Scenes of jubilation are spreading across Palestine, as the first group of women and children released from Zionist prisons are reunited with their families. Many of them have spent several years in jail, and suffered under the illegal administrative detention, which the Israelis use to imprison Palestinians indefinitely without trial.

Shatila Abu Ayad, now 30, was sentenced to 16 years in jail. She had already spent six years behind bars. Hers is one of the longest sentences for women abducted by the Zionist entity.

Maysoon Al Jabali, from Bethlehem, is considered the "dean of the women prisoners." In June 2015, she was sentenced to 15 in an Israeli jail.

Nufuz Hammad was sentenced to 12 years in prison two weeks ago. The Israeli entity accused her of carrying out an act of resistance in December 2021. At 16, she is also the youngest of the female prisoners in Israeli jails.

In 2019, 40-year-old Aisha Afghani from Al-Quds, was sentenced to 15 years in prison after being jailed in 2016. The Zionist entity accused her of a stabbing operation.

From Ramallah, 29-year-old Rawan Abu Ziyada was shot in 2015. Her court sessions were postponed 11 times before a nine-year sentence was issued in 2016.

Isra'a Jaabis was imprisoned in 2015 after her car malfunctioned while moving furniture. A propane tank exploded, and she requested the help of a Zionist policeman, who refused. She was then falsely accused of detonating a bomb, and suffers burns all over her body. Her fingers have also been amputated due to the extent of her injuries.

Itaf Jeradat, a mother of eight, was imprisoned in 2021 for allegedly covering up for a Palestinian resistance operation by hiding the alleged weapon. She was denied access to a lawyer and was subjected to arbitrary transfer. In protest against this violation of her human rights, she underwent a hunger strike earlier this year.