strip still functioning – on 15 February. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said intelligence indicated that the hospital housed Hamas operatives.
They also said Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on 7 October had been held there – and some of the hostages themselves have publicly said they were kept at Nasser. Hamas has denied that its fighters operate inside medical facilities.
Footage secretly filmed in the hospital on 16 February, the day the medics were detained, was shared with the BBC.
It shows a row of men stripped to their underwear in front of the hospital’s emergency building, kneeling with their hands behind their heads. Medical robes are lying in front of some of them.
Ahmed Abu Sabha, a doctor at the hospital, described to the BBC being held for a week in detention, where, he said, muzzled dogs were set upon him and his hand was broken by an Israeli soldier.
His account closely matches those of two other medics who wanted to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals.
The BBC supplied details of their allegations to the IDF. They did not respond directly to questions about these accounts, or deny specific claims of mistreatment. But they denied that medical staff were harmed during their operation.
They said that “any abuse of detainees is contrary to IDF orders and is therefore strictly prohibited”.
The BBC investigated the hospital’s story for several weeks, speaking to doctors, nurses, pharmacists and displaced people camping in the courtyard. We have cross-checked details in these accounts.
We were given the names of 49 Nasser medical personnel said to have been detained. Of those, 26 were named by multiple sources, including medics on the ground, the Hamas-run health ministry, international groups, and the families of those missing.
The war began when Hamas gunmen attacked southern Israel on 7 October, killing about 1,200 people and seizing 253 hostages. More than 31,180 people have been killed in Gaza since then, the Hamas-run health ministry says.