ALBAWABA - Since the start of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, the occupation government has been trying to abolish its bad reputation by changing facts with the latest being about freed Palestinian prisoner Mohamed Nazal.
Palestinian Mohamed Nazal was among those who were released by Israel amid the latest prisoner exchange deal between Hamas and Israel. He was released on Nov. 28.
On Thursday, Hamas and Israel announced extending the truce agreed on Gaza for 24 hours.
Who is Palestinian prisoner Mohamed Nazal?
Mohamed Nazal, 17, is from the town of Qabatiya, south of the city of Jenin, in the northern West Bank.
He was arrested by Israeli forces 3 months ago and was sentenced to administrative imprisonment for a period of 6 months. Upon his release, Nazal said that Israeli units in jail attacked him and left him with broken hands.
The Palestinian child said that Israeli units were constantly storming the prisoners' rooms and severely beating them.
Israel's narrative:
Israel posted on its official X account a video in which it claimed that Mohamed Nazal left Israel jail with healthy hands.
It wrote: "CCTV footage shows Mohamed Nazal leaving prison and boarding the bus with two perfectly working arms."
Furthermore, Ofir Gendelman, the Israeli Prime Minister's spokesperson to the Arab world, posted the same video of Mohamed Nazal and said: "Do you remember the Palestinian prisoner Muhammad Nazzal, who was released yesterday and who falsely claimed to the Arab media that members of the Israeli Prison Service had broken his hands?"
"Here he is as he boarded the Red Cross bus yesterday after leaving prison. His hands are unharmed."
Palestinian child Mohamed Nazal speaks the truth:
Misbar reported after investigating what happened with the child prisoner saying that it reviewed the interview that Nazal made with Al Jazeera upon his arrival in the city of Ramallah exposing Israel's lies about the health condition of Mohamed Nazal.
In the interview, the Palestinian prisoner confirmed that the Red Cross was the one who treated him on the bus that was transporting prisoners from prison, and that "his fingers were broken and he was unable to move them well."