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Free Georges Abdallah! Mobilize October 17-24 for the International Week of Action

International Call for Action | Take Action | EventsMaterials and Resources

On 24 October 2018, we will mark the 34th anniversary of the arrest of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, revolutionary Lebanese Arab Communist struggler for Palestine, by French police. Since 1984, he has remained behind bars, one of the longest-held political prisoners in the world.  From 17-24 October 2018, join Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, the campaign to Free Georges Abdallah and organizations in France and around the world. Organize protests, campaign on social media and distribute information this week in your community to demand freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah and all Palestinian prisoners!

“We are chained by the common injustices manufactured in the United States of America, which are the same ones used in Palestine, and I do not doubt that there are many examples in all of the strongholds of imperialism.…Until we meet one day in the world of freedom, you remain a symbol and a model for us to follow.” – Ahmad Sa’adat (imprisoned PFLP General Secretary) to Georges Ibrahim Abdallah

Georges Abdallah has been committed throughout his life to the revolutionary struggle in Lebanon and the liberation of Palestine – and to a revolutionary vision of human liberation. He worked with the Palestinian leftist organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, resisting Israeli attacks on Lebanon. Later, he joined other Lebanese revolutionary leftists in the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions, pointing to a non-sectarian, socialist and revolutionary path to liberation for the people of Lebanon, faced with civil war militias and Israeli invasion and occupation.

Georges Abdallah was originally arrested for allegedly carrying false documents; his detention was repeatedly extended as French intelligence searched for information to charge him with involvement in armed actions that killed a U.S. diplomat and an Israeli representative in Paris. Even one of his lawyers was reportedly involved in spying on Abdallah for the French intelligence agency. While he was supposed to be exchanged with prisoners held by Arab revolutionaries, the French state reneged after obtaining their own prisoners, keeping Abdallah as a prisoner.

In 1987, when Georges Abdallah was sentenced, he was expected to receive a lengthy sentence of ten yearsor less – as recommended by the prosecutor in his case. Instead, he received a life sentence, as argued by a private lawyer representing the U.S. government.

Today, Georges Abdallah remains behind bars. Despite being eligible for release since 1999, his parole applications have been denied repeatedly. Even when he has achieved a victory in court, French officials like former Prime Minister Manuel Valls have intervened at the highest levels to block his release. U.S. officials like former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have also intervened in an attempt to keep Georges Abdallah in prison. In essence, Georges Abdallah is a prisoner not only of the French colonial state but also of U.S. imperialism and the Israeli occupation. Meanwhile, the Lebanese government has failed to live up to its responsibility in seeking the freedom of its imprisoned countryman.

Despite being held in Lannemezan prison for 34 years of his life, Georges Abdallah is an active participant in struggle. He has written letters and issued statements in response to revolutionary struggles around the world and always maintains a special eye toward the Palestinian prisoners, who have declared him one of their own.

His words continue to inspire generations of revolutionaries, strugglers and freedom fighters. And his participation is not limited to words – indeed, he has refused meals and organized his Basque and Arab fellow prisoners in Lannemezan to do so as well, in solidarity with the hunger strikes of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

This year,  we call on you to join us, in your cities, communities, neighborhoods, camps, towns and campuses, to organize events, protests, marches and activities to demand freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah and all Palestinian prisoners from 17 to 24 October, 2018. The central event of the week will be the 20 October mass march in Lannemezan for Georges Abdallah’s freedom. Events are also being organized in countries around the world, and past weeks have included actions in the United States, Canada, the UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Gree

Georges Abdallah is not alone; his imprisonment is part and parcel of that of nearly 6,000 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails and the prisoners of Palestine in U.S. and other international jails – as well as the prisoners of struggles against capitalism, racism and imperialism around the world.

Georges Abdallah and his fellow prisoners are imprisoned in an attempt to silence and suppress the anti-colonial struggle of the Palestinian people for justice, liberation and return. However, despite all repression, their leadership remains a symbol of hope and inspiration to all those who struggle for freedom. Join the movement to free Georges Abdallah, free Palestinian political prisoners and free Palestine, from the river to the sea!

TAKE ACTION:

1. Organize events, actions and protests at French embassies and consulates around the world. Where there is not a French consulate, protest at U.S. or Israeli embassies and consulates and in public squares. Send us your events! Use this form or email samidoun@samidoun.net

2. Join the broad national protest in Lannemezan on 20 October. Every year, hundreds arrive to demand George’s freedom, raising a call so loud the prisoners can hear us inside. Don’t miss this year’s action!

3. Distribute this call to action and take media actions, like posting photos with posters calling for freedom for Georges Abdallah and other Palestinian prisoners.

4. Endorse this call! Join in the call for events and actions for the prisoners this October. Use the form or email samidoun@samidoun.net

5. Share the materials below and use our social media materials, like the poster at the top of this page or our Facebook cover photo, below:

Events:

Martigues: Speaking About Georges Abdallah

Sunday, 7 October
1:30 pm
Le Rallumeur d’étoiles – Café associatif
Quai Brescon
13500 Martigues, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/311946046268481/

Marseille: A Month for Georges Abdallah

October 2018
Marseille, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/151408189138566/

Berlin: Protest to free Raja Eghbarieh, Georges Abdallah and all Palestinian Prisoners

Saturday, 13 October
12:00 pm
Alexanderplatz
Berlin, Germany

Manchester: Victory to Palestine! Free Georges Abdallah!

Saturday, 13 October
12:00 pm
Piccadilly Gardens
Manchester, UK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/863503310705696/

Toulouse: Information stand for Georges Abdallah

Saturday, 13 October
2:00 pm
Metro Capitole
Toulouse, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1234469550011712/

Birzeit: Seminar on Georges Abdallah and Palestinian Strugglers from Outside Palestine

Wednesday, 17 October
1:00 pm
Birzeit University
Faculty of Arts
Hall no. 102
Birzeit, Palestine
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/199661224153549/

Shatila: Lecture on the case of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah

Friday, 19 October
5:00 pm
Palestinian Chess Club
Shatila Refugee Camp
Lebanon

Gothenburg: Victory to the Palestinian liberation struggle!

Friday, 19 October
5:30 pm
Brunnsparken
Gothenburg, Sweden
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/309184616544806/

Paris: Bus departing to the national protest in Lannemezan

Friday night, 19 October
Paris, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2127880644153411/

Lannemezan: National protest for the liberation of Georges Abdallah

Saturday, 20 October
2:00 pm
Gare de Lannemezan
Lannemezan, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/656186514764030/

More buses from Toulouse: leaves 11:30 am from Metro Basso Cambo, email couppourcoup31@gmail.com
from Paris: email campagne.unitaire.gabdallah@gmail.com
from Montpellier: email npa@npa34.org
from Bordeaux: leaves 9:15 am from place Ravezies, email liberte.pour.georges@gmail.com
from Marseille: more info at https://www.lepotcommun.fr/pot/99sds8ij

Tunis: Protest at the French Embassy in Solidarity with Georges Abdallah

Saturday, 20 October
2:30 pm
French Embassy
Avenue Habib Bourguiba
Tunis, Tunisia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/327480194683643/

Milan: Freedom for the Revolutionary Prisoners! 34 years of repression, 34 years of resistance

Saturday, 20 October
3:00 pm
Viale Padova
Milan, Italy
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/183754312502914/

Brussels: Concert in solidarity with Mustapha Awad

Saturday, 20 October
6:30 pm
Projection Room
55 rue de Praetere
Uccle, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/295688327687183/

Saida: Cultural Evening of Solidarity for Georges Abdallah

Saturday, 20 October
6:00 pm
Maarouf Saad Cultural Center
Saida, Lebanon

Ramallah: Protest to Free Georges Abdallah

Sunday, 21 October
5:00 pm
Manara Square
Ramallah, Palestine

Geneva: Letter Writing Evening for Georges Abdallah

Wednesday, 24 October
8:00 pm
Cafe Gavroche
Boulevard James-Fazy 4
Geneva, Switzerland
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/695368644169180/

Athens: Demonstration for Freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah

Wednesday, 24 October
6:00 pm
French Embassy
Akadimias and Leof. Vasilissis Sofias
Athens, Greece

Belfast: Irish Solidarity for the Release of Georges Abdallah

Wednesday, 24 October
7:00 pm
International Wall
Belfast, Ireland
More info: https://irsp.ie/irish-solidarity-for-the-release-of-georges-abdallah-protest-belfast-intl-wall-wed-24th-7pm/

Materials and Information: 

Download Materials for Your Events for Georges Abdallah! 

Flyer for distribution: Click here to Download PDF

Posters for Georges Abdallah Protests

Poster 1: Click here to Download PDF

Poster 2: Click here to Download PDF

Poster 3: Click here to Download PDF

Poster 4: Click here to Download PDF

15 September, Britain: National Day of Action – tell HSBC to #StopArmingIsrael

Saturday, 15 September
All Day
See the Facebook page for event list, updates and more: https://www.facebook.com/events/2121569091495925/

Events include:
Manchester
1:00 pm
Piccadilly Gardens
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/558048361277258/

Supporters of Palestinian human rights will be taking action around the country on 15th September calling on HSBC to end its investments in Israel’s arms trade.

HSBC holds shares several arms companies which supply the Israeli military with weapons used regularly in attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

These include Elbit Systems which makes drones used by Israel in Gaza. It was recently revealed that Elbit’s Hermes 450 drone was part of a 2014 attack in which four Palestinian children were killed on a beach in Gaza while playing football.

In total, HSBC holds over £800m worth of shares in, and is involved in syndicated loans worth over £19bn to, companies that sell weapons and military equipment to the Israeli government. HSBC is part of the chain of complicity.

There have been actions and protests up and down the country at HSBC branches for 18 months and it is important we grow the movement now to pressure HSBC in to ending their links to Israel’s arms trade.

Join the campaign to expose and end HSBC’s investments in Israel’s arms trade by taking action at your local branch.

Find and join your local action:
https://www.palestinecampaign.org/events/hsbc-day-of-action/

Facebook events for some of the above:

* Manchester https://goo.gl/x4cQKN
* Birmingham https://goo.gl/KyDd8p
* Luton https://goo.gl/GWTFDv
* Lewisham https://goo.gl/p762v6
* Northampton https://goo.gl/vJEuCx
* Wellingborough https://goo.gl/5iS782
* Tower Hamlets https://bit.ly/2NWhFGP

12 September, Vancouver: Tell David Eby – No Complicity With Israeli Occupation & War Crimes

Wednesday, 12 September
1:30 pm
2909 W. Broadway
Vancouver BC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/525583607887411/

TELL DAVID EBY TO END COMPLICITY IN ISRAELI OCCUPATION AND WAR CRIMES!

David Eby, BC’s Attorney General, is responsible for the provincial Liquor Distribution Branch. For many years, there has been an ongoing local campaign to call for a boycott of Israeli wines, many of them produced in the Occupied Territories, which are being sold in our publicly owned BC Liquor Stores. We had hoped that the NDP government would be more concerned with these blatant violations of international human rights; we asked Mr. Eby to respond to this issue but received exactly the same response we got from previous governments, which was to completely ignore the issues raised and instead focus solely on “personal choice”.

The wines in question are either from the Galil Winery, which is a joint venture with the Golan Heights Winery (the name of which speaks for itself), or from the occupied West Bank, including the illegal Gush Etzion settlement bloc around Jerusalem. Two wines of particular note are the Efrat Judean Hills Kosher and Vision Malbec, both produced by the Israeli Teperberg Winery. This winery openly states that some of its vineyards are in occupied Palestinian territories and even provides a map on its website showing vineyards in the occupied West Bank.

One of the Teperberg vineyards is in the illegal Israeli settlement of Mevo Horon according to the progressive Israeli research group “Who Profits”. This particular settler enclave is in the Latrun area of the occupied Palestinian West Bank and is close to the infamous “Canada Park” built by the Jewish National Fund on the rubble of 3 Palestinian villages with Canadian tax-deductible monies.

All of this is in direct contravention of the Fourth Geneva Convention and “stated” Canadian policy. Detailed information on Israeli wineries can be found in the exhaustive study done by “Who Profits” entitled Forbidden Fruit: Israeli Wine Industry and Occupation.

This campaign was initially launched 10 years ago and was endorsed by 22 local and international groups. At that time, the Israeli government had announced plans to “rebrand” its 60 years of dispossession and ethnic cleansing; sadly, we are now at 70 years of Palestinian dispossession and the situation for Palestinians, especially in Gaza, is worsening by the day. Our educational pickets have also highlighted the parallels between the campaign in BC against South African apartheid wines09 09  and our campaign. The response to these actions has been encouraging and additionally, other activists in eastern Canada have launched a lawsuit against the Canadian Food Inspection Agency for mislabelling these wines as “made in Israel”.

Please support our campaign to tell David Eby and the BC government that they do not represent us by stocking these wines, which are the fruit of a brutal occupation. As our South African brothers and sisters said many years ago on the streets of Vancouver, Don’t Drink with Apartheid!!
More info: https://whoprofits.org/company/teperberg-1870

12 September, Berlin: Women Under Occupation – A Talk with Manal Tamimi

Wednesday, 12 September
7:00 pm
Reuterstrasse 52
Berlin, Germany
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/305156766939341/

The village of Nabi Saleh has been conducting protest against the occupation and confiscation of its lands since 2010. In this period of time, almost all of the participating activists have been arrested, attacked and injured. Three activists of the village have been killed by the Israeli army, and most of the village´s youth are imprisoned in almost any given time. Imprisonment, solidarity and resistance have become focal points of the struggle of Nabi Saleh.

Recently brought again into the public eye through the arrest of 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi and her mother Nariman, who suffered harassment and abuse in their 9 months in prison, the village is known for the significant participation of women activists in its protests. In this way, the women of the village are double oppressed – through their own arrests and targeting of their homes and lives, as well as through the targeting of their families, children and partners.

Manal Tamimi is a long-time activist from Nabi Saleh, who has been active in the village´s struggle since its inception. She herself was imprisoned and injured, and several of her children are currently in jail. Manal is not only active in the struggles on the ground, but also, through social media and appearances, in bringing the cause of the struggle abroad. In the talk she will discuss the role of women in the resistance, experiences of imprisonment and oppression and the possibilities of practical solidarity with Palestine in Europe.

The event is co-hosted by Gefangeninfo and local activists. In English with translation to German.

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Frauen unter Besatzung – ein Gespräch mit Manal Tamimi

Seit 2010 organisiert das Dorf Nabi Saleh Proteste gegen die Besatzung und Enteignung seines Landes. In diesem Zeitraum wurden fast alle beteiligten Aktivisten verhaftet, angegriffen und verletzt. Drei Aktivisten des Dorfes sind von der israelischen Armee getötet worden, und die meisten Jugendlichen des Dorfes sind beinahe durchweg inhaftiert. Haft, Solidarität und Widerstand sind zum Fokus des Kampfes von Nabi Saleh geworden.

Das Dorf, das durch die Verhaftung der 17-jährigen Ahed Tamimi und ihrer Mutter Nariman, die in ihren 9 Monaten im Gefängnis Schikanen und Misshandlungen erlitten, erst kürzlich wieder in der Öffentlichkeit stand, ist bekannt für die erhebliche Beteiligung von weiblichen Aktivistinnen innerhalb seiner Proteste. Auf diese Weise werden die Frauen des Dorfes doppelt unterdrückt – durch ihre eigene Inhaftierung und die Angriffe auf ihre Häuser und ihr Leben sowie durch die Angriffe auf ihre Familien, Kinder und Partner.

Manal Tamimi ist eine langjährige Aktivistin aus Nabi Saleh, die im Kampf des Dorfes aktiv war, seitdem dieser entstand. Sie selbst wurde eingesperrt und verletzt, und mehrere ihrer Kinder befinden sich derzeit im Gefängnis. Manal ist nicht nur aktiv in den Kämpfen vor Ort, sondern auch in sozialen Medien und durch Auftritte, um den Grund für die Kämpfe im Ausland zu vermitteln. In dem Vortrag wird sie über die Rolle der Frau im Widerstand, über die Erfahrungen von Inhaftierung und Unterdrückung und über die Möglichkeiten praktischer Solidarität mit Palästina in Europa sprechen.

Die Veranstaltung wird gemeinsam vom Gefangeninfo und lokalen Aktivist*innen veranstaltet. Auf Englisch mit Flusterübersetzung ins Deutsche.

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نساء تحت الاحتلال – حديث مع منال التميمي

منذ عام ٢٠١٠ وحتى هذا اليوم، تقوم قرية النبي صالح الفلسطينية المحتلة بالتظاهر المستمر ضد الإحتلال الإسرائيلي لها. خلال هذه الفترة، قامت قوات الإحتلال بالإعتداء على جميع الناشطين/ات واعتقالهم/ن، فإستشهد على الأقل ٣ نشطاء من أهالي القرية وسجن معظم شبابها في سجون الإحتلال. أصبح السجن والتضامن والمقاومة نقاطًا محورية في صراع قرية النبي صالح.

وفي الآونة الأخيرة، تسلطت الأنظار على قرية النبي صالح مجدداً بعد أن قامت قوات الإحتلال الإسرائيلي بإعتقال وسجن الناشطة الشابة “عهد التميمي” البالغة من العمر ١٧ عاما، ووالدتها ناريمان التميمي، حيث تعرضتا لشتّى أشكال التحقيق والإبتزاز والمضايقات على يد قوات الاحتلال خلال الأشهر التسعة التي قضيناها في سجون الاحتلال.

وتشتهر القرية بمشاركات كبيرة للناشطات في التظاهرات. لهذا السبب، تتعرض نساء القرية للقمع المزدوج – من خلال إستهدافهن وإعتقالهن كأفراد و ومن خلال إستهداف منازلهن وأسرهن وأطفالهن وشركائهن.

منذ نشأتها في قريتها المحتلة، برزت منال التميمي في نضال القرية ضد الإحتلال، فتعرضت للإصابة و زجت في السجن، بينما يمكث بعض أطفالها حالياً في سجون الإحتلال. ولا يقتصر نشاط منال التميمي على الاحتجاجات والتظاهرات المباشرة على الأرض في مواجهة قوات الإحتلال، بل يشمل أيضا وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي والمحاضرات الهادفة لجلب قضية صراع قرية النبي صالح إلى الخارج.

في لقاءنا القادم معها في برلين، ستتحدث منال عن دور المرأة الفلسطينية في المقاومة والنضال ضد الإحتلال وعن تجربة النساء داخل السجن والقمع الذي تتعرضن له، وعن إمكانيات وسبل التضامن مع قضية فلسطين في أوروبا.

وتستضيف هذا الحدث كل من المجموعات التالية: “غيفانغينه إنفو” اليسارية لشؤون السجناء السياسيين والمعتقلين، بالإضافة إلى الناشطين المحليين لأجل قضية فلسطين.

8-9 September, Belgium: Free Mustapha at ManiFiesta!

Saturday and Sunday, 8-9 September
10:00 am – 6:00 pm
Kapelstraat
Bredene, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/547031865728087/

A “Free Mustapha” Stand at ManiFiesta

It has always been a pleasure to see Mustapha Awad at ManiFiesta each year.

As a member and co-founder of the Raj’een Dabkeh Group, he performed as a dancer and organized a stand alongside the “Boycott Israel” area.

This year, Mustapha will not be there in person. On 19 July, he was arrested by Israeli authorities at the border of Jordan with Palestine and has since been held in Israel.

Plate-Forme Charleroi-Palestine has decided to transform its “Boycott Israel” tent into a “Free Mustapha” tent.

We will also join Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and the Free Mustapha Committee.

In the tent, you will also find kuffiyehs, stickers, brochures for the BDS campaign and other solidarity items.

YOU CAN ALSO JOIN THE ACTION FOR MUSTAPHA!

* You can sign the petition for his release
* You can be photographed with the “Free Mustapha” petition
* You can donate to his legal defense fund
* You can also play a more active role by volunteering at the stand for one or two hours.

WELCOME! MARHABA!

 

EEN STAND « FREE MUSTAPHA » OP MANIFIESTA

Het was altijd een genoegen Mustapha Awad te ontmoeten op ManiFiesta de afgelopen jaren.

Als lid en mede-oprichter van de Raj’een Dabkeh Group trad hij er op als danser en hield er een stand naast die van « Boycott Israël ».

Dit jaar zal Mustapha niet aanwezig zijn. Op 19 juli werd hij door de Israëlische autoriteiten aangehouden aan de grens van Jordanië met Palestina en wordt sindsdien gevangen gehouden in Israël.

Het « Plate-Forme Charleroi-Palestine » heeft beslist om haar tent « Boycott Israel » om te vormen tot een « Free Mustapha » tent.

Wij zullen er Samidoun, het solidariteitsnetwerk met de Palestijnse gevangenen en het Comité Free Mustapha verwelkomen.

In de tent zal u eveneens keffiehs, stickers, brochures voor de BDS campagne en andere solidariteitsproducten aantreffen.
MAAR U KAN ER VOORAL ACTIE ONDERNEMEN VOOR MUSTAPHA!

– u kan er de petitie tekenen voor zijn vrijlating

– u kan zich laten fotograferen met een affiche « Free Mustapha »

– u kan bijdragen aan de collecte voor het betalen van zijn advocaten

– u kan ook een meer actieve rol spelen door één of twee uur de permanentie te verzekeren van de stand
WELKOM! MARHABA!

*********

Dans le passé, c’était toujours un plaisir de rencontrer Mustapha Awad à ManiFiesta.
Membre et cofondateur du Raj’een Dabkeh Group, il s’y est produit comme danseur et tenait un stand à côté de la tente « Boycott Israël ».
Cette année, Mustapha ne sera pas là. Le 19 juillet il a été arrêté à la frontière entre la Jordanie et la Palestine par les autorités israéliennes et est emprisonné depuis en Israël.

La Plate-forme Charleroi-Palestine a décidé de transformer sa tente « Boycott Israël » en une tente « Free Mustapha ».

Nous y accueillerons Samidoun, le réseau de solidarité avec les prisonniers palestiniens et le Comité Free Mustapha.

Dans la tente vous trouverez évidemment des keffiehs et autres produits de la solidarité, des autocollants, des brochures pour la campagne BDS…
Mais surtout, vous pourrez y agir pour Mustapha !

-vous pourrez signer la pétition pour sa libération

-vous pourrez vous faire photographier avec une affiche « Free Mustapha »

-vous pourrez participer à la collecte pour payer ses avocats

-vous pourrez aussi jouer un rôle plus actif en assurant une permanence d’une heure ou deux heures dans la tente.

Soyez les bienvenu.e.s, marhaba, welcome !

Israeli occupation bans Palestinian student from his university campus

Photo: Yousef Dweikat and the order barring him from his university. Via Hadf News.

Palestinian student Yousef Dweikat was banned from entering the campus of his university, An-Najah National University in occupied Nablus, on Tuesday, 28 August 2018. Dweikat, 20, a student at the Faculty of Engineering at the university and an activist with the Islamic Bloc student organization, was summoned to meet with Israeli occupation intelligence in the Salem military base.

When he presented himself, he was presented with an order barring him from his own university campus for the next six months. A Palestinian refugee who lives in Balata refugee camp, Dweikat, an electrical engineering student, is a former prisoner; he was arrested by Israeli occupation forces in March 2017 and jailed for six months for his involvement in student activities.

In an interview with Quds News, Dweikat called upon the university “to create solutions and alternatives so that this type of decision does not affect a larger number of university students.” He noted that the Israeli occupation had used a similar policy against university students in the 1980s and is now returning to those practices. Dweikat also said that his education was already delayed because of his previous detention and that he had already registered for the new year, paid his university fees and prepared to start the new semester. “My family and I are tense and frustrated. We do not know what we can do next to confront this unjust decision,” he said.

This is only the latest violation of the Palestinian right to education by the Israeli occupation. According to the Palestinian Ministry of Education, there are over 300 Palestinian university students imprisoned in Israeli jails. Each year, especially around the time of student council elections, universities face invasions and attacks on active students. Student leaders like Omar Kiswani, president of the Bir Zeit University student council, have been seized from campus in violent raids.

In addition, as the Palestinian Right to Enter campaign notes, international academics – including Palestinians born in exile with foreign passports – are routinely denied entry to Palestine by Israeli occupation forces at colonially controlled borders.  By denying entry to scholars invited to teach, lecture or study at Palestinian universities, the Israeli occupation seeks to isolate Palestinian educators, scholars and students from their international peers.

These routine violations of Palestinian academic freedom – along with the racial exclusion of international students, particularly those identified as Arabs, Muslims or Palestinians – have added impetus to the ongoing call for academic boycott of Israeli institutions. The US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel is urging universities, students and faculty to take a pledge to boycott “study abroad” programs run by Israeli institutions, “We Will not Study in Israel Until Palestinians Can Return: Boycott Study Abroad in Israel!” Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is one of the endorsers of this call.

As many students head back to university around the world, solidarity with Palestinian students and scholars is particularly critical. These arrests and bans are an attempt to dismantle Palestinian students’ ability to learn, organize and uphold their identity, existence and struggle on campus. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges supporters of Palestine on campuses around the world to join the campaign to boycott Study Abroad, support the academic boycott of Israel and hold events and activities to highlight the violation of Palestinian rights to education, particularly the imprisonment of Palestinian students.

Israeli military reimposes sentence on former prisoner from occupied Palestine ’48

Photo: Mohammed Zayed. Via Quds News

Palestinian former prisoners continue to face harsh persecution, as former prisoner Mohammed Zayed, released in the 2011 Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange agreement (the so-called “Shalit deal”), became the latest person to have his former sentence reimposed, seven years after his liberation. Zayed, 58, is a leader of the Abnaa el-Balad movement in occupied Palestine ’48. While he is a Palestinian citizen of Israel, his treatment makes clear the status of Palestinians in ’48 – colonized, occupied and subjected to a racist system.

When Zayed was released in 2011, he had already spent 19 years of his 35-year sentence in Israeli jails. Like his fellow released prisoners, he was forced to sign terms of release. On Monday, 27 August, he was ordered to spend the remaining 16 years of his sentence behind bars. Louay Khatib, an Abnaa el-Balad representative, told Quds News that Zayed was arrested a short time ago on an unrelated matter not considered a “security” or political issue. He was sentenced to eight months in prison for this unrelated case, not referred to in the conditions of his release.

Khatib said that because he was sentenced to more than six months in prison, the Israeli military system re-imposed his former sentence, saying that the court’s decision in the other case “did not specify the nature of the matter.” Khatib also said that Zayed is appealing his case to the Central Military Court and the Supreme Court, despite the fact that his lawyer requires a fee of 100,000 NIS ($27,537 USD) to proceed.

He denounced this latest reimposed sentence against a Palestinian prisoner, demanding that “the Egyptian guarantor of the agreement must stand up to its responsibilities in this case. It is not reasonable that any conviction requires the reimposition of the former sentence.” Khatib also said that Zayed was told that he would not be housed with his fellow Palestinian prisoners but with criminal prisoners. Zayed, from the occupied city of Lyd in Palestine ’48, has a number of chronic diseases including diabetes and dyskinesia as well as suffering from a “difficult” psychological and social situation, according to Quds News.

Allam Kaabi, a former prisoner released in the Wafa al-Ahrar exchange and a leader of the prisoners’ committee of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, told Hadf News that “once again, occupation courts prove that they are criminal tools of repression of the Palestinian people.” He noted that around 55 freed prisoners had been re-arrested and their former sentences imposed as a form of pressure against the Palestinian resistance in any forthcoming prisoner exchange agreement. Kaabi also noted that more such arrests may be forthcoming in an attempt to escalate that pressure.

Palestinian resistance organizations have emphasized that the re-arrested prisoners of the Wafa al-Ahrar exchange must be released unconditionally before a prisoner exchange. Kaabi said that it is essential to ensure that these freed prisoners are not once again subject to re-arrest.

Seven detained Palestinian women activists from al-Khalil face Israeli persecution

Photo: Protest demands release of Palestinian women prisoners. Via Wattan TV

Seven Palestinian women from al-Khalil have been jailed by the Israeli occupation, with many held in intense, torturous interrogation for many weeks. The Israeli Shin Bet intelligence agency is now attempting to market these arrests in the media as an attack on “Hamas infrastructure” in al-Khalil in an attempt to justify the ongoing large-scale arrests targeting active Palestinian women in the city.

In addition to the main arrests targeting seven women, a number of other women were summoned to hours of interrogation before being released. Riyad al-Ashqar of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies said that all of the women work in social services, public activities, media work or at home with their families and that none are involved in Hamas’ political or military work. He said that the Shin Bet’s claims are an attempt to create a state of fear and terror to suppress Palestinian women’s participation in activities against the crimes of the occupation or supporting the Palestinian resistance.

The campaign against Palestinian women in al-Khalil began with the arrest of City Council member Suzan Abdel-Karim Owawi, 40, on 5 June. She was subjected to extensive, harsh interrogation that was extended repeatedly during that time. In addition to her public service as an elected official, she is a social activist who works to support Palestinian prisoners; she is married and the mother of four children.

Safa Abu Hussein, 36, was arrested next after Israeli occupation forces invaded her home and took her to interrogation. Her detention has been extended four times.

Rawda Mohammed Abu Aisha, 53, was next to be seized by occupation forces; she was seized when she drove to a checkpoint in Bethlehem and taken to interrogation.

The occupation forces also arrested Dima Said al-Karmi, 38, the widow of Nashat al-Karmi, a Hamas activist killed by Israeli occupation forces and the mother of an 8-year-old daughter. She was taken to Ashkelon detention center and interrogated harshly and extensively and deprived of sleep. During her interrogation, she fainted on multiple occasions. Her detention has also been repeatedly extended.

Lama Khater, 42, is a Palestinian writer who was seized on 24 July by Israeli occupation forces after they invaded her family home. She was deprived of sleep, insulted and threatened by Israeli interrogators at the Ashkelon detention center. The mother of five children – the youngest only 2 – she is a political analyst and writer whose work is widely published on newspapers and websites.

Saida Badr, 55, is the wife of Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) member Mohammed Badr, 61, who has spent many years in Israeli prison including a recent sentence in administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

Finally, Sonia Hamouri, 40, a university lecturer, was seized from her family home in al-Khalil on 14 August. A number of other women were also detained for several hours and interrogated.

The Israeli occupation is accusing the women of communicating information from Palestinians in exile to those inside occupied Palestine, especially activists in Hamas. They were also accused of doing social and charitable work in support of the movement by providing aid to the prisoners’ families.

Palestinian political parties and movements are labeled “illegal organizations” by the Israeli occupation, and thousands of Palestinians are jailed for allegedly supporting or belonging to these liberation movements. One of the most common charges against Palestinian prisoners is “membership in an illegal organization,” as participation in most major Palestinian political movements is criminalized by the colonial occupation.

These seven women are among a total of approximately 63 Palestinian women prisoners, including several held without charge or trial under administrative detention, such as parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar and student Fidaa Akhalil.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands in solidarity with these women and all Palestinian prisoners and demands their immediate release. The Israeli occupation military uses media releases and sensationalism in an attempt to justify their targeting and criminalization of the Palestinian people and their political movements.

Seven Palestinian prisoners join strikes to end imprisonment without charge or trial

Seven Palestinian prisoners have joined the hunger strike against administrative detention as of Monday, 28 August, joining three prisoners who were already on strike in rejection of the Israeli policy of imprisonment without charge or trial. The Muhjat al-Quds Foundtion said that seven prisoners from a range of different political affiliations joined the open strike in order to escalate the prisoners’ struggle to bring the policy of administrative detention to an end.

The prisoners said that they had repeatedly exhausted avenues of negotiations or dialogue with the Israeli occupation intelligence and prison administration, only to be met with delays, procrastination and no real change. The prisoners who entered the strike were named as Jamal Jaber Hamamreh and Thaer Yousef Hamdan from the Islamic Jihad Movement, Yousef al-Lahham and Ahmad Khalayleh from the Hamas movement, Ismail Alayan and Mohammed Zaghari from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (referred to in an earlier announcement) and Mohammed al-Roumi from Fateh.

After the announcement, Ofer prison officials immediately transferred all seven to isolation in retaliation to their joining the hunger strike.

They joined ongoing strikes by fellow administrative detainees, Khaled Battat, 46, from al-Dhahriyeh, and Saddam Awad, 28, from Beit Ummar. Both have been on hunger strike since 12 August at the Negev desert prison; both are imprisoned without charge or trial in Israeli prison.

Also on hunger strike since 5 August is Omran al-Khatib, 60, from Jabalya refugee camp in Gaza. He has spent 21 years in prison, jailed since July 1997. His health has deteriorated significantly and he suffers from high blood pressure, cholesterol and other problems; since he launched his strike, he has been held in isolation and banned from family visits.

Palestinian prisoners are collectively demanding the end of the Israeli policy of administrative detention. First introduced to Palestine by the British colonial mandate, administrative detention orders can be issued for up to six months at a time without charge or trial on the basis of so-called “secret evidence.” These detention orders are indefinitely renewable and Palestinians have spent years at a time jailed without charge or trial under these repeatedly renewed orders.

Since 15 February, all administrative detainees have boycotted the military courts that issue and verify administrative detention orders. They are refusing to give even the appearance of legitimacy to the fig leaf of “legality” that the military courts may provide. These hunger strikes mark another step in their campaign for justice. There are approximately 450 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention, out of around 6,000 total Palestinian prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the escalation of protests and actions in solidarity with the struggle to end administrative detention. Administrative detention is a colonial weapon used to separate effective leaders from the Palestinian people through arbitrary imprisonment without charge or trial. It is also a form of psychological torture for both prisoners and their families, denying them even the knowledge of when or if they will be released. We urge the immediate end of the practice of administrative detention and the release of all Palestinian prisoners. As the prisoners boycott the military courts, it is our responsibility to escalate boycott, divestment and sanctions campaigns to isolate the Israeli state that confiscates Palestinian land, rights and freedom. 

PFLP leaders transferred, isolated by Israeli prison administration after public political statements

Protester calls for freedom for all jailed Palestinians.

Leading Palestinian prisoners of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine were suddenly transferred on Wednesday, 29 August on multiple occasions, while in Megiddo prison, tension rose between the Palestinian political prisoners and the Israeli occupation prison administration.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh was suddenly transferred from Hadarim prison to Ramon prison, while Wael Jaghoub was transferred to Gilboa prison. In addition, Mohammed Musa Abu Khdeir was transferred from Nafha prison to Ramon.

In addition, all of the PFLP prisoners in Megiddo were thrown into isolation cells after protests inside the prison against poor conditions and ongoing violations of their rights, according to the Handala Center for Prisoners And Former Prrisoners.

These actions could come in response to the visible political role of the prisoners of the Popular Front inside Israeli jails, including imprisoned General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat.

The PFLP prisoners recently released a widely distributed statement in solidarity with U.S. prisoners engaged in work-stoppages, boycotts and hunger strikes against forced prison labor, racism and exploitation inside U.S. jails. Some excerpts follow:

“The prison strike is a struggle of oppressed and exploited workers, first and foremost, confronting the unmasked brutality of capitalism behind bars. Around the world, prisoners have only protected their human rights and won victories through struggle. We know that you are demanding improved conditions, the right to fight in court for your rights and an end to excessive, lifelong sentences. You are also demanding an end to the new form of slavery found in U.S. prisons, where prison workers are paid pennies to produce goods and perform services for some of the country’s largest corporations.

We also salute your struggle against racism. U.S. settler colonialism and imperialism practices its vicious racism both internally and externally, and the prison system reflects that reality. Black communities, Latino communities, Arab communities are under attack, facing mass incarceration and a system that seeks to imprison and exploit rather than support and nurture youth and elders.

Today, prison workers are some of the most exploited workers in the United States, and the same ruling class that profits from the confiscation of Palestinian land and resources and from the bombing of children in Yemen also profits from the forced labor of prisoners. Your struggle is a workers’ struggle that is part of our global conflict against the vicious exploitation that our peoples face today. This struggle inside the prisons highlights the deep connections between racism and capitalism and how the struggle against them both can never be de-linked.

The boycott campaign that is part of your strike also emphasizes the critical role of boycott in confronting exploitation and oppression. While our circumstances and lives may vary greatly from one another in many ways, we too face economic exploitation through a “canteen” system that seeks to profit from our imprisonment as Palestinians. We know that prison profiteers in the United States also profit from prison canteens, phone calls and other purchases, and we salute your campaign of boycott. This is the same reason why we call on people around the world to join the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israel. We cannot and must not be the consumers of those who profit from our misery and oppression.”

The PFLP prisoners also issued a statement just two days ago in memory of assassinated PFLP General Secretary Abu Ali Mustafa, killed by Israeli occupation forces with a U.S.-made and -funded helicopter-fired missile on 27 August 2001. The statement harshly condemned U.S. imperialism as well as the role of the Palestinian Authority and right-wing Arab regimes. Some excerpts follow:

“His assassination was a great loss not only for the Palestinian and Arab cause but for the international struggle of all oppressed peoples and for progressive international liberation movements. His vision emanated from his understanding of the importance of the class struggle, and he always rooted his work in the oppressed peoples and popular classes. The comrade was committed to this vision, from his origins and through his practice. He was the son of a poor peasant family who lived a life as a refugee with his people in the struggle against the Zionist settler colonial project, which seeks to end Palestinian existence and eliminate our rights as a people.

On this anniversary of the martyrdom of Comrade Abu Ali, we are passing through a time of the darkest and most difficult political circumstances, with important international and regional changes and new alliances that must be confronted. At the international level, we see a number of important phenomena, such as the growth of the extreme chauvinistic right, particularly in Europe. Radical changes could direct the future of the European countries, including the rise of voices within the EU calling for separation, reconsideration of the alliance or reformulation of it to reduce the influence of some countries, especially Germany. This may be the most serious contradiction among capitalist European countries since World War II, but it is also a time of conflicts of interest between the EU and the United States of America. These contradictions are not merely the outcome of the election of Trump as president of the world’s leading imperialist power, but are a natural product of social contradictions under capitalism over economic power and political influence.

It is clear that there is nothing strange about the election of Trump in the United States, built on the genocide of the indigenous people of that land. His election in fact reflects the nature of conflicting forces in American society, including the most rapacious capitalist interests in alliance with right-wing Protestant groups and powerful lobbies, the arms lobby and the Zionist lobby. There is no doubt that this racist alliance seeks to expand the scope of the conflict with the peoples of the world on the basis of imposing imperial domination and control without rivalry.

The United States plans to challenge China, Russia and the European Union for economic and political influence. This comes at the same time as it escalates its blatant interference in Latin America, comes into conflict with long-time allies like Turkey, imposes economic sanctions and jointly imposes Israeli demands against Iran and Palestine. It returns to use the veto once again in the Security Council in favor of the colonial Israeli entity as it promotes its so-called “deal of the century,” which seeks to abolish the national, historical and human rights of the Palestinian people. This is a clear confirmation of the hostility of U.S. imperialism to the Palestinian people and its full partnership in the policies of ethnic cleansing and attacks on our rights.

Our dear comrades, what is happening in the Arab arena is also very concerning. First, the pace of normalization between the Arab reactionary regimes and the Zionist entity has increased in an unprecedented manner as the Saudi and Emirati (UAE) regimes escalate Arab contradictions in full participation in a project to dismantle and destroy the Arab world, as we see in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and elsewhere.

It is clear that the enemy camp includes these treacherous reactionary forces, allied with the United States and the Zionist entity, who have made their role clear in the implementation of imperialist plans and projects, especially in regard to the Palestinian cause.

Dear comrades, the series of attacks that are being waged against our people requires the immediate completion of the reconciliation file and ending Palestinian division on the basis of true national partnership and the reconstruction of the Palestinian house, the shortest way to confront the “deal of the century,” The ongoing delay, procrastination and distortion around the issue of reconciliation does not serve our national interest and does serve the occupation and its attempts to quash our vision of return and self-determination.

In this context, we see a large gap between the statements by the Palestinian presidency purporting to call for a rejection of the “deal of the century” and the practice on the ground by the Palestinian Authority. What is the goal of disrupting reconciliation? Of imposing impossible, unacceptable conditions? Of imposing unfair sanctions on our people in Gaza? Or the convening of a divided ‘Palestinian National Council’ that does not reflect the Palestinian people? Is not that a deal with the “deal of the century”?

The relentless pursuit of the fragmentation of the Palestinian people and their resistance forces serves only to weaken our people, in harmony with the Zionist-imperialist projects in the region.

In this framework, the Return Marches in Gaza have upheld the honor of the Palestinian cause. They have made clear the will of the Palestinian masses, against all conspiracies against our people, in rejection of siege and humiliation, asserting our right to resist the occupation by all possible means.”