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21 April, Copenhagen: Solidarity demonstration with Gaza!

Saturday, 21 April
4:00 pm
Den Sorte Plads
Mimersgade 98
Copenhagen, Denmark
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/238939693337187/

Solidarity with Gaza! Join the street on Saturday, April 21, and show your support to the many thousands of people who are currently demonstrating in Gaza and who are risking their life every day!

Let us condemn the brutal violence and the killing that the Israeli military is responsible for these days!

Since the protests started last week, more than 21 Palestinians, including children, have been killed and more than 1400 are injured by shots, tear gas, rubber balls and drones.

Such military acts of violence must never be accepted and shall be condemned!

Info about the conflict:
The major demonstrations in Gaza began on March 30, 2018, on the anniversary of the 1976 demonstration, where six Palestinian protesters were killed by the Israeli military.

The ongoing protests are called “The Great Return Day” and the protesters calls for the Palestinian refugees and their descendants to be given the opportunity to return and to stop the siege of Gaza.

The protests will last six weeks – until 15 May. This is the day that marks the violent displacement of several hundreds of thousands of Palestinians during the conflict about the establishment of the Israeli state in 1948.
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We start at Den Sorte Plads at 16.00 and go together to Blågardsplads.

Speaks, music and precise route are published as soon as possible.

See you!

Solidaritet med Gaza! Gå med på gaden lørdag den 21. april, og vis din støtte til de mange tusinde mennesker, der lige nu demonstrerer i Gaza, og som bliver mødt af kugler og tåregas!

Lad os fordømme den brutale vold og de drab, som det Israelske militær i disse dage er ansvarlig for!

Siden protesterne startede i sidste uge er mere end 21 palæstinensere, herunder flere børn, blevet dræbt og mere end 1400 er såret af skud, tåregas, gummikugler og droner.
Sådanne militære voldshandlinger må aldrig accepteres og skal fordømmes!

Info om konflikten:
De store demonstrationer i Gaza begyndte den 30. marts 2018 på årsdagen for den demonstration i 1976, hvor seks palæstinensiske demonstranter blev dræbt af det israelske militær.

De igangværende protester bliver kaldt “Den store march for tilbagevenden” og der demonstreres for, at de palæstinensiske flygtninge og deres efterkommere får mulighed for at vende tilbage, og at belejringen af Gaza stoppes.

Protesterne vil efter planen vare seks uger – frem til 15. maj. Dette er dagen, der markerer den voldsomme fordrivelse af flere hundredetusinde palæstinensere under konflikten omkring oprettelsen af den israelske stat i 1948.
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Vi starter på Den Sorte Plads kl 16.00 og går samlet til Blågardsplads.

Taler, musik og præcis rute offentliggøres snarest.

Vi ses!

14 April, Belfast: Support the Right of Return

Saturday, 14 April
3:00 pm
City Hall
Belfast, Ireland
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1316202045146684/

The Great Return March.

Thousands of Palestinian refugees have embarked on The Great Return March to protest against Israels refusal to allow Palestinians to return home. The Palestinian Refugee problem began with the Nakba, when Israel forcibly displaced 700,000 Palestinians from their home in 1948. The Great March Return is a peaceful non violent demonstration telling the whole world that the Palestinians have been suffering for almost 70 years and their lives have been awful since.

They are met with sniper fire, the IDF were ordered to shoot, drones flooded the peaceful demonstrators with tear gas, you will have seen the footage of the man getting shot while praying, a couple getting shot in the back as they ran away, a lady walking about with a flag, these people were hundreds of metres back from the border fence, there is a huge electric fence between them and the IDF, they were no threat to anyone, this demonstration was peaceful from the Palestinian side.

Israel will continue showing flagrant disregard for international law and commit war crimes with impunity until Ireland and the International community hold them to account.

We call on the people of Belfast to unite in sending a message to the apartheid state of Israel that you will no longer act with impunity.

The Palestinians need OUR support!!!

14 April, Edinburgh: Palestine on Princes Street

Saturday, 14 April
12:00 pm
Princes Street
Edinburgh, Scotland
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/412654272534550/

Join the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign to put pro-Palestine images along Princes Street on Saturday. Help us attach many large banners, placards, flags (bring your flags), laminated graphics, keffiyahs on statues, your own solidarity messages to heroic Gaza on stretches of railings, other fixtures from 12 till 4

Join in mass leafletting and collecting signatures on letters to Councillors to divest from arms companies equipping israel to massacre Palestinians.
Meet at Wellington Statue

14 April, Austin: Gaza Great Return March and Candlelight Vigil

Saturday, 14 April
6:00 pm
South Entrance of the Capitol Building
112 E. 11th St
Austin, TX
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2087990034817426/

International call to action in support of The Great Return March!

We are calling our community and allies to take action and launch demonstrations in support of the Great Return March on April 14th, just as the righteous resisters in Gaza have declared. The time has come for our youth wherever they may be to raise their voices in support of the rightful struggle of our people in Gaza, and for our youth in diaspora to proclaim we will never surrender the right of return. Now more than ever when we seem the most divided, we must come together in collectively asserting our right to return and our dream of the total liberation of our people and homeland. There will be no solution without the total end of the Zionist colonization of Palestine–return is our right, and demand: we will return! Palestine will be free!

We will meet at 6:00 PM at 112 E 11th Street, south entrance of the capitol building Austin, Texas for Candlelight vigil. Please bring candles and lighters to share. Flags, signs and statements will be appreciated as well.

The #GreatReturnMarch continues forward: Download posters, view list of global events and actions for Palestine

The #GreatReturnMarch entered its third week in the Gaza Strip on Friday, 13 April with ongoing protests demanding Palestinian refugees’ right to return and an end to the siege on Gaza.  As Palestinians continued to march to the colonially imposed “border,” where once again, they faced lethal Israeli live fire turned on a mass, popular protest.  Palestinians in Gaza are over 70 percent refugees who have been denied their right to return home for 70 years after being driven from their land in 1948 by Zionist forces. Today, over 2 million Palestinians live in the Gaza Strip, where they continue to resist and struggle despite facing constant Israeli occupation attacks by air, sea and land. The Israeli occupation, with the cooperation of Egypt and international powers, has imposed a deadly siege on Gaza that has deprived Palestinians of power, electricity, clean water, utilities and key goods and other basic needs.

So far, one Palestinian, 28-year-old Islam Herzallah, was killed by Israeli occupation forces, in addition to the 32 lives taken in the past two weeks of protests. Hundreds more were injured, many by live fire in addition to tear gas, shrapnel and rubber-coated metal bullets.

Around the world, people have responded to this popular upsurge of Palestinians in Gaza with outrage at the Israeli crimes and solidarity with Palestinians continuing to march for return and liberation.  These actions are continuing in the coming days, marking Palestinian Prisoners’ Day and joining in the #GreatReturnMarch for the liberation of Palestine.

April 17 is Palestinian Prisoners’ Day, a national and international day of action for the freedom of all Palestinian political prisoners, the prisoners of freedom, the prisoners of return and liberation, behind Zionist bars because of their commitment to the freedom of their people and their land. This year, April 17 can and must be a day of mobilization to liberate Palestinian prisoners, free the land and people of Palestine, break the siege on Gaza and confront all imperialist and Zionist attacks.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges supporters of Palestine around the world to mobilize in immediate and ongoing response to the Land Day massacre in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza and the entire Palestinian people – including all of the millions of Palestinian refugees in exile and diaspora who struggle for their right to return home, the key to Palestinian liberation.

Send your events and actions to us at samidoun@samidoun.net, on Facebook, or use the form to tell us about your actions in response to the Land Day Massacre and for Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. We will be publishing an international list of events and actions that will be regularly updated.

The following signs can be used in your own local events and actions. PDF download links are provided below!

1 – Right to Resist – Right to Return – Download PDF

2 – End Israel’s War on Palestinian Journalists – Download PDF

3 – Right to Resist – Right to Return – Download PDF

Upcoming Events

Our events calendar is constantly updated!

Friday, 13 April

Saturday, 14 April

Sunday, 15 April

Monday, 16 April

Tuesday, 17 April

Wednesday, 18 April

Thursday, 19 April

Friday, 20 April

Saturday, 21 April

Sunday, 22 April

14 April, Detroit: Great Return March kick-off

Saturday, 14 April
12:30 pm
Campus Martius Park
800 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2055778761104347/

Youth Without Borders in Gaza, and Palestinian Youth Movement, have issued an international call for actions between April 14 and May 15 which has garnered global response in various regions. We, the members of Palestinian Youth Movement of Southeast Michigan, are heeding the call by organizing an action in the form of a vigil for Gaza, to uplift and honor our martyrs, and to condemn the Israeli state and the media’s misportrayal of Palestinian popular resistance.

We are joining MECAWIin their call to end imperialism and war in supporting Palestine and march for the right of return, rain or shine!

Activists, journalists around the world mourn Yaser Murtaja, demand justice and accountability

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

On 6 April 2018, the second large Friday demonstration of the Great March of Return in Gaza, Israeli occupation forces shot and killed nine Palestinians at the mass popular demonstration. Among those targeted by Israeli occupation snipers was well-known Palestinian photojournalist and videographer Yaser Murtaja, whose work was known internationally and who had been retained by the Norwegian Refugee Council to cover the events of the March. Murtaja, 30, was wearing a protective vest prominently labeled with the word “PRESS.” International protests have responded to the killing of Murtaja, including vigils organized by close friends and fellow journalists in global cities.

Yaser Murtaja’s last footage:

Murtaja was a prominent member of the community of journalists in the Gaza Strip and a founder of Ain Media, which was known for photographing Gaza footage using aerial drones. After shooting down Murtaja as he filmed the demonstration, infamous far-right, racist Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman attempted to justify his killing by labeling him as affiliated with Hamas. Lieberman also claimed that there were “no innocent people in Gaza.” While Lieberman’s words indicate the murderous intention of the Israeli occupation state toward Palestinians who have the right to resist and to choose their political affiliation, the comments in the case of Murtaja are particularly absurd, noted the International Federation of Journalists.

Cartoon in honor of Yaser Murtaja. By Mike Flugennock

Murtaja had, in fact, been detained by security forces of the Palestinian Authority in Gaza under the authority of Hamas in 2015, while documenting the demolition of a Palestinian home. He was beaten by security forces and required hospitalization.  Murtaja was the married father of a 15-month-old son. He was one of six Palestinian journalists shot or injured during the march. The others were Adham al-Hajjar, a cameraman for Medi1TV of Morocco; Khalil Abu Adhreh, cameramen for Al-Aqsa TV; Ibrahim al-Zaanoun, a freelance photographer; Ezz Abu Shanab, editor for Sky Press Agency; and Saber Nureldine, photographer for the European Press Photo Agency.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

In a report in the New Yorker, Murtaja’s business partner, Rushdi al-Sarraj, spoke about the project he was working on: a documentary about the Great Return March. “Yaser and I were preparing a documentary about the Great Return March that started a week and a half ago,” said al-Sarraj. “Yaser thought of making a documentary about it and picked some characters to follow: a nurse, a doctor, a twelve-year-old student, all of whom had joined the protests.”

Photo: Nada Abu Hijleh, Ain Media – Portland, Oregon

“We talked about the stories we wanted to cover – families affected by violence, as well as children again exposed to trauma and their ensuing nightmares,” said Karl Schembri of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which commissioned Murtaja to film footage of the march shortly before he was killed. “Two days later, he was killed by an Israeli sniper while peacefully observing the demonstrations. He was killed doing his job: recording his people’s right to protest for their human rights.”

Photo: Mohamad Elshamy, Ain Media – NYC

When Murtaja was buried in a mass funeral in Gaza on Saturday, 10 April, his body was wrapped in a Palestinian flag as well as a “PRESS” vest.  Murtaja has been honored with protests, vigils and memorials in Gaza and in several global cities, including London, Portland, Istanbul and New York.

Photo: Nada Abu Hijleh, Ain Media – Portland, Oregon

In Portland, Oregon, people gathered with candles and flowers, laying them before a Palestinian flag with photos of Murtaja on 10 April.

 

Photo: Nada Abu Hijleh, Ain Media – Portland, Oregon

Nour al-Ghussein, a young Palestinian woman from Gaza, delivered a powerful, evocative memorial at the vigil. She was currently working on a documentary film, called “Between Two Borders,” with Murtaja.

“I knew Yaser for so many years. He was a close friend, he was like family…I lived in Gaza for 20 years before coming here. I know the feeling of losing someone, of losing your house, of being scared, under fire, feeling insecure. But I did not know it is so much harder to be away from your family, to not be back home, sharing such a painful death….Not being there is so hard.”

Photo: Ain Media

In Istanbul, a display in Taksim Square honored Murtaja, displaying cameras alongside posters of the slain journalist, under the slogan, “You Can’t Kill the Truth.”

Photo: Mohamad Elshamy, Ain Media – NYC

In New York City, crowds, including local organizers with Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and many other Palestinian and solidarity organizations, gathered in Union Square on 8 April for a vigil remembering Murtaja. The demonstration was organized by Palestinian youth who had worked with and befriended Murtaja, including Walaa al-Ghussein, Nour’s sister.

Photo: Mohamad Elshamy, Ain Media – NYC

In Madison, Craig and Cindy Corrie, the parents of Rachel Corrie, joined Joe Catron and Islam Maraqa and members of the Madison-Rafah Sister City Project to express their remembrance of Murtaja. This solidarity photograph was taken at one of the ongoing events on the International Solidarity Movement spring tour, in which Catron, also the U.S. coordinator of Samidoun, and Maraqa are touring North America to inform audiences about the work of the ISM.

Photo: International Solidarity Movement

In London, the National Union of Journalists held a vigil in remembrance of Murtaja on 12 April, calling for justice and accountability for his killing. Participants carried Palestinian flags and photos of Murtaja.

Photo: Emma O’Kelly

The NUJ joined more journalists’ organizations in expressing outrage at the killing of Murtaja and demands for accountability. The Committee to Protect Journalists issued a statement in which they “condemned comments by Israel’s defense minister over the weekend that appear to justify the killing of Palestinian journalist Yaser Murtaja in Gaza, and called on authorities to hold to account anyone who shot journalists with live ammunition.”

Photo: Emma O’Kelly

Meanwhile, the International Federation of Journalists – the global journalists’ alliance that includes the Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate – stated that the Israeli government is “fabricating lies to justify murder,” in response to Lieberman labeling Murtaja a “terrorist.” “It is clear that after Israeli soldiers murdered a journalist the Defence Minister is more interested in spouting propaganda and engaging in a cover-up than in carrying out a thorough and transparent investigation and bringing Yasser’s killers to justice,” said IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger. “It is time for the Israeli authorities to stop fabricating lies to justify murder and it is time to stop targeting Palestinian journalists.”

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

The IFJ has responded to past Israeli attacks on Palestinian journalists, including their imprisonment. For example, Palestinian journalist Omar Nazzal was on his way to a conference of the European Federation of Journalists – an IFJ affiliate – when he was seized by occupation forces at the Karameh crossing to Jordan and thrown in administrative detention without charge or trial.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Ain Media itself issued a statement, noting that the Israeli occupation bears full responsibility for the targeting of Yaser, wearing a helmet and press shield and clearly actively filming. “We affirm that we will knock on all doors and work in every legal institution to hold the Israeli occupation accountable for this heinous crime,” it said.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces the killing of Palestinian journalist Yaser Murtaja and notes that this killing takes place as part of a systematic attack on Palestinian journalists that includes targeting them for death, injury and imprisonment. Israeli occupation forces have repeatedly targeted journalists, and Palestinian journalists are routinely subjected to imprisonment, frequently administrative detention without charge or trial. The cases of Mohamed al-Qeeq, Omar Nazzal and Bushra al-Tawil are three among dozens that underline this policy, alongside historic assassinations of Palestinian writers like that of groundbreaking novelist, writer and revolutionary Ghassan Kanafani in 1972. The work, the images and the words of Palestinian journalists are critical in sharing the Palestinian experience, narrative and struggle with the Palestinian people, the Arab world and international audiences. Palestinian journalists must receive international solidarity and Israeli occupation forces must be held accountable, including through global sanctions and an arms embargo, for their targeting of Palestinians who document the stories of their people.

Artwork: Ain Media

The martyrs of the Great Return March in Gaza (list compiled by Shahd Abusalama)

1. Omar Wahid Samour, 31 — the farmer who was killed around dawn.
2. Mohammed Kamal al-Najjar, 25.
3. Jihad Zuhair Abu Jamous, 30.
4. Amin Mansour Abu Muammar, 22.
5. Ibrahim Salah Abu Sha’er, 17. Defence for Children NGO investigations “confirmed he was 17 years old when he was killed, not 22 years as reported by news media. Under international law, any person below 18 years is considered a child.”
6. Nagy Abdullah Abu Hjeir, 25.
7. Musab Zuhair Al-Soloul, 23.
8. Abd al-Qader Mardi al-Hawajri, 42.
9. Mahmoud Saadi Rahmi, 23.
10. Mohammed Naeem Abu Amro, 26.
11. Ahmed Ibrahim Ashour Odeh, 19.
12. Jihad Ahmed Farina, 34.
13. Abdel-Fattah Abdel-Nabi, 18. Shot by a sniper from his back before camera.
14. Bader Fayiq al-Sabbagh, 22.
15. Sari Walid Abu Odeh, 27.
16. Hamdan Isma’il Abu Amsha, 23.
17. Fares Al-Ruqab, 29.
18. Ahmad Omar Arafah, 25.

*Second Friday*
19. Osama Khamis Qdeih, 38.
20. Majdi Ramadan Shabat, 38
21. Hussein Muhammad Adnan Madi, 13.

22. Subhi Abu Atawi, 20.
23. Mohammad Said al-Haj-Saleh, 33.
24. Sedqi Faraj Abu Atawi, 45.
25. Alaa al-Din Yahya Ismail al-Zamli, 15.
26. Hamza Abd al-Al, 20.
27. Yaser Murtaja, 30, journalist shot dead while wearing a Press vest at the protest

28. Ibrahim Al-‘ur, 19
29. Mujahed Nabil Al-Khudari, 25.
30. Marwan Odeh Qdeih, 45, succumbed to wounds.
31. Mohammed Hjeila, 30, killed in an airstrike in eastern Gaza on April 12.
32. Abdallah Al-Shahri, 28, killed in an airstrike on April 12.

Video: Chicago Palestinians remember Gaza sand artist, join #GreatReturnMarch

Palestinians in Chicago remembered Mohammed Abu Amr, the 19-year-old sand artist known for his sculptures on the beaches of Gaza who was killed by Israeli occupation forces on 30 March 2018 as he participated in the Great March of Return on the colonial “borders” of the Gaza Strip.

Organized by the US Palestinian Community Network in Chicago, participants in the action sculpted the image of the map of Palestine in sand, filming it from above, while speaking about their own experiences as Palestinians committed to achieving the right of return and liberation for their people.

Watch the video:

Toulouse shows its solidarity with all Palestinian prisoners

Translated from the French at Coup Pour Coup 31, an anti-imperialist collective and a member organization of the Samidoun Network: http://www.couppourcoup31.com/2018/04/depuis-toulouse-solidarite-avec-toutes-et-tous-les-prisonniers-palestiniens.html

Photo: Coup Pour Coup 31

At the call of a number of organizations, including our anti-imperialist collective Coup Pour Coup 31, dozens of people rallied in support of the liberation of all Palestinian prisoners on 11 April in Toulouse, France.

Photo: Coup Pour Coup 31

For more than two hours, activists operated an information booth and a stand for people to write solidarity letters to the Palestinian prisoners, including a number of passers-by. More than 100 cards were written to be sent to various prisoners.

Photo: Coup Pour Coup 31

Hundreds of flyers and leaflets were distributed about the Palestinian prisoners, against administrative detention, in support of Georges Abdallah and for the BDS campaign.

Photo: Coup Pour Coup 31

The protest also included music as well as speeches from organizations involved. The gathering ended with several songs performed by the choir, La Canaille du Midi.

 

Photo: CAPJPO-EuroPalestine

Elsewhere in France, numerous cities organized marches and rallies in solidarity with Palestine on 6 through 8 April. In Paris, two demonstrations on 6 April and 7 April brought many to the streets. On Saturday, 7 April, activists from Palestine organizations, including CAPJPO-EuroPalestine joined more than 2000 in a demonstration for the right to free movement, in opposition to the repressive immigration bill being proposed by the Macron government.

Photo: CAPJPO-EuroPalestine
Photo: CAPJPO-EuroPalestine
Photo: CAPJPO-EuroPalestine

March 2018 report: 609 Palestinians seized by occupation forces as prisoners face torture, isolation

The following report is prepared monthly by four Palestinian human rights organizations: Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society and the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission. Translation below by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.

Introduction

International law has established specific standards for the protection of the rights of prisoners in order to regulate their conditions and preserve their human dignity. These standards are legal obligations that require the occupying state to fully comply with their provisions, ensure fair trial guarantees and ensure that no one is subjected to torture or other cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment or punishment.

During March 2018, the Israeli occupation authorities continued their policy of the arbitrary detention of Palestinians, in violation of these international standards for prisoners in international humanitarian and human rights law.

The report includes five sections; the first deals with statistics on Palestinian prisoners, the second focuses on torture and other forms of cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment (with the case of detained Palestinian student Omar al-Kiswani as an example), the third deals with the policy of isolation and solitary confinement, the fourth deals with violations of the right to life and physical integrity, and the fifth presents legal obligations of the occupation and presents a set of recommendations.

1. Statistics on Arrests

In March 2018, the Israeli occupation authorities arrested 609 Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian territories, including 95 children and 13 women.

Monitoring and documentation by Palestinian human rights institutions indicate that occupation forces seized 155 Palestinians from Jerusalem, 113 from Ramallah, 85 from al-Khalil, 48 from Nablus, 47 from Tulkarem, 43 from Bethlehem, 33 from Jenin, 28 from Qalqilya, 24 from Jericho, 7 from Salfit and 5 from Tubas as well as 19 Palestinians from the Gaza Strip.

In the context of the ongoing policy of administrative detention, imprisonment of Palestinians without charge or trial, occupation authorities issued 81 administrative detention orders, including 34 new orders, with the remainder renewals of existing detention orders. These arrests brought the number of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons to approximately 6500, including 62 women, among them 8 minor girls. There are approximately 350 Palestinian children in Israeli prisons and 500 people held under administrative detention.

2. Torture and other cruel and inhumane treatment

In March 2018, the occupation authorities continued to carry out various forms of torture and ill-treatment against Palestinian prisoners. The case of Palestinian student detainee Omar al-Kiswani is an example in this regard.

On Wednesday, 7 March at approximately 4:30 pm local time, an Israeli occupation force stormed and invaded Bir Zeit University disguised in civilian clothes in order to seize the student Omar Hassan al-Kiswani, 24. Kiswani is the president of the Bir Zeit Student Council, a resident of the town of Beit Iksa. He was abducted from campus in a violent attack and forcibly taken to the Moskobiya detention center.

According to his statements to his lawyer from the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society on 1 April 2018, he was beaten severely from the moment of his arrest, punched and kicked and also beaten with an electrified baton. This physical abuse and torture did not stop at the time of his arrest, but continued into the interrogation with various forms of physical and psychological pressure. He has been interrogated for up to 18 hours at a time for consecutive days as a form of psychological pressure and sleep deprivation; in addition, his mother was seized, brought into the interrogation center, and shown to him in an attempt to pressure him. He was prohibited from speaking to or contacting his mother. Physical pressure was also exercised in conjunction with this psychological pressure. He has been forced to sit through the interrogation on an iron chair with his hands and feet shackled or restricted.

In response to this mistreatment, he launched a 14-day hunger strike in protest. He continues to be held under interrogation and the Ofer occupation court extended his detention for the fourth time on 7 April 2018 to continue his interrogation.

3. Solitary confinement of Palestinian prisoners

Solitary confinement is one of the harshest punishments carried out by the Israeli prison administration against Palestinian detainees. The prisoner is held alone for prolonged periods in a dark, dirty cell, often with damp walls and only a toilet inside. It is common for the cells to be smelly and old and infested with insects and rodents. The experience of solitary confinement can cause significant psychological damage and deterioration to Palestinian prisoners.

The isolation rooms:

The isolation rooms are 1.8 meters in length and 2.7 meters in width. There is no room for walking or for most of the prisoners’ needs; this can be intensified when there are two beds in the room for prisoners held in joint isolation.

The isolation rooms have little ventilation and high humidity. There is one small, high window close to the ceiling, and the door has a small window, eight centimeters long and eight centimeters wide. It is common for Palestinian prisoners in isolation to develop illnesses, especially respiratory disorders.

One such case is that of the ill prisoner Musa Soufan from Tulkarem, serving a 33-year sentence. He has completed 15 years in prison as of the writing of this report and has spent the longest number of years in isolation. In recent years, he has been isolated continuously for 5 years under the pretext of a “secret file” that declares that he poses a threat to the security of the occupying power. He suffered from a tumor that was removed surgically on 24 December 2016, but he was given no further treatment after the procedure and remains concerned that the disease will return.

During his isolation, he has been deprived from communicating with the outside world or receiving family visits and is held in a small, poorly lit, dirty and poorly ventilated cell.

4. Violations of the right to life and physical integrity

Israeli occupation forces continued attacks against Palestinian civilians during their arrests. The excessive use of force by Israeli occupation soldiers and special forces has caused serious injuries to Palestinian prisoners and the death of Palestinian prisoners, as in the case of the martyr Raed al-Salhi, 21, of Bethlehem. He was killed in August 2017 after being severely injured when attacked by occupation forces who stormed Dheisheh refugee camp and attempted to arrest him.

More than 60 Palestinian prisoners and detainees have died as a result of medical neglect in Israeli prisons, the majority of whom were injured during their arrests by occupation forces.

On 7 March 2018, a special unit of occupation forces invaded Bir Zeit University to kidnap the student council president, Omar al-Kiswani. The occupation forces opened live fire on campus as they dragged Kiswani from the university. Kiswani himself was beaten all over during his arrest and was kicked in the military jeep on his way to the detention center as occupation soldiers cursed his family.

Palestinian detainee Abdullah Nayef Salem was seized by occupation forces at 6 a.m. on 26 March 2018 as he went to visit a grocery store near his home in Dheisheh refugee camp, where he was intercepted by a white car. An occupation soldier emerged and fired directly at his knee; he fell on the ground and was dragged and beaten by the soldiers before being taken to the Etzion military camp. He was then taken with Israeli occupation soldiers to Shaare Tzedek hospital in Jerusalem. He continues to have slight internal bleeding and is in stable condition after surgery.

5. Legal Analysis

This report presents the legal protections under international humanitarian and human rights law to detainees, related to the types of Israeli violations during the reporting period and the legal rules that prohibit such violations, as follows:

1 – The arbitrary detention of Palestinian citizens violates the legal guarantees related to the prohibition of arbitrary detention in international human rights law, including article 9 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles 9 and 10 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976).

2 – The policy of administrative detention by the occupation state, in which detention is carried out on the basis of secret evidence and without any charge against the detainee, constitutes a direct violation of fair trial guarantees under the following legal principles:

a) It is contrary to Article 11 (1) of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that: “Everyone charged with a penal offense has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defense.”

b) It constitutes a grave violation of articles 9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of 1976, which guarantees everyone the right to a fair trial, to be informed of the charges against them and to be able to defend themselves. (Note: The Occupying Power acceded to the ICCPR in October 1991, and shall be bound by it.)

c) The failure to disclose any charges against the person detained under the administrative detention order precludes every possibility of verifying the compliance of the occupying state with Article 78 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which states that “If the Occupying Power considers it necessary, for imperative reasons of security, to take safety measures concerning protected persons, it may, at the most, subject them to assigned residence or to internment.” It is impossible to verify whether this detention is permitted without knowing what the reasons have been and are.

d) Failure to inform the detained person of the charges against them constitutes a violation of Article 71 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which obliges the occupying power to report charges without delay. They also constitute a violation of article 10 of the Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons in Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment of 1988, which requires the same.

3. The violations of the rights of detainee Omar al-Kiswani involve violations of the right to not be subjected to torture, contained in Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention against Torture. Torture and other cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment are contrary to the standards and rules in the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners of 1955, and are among the offenses prohibited under Article 147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949.

4. The expansion of the use of solitary confinement leads to severe human suffering, prohibited under Rule 31 of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners of 1955 as well as the aforementioned legal principles in the Convention Against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

5. The practices of the occupying forces in conjunction with arrests are an explicit violation of international standards on the right to life and physical integrity, in particular Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention and Article 1 of the Convention Against Torture.

Recommendations:

At the conclusion of the report, this series of recommendations is based on the above-mentioned facts and the systematic and gross violations of international humanitarian and human rights law by the occupying power, as follows:

1) Formation of a fact-finding committee by the UN Human Rights Council on Israeli violations against detainees.

2) Activate the mechanisms of accountability by the international community towards the perpetrators of violations in fulfillment of its legal and ethical obligations.

3) The High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions must uphold their responsibilities and pressure the occupying power to respect international humanitarian law.

4) International contracting committees of the Conventions must activate their role to pressure the occupying state to respect the standards for prisoners’ rights.