Home Blog Page 101

Palestinian prisoners escalate resistance to attacks on women prisoners, isolation and repression

The isolated Palestinian women prisoners have been returned to Damon prison but not to their rooms with their fellow imprisoned Palestinian women. While the Israeli prison administration committed to releasing Marah Bakir, Shorouq Dwayyat and Mona Qaadan from solitary confinement as a condition of the prisoners’ movement for negotiations on the conditions of the women prisoners, it only returned them to the prison itself and not to their rooms.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

As a result, the Palestinian prisoners’ movement is joining with resistance factions in calling for action and mobilization to defend the Palestinian women prisoners, who have faced violent physical assaults, forcible transfers, solitary confinement and denials of fundamental rights, including family visits and appropriate health care. Palestinian national and Islamic forces called for days of protest on 24 December, while the Palestinian resistance factions pledged to stand beside the prisoners in the struggle.

On Wednesday, 22 December, Palestinian political prisoners will return their breakfast meals and close their sections until noon, to demand the immediate return of Dwayyat, Bakir and Qaadan to their cells. These protest actions will focus on three demands:

  • The implementation of the agreement to return Dwayyat, Bakir and Qaadan to their rooms with their fellow imprisoned women and restore the previous situation of the women prisoners;
  • The release of Hisham Abu Hawash, on hunger strike for nearly 130 days to end his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial;
  • Ending the attacks on the prisoners in Nafha prison, especially those in section 12.

The Handala Center for Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners reported that the Palestinian prisoners in Ramon prison have already begun these protest steps to demand implementation of these three points.

The women prisoners were repeatedly attacked by repressive units between Thursday, 16 December and Sunday, 19 December. They engaged in physical attacks on the women prisoners, isolating their elected leaders (Bakir and Dwayyat), turning off their electricity and imposing further restrictions on them, such as denying them showers for over three days.

Their fellow Palestinian prisoners, including the male prisoners, responded to these attacks with outrage. In Nafha prison, Yousef al-Mabhouh, a Palestinian political prisoner from Gaza, physically confronted and wounded a jailer to express his anger at the abuse of the women prisoners. Following this, Israeli occupation forces entered numerous repressive units into Nafha prison, removing all of the detainees to the prison yard. A group of prisoners, including Mabhouh as well as at least three more prisoners, including Fadi Abu Sabah, Tamer al-Derini and a third unknown person, who were later transferred to the prison clinic, were beaten severely. Mabhouh was taken away by helicopter from the scene.

Multiple prisoners in Nafha were then transferred to solitary confinement outside the prison, including Youssef Massoud, Ashraf al-Zughair, Munir Marei, Mohammed Arman, Mahmoud Radwan and Omar Sharif, and Israeli occupation forces announced that they were banning family visits to all Hamas prisoners. The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society demanded information about the fate and whereabouts of Mabhouh and more than 80 prisoners of section 12, which remain unknown, including sick and elderly prisoners.

Meanwhile, Hisham Abu Hawash, on hunger strike for the 127th day, is facing increasingly dangerous health conditions. Abu Hawash, 40, from Dura near al-Khalil, has been repeatedly transferred to civil hospitals or a short period before being returned to the Ramle prison clinic, putting even more pressure on his body in an attempt to force him to end his hunger strike. The Israeli High Court declined to order him transferred to a civilian hospital, claiming that only the prison administration can make this decision. He is on hunger strike to demand an end to his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, and the refusal to transfer Abu Hawash to a hospital is a new method of pressure upon him to end his strike.

Abu Hawash has been jailed without charge or trial since 27 October 2020 and has spent a total of 8 years in prison, including 52 months without charge or trial under administrative detention. He is married and the father of five children: Hadi, Mohammed, Izz al-Din, Waqas and Saba.

This comes as Palestinians jailed without charge or trial announced they will launch a collective boycott of the Israeli military courts on 1 January 2022, with escalating protest steps up to and including a collective hunger strike to bring administrative detention to an end. Currently, approximately 500 of the 4550 Palestinian political prisoners are jailed without charge or trial under these arbitrary orders, which can be indefinitely renewed. Palestinians routinely spend years at a time jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention orders, which were first introduced to Palestine by British colonialism before being adopted by the Israeli occupation.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the strongest campaign of international solidarity with these imprisoned Palestinian women and men, on the front lines in the struggle for justice and liberation in Palestine. Learn more about Palestinian women prisoners and how you and your organization can support their struggle at the Aseerat campaign page.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has a responsibility to act to safeguard these Palestinian women prisoners — and all imprisoned Palestinians — from the retaliatory actions and collective punishment imposed by the Israeli occupation.   Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Join the social media campaign to support women prisoners! On Wednesday, 22 December, at 7 pm Palestine time (6 pm central Europe, 9 am Pacific, 12 noon Eastern), join the social media storm. Tweet using the hashtags: #FreeThemAll #SaveFemalePrisoners

Samidoun NY/NJ joins vigil for justice and liberation in the Philippines

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

On Thursday, 9 December, Samidoun NY/NJ activists joined the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines, BAYAN USA, Anakbayan NY and other organizations for a demonstration outside the Philippine consulate in New York City on the eve of International Human Rights Day.

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

The candlelight vigil honored the lives lost under the administration of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration while denouncing the so-called “Summit for Democracy” hosted by U.S. president Joe Biden, which aimed to build support for an agenda of war and sanctions on targeted countries while inviting noted right-wing autocrats like Duterte, India’s Narendra Modi and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro — all noted for their support for U.S. imperialist objectives and for pursuing alliances and arms deals with the Israeli occupation regime.

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

Vigil participants highlighted the biographies of human rights defenders killed by state forces under the Duterte regime for their political beliefs and activism. Among those honored at the vigil were Atty. Juan Macababbad, land defender Joseph Canlas, human rights defender Zara Alvarez, and baby River, the child of urban poor advocate and political prisoner Reina Mae Nasino.

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

“He defended the poor, peasant farmers, and in particular indigenous communities,” recounted Julie Jamora of Malaya Movement USA, remembering Macababbad, the 65th lawyer killed under the Duterte regime. Jamora met Macababbad during an International Fact Finding Mission in 2018, when she and her fellow human rights workers were detained by the military for hours and threatened with deportation. “We were told that they needed to verify that we were not terrorists because we were conducting this fact finding mission. Without any hesitation, he came and was able to get our safe release. I am eternally indebted to Atty. Juan and incredibly angry that his life was silenced early. How many more indigenous communities could he have served? How many more peasant communities could he have helped? But the Duterte administration chose to kill him instead because he was too powerful of a human rights defender!”

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

The vigil also raised the alarm about the “Anti-Terrorism Law” in the Philippines, which presents a dangerous threat to activists and human rights defenders. The law even aims to reach across borders to prosecute people living outside the Philippines for their political activities. Participants called on members of Congress to pass H.R. 3884, Philippine Human Rights Act, to cut U.S. military aid to the Philippines. In 2021 alone, the U.S. has sent $550 million in military aid to the Philippines, with an additional $2.6 billion in weapons sales .Human rights organizations have documented the use of U.S. fighter jets in indiscriminate aerial raids on civilian communities throughout the rural Philippines.

Joe Catron, U.S. coordinator of Samidoun, delivered the following statement:

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

In 2019, Ahmad Sa’adat, the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said:

“Political prisoners are not simply individuals; they are leaders of struggle and organizing within prison walls that help to break down and dismantle the bars, walls, and chains that act to divide us from our peoples and communities in struggle…

“So when we witness the escalation against our movement as we see today in the Philippines, as we see the murderous and orchestrated attacks on our Palestinian resistance, as we see the criminalization of Black people and movements, it is clear that we are still facing the situation that Huey Newton identified and confronted.”

Tonight, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reaffirms our solidarity with the struggle of the peoples of the Philippines for justice and liberation from imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.

Duterte has escalated official cooperation of the Philippine government with Israel, acting in line with his service to U.S. imperialism.

The “terror” label is routinely used by the Israeli occupation and the U.S. and other imperialist powers, as well as in the Philippines, to criminalize people’s movements for liberation. We know that this designation will never repress the dynamic struggle of the Filipino people.

Tonight, we also mark 40 years of the political imprisonment of Philadelphia journalist and Black Panther Party activist Mumia Abu-Jamal by the State of Pennsylvania.

Like our other political prisoners, from Palestine to the Phillippines, Mumia is an icon of struggle, a leader of our liberation movements, and a beacon on our paths to freedom.

We celebrate their resistance behind bars and the resilience of the movements they inspire.

And we pledge to continue the fight for their liberation and the victories of their struggles.

From Palestine to the Philippines:
Stop the U.S. war machine!

Photo: International Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (ICHRP – US)

The growing battle to end administrative detention: Boycott launched for 2022; Hisham Abu Hawash on hunger strike for 126 days

 

As Hisham Abu Hawash enters his 127th day of hunger strike, the collective struggle of Palestinian prisoners to end administrative detention — imprisonment without charge or trial — is escalating. The Administrative Detainees’ Committee announced that, as of 1 January 2022, the administrative detainees will collectively boycott the Israeli occupation military courts.

Currently, approximately 500 out of the 4,550 Palestinian political prisoners are jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders were first introduced to Palestine by the British colonial mandate and were later adopted by the Zionist project to target Palestinians. These orders are issued for up to six months at a time and are indefinitely renewable; consequently, Palestinians are jailed for years at a time without charge, trial or even knowing when or if they will be released.

Over the past 10 years, many Palestinian prisoners have launched individual and collective hunger strikes in protest against administrative detention, with many detainees recognizing that such a struggle is one of the only ways to ensure their release. Hisham Abu Hawash is currently on hunger strike for 127 days against his own imprisonment without charge or trial, which was extended for another four months during his strike.

The Palestinian prisoners’ movement announced its full support for the administrative detainees’ declaration of boycott, calling on human rights and legal institutions to take up their responsibilities to support this confrontation of administrative detention, seeking its end as a policy. The prisoners’ movement stated that the detainees have the support of all Palestinian organizations and that the struggle could escalate to a mass open hunger strike should the occupation refuse the just demands of the detainees.

The announcement of the collective boycott campaign was announced at a press conference on 20 December organized by the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society and Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association.

It follows on the boycott of the military courts announced by Bashir al-Khairy, Palestinian lawyer and longtime leftist leader, who asked his lawyer Mahmoud Hassan not to represent im before the Ofer Military Court. Al-Khairy, 79 years old, has been detained since 29 October 2021 and the Israeli occupation authorities issued an administrative detention order against him for 6 months, until 28 April 2022. The administrative detention order was issued against him after he was previously ordered released by a military court due to his elder age and the dated allegations against him, which included public events and dated back to 2000, 2014 and 2017.

Al-Khairy spent 15 years in Israeli occupation prisons; seized by occupation forces in 1968, he was released in 1984. In a statement, Al-Khairy emphasized, “As a lawyer and a man of law, I view the procedure of transferring me to administrative detention — regardless of its duration — as contradicting the most basic human right to defend oneself and to know the charges laid against him, in contravention of international law…Before these fascist, oppressive courts, so as to preserve my national dignity and convictions, I will boycott and refuse to appear before the military court, and I reject any ruling issued by it.”

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses its strongest solidarity with the action of the administrative detainees to boycott the illegitimate Israeli military courts and bring this unjust and illegal system to an end. We urge supporters of Palestine to organize actions, events and solidarity campaigns to support these boycott actions, including during the Week of Action to Free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian Prisoners from 15-22 January 2022. Administrative detention — like the entire Israeli prison system — is a colonial weapon intended to target Palestinian resistance and isolate the leaders of the Palestinian people’s struggle. End administrative detention; free all Palestinian prisoners! 

Read the statement of the administrative detainees below (translated from Arabic):

Continuing the determined national efforts to put an end to the unjust practice of administrative detention against the Palestinian people by the occupation forces, and within the framework of intensive consultations conducted by the prisoners’ movement across its full spectrum to organize a large movement, through a program of national struggle in which administrative detainees have participated in all areas, prisons and detention centers,

Continuing the previous steps taken by the administrative detainees to confront this arbitrary policy and unjust detention, and whereas the Israeli military courts are an important part of the occupation’s systemic efforts to suppress all the active forces of our people, to besiege, loot and confiscate every Palestinian right, including the Palestinian right to freedom, these courts are a barbaric racist tool that consumed hundreds of years of the lives of their children. Our people are under the hammer of administrative detention, through farcical sham courts, the results of which have been pre-established by the military commander of the region. This policy is being carried out against children, women, elders, sick and ill people, and the general population.

The cadres and activists of the Palestinian people are imprisoned under flimsy justifications with the goal of breaking the will and consciousness of our people.

Accordingly, we, the Administrative Detainees’ Committee, representing all administrative detainees in the occupation prisons, and in coordination with all of the organizational bodies of the national and Islamic factions, announce the following:

First: Launching our project for a comprehensive boycott of the occupation military courts for administrative detention, starting from the date of 1 January 2022 at all levels (initial, appeal, high court) under the slogan: “We have decided on freedom — no to administrative detention.”

This campaign will launch with coordination with the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission, the Prisoners’ Society and other relevant institutions, a binding and general step, and we call on all legal institutions and lawyers to support us in our step through boycotting these courts in relation to administrative detention, with reference to the legal front of this framework.

Second: We call upon our free and proud Palestinian people in all areas of their presence, their forces and national and Islamic factions, student, labor and professional unions, and various movements to fully prepare to support our project as a national project that aims to repel the attack of the occupier and lift its oppressive hand of administrative arrest, which now targets any popular movement, expression or position opposing the occupation.

Third: What our people can do through their united struggle, formulating a comprehensive program of support, is what can guarantee victory for any battle, including what can be done through the media and social media, and pursuing all legal and media routes, in addition to highlighting this project in all national and popular movements with your effective support.

Fourth: Our message to all free peoples and democratic forces of the world, to all nations of the world and international and human rights institutions: Support our just cause, stop the guillotine of administrative detention on our necks, and besiege the occupier and its officers and judges of death in its unjust military courts.

Fifth: The project of our comprehensive boycott of the courts begins in a strategic form, in which we will build upon all efforts that have been made over the years and over the coming months, preparing towards a collective open hunger strike in the event that the occupier does not respond to our just demands in accordance with the norms of international law.

Our decision is freedom — no to administrative detention!

Administrative Detainees’ Committee

20 December 2021

Update on the situation of Palestinian women prisoners

Imprisoned Palestinian women are continuing to mobilize to defend their rights against attacks by Israeli occupation forces. According to reports from Palestine, the mobilization of the women prisoners achieved its first demand, of the release of their representatives from isolation. Mona Qaadan and Shorouq Dwayyat have been returned to Damon prison from Gilboa, where they were held in isolation; and Marah Bakir will reportedly be returned shortly to Damon from the Jalameh interrogation center. However, the women prisoners are continuing to fight for their demands for family visits and phone calls and to end the attacks by repressive forces.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

The Palestinian prisoners’ movement insisted on the release of the three women from isolation as a condition to begin a dialogue on the situation of the Palestinian women prisoners, as well as the lifting of the unjust penalties against them. However, all of these require ongoing vigilance and action, as the most recent attacks came only days after the women extracted a promise to have phone calls with their families after being deprived of family visits.

The women prisoners are continuing to return their meals in protest of the assaults over the past several days by repressive forces and the isolation of Bakir, Dwayyat and Qaadan. The women prisoners were subjected to disciplinary hearings in absentia, and they were ordered deprived of family visits and the “canteen” (prison store) for one month — even though they have already been collectively denied family visits for three months, one of the major reasons they launched their protest. Maysoon Musa al-Jabali, Nourhan Awwad, Shorouq Dwayyat, Malak Salman and Marah Bakir were ordered doubly penalized and fined.

The prison administration also threatened to abolish the women prisoners’ representation, which handles matters of negotiation and dealing with the administration. Marah Bakir represents the women prisoners, and Shorouq Dwayyat is her deputy. They threatened to classify them as “civil” prisoners rather than “security” prisoners, an attempt to strip them of what is essentially their designation as political prisoners — undoubtedly, without the rights and benefits enjoyed by Israeli civil prisoners.

The women prisoners have been prevented from leaving their rooms, denied showers for three days and prevented from accompanying one another during visits to the prison clinic or hospital. They have also been repeatedly threatened with tear gas whenever they object to any of the measures imposed upon them.

Palestinian lawyer Hanan al-Khatib visited the women prisoners in Damon prison, and said after her meetings: “The women prisoners are in high spirits despite the difficult circumstances they have lived through. They are reassured by the widespread support for them. The prisoners are standing together with one another and will not give up the demand to return their three comrades subjected to solitary confinement. The women prisoners salute everyone who is standing with them. The support of the Palestinian people and communication with their families only increases their resolve and steadfastness.”

Palestinian resistance forces urged continued support for the women prisoners and warned against attempts to cover up the ongoing crimes against them. The leadership of Hamas prisoners issued a statement, warning that “The administration of the occupation prisons, by returning the isolated imprisoned sisters to their rooms and restoring their conditions to what they were prior, is trying to cover up its heinous crimes and ugly actions in an attempt prevent the movement of the street and the resistance in response.”

The Prison Branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine called for a “state of public alert in support” of the women prisoners, calling for protest, action and confrontation of the settlers and the occupation army to stand with the women prisoners and support their steadfastness.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the strongest campaign of international solidarity with these imprisoned Palestinian women, on the front lines in the struggle for justice and liberation in Palestine. Learn more about Palestinian women prisoners and how you and your organization can support their struggle at the Aseerat campaign page.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has a responsibility to act to safeguard these Palestinian women prisoners — and all imprisoned Palestinians — from the retaliatory actions and collective punishment imposed by the Israeli occupation. We call on the ICRC to act to protect Palestinian women from attack; secure family visits for imprisoned Palestinian women; secure the implementation of phone calls to family members for imprisoned Palestinian women; and uphold the rights of the women prisoners.  Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Take Action: Defend Palestinian Women Prisoners Under Attack

Update: 20 December 2021 – The isolated women are scheduled to be returned due to the protests and action of the prisoners’ movement, especially the women prisoners. However, the struggle is far from over. Please continue to take actions and send letters to defend Palestinian women prisoners!

Palestinian women prisoners are fighting back against a wave of repression inside Israeli occupation jails. Marah Bakir and Shorouq Dwayyat, the two women prisoners who represent the detainees as a group in negotiations or dealings with the prison administration, have both been transferred to solitary confinement. Their fellow prisoner, Mona Qaadan, has also been taken to an unknown location.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

On Sunday, 19 December, Zionist repressive units violently attacked the women prisoners who were returning their meals, refusing to stand for security checks and banging on the doors of their prison rooms. The women prisoners demand that Shorouq Dwayyat and Marah Bakir be immediately released from isolation; both have been transferred to other prisons — Dwayyat to Gilboa prison and Bakir to the Jalameh interrogation center.

According to prisoners’ organizations in Palestine, the electricity was cut off from the women prisoners’ cells, several of the women’s hijabs were torn from their heads, and one of the women prisoners lost consciousness during the attack. The prison administration is continuing to threaten the women prisoners with tear gas inside their rooms.

Now, Palestinian women prisoners are being denied access to the “canteen” (the prison store where women must buy many foods and other necessities) and fined because of their protest of this injustice. The women prisoners in Damon prison have also been denied showers for three days.

Meanwhile, Palestinian resistance organizations have declared their full support for the women prisoners’ struggle. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons, joins their demands and urges escalated international solidarity to support their struggle for liberation.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Systematic Rights Violations

Palestinian women prisoners have been subjected to ongoing and systematic denials of family visits, including denials of family visits of the children of imprisoned mothers. Israeli occupation authorities have claimed that these visits are being denied because of the self-liberation of six Palestinian prisoners in the Freedom Tunnel operation, because of repairs to the visiting room and because of coronavirus restrictions, but the reality remains the same: a systematic attempt to isolate imprisoned Palestinian women from their loved ones.

Despite an attempt to quell the prisoners’ protests with a declaration that phone calls to family would be implemented, these promises have not been fulfilled, and the women prisoners continue to be cut off from their families. In addition, they have had books confiscated from their library, including cultural and scientific books, and have been denied basic goods and supplies for handicrafts provided by their families.

They are subjected to ongoing surveillance, including in the recreation area and in the corridors, and they are transferred back and forth to the military courts or to receive medical care via the “bosta,” the notorious transportation vehicle in which the prisoners are shackled on metal benches. They are frequently denied access to toilet or sanitary facilities, and journeys that should take an hour or less take up to a day to complete. In many cases, the use of the “bosta” is exacerbated by repeated trips to military courts, which are constantly postponed, particularly if the detained Palestinian women refuse to agree to a plea bargain in order to bring this coercive process to an end.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

What sparked protests by imprisoned Palestinian women?

On Thursday, 16 December, repressive units attacked a 14-year-old Jerusalemite girl from the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood targeted by Israeli settlers, while she was being transported in the “bosta.” The girl, whose family is facing forced displacement from their home in Sheikh Jarrah by the settler state, was seized by the Israeli occupation forces on 9 December and accused of attempting to stab a settler.

In response to the attack on the imprisoned girl, the women prisoners took protest steps, including refusing to leave their rooms for security checks and closing their sections in Damon prison.

The prison itself, formerly a stable for animals, is notorious for its poor standards of living and extremely humid conditions, especially during the winter season. Women prisoners like Israa Jaabis, with severe medical needs, are not given proper health care or supports and their fellow women prisoners must help them with all activities of living, as they continue to face medical neglect that worsens already-serious health conditions.

There are currently 34 Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons, including Khitam Saafin, the president of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees. Saafin’s administrative detention — imprisonment without charge or trial — was extended on multiple occasions, and now she is being brought before the occupation military courts on trumped-up charges related to her political and social activities. Shorouq al-Badan, 27, who was just released from Israeli occupation prisons in May 2021, was seized again by occupation forces on 8 December and ordered imprisoned without charge or trial once again on 16 December.

Just yesterday, on Saturday, 18 December, Saadia Salem Radwan Farajallah, 65, from the village of Idna near al-Khalil, was seized by Israeli occupation forces, accused of attempting to stab an illegal Israeli settler in al-Khalil.

Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the strongest campaign of international solidarity with these imprisoned Palestinian women, on the front lines in the struggle for justice and liberation in Palestine. Learn more about Palestinian women prisoners and how you and your organization can support their struggle at the Aseerat campaign page.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has a responsibility to act to safeguard these Palestinian women prisoners — and all imprisoned Palestinians — from the retaliatory actions and collective punishment imposed by the Israeli occupation. We call on the ICRC to act to protect Palestinian women from attack; secure family visits for imprisoned Palestinian women; secure the implementation of phone calls to family members for imprisoned Palestinian women; and secure the release of Shorouq Dwayyat, Marah Bakir and Mona Qaadan from solitary confinement.  Click here to write a letter to the International Committee of the Red Cross to demand the ICRC take action to defend Palestinian women prisoners.

Delegation visits Georges Abdallah in Lannemezan with greetings of international solidarity

A delegation from the Collectif Palestine Vaincra visited Georges Ibrahim Abdallah in Lannemezan Prison in December 2021. Georges Abdallah is a Lebanese Arab struggler for the Palestinian resistance who has been imprisoned in French jails for 37 years. His story and life in struggle is the subject of the film “Fedayin: Georges Abdallah’s Fight,” and over 1,000 people gathered in Lannemezan in October 2021 to demand his immediate release.

The Collectif Palestine Vaincra, based in Toulouse, France, is a member organization of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network. The delegates met with Abdallah for many hours for lively discussions on the situation of the movement for the liberation of Palestine, political developments in Lebanon and social struggles in France, among other topics.

During the visit, Georges Abdallah emphasized the centrality of the Palestinian prisoners’ cause to the struggle for justice and liberation and expressed his support and encouragement for the International Week of Action to Free Ahmad Sa’adat, 15 to 22 January 2022.

They carried greetings and messages of solidarity for Abdallah from organizations and activists, including fellow members of the Samidoun Network. They also delivered a solidarity statement from the Internationalt Forum in Denmark, republished below:

Free Georges Abdallah – Free Palestine

Internationalt Forum sends our warmest greetings to Georges Abdallah, Lebanese internationalist who has for more than 37 years been confined in French prison for his participation in the Palestinian liberation struggle.

We support the international campaign for the immediate release of Georges Abdallah from the jail in Lannemezan in South Western France.

The French state is a colonial and imperialist state which supports the Zionist state Israel and its colonization of Palestine and the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people.At the same time, the French state fights Palestinian and other antiimperialist freedom fighters – and blacklists and persecutes them.

This is the background of the fact that since 1984 the French state has kept Georges Abdallah imprisoned – although according to the French judicial system he had the right to be released in 1999.The release of Georges Abdallah will be a slap in the face of the French state and the Zionist lobby in France, but also of imperialism and Zionism.

Internationalt Forum in Denmark which is an antiimperialist solidarity organization, expresses our deepest respect to comrade Georges Abdallah for his personal and political courage and steadfastness behind bars, expressed through his unbreakable solidarity with  the Palestinian liberation struggle, hereunder the Palestinian  political prisoners in Zionist jails and his continued struggle against Zionism and imperialism.

Free Georges Abdallah now!
Free all revolutionary prisoners!
From the River to the Sea – Palestine shall be Free!
Long live International solidarity!
Internationaltforum.dk

Løslad Georges Abdallah – Frit Palæstina!

Internationalt Forum sender sine varmeste hilsener til Georges Abdallah – libanesisk internationalist, der på 38. år sidder indespærret i fransk fængsel for sin deltagelse i den palæstinensiske befrielseskamp. Vi støtter den internationale kampagne for øjeblikkelig løsladelse af Georges  Abdallah fra fængslet i Lannemezan i det sydvestlige Frankrig.

Den franske stat er en kolonial og imperialistisk  stat der støtter den zionistiske stat Israel og dens kolonisering af Palæstina og den etniske udrensning af det palæstinensiske folk. Samtidig hermed bekæmper den franske stat palæstinensiske og andre antiimperialistiske frihedskæmpere og terrorstempler og forfølger dem.

Det er baggrunden for at den franske stat siden 1984 har holdt Georges Abdallah indespærret – på trods af at Georges Abdallah ifølge det franske retssystem var berettiget til løsladelse helt tilbage i 1999!

En løsladelse af Georges  Abdallah vil være et slag i ansigtet– ikke kun på den franske stat og den zionistiske lobby i Frankrig, men også på zionismen og imperialismen.Internationalt Forum i Danmark, som er en antiimperialistisk solidaritetsorganisation, udtaler vores dybe respekt for kammerat Georges  Abdallah for hans personlige og politiske mod og udholdenhed  bag tremmerne – der har givet sig udtryk i hans ubrydelige støtte til den palæstinensiske befrielseskamp, herunder de palæstinensiske fanger i zionismens fængsler, og hans vedholdende kritik af og kamp imod zionismen og imperialismen.

Løslad Georges Abdallah NU!
Løslad alle politiske revolutionære fanger!
From the River to the Sea- Palestine shall  be Free!
Styrk den internationale solidaritet!
Internationaltforum.dk

Write a letter: Canada’s trifecta of anti-Palestinian racism—diplomats Wettlaufer and Stadelbauer, and Minister Joly

Take one minute to write to Prime Minister Trudeau, Head of Mission in Ramallah Wettlaufer, Ambassador Stadelbauer in Tel Aviv, and Foreign Affairs Minister Joly.

Click here to write your letter!

Let them know that their anti-Palestinian behaviour is not acceptable.

Along with the usual trend each December of Canada voting with Israel, the USA and a couple of small countries beholden to the US, opposing most pro-Palestinian resolutions at the United Nations, it has also been an embarrassing time for the Canadian government with its Foreign Affairs minister and its two top diplomats in Ramallah and Tel Aviv all making anti-Palestinian comments.

Canada’s Top Diplomat to Palestine denies Canadian arm trade with Israel

On December 15, 2021, Robin Wettlaufer, the Head of the Canadian Mission in Ramallah, criticized Electronic Intifada editor Ali Abunimah for tweeting that Canada “arms and funds the apartheid state to murder Palestinians and steal their land.” She responded by writing “we neither arm nor fund Israel.”

After Abunimah and others provided evidence of Canada “arming and funding Israel” the Canadian diplomat then blocked Abunimah on Twitter.

Ms. Wettlaufer should be aware that Canada helps to “arm Israel”. Canadian weapons sales to Israel have received attention in recent months with calls for two way embargos, including her receiving 1K letters just before the election and another almost 3500 over the last month or so. At the NDP convention in April, a resolution was passed calling for Canada to (among other things) end arms sales to Israel; and party leader Jagmeet Singh raised this on multiple occasions during the rise of Israeli violence in May.

Between 2015 and 2020 Canada exported about $15 million a year in weapons directly to Israel.

An equal or greater number of Canadian weapons sales are delivered to Israel through US exports. Under the Canada-US Defence Production Sharing Agreement the two countries’ arms industries are highly integrated so there is little data about weapons exports to the US, some of which would be exported to Israel.

Read more

Canada’s Foreign Minister and anti-Palestinianism

On December 7, 2021 during a response to a question in Parliament, Canada’s foreign affairs minister, Mélanie Joly said:

“…obviously we are a steadfast ally of Israel and friends to the Palestinian people. I raised the question regarding the Palestinian civil society organizations listed by Israel as terrorist organizations with my counterpart, Lapid, when I had the chance to talk to him. Of course, he said to me that he would be giving more clarity on this matter, so I am waiting for him.”

Her reference to the six Palestinian human rights organizations is deeply concerning. Why is she asking and still waiting for information from the Israeli government, when she should be considering the statement made in October by United Nations experts? She has received more than 6,000 letters outlining the situation, and her colleague Nathaniel Erskine-Smith has sponsored a parliamentary petition, E-3679, asking Canada to call upon the Israeli authorities to immediately rescind the designations and end all efforts aimed at delegitimizing and criminalizing Palestinian human rights defenders.

On December 7 in Parliament, she also noted:

“…of course we will always be there to help vulnerable Palestinians. We would rather see them sitting in classrooms in schools that are funded by United Nations organizations than in the streets fighting. That is exactly why we want to make sure we continue to support UNRWA.”

This comment was a clear-cut case of anti-Palestinian racism that needs both a public apology and a commitment to cease and desist from any further dehumanization of the Palestinian people and nation.

Canadian Ambassador to Tel Aviv praises Israel for its support on arbitrary detention

Perhaps Lisa Stadelbauer should check her email—over the last few weeks she received copies of almost 6,000 letters sent to the Prime Minister and Minister Joly, expressing concern about administrative detention in Palestinians by Israel in contravention of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Also, Liberal MP Salma Zaid has sponsored two parliamentary petitions, E-3312 and E-3608 signed by almost 7,000 Canadians this year in regard to the treatment of children under Israeli military law including administrative detention.

There are currently approximately 500 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, out of 4,550 Palestinian political prisoners. These orders are issued by the military and approved by military courts on the basis of “secret evidence”, denied to both Palestinian detainees and their attorneys. Issued for up to six months at a time, they are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians — including minor children — can spend years jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. Currently there are 170 children in Israeli jails.

The tweet:

https://twitter.com/canembisrael/status/1470310569467121665

UN Vote 2021 and historically

Once again Canada has maintained its “No” vote for Palestine at the UN, with the exception of the one resolution supporting self-determination. In 2019 in a desperate and unsuccessful attempt to show the world Canada was worthy of a seat at the UNSC, Canada after over a dozen years reversed this vote to a “yes”; it has continued to try and save face in 2020 and now in 2021, by maintaining this lone yes vote on Palestinian self-determination. #NoUNSC4Canada

Click here to write your letter!

Read more:
It is that time of year again! The UN votes on Palestine! Nothing new– Canada’s vote at the UN since 1947 shows at best conditional support for Palestine

Co-sponsored by

Canadian BDS Coalition

Canada Palestine Association

Just Peace Advocates

Palestinian and Jewish Unity

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Solidarity with Palestine at the Aubervilliers market in France

Samidoun Région Parisienne held its third stand in the Aubervilliers city center market this Saturday, 18 December, receiving a warm welcome from people attending the market.

Many people stopped to discuss the necessity of boycotting Israel as a tool in the fight against colonialism and apartheid. Participants in the stand distributed several flyers with a list of Israeli products and complicit international companies, including the sports equipment manufacturer PUMA and the computer brand Hewlett-Packard. In addition, the organizers distributed hundreds of leaflets on the situation of Palestinian prisoners. Currently, 4,550 Palestinians are imprisoned in Israeli jails including Hisham Abu Hawash, who has been conducting a courageous hunger strike for freedom for 124 days.

Solidarity with the struggle of the Palestinian people and their resistance is an integral part of the struggle against colonialism and racism. Samidoun Région Parisienne regularly organizes stands at the Aubervilliers market. Do not hesitate to contact us by email samidoun.rp@gmail.com or on our various social networks ( Facebook , Twitter and Instagram ) if you wish to participate!

18-19 December, NYC: Palestine Lives Weekend Holiday Pop-Up Shop

Saturday, 18 December – 10 am to 5 pm
Sunday, 19 December – 11 am to 7 pm
An-Noor Social Center
7114 5th Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11209
Organized by Within Our Lifetime and Existence Is Resistance
Info: https://www.instagram.com/p/CXbVHYcLcvg/

You don’t want to miss out on our upcoming event this weekend! Celebrate Palestinian people, culture and resistance at our two day holiday pop-up this weekend. We will be featuring vendors, art, poets performing live from Gaza and other liberation struggles @gazapoets @troikakollectiv, a Palestine photo booth, a political prisoner letter writing workshop for Palestinian prisoners and prisoners in the US with help from @samidounnetwork and Black liberation movement elder @dequi4liberation , Knafeh @kanafa.cups, giveaways and more!

Some of the vendors we’ll be featuring include
@tarinandreadesigns @purepali @arabellabymansour @marijonco @lays_embroidery @palestinian_made @kyledidthis @rodrigostarz @linas.macarons.nyc
@kanafa.cups @candlescape_nyc @deadseapearls.us @sisterbatwing @retrofixdirect @chewsabox

Contact @wolpalestine or @existenceisresistance ASAP if you’re interested in vending

#Palestine #FreePalestine #WithinOurLifetime #Existenceisresistance #brooklyn #nyc #Palestineslives

19 December, Online Event: International commemoration of prison massacre in Turkey


19 DECEMBER 2021 – INTERNATIONAL ONLINE CONFERENCE

The international online conference in commemoration of 28 political prisoners in Turkey who were brutally murdered in a prison operation during 19-22 December 2000, will be live streamed on Sunday, 19 December, 7:00 PM Central European Time (Germany)

find converted time for your region here:
https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html

*Participants from Peru, Greece, Italy, Turkey, Ireland, France, UK, Germany, Philippines, USA, Palestine and Donbass…
18 speakers from the mentioned countries will reflect on the solidarity with political prisoners in different parts of the world.

*Eye witnesses will report about the hell they went through these days in different prisons and also about their resistance which went beyond their limits to push back the brutal attack and to protect their comrades, especially those in a death fast against the forced transfer to isolation prisons.

*Grup Yorum will contribute to the event with a message and songs

Share this event with others and watch our interesting live program which will be broadcasted in English and Turkish on the Youtube channel – Free Ali Osman Köse: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0pQGKSK79KDeMduwuNKW8A