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Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh has family visit with wife and daughter for first time since 2009

Wafa’ and Rita Abu Ghoulmeh

The wife and daughter of imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, 50, were permitted to visit him for the first time in many years at Hadarim prison on 20 March, reported Hadf News. Wafa’ Abu Ghoulmeh, Ahed’s wife and a Palestinian organizer, and Rita Abu Ghoulmeh, their teen daughter, have been denied visits with Ahed repeatedly over the years. This was the first visit that Wafa’ and Rita were able to conduct together since 2009.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, a leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, is serving a life sentence in Israeli prison; he was abducted with Ahmad Sa’adat and their comrades Hamdi Qur’an, Basil al-Asmar and Majdi Rimawi on 13 March 2006. They had been held in a Palestinian Authority prison in Jericho for the past four years under U.S. and British guard; in 2006, following promises of Palestinian Legislative Council members to release the PA political prisoners, the Israeli occupation violently attacked and destroyed the prison.

Abu Ghoulmeh and his comrades were seized first by the PA and then the occupation forces after the PFLP’s military wing assassinated notorious far-right, racist Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Ze’evi in 2001, in response to the assassination of PFLP General Secretary Abu Ali Mustafa by occupation forces using U.S.-made and -provided weaponry.

During his imprisonment, Abu Ghoulmeh has been repeatedly held in solitary confinement and denied family visits; he has been a leader in the prisoners’ movement and participated in prisoners’ leadership councils, hunger strikes and protests.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh’s daughter Rita in 2013 with a poster of her father

In speaking about the visit, Wafa’ Abu Ghoulmeh expressed the difficulties experienced at the hands of the Israeli occupation for Palestinian families who seek to visit their imprisoned family members, beginning their journey at 5 a.m. to pass all of the Israeli checkpoints. After arriving at the prison, she said, all of the families are searched extensively, accompanied by continuous shouting and screaming from occupation soldiers. She noted that the occupation deliberately delays and detains people during these searches. “On the day of our visit, a number of the prisoners’ family members were held back, including the father of Ahed Tamimi, and her brother was prevented from visiting,” said Abu Ghoulmeh.

Family members are forbidden to bring food, drink or personal items with them. Wafa’ said that she could only speak to her husband over a telephone, behind a glass wall. “One policeman stands behind the prisoner and another behind the visitor. Every word we say is heard by this guard….On the way back, we are subject again to the same procedures and harassment. The visit is a joy for prisoners’ families, but it is not without painful moments, especially when watching prisoners with their children.”

She noted that Hadarim prison, where Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh is held, is a type of mass isolation with 100 Palestinian prisoners; all of the men held there are serving life sentences. It is part of the same complex as HaSharon prison, where the women prisoners are held. She noted that family members are forbidden from bringing educational and political books to prisoners in Hadarim, and only religious books and novels are permitted to enter.

Despite the restrictions and repression imposed by the Israeli occupation, Abu Ghoulmeh is preparing to write a doctoral thesis on the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and the psychological situation of people with high sentences. He has compiled research and written significant portions; however, when he was in Ramon prison, the Israeli prison administration confiscated his writings as well as the archive of educational materials maintained by the prisoners. She noted that Abu Ghoulmeh was looking toward Arab and international universities to complete his education; while a number of European universities reportedly expressed interest in facilitating Abu Ghoulmeh’s continued education, he is unable to attend classes and the supervisor of his work is also imprisoned, Marwan Barghouthi.

She said that a Moroccan university has expressed initial approval of the project but seeks to partner with a Palestinian university. In addition, she said that Abu Ghoulmeh is committed to spending every moment in the prison in research, study or teaching other Palestinian prisoners.

Shadi Ma’ali seized by disguised Israeli occupation forces in the heart of Bethlehem

Former long-term hunger striker and Palestinian refugee, Shadi Ma’ali, was seized by undercover occupation forces at dawn on Saturday, 17 March in the heart of the city of Bethlehem on Manger Street. Ma’ali, from Dheisheh refugee camp, was attacked by so-called “mustaribeen,” occupation forces that dress to appear as Palestinians.

Ma’ali, who was on hunger strike for over 40 days in 2015 with five of his comrades to demand an end to administrative detention, has been repeatedly arrested and has spent years in Israeli prisons. His fellow former hunger strikers have also been repeatedly targeted; Nidal Abu Aker is held without charge or trial under administrative detention while Ghassan Zawahreh has been transferred to the military courts after over a year and a half of imprisonment with no charge.

In a statement following Ma’ali’s abduction, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine said that “the abduction…once again raises new questions about the Palestinian Authority security forces and their inability to protect Palestinian citizens or detect and respond to the ‘mustaribeen’ attackers…This crime will not succeed in breaking his will and determination.”

Abdel-Aziz Arafa

Meanwhile, the military court hearing of wounded Palestinian prisoner Abdel-Aziz Arafa, also from Dheisheh camp, was postponed until 8 April. Arafa was seized on 7 August 2017, the same night that fellow Palestinian refugee Raed al-Salhi was shot by Israeli occupation forces. Salhi was isolated from his family and denied visits in the hospital for a month before he was killed by his injuries. As Salhi was fatally shot, occupation forces also shot Arafa in the leg; he has been held in the Ramle prison clinic and has undergone multiple operations during his detention.

Salhi was a beloved son of the camp who was deeply involved in political organizing, library volunteering and many other aspects of camp life. From an impoverished family, he dedicated his life to the freedom of his people and was shot down, unarmed, by the occupation forces who sought to imprison him for this very reason.

Khader Adnan denied family visits; Ayman al-Tabeesh isolated, ordered imprisoned without charge

Imprisoned Palestinian activist and former hunger striker Khader Adnan was denied a visit with his children on 19 March after his family were told that he was being transferred from Megiddo to Ramon prison. Randa Adnan, his wife, said that the International Committee of the Red Cross called the family to say that the children’s visit was cancelled.

Adnan, 39, from the village of Arraba, is well-known for his long-term hunger strikes that twice won his release from administrative detention, Israeli imprisonment without charge or trial. He was re-arrested once again on 11 December 2017 after a large force of occupation soldiers invaded the family home in a violent raid, throwing him on the ground. He launched a hunger strike immediately upon his arrest after being threatened again with administrative detention; his case was then transferred to the Israeli military courts.

He has been denied family visits from his wife and his father since he was seized by occupation forces; only his six children have been allowed to see him, accompanied by the relatives of other prisoners. The family has been prohibited from bringing him clothing other than the prison uniform to wear during that time and have been unable to bring his glasses.

Adnan’s military court hearing has been continued multiple times; most recently, the Salem military court set his next hearing on 16 April, along with that of Islamic Jihad leader Tariq Qa’adan.

Ayman al-Tabeesh

Palestinian prisoners affiliated with the Islamic Jihad movement announced that they will escalate protest actions in early April if fellow prisoner Ayman al-Tabeesh, 37, from the village of Dura near al-Khalil, is not released from isolation. Al-Tabeesh, a former long-term hunger striker who has been currently imprisoned without charge or trial since 2 August 2016 under repeatedly renewed administrative detention orders, is separated from his fellow Palestinian prisoners in isolation cells.

Prisoners stated that they may launch an open hunger strike to end al-Tabeesh’s isolation. He has been isolated in Ramon prison and denied family visits for two months on unsubstantiated and unspecified allegations of posing a “threat to the security of the area.” He has spent a total of 13 years in Israeli prison through multiple arrests.

Al-Tabeesh’s administrative detention was renewed for another four months on Saturday, 25 March, and he was issued a visitation ban for the same period at the same time. In a letter, al-Tabeesh said:

“In a sham court, the director of the Ramon prison informed me that he had extended my prohibition on receiving visits until 23 July 2018. It is odd, because the Shabak issues permits to my family to visit me. Then they tell me that the Shin Bet is restricting me from visitation. This is an attempt to increase the psychological pressure, especially on the parents and families. Several days ago, the Red Cross told the mother of a prisoner isolated beside me that her visit would be allowed, the mother of the prisoner Ismail al-Arouj from Bethlehem. But when his mother arrived with the family to the prison door she was informed that the visit was banned, and that his prohibition on visits was extended for an additional three months.”

Fawzi al-Junaidi, Mohammed al-Qeeq banned from leaving Palestine by Israeli occupation

Former Palestinian prisoner, long-term hunger striker and journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq was prohibited from traveling outside Palestine for 16 months in a military order, Wattan TV reported on 21 March. Al-Qeeq said that his lawyer was informed by Israeli occupation forces that he was banned from leaving Palestine for the next 16 months, and that the ban may be further extended.

Al-Qeeq noted that he had refused offers to end his hunger strike by deporting him outside of Palestine while imprisoned. He carried out two hunger strikes, one of which lasted for 96 days against his imprisonment without charge or trial. He said that he intended to challenge the order, which was aimed at imposing further restrictions and repression upon a Palestinian journalist and a freed prisoner to suppress the voice of the Palestinian people.

Al-Qeeq is not alone; former child prisoner Fawzi al-Junaidi, 16, known internationally for the image that showed him surrounded, blindfolded, by 23 Israeli occupation soldiers, was prohibited from leaving Palestine to Jordan on 6 March. Fawzi was detained on the King Hussein bridge for eight hours before being returned to al-Khalil with his father. Fawzi’s father told Palestinian media outlet Wattan News that they were on their way to Turkey to receive medical treatment; Fawzi’s right shoulder was fractured when he was beaten by occupation forces after being seized on 7 December in al-Khalil amid widespread protests against U.S. President Donald Trump’s declaration of recognition of Jerusalem as capital of the Israeli occupation state.

He was jailed from 7 to 28 December; Fawzi’s father said that they were not informed of a a travel ban or its duration and is demanding action to allow Fawzi to travel and receive medical care.

Jerusalemite organizer Abeer Abu Khdeir sentenced to two months in Israeli prison for 2011 arrest

Prominent Palestinian activist Abeer Abu Khdeir, organizer with the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees and the wife of imprisoned Palestinian Nasser Abu Khdeir, was sentenced to two months in Israeli occupation prisons on 2 March.

Abu Khdeir’s case has continued for seven years; she was seized by occupation forces in 2011 when they invaded the family’s home in Shuafat, Jerusalem. They came to arrest her 14-year-old son, Anan, and she intervened between her son and the soldiers to free him from their hands. She and her daughters, Asala and Sumoud, were arrested and released after several days.

They were charged with disruption of official police work and “assaulting” police; trial sessions in the case continued for seven years. In addition to the prison sentence, she was also fined 4,000 NIS ($1,000 USD). Her daughter Asala was sentenced to two months of community service and a fine of 2,000 NIS ($500 USD), while her daughter Sumoud was sentenced to 300 hours of community service and a fine of 1,000 NIS ($250 USD).

Abeer Abu Khdeir has been arrested on several occasions by occupation forces and beaten in the streets of Jerusalem. Her husband Nasser Abu Khdeir is currently serving a 16-month sentence in Israeli prison and has spent over 15 years in Israeli occupation jails. She is known nationally and internationally for her work in defense of Jerusalem and organizing Palestinian women.

Activists rename Dutch streets to honor Ahed Tamimi

All images via MovementX and DocP

Activists in the Netherlands changed street names in 13 Dutch cities who “woke up with an additional street name” on 23 March; placards and street signs had been placed around the cities labeling important thoroughfares “Ahed Tamimi street.” MovementX and DocP, two Dutch organizations that advocate for Palestinian rights, posted the grassroots street signs in Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam, Groningen, Leeuwarden, Grijpskerk, Assen, Leiden, Heemstede, Tilburg, Vlaardingen and Nijmegen.

All images via MovementX and DocP

The activists sought to highlight the sentencing of Ahed, 17, a Palestinian teen activist sentenced to eight months in Israeli prison by the Ofer military court on 21 March.

All images via MovementX and DocP

“For a small act of resistance against an Israeli soldier who was illegally in the yard of her house, she was sentenced to 8 months in prison and a hefty fine. Her family members received similar punishments. On the same day, the Israeli soldier Azaria who had shot a Palestinian man in the head in 2016 who was already dying from a bullet wound, saw his sentence reduced from 8 to 9 months. The activists are outraged that the Dutch government so far did not not exercise significant pressure on Israel for Tamimi’s release,” said MovementX and docP in a press release.

All images via MovementX and DocP

Ahed Tamimi’s case received worldwide publicity and attention after she was seized by Israeli occupation forces in December 2017. Ahed and her family are leaders in the indigenous anti-colonial resistance and land defense in the Palestinian village of Nabi Saleh, under attack by occupation forces and the illegal settlement of Halamish. Ahed, then 16, was seized by occupation forces in a pre-dawn raid on her family home in Nabi Saleh by occupation forces days after a video streamed on Facebook by her mother, Nariman Tamimi, documented her confrontation of an Israeli soldier. Ahed slapped the soldier, demanding that the heavily armed occupation forces leave her family’s land. Hours later, her mother Nariman was arrested as well.

All images via MovementX and DocP

The organizers noted a particular likeness to Hannie Schaft, a heroine of the Dutch antifascist resistance. “Both are praised for their courage, and their striking hair. Hannie Schaft, herself a communist, was given the nickname ‘The girl with the red hair.’ Ahed Tamimi is famous for her striking blond curls and her free-spirited behaviour. In Leiden, therefore, Ahed Tamimi’s nameplate is placed in the Hannie Schaftstraat, joined to the nameplate of Hannie Schaft.”

All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP
All images via MovementX and DocP

The sentencing of Ahed, Nariman and Nour Tamimi: The struggle continues!

Art by Katie Miranda

“There is no justice under the occupation and this court is illegal.”
– Ahed Tamimi, 21 March 2018

Palestinian teen activist Ahed Tamimi, 17, was sentenced by an Israeli military court on Tuesday, 21 March to eight months in Israeli prison. The sentencing came after a plea bargain was reached in the case and confirmed by the military court; the majority of the original 12-count indictment was dropped by the Israeli military prosecution.

It is important to understand the context of plea bargains in occupied Palestine. Despite any claims to the contrary by the Israeli occupation, for Palestinians, plea bargaining is essentially a choice with no meaningful alternative, rather than a recognition of “guilt.” Over 95 percent and often over 99 percent – numbers that mirror the conviction rate of the military courts overall – of military court cases end in plea bargains. The alternative is no solution at all for Palestinians; as the military courts accept dubious evidence and evidence obtained through torture and exist as part and parcel of the carceral system of occupation, legal brilliance and strong arguments do little to nothing to obtain Palestinians’ freedom. The “plea bargain” in these cases is no equal agreement, but simply an imposed form of military court sentencing at the hands of the Israeli occupation.

In addition, the cost for continuing the military court case through to sentencing is often immense. Overcharging is used systematically, as it is in Ahed’s case, to threaten arrested and imprisoned Palestinians with years-long prison sentences. This is equally true of Palestinian child prisoners like Ahed as it is of Palestinian adult prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons. Each trip to the military court is a day-long ordeal for imprisoned Palestinians; the use of the infamous transport van called the “bosta” has itself sparked multiple prison protests and hunger strikes. Every trip to and from the military court is another hours-long, shackled trip on the “bosta.” And when a plea agreement is not reached, the Israeli military court system has no hesitation in dragging out the trial through a series of continuations that can take months and years.

For imprisoned Palestinian children, the cost is even greater; Palestinian teens like Ahed are at risk of losing critical years of their education as they prepare to graduate high school, take the national tawjihi examinations and enter university. The threat to Palestinians’ education is another weapon held above the head of imprisoned Palestinian children to compel plea agreements and impose sentences upon these targeted youth.

Of course, a plea agreement that wins Ahed’s freedom in four more months – already imprisoned for four months, she will be released in July – is also far below the previous demands of a minimum sentence of two to three years, let alone the demands of racist, far-right Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman that Ahed be imprisoned “for the rest of her life.” Ahed, like other imprisoned Palestinians, continues her struggle and exemplifies steadfastness; this so-called “plea” does not carry guilt, but pride in the strength of youth like Ahed, who inspire people around the world to continue to resist and struggle.

The sentencing did not only carry an eight-month prison sentence for Ahed, but also a 5,000 NIS ($1,400 USD) fine as well as three years of a suspended sentence. Two other Tamimi women strugglers were sentenced at the same time: Ahed’s mother, Nariman, a leader in the indigenous land defense movement in their village of Nabi Saleh, and Ahed’s cousin, Nour.

Nariman Tamimi will also serve an eight-month prison sentence alongside her daughter and a three-year suspended sentence; she was fined 6,000 NIS ($1,780 USD) for filming Ahed’s confrontation with an occupying soldier and livestreaming it on Facebook. Nour was sentenced to her time served and fined 2,000 NIS ($500 USD).

Suspended sentences are another mechanism used by the Israeli occupation in an attempt to suppress Palestinian resistance; they emphasize that even after leaving behind the occupation prisons, Palestinians are not free, but are threatened constantly with the imposition of the “suspended” sentence after another arrest or pre-dawn raid. Nevertheless, as Palestinian prisoners have made clear through decades of struggle, none of the repressive mechanisms of the occupation have succeeded in suppressing or erasing Palestinian resistance and commitment to win their freedom, return and liberation.

The sentencing of the Tamimi women came alongside news that Elor Azaria, the occupation soldier who murdered Palestinian youth Abdel-Fattah Sharif as he lay wounded on the ground, received a further reduction to his sentence; he will have spent nine months behind bars when released. Even the case itself was an anomaly; Israeli soldiers routinely receive no punishment at all for shooting and killing Palestinian children and youth, including multiple cases of teens being shot in the back.

Ahed’s case is a reminder, like the cases of all over 6,100 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, that the military court system and, indeed, the entire Israeli “justice” system, is nothing but a colonial apparatus that seeks to suppress Palestinian resistance and existence on the land of Palestine. It can, should and must inspire us all to win the immediate release of every Palestinian struggler locked behind Israeli bars and to struggle for the freedom of the Palestinian land and people, dismantling all the Zionist colonial systems that seek to impose their domination over the indigenous people.

While the targeting of Ahed, Nariman, Nour and the Tamimi women was an attempt to repress Palestinian resistance and activism against colonization, apartheid and occupation, as many Palestinians and other organizers have pointed out, the effect of their imprisonment has been precisely the opposite. Inside and outside Palestine, around the world, people have been inspired by the anti-colonial, indigenous land defense movement in Nabi Saleh and the struggle of the Palestinian people for their freedom. Millions of people have signed petitions and thousands have taken to the streets in dozens and hundreds of actions organized around the world to demand Ahed’s freedom and that of her fellow Palestinian political prisoners. The plight of Palestinian child prisoners – and the struggle of all Palestinian prisoners for freedom – has been highlighted at a global level.

Ahed’s struggle and sacrifice has helped to grow and build a global movement for Palestinian freedom and continues to do so. From letter-writing evenings at schools and community centers to art exhibitions to protests marching through the streets of New York, Berlin and Brussels, this is the time to honor the steadfastness of Ahed and her fellow Palestinian prisoners with increased struggle to demand all of their freedom and to make it clear that the popular movements of the world stand with the Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian people.

Free Ahed Tamimi! Free all Palestinian prisoners!

Solidarity with De Verrekijker, autonomous student space at the VU-Amsterdam!

Photo via De Verrekijker

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to defend De Verrekijker. De Verrekijker is an autonomous student space on the campus of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU Amsterdam). This space was squatted since 2015 by activists of De Nieuwe Universiteit and has maintained a consistent presence on campus as a home for all forms of anti-racist, radical, progressive and revolutionary organizing on campus and in the community.  Samidoun activists and many other Palestine solidarity organizers have met, organized and spoken in events and meetings held in this space. De Verrekijker is currently under attack and facing confiscation of this precious student space and has been specifically targeted after hosting the event organized by Revolutionaire Eenheid (Revolutionary Unity) and Anakbayan Europe on anti-imperialism featuring Rasmea Odeh on 27 February.

Rasmea Odeh is a Palestinian community leader, a torture survivor and a former Palestinian prisoner who has inspired generations of Palestinian activists. She visited Belgium and the Netherlands for several events that focused on her life in struggle in Palestine, the United States and elsewhere, including the Amsterdam event that featured her alongside Coni Ledesma, a revolutionary leader in the Philippines’ peoples’ movement.

The event came under severe attack from Zionist forces who sought to shut it down, pressuring several venues to cancel the talk. Illustrating the importance of a space like De Verrekijker, the event was held at the last minute at the campus autonomous space.

In response, the youth organizers of the event, Rasmea Odeh and the hosting space – De Verrekijker – were subject to extensive and ongoing attacks, frequently making use of the “terrorist” label in an attempt to marginalize and repress critical anti-imperialist and, particularly, Palestinian organizers. Even a judge charged with reviewing the event after spurious complaints concluded that nothing “anti-Semitic” occurred at the event – instead, a discussion of the role of imperialism in the world and the Palestinian struggle for liberation took place.

However, following these attacks from Zionist groups and right-wing political organizations and media entities, the administration of the VU Amsterdam stepped in to continue the repression, demanding the closure of De Verrekijker. The student organizers have continued since 28 February to hold the space, despite the university issuing a formal letter demanding that the space be vacated before 3 April. Students have consistently slept in the space to keep it open and protect it; they have been threatened with forcible entry and removal. On 17 March, the university turned off electricity and heating to the space in another attempt to force out the organizers.

As noted by the De Verrekijker team:

“The DV was able to draw attention to issues regarding university policies, which include, amongst others, the lack of space for self-organisation and self-determination of students and workers, the lack of transparency regarding administrative processes and decision making and the financial structure of the VU (VUSAM). But also several other societal issues were brought up by the DV such as the need for housing and the struggle against racism and sexism that affect many of us on a daily basis. These problems, and others, are still present, widespread, and concern every student, teacher and member of the staff.

In the last few weeks the VU has shown a growing hostility towards us. Despite the fact that in these three years the collective achieved “house peace”, which grants DV the legal right to access to the building and to refuse entry to whomever we please, the VU expressed the willingness to evict us, based on dubious safety arguments. They even sent security guards to illegally break into De Verrekijker, and they are trying to bully us out by turning off heaters and electricity plugs.”

It is critical for people around the world to show their solidarity with De Verrekijker and the student and youth organizers in Amsterdam, under attack for welcoming Palestinian analysis and organizing to a free, anti-racist space. Many of the attacks against De Verrekijker came from around the world, and it is important to provide global support for the students and make it clear to the VU administration that people around the world stand with Palestine and with the student organizers and space of De Verrekijker.

It must also be clear that the criminalization of the Palestinian right to resist and the demonization of Palestinian strugglers is related not only to attempts to suppress the Palestinian movement but to suppress all struggles for justice and liberation. The use of the “terror” label is a political weapon used to justify racism, mass violation of people’s rights, silencing and suppression and extreme violence and terror against the peoples of the world seeking freedom from imperial domination.

Take action:

1) Sign the petition to support De Verrekijker: https://www.change.org/p/vrije-universiteit-amsterdam-save-de-verrekijker-free-the-academic-discours-at-the-vu-8c5f07f4-a7f8-40ec-929c-576e2a640309

2) Send a message of support or a solidarity photo to De Verrekijker from your own student or community group, club or organization. Message De Verrekijker on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/deverrekijkervu/

3) Support the organizers of the important event with Rasmea Odeh! Send a solidarity message to Revolutionaire Eenheid and Anakbayan Europe: https://www.facebook.com/revolutionaireeenheid

Palestinian teen Ahed Tamimi to be sentenced to 8 months in Israeli prison

Ahed Tamimi, 17-year-old activist from Nabi Saleh whose case has received widespread global attention, will be sentenced to eight months in Israeli prison following a plea bargain on 21 March at Ofer military court, Palestinian media have reported. The plea bargain will involve a modified indictment with four items instead of the 12 that were originally included in the indictment, under which she was threatened with imprisonment for up to 10 years.

In the revised indictment, Ahed is accused of obstructing and assaulting an occupation soldier as part of the famous incident in which she slapped an occupation soldier on her family’s land, demanding he leave. Other charges of “incitement” and allegations related to political speech were excluded from the new indictment, as were five other incidents in which she was accused of assaulting occupation forces when they invaded her village, Nabi Saleh. The sentence has not yet been approved by the military court and is not yet final.

Ahed’s mother, Nariman, is also imprisoned and facing similar charges relating to the action on 15 December, in which Ahed confronted an Israeli occupation soldier invading her village alongside her cousin, Nour. Nariman Tamimi livestreamed the confrontation on Facebook in a video that soon went viral, expressing Palestinians’ commitment to resist occupation. Ahed and her family are leaders in the grassroots indigenous land defense movement in Nabi Saleh, confronting the illegal settlement of Halamish and occupation soldiers who have confiscated the village’s spring and lands.

The vast majority of all military court cases in occupied Palestine end in plea bargains. Palestinian prisoners are forced into plea bargains with threats of lengthy sentences that pose an all-too-real danger, especially with the inflated charges and lengthy indictments proffered against Palestinians. Over 99 percent of all military court cases end with a conviction, and lengthy sentences have become a norm, even for many children. Plea bargains are forced on Palestinians by a colonial “court” system that is only designed to suppress their resistance and isolate organizers and leaders from the Palestinian people.

The sentence comes only days after the Israeli military appeals court ruled on 19 March that Ahed’s trial must be held behind closed doors and away from public view. Ahed and her lawyer, Gabi Lasky, are rejecting the closed trial, especially as the case has helped to shine an international light on Israeli practices against Palestinian prisoners, especially Palestinian children targeted for arrest and persecution. Ahed’s case has helped to highlight the ongoing, systematic practice of the military imprisonment and trial of hundreds of Palestinian children each year.

While the Israeli court justified its order for a closed trial with language about the protection of minors, the Israeli army videotaped and widely distributed footage of Ahed’s arrest and leading Israeli politicians have publicly demanded she spend the rest of her life in prison. The village of Nabi Saleh has been subjected to repeated raids and attacks and the imprisonment of yet more children of the extended Tamimi family.

Over 1.5 million people have signed a global petition to demand Ahed’s freedom and thousands of people around the world have participated in hundreds of events and actions to demand her release and that of the over 6,100 Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli jails, including over 350 Palestinian children. The struggle to free Palestinian prisoners and build solidarity for their struggle must be continued and intensified; the global action was critical in maintaining a high profile for Ahed’s case, and every Palestinian prisoner also deserves this attention, solidarity and struggle. 

Free Ahed Tamimi! Free all Palestinian prisoners! 

19 March, Brooklyn: Palestinian Resistance and the International Solidarity Movement

Monday, 19 March
7:00 pm
Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1557655431022634/

Join us at this forum to learn more from American and Palestinian activists Rana Nazzal and Joe Catron.

Following its own strict guidelines of nonviolence, using direct action and documentation, this Palestinian-led movement seeks to intervene when Israel violates international law in the oppression of Palestinians.

The presentation will include screening of an abridged version of “Radiance of Resistance,” a film produced by three ISM volunteers in Nabi Salih, featuring Ahed Tamimi and her cousin Janna Ayyad.