Friday 09 May 2025 
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Refugee who gave birth to stillborn sues Israel

Jisma Abu Moussa Ibrahim, is a Sudanese asylum seeker, placed at Saharonim facility eight months into pregnancy after entering Israel more than year ago. Denied medical attention despite her complaints she was eventually rushed to hospital only to give birth to stillborn.

"The doctors in prison took away everything I had, they could have saved my baby but when I gave birth he was already dead, now I have nothing," Jisma, 33 said.

Eight-months pregnant, she was placed at the Saharonim facility without gynecological care and gave birth to a stillborn a month later at the Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba. "At nights I dream that I'm holding my baby but when I wake up all I can do it imagine," she says.

Earlier this month, Abu Moussa Ibrahim filed a civil suit against the Israel Prison Service claiming medical negligence.

She entered Israel in June 2012 and was jailed at the Saharonim holding facility under the Infiltration Prevention Law.

An Israeli doctor who examined her upon her arrival at Saharonim said her overall health was "satisfactory."

According to the suit, he did not see fit to take her medical history nor did monitor her condition as the pregnancy progressed. She was thus left without any medical supervision.

According to the suit, Abu Moussa Ibrahim complained of weakness, pain and general discomfort several times during her stint in Saharonim. But each time she was told to "lay in the shadow and drink water."

Her complaints were not recorded and she did not undergo basic examinations required for pregnant women. 

According to the Doctors without Borders organization, women held at the Saharonim facility have access to a gynecologist at the Soroka Medical Center only twice a week. Many of them are asylum seekers that have suffered severe sexual abuse in camps in the Sinai Peninsula. Complaints on the matter received by various human rights groups resulted in a 2011 High Court petition for gynecological services in Saharonim. These are available in the Neve Tirza women's holding facility.

The court ordered both sides to settle the matter but no progress has been noted as of yet. "This is negligence and total disregard for human life on the part of the Prison Service," said Attorney Rotem Aloni, representing Abu Moussa Ibrahim.

"From the moment she was placed under their care and until she arrived in Soroka, the Prison Service had numerous opportunities to treat her and thus prevent the death of the fetus and a terrible trauma." The Prison Service said in response, "We will file our response to the suit through the State Prosecutor's Office, in due time."




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