Former Jordanian detainee Dahham Al-Amoush has died after months of severe health deterioration following a prolonged hunger strike that left him in a coma, in circumstances that highlight serious neglect and deliberate violations of fundamental human rights.
After falling into a coma, Jordanian authorities transferred him to Al-Bashir Hospital but prevented his family from taking him abroad for treatment and refused to release him. Instead, he was kept on life-support machines while in a critically deteriorating condition. This stance suggests that his death was not merely the result of a medical complication, but the consequence of a deliberate policy of neglect that denied him the medical care necessary to preserve his life.
In March, a Jordanian court sentenced Al-Amoush to 12 years in prison with hard labour, a sentence later reduced to eight years, in what critics describe as a stark disregard for the right to life and the right to adequate healthcare.
Detaining a critically ill individual while preventing him from travelling abroad for medical treatment constitutes a direct violation of international legal and humanitarian standards. It also breaches the prohibition against cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment, a principle designed to protect detainees from abuse or deliberate neglect.
Keeping a detainee in life-threatening health conditions while denying access to appropriate medical care abroad reflects a profound disregard for human dignity. Such practices effectively turn detention into a form of slow execution and expose the fragility of legal safeguards intended to protect the lives of detainees, while highlighting the absence of meaningful accountability for deliberate medical negligence.
The death of Dahham Al-Amoush stands as a stark example of how the failure to respect the fundamental rights of detainees can lead to tragic outcomes. Official intransigence and deliberate medical neglect represent grave breaches of international standards of humane treatment. This tragedy should serve as an urgent call to review detention and medical release policies and to ensure the protection of the life and dignity of all detainees in accordance with international human rights law.






















