Israeli police said her vehicle stopped abruptly after being hit with stones, and accused the five boys of having thrown stones that day at Israeli vehicles driving on Route 5, the highway leading to several nearby Israeli settlements.
Twenty Israeli drivers afterwards filed insurance claims stating that stones hit their cars, but there was no eyewitness testimony of the incidents and the police received no calls at the time the boys were allegedly throwing stones.
All five boys denied the allegations, but later signed confessions “after being repeatedly abused in prison and during interrogations,” according to “Hares Boys,” an activist blog dedicated to raising awareness of their case.
Another boy, then 16, who was arrested along with the five but later released, described his ordeal in a report published by the International Women’s Peace Service, an organization that monitors human rights.
For the first three days of his detention, the boy said he was kept in solitary confinement in a windowless cell about one meter wide and two meters long, with neither a mattress nor blanket provided. He slept on the floor.
The six lights were kept on continually so that he was not aware of the time of day, and the food made him feel ill. Any water he was given had sugar in it. He was not given the opportunity to leave the cell and was unable to speak to anyone for two full days.
He said that soldiers threatened to hit him if he did not confess, and told him: “If you do not speak, bad things will happen to your mother
and sister.”
One of the boys who remains in detention, Ali Shamlawi, was reportedly told upon his arrest to “kiss and hug your mother goodbye. You may never see her again.”
The Hares Boys blog wrote in their defense in 2013: “If the boys are convicted, this case would set a legal precedent which would allow the Israeli military to convict any Palestinian child or youngster for attempted murder in cases of stone-throwing.”
It added: “The boys are now 16 to 17 years old. If the Israeli military get their way, the boys would only return to their homes and their families at the age of 41.”
The five boys are Ali Shamlawi, Muhammad Kleib, Muhammad Suleiman, Ammar Souf and Tamer Souf.
According to Military Court Watch, there were 163 Palestinian children in Israeli detention as of Jan. 31, 2015, including 16 children aged 15 or younger.
Approximately 5,500 Palestinians are being held in Israeli jails in total.