Ahed Tamimi, a 16-year-old Palestinian girl, was taken in the dead of night by Israeli soldiers. She was arrested after a video that her mother, Nariman, took went viral, showing an altercation with soldiers trying to enter their house. Ahed’s mother is being charged with incitement for posting the video. The Tamimis are well-known in their village of Nabih Saleh for their weekly nonviolent protests against Israeli occupation and apartheid. #FreeAhed
This event is organised by Waterford and New Ross IPSC in conjunction with Anti Internment Munster. Please come and show your solidarity with Ahed and all Palestinian prisoners.
The PCF section of the 9th arrondisement of Marseille invites you to an afternoon of discussions and actions in support of freedom for Salah Hamouri and support for the Palestinian cause.
The program includes:
– Presentation on Salah Hamouri
– Presentation on the Palestinian political situation by a representative of the Association France-Palestine Solidarite
– Presentation by a Palestinian activist about life on the ground.
Actions include:
– Letter writing to Emmanuel Macron to support Palestine and free Salah
– Writing cards to Salah Hamouri in Israeli prison
– Creating a petition
– Training on Palestine
Protest in Manchester against Israel’s detainment of over 6000 Palestinian political prisoners! Take action to tell the UK to Stop Arming Israel!
12pm Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester City Centre – this Saturday 20th January
Roughly 20% of the Palestinian population and 40% of the Palestinian male population of the West Bank and Gaza have served time in Israeli jails since Israel occupied the territory in 1967. Over 6000 Palestinian political prisoners are currently locked up in Israeli military prisons, hundreds without charge and over 300 of them are children,
16 year old Ahed Tamimi has just had her imprisonment extended in Israeli jails, a young Palestinian girl who has already spent the Christmas period and New Year in Israeli prison and remains imprisoned by an illegal occupying force. She challenged heavily armed Israeli soldiers in her own court yard, the same day her fifteen year old cousin had earlier been shot in the face and was sitting in an induced coma in hospital. Over 300 other Palestinian children remain imprisoned. In October 2017, 8 out of 40 Palestinian children arrested were subject to torture.
Resisting Israel’s brutal and illegal military occupation of Palestine is a duty not a crime. Join the Protest in Manchester this Saturday and call for the release of all Palestinian political prisoners. Don’t turn your backs on Ahed Tamimi and the other children still locked up in Israel. Take to the streets and tell the UK to Stop Arming Israel!
Ahed is the visible face of Palestinian children and youth in resistance, but it is not the only one.
There is a whole new generation that says enough of occupation! A generation that calls into question the failed Oslo Accords and demands the end of the occupation through struggle.
The “battle of Ahed,” as they have called it in some press, is the “battle for Jerusalem,” the battle for Palestine.
In homage to the struggle of Ahed, for justice in Palestine, and in solidarity with these children and young people locked up in the Zionist prisons, we invite you to participate in the construction of a collective mural in which to express our solidarity, this Friday, January 19 , Starting at 6 pm, in the square at Hocquart and Av. De las Leyes.
Immediate freedom for Ahed and all the children kidnapped by Zionism!
Freedom for Nariman and all the men and women imprisoned in the
Zionist prisons!
Palestine from the River to the Sea and Jerusalem is its capital!
Palestinian films and torch procession in Norrebro
Freedom for Ahed Tamimi, Khalida Jarrar, Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails
There will be short films and presentations about Palestinian prisoners, followed by discussion and coffee and then a procession through the streets of Norrebro with torches and pictures of the imprisoned comrades at the front. We hope to see you!
Join CAPJPO-EuroPalestine for one of a series of protests across France to demand the freedom of Ahed Tamimi, the 16-year-old Palestinian girl imprisoned by the Israeli occupation, along with her mother Nariman and 6,200 Palestinian prisoners, including 300 children.
The Israeli occupation army has declared the Ramallah-area Palestinian village of Nabi Saleh to be a closed military zone in an attempt to suppress a planned demonstration in support of Jerusalem against Israeli ethnic cleansing and U.S. President Donald Trump’s declaration of recognizing it as the capital of Israel.
The mass march was attacked by Israeli occupation forces who fired large amounts of tear gas on the marchers, many of whom suffered as a result of inhaling tear gas. They also attacked the demonstration with rubber-coated metal bullets after surrounding the village and blocking the roads and entrances. Journalists seeking to attend the march were prevented from passing through the checkpoint and denied entry to Nabi Saleh.
This latest attack on Nabi Saleh, the village that has been at the center of an indigenous Palestinian land defense struggle after its land and spring were stolen by the illegal settlement of Halamish, comes in addition to repeated raids and arrests, particularly those targeting Ahed Tamimi and her family, one of the largest and most active families in the village.
The order comes shortly following the decision of far-right, racist Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s collective punishment order against the Tamimi family. Bassem Tamimi, the father of Ahed and the husband of Nariman, Ahed’s mother, who is also imprisoned, was banned from traveling outside Palestine. Bassem was previously imprisoned for several years for his involvement in protests and was recognized as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International.
The Tamimi family have traveled to South Africa, Lebanon, Europe and elsewhere to speak about the situation in Nabi Saleh and the Palestinian people’s struggle for liberation. This comes as a clear attempt to cut off the Tamimi family from international support.
However, that international support has only continued to grow. In addition to protests in Sydney, Berlin, Athens, Rome, Porto, Lisbon, Dublin, New York, Brussels, Portland, Braga, Toulouse and elsewhere to demand freedom for Ahed Tamimi and her fellow Palestinian prisoners, French trade unionists also showed their support for Ahed. CGT railway workers at a conference in Versailles responded to the World Federation of Trade Unions’ call for solidarity:
Ahed is one of over 300 Palestinian children currently jailed by the Israeli occupation. Each year, approximately 700 Palestinian kids are brought before Israeli military courts and are frequently subject to beating, solitary confinement, physical and psychological abuse and other forms of cruel and inhumane treatment.
In addition, Lieberman withdrew the Israeli work permits of 20 Tamimi family members in an apparent attempt to impoverish the family into submission. Six Tamimi family members, including Mohammed Bilal Tamimi, the son of Manal Tamimi, earlier arrested and released, were also seized by occupation forces on Thursday in pre-dawn raids.
Justifying the collective punishment, Lieberman declared that “Dealing with Tamimi and her family has to be severe, exhaust all legal measures and generate deterrence” of involvement in popular Palestinian resistance.
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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces the arrest of Ahed Tamimi and Nariman Tamimi, the latest of well over 500 Palestinians arrested by Israeli occupation forces following U.S. President Donald Trump’s declaration of recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Approximately half of those detained, like Ahed, Abdul-Khalik Burnat and Fawzi al-Junaidi, are children. There are hundreds of Palestinian children jailed by Israel and frequently subject to beatings, abuse, and interrogations without parents or lawyers present in violation of the law. We urge people of conscience around the world to take action to demand freedom for Ahed and her fellow detained and jailed Palestinian children in occupation detention centers, interrogation centers and prisons – and for Nariman Tamimi and all detained and imprisoned Palestinians.
The resistance of the Palestinian people has never been quelled by arrests or repression, and it must be clear that we, around the world, stand alongside the Palestinian people as they defend Jerusalem and their entire land and people under attack. This includes standing with detained and jailed Palestinian prisoners in their struggle for liberation for themselves, their people, and their occupied homeland.
TAKE ACTION:
For supporters in the US: Call your member of the House of Representatives to support H.R. 4391, the Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act. Tell them specifically about Ahed’s arrest, and urge them to act for her release. Tell them to pressure Israel to free Ahed and other detained Palestinian kids. Call the House switchboard at (202) 224-3121 and ask to speak to your Representative’s office. CODEPINK has an action to highlight this case specifically.
Take action around the world: From 10 January to 20 January, there is an international week of action to contact local parliamentarians in each country and urge the freedom of Ahed Tamimi and her fellow Palestinian prisoners. Find our sample letters and contact addresses in multiple languages here!
Call your nearest Israeli embassy and let them know that you know about the detention of Ahed Tamimi in Nabi Saleh and other Palestinian child prisoners. Demand Ahed, her mother Nariman, and the other detained children be immediately released. Contact infomation here: https://embassy.goabroad.com/embassies-of/israel
Organize a protest for Ahed or join one of the many protests for Jerusalem and distribute this post and other news about Ahed and the Palestinian prisoners. Get others involved in the struggle for Palestinian freedom! Build the campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel and complicit corporations like HP and G4S.
Write to Ahed and Nariman. While Zionist jailers frequently censor Palestinian prisoners’ mail, these letters can help bolster morale and even send a message to the jailers and censors themselves. Write to Ahed Tamimi or Nariman Tamimi (choose one and address your letter to one only) at: HaSharon prison
Ben Yehuda, P.O. Box 7
40 330 Israel
Palestinian prisoner Israa Jaabis came before the Israeli occupation’s High Court of Justice on Thursday, 11 January in an appeal against her 11-year sentence, noting her severe injuries and poor overall health, with her suffering only intensified due to the conditions in HaSharon prison, where she is held. Her lawyers have argued that she was subjected to a lengthy, arbitrary sentence with little concern for the reality of the charges against her or her intense pain and suffering.
Jaabis’ case has come to renewed attention on social media as well in the last week, with many activists highlighting #FreeIsraa, #انقذوا_اسراء and #HelpIsraa hashtags in support of her appeal and campaign for her liberation. The court heard arguments from the defense and prosecution and did not set a date for issuing a decision.
The story of Israa Jaabis is a human tragedy brought about due to occupation, racism, oppression and injustice. Jaabis, the mother of a 9-year-old child, was seized in October 2015 near the al-Zaim checkpoint at the entrance to Jerusalem. Jaabis holds a Jerusalemite identity card, but lived in the West Bank with her family and her son, who has a West Bank identity card. Reportedly, she was informed that she would lose her Jerusalem identity unless she moved back to Jerusalem – part of the ongoing and systematic Israeli attempt to erase Palestinian existence in Jerusalem – and was being forced to live apart from her child.
She had rented an apartment in Jabal al-Mukabber and was in the process of moving her basic belongings to the apartment, including a gas cylinder to power a stove. As she approached the checkpoint, the gas cylinder caught fire after an airbag popped open inside of her vehicle, burning Jaabis severely over 60 percent of her body while the situation was treated as a “terror attack” rather than a medical emergency by the occupation forces on the scene.
Rather than summoning an ambulance, security forces and police were brought to the scene. Despite initial reports that this was a traffic accident, Israeli media then reported that this was an operation targeting Israeli soldiers. She was imprisoned while hospitalized and charged with “attempted murder” of the Israeli occupation forces at the checkpoint as eight of her fingers were amputated. Israeli prosecutors alleged that social media posts expressing support of the Palestinian resistance and other political opinions merited this extreme sentence. Her story combines the terror of colonial imprisonment with the ethnic cleansing of Jerusalem and the constant violence against Palestinian families, particularly women and children, of Israeli colonialism.
Jaabis issued a message from prison through her sister Mona, translated below, saying that she urgently needs more than eight operations and that she suffers from intense pain and suffering in her hands and feet, especially after the amputation of her fingers, and that she is unable to care for herself properly.
Israa’s message follows:
“As for my health, it is as follows: I have severe cramps in my hands and feet and these prevent me from doing my daily tasks. I need help from other girls to do the simplest things. This hurts me and makes me feel less than others. I feel humiliated and ashamed. And I urgently need to have the operation to relieve these cramps and seizures so that I can do my own daily simple tasks. Since I was arrested, the administration here has always procrastinated. They say that the operation will happen each month, but nothing happens and my situation worsens every day.”
“Every day I look in the mirror and I feel silent and my soul is shattered every day. I need treatment to face this painful reality. I am scared from my face when I look at myself in the mirror. How about others? What does my child say when he sees me? Do you feel scared of me? Thousands of questions pass through my head every day and I cannot find an answer. I feel scared, humiliated and anxious. I try to help myself, but to no avail.”
“I need treatment, I need surgery so that I can live with this difficult situation…..I must live with these near-fatal injuries and I could live if operations were conducted with humane treatment. Now I cannot even wear a brace which covers the burns because I have a hard time wearing it as it is torn and the prison administration will not help me.”
“I have bleeding in my eye and I feel great pain whenever it is exposed to the air or I wash my eyes with water. I urgently need eye treatment and again there is no answer. My nose was burned from the inside and so I must breathe from my mouth or a very small hole in my nose. My nose bleeds and I receive no treatment although my condition worsens every day.”
“My teeth are very weak, they have broken and I asked for outside treatment. After a long hassle, the management agreed to allow an outside dentist to enter, but he came only onceand no longer. I cannot raise my arms up, I have limited movement in my arms because the skin is fused to the armpit, and the management and doctors here are not trying to help me. My feet itch painfully, my right ear is almost non-existent and I oftern have severe infections. I urgently need an ear operation and everyone ignores the situation.”
“I am very tired of all of this inside, and my permanent need for everything causes me pain. I feel insulted, embarrassed and my situation worsens day after day. May times I shout and scream and erupt about my situation and I need psychological help as well. My psychological state has taken away my desire to eat. I almost do not eat and I do not want to eat. I have so much pressure in my head, and I do not understand what others talk about in front of me, and I lose focus.”
“The administration told me they would prevent me from visits from my son. I am told I have to receive blood tests, but they never happen. I hope everyone reads my message. I’m not a normal prisoner, who only suffers from prison. I suffer from much more than the injustice of the jailer, my condition is very difficult for those who are in their homes, let alone being in prison.”
On Friday, 12 January, Rizk Rajoub, on hunger strike for 22 days, was transferred to the Ramle prison clinic after the deterioration of his health. Rajoub launched his hunger strike on 25 December in protest of his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. He was offered the choice of indefinitely renewable imprisonment on the basis of secret evidence or deportation to Sudan.
Rajoub, 61, is from the town of Dura near al-Khalil. He has spent 23 years in Israeli prisons over separate arrests, with over half of that time held in administrative detention on multiple occasions. His family members report that he has not spent a full year outside Israeli prisons since 1996. He was seized again by occupation forces on 27 November 2017 in his home in Dura, and then ordered to administrative detention. The next hearing on his administrative detention will take place on 15 January.
Rajoub had said earlier that he will not accept deportation from Palestine for one day, but he just as clearly rejects his continued arbitrary imprisonment, vowing to continue his strike until the end of his administrative detention. Rajoub’s lawyer reported that he has been held in solitary confinement in Ofer prison since launching his strike and has only been allowed to shower once in that time. Rajoub was held prior to the transfer to the Ramle clinic in a small, dirty cell with surveillance cameras and old, smelly blankets with no changes of clothes. The temperature inside the cell is very cold with a high iron window that is always open. Rajoub’s cell is also raided three times daily by two jailers in an attempt to pressure him to end his strike.
Fellow prisoner Ibrahim al-Araj said that Rajoub has lost 15 kilograms (31 pounds) since launching the strike and that the prison administration provodes him with two salt tablets daily.
Ahmad Rajoub, Rizk’s son, said that his father’s health was in continual decline and that he is refusing to consume medications or undergo tests. He is refusing to consume vitamins or other supplements.
Ayoub al-Asa
In addition, on 10 January, Ayoub Yacoub Mahmoud al-Asa, 33, from the town of al-Obeidiya near Bethlehem launched a hunger strike in rejection of the renewal of his administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial – for an additional six months. The prisoners of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Ofer prison said that he was transferred to isolation cells after launching his hunger strike. He has been imprisoned since 21 June 2017 without charge or trial, and has spent over five years in Israeli prison in the past.
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses its strongest solidarity with Rizk Rajoub and Ayoub al-Asa and demands their immediate release and an end to the policy of administrative detention, a systematic violation of Palestinian rights by the Israeli settler colonial project.
Palestinian child prisoner Amal Qabaha, 17, from the village of Umm al-Rayhan southwest of Jenin, was released from Israeli occupation prisons on 11 January 2018, after completing her 1 1/2 year sentence in Israeli jails.
She was seized on 14 August 2016 at a checkpoint by occupation forces and accused of intending to stab a soldier, because she was accused having a knife in her possession. Her village of Umm al-Rayhan is isolated behind the separation wall, near the town of Yaabad.
Amal’s family said that she was seized and targeted because she verbally challenged a soldier at the checkpoint who was abusing and shouting at the Palestinian civilians lined up there, after which she was pulled out of the line, her hands bound and transferred to interrogation.
She had 12 hearings before the Salem Military Court and was jailed in HaSharon prison with women prisoners and her fellow imprisoned Palestinian girls.
Upon her release, Amal spoke with Asra Voice Radio, emphasizing the importance of the experience of the “flowers,” the minor girls held captive in Israeli jails. She said that the girls put together a magazine to increase cultural awareness to distribute to their fellow prisoners, emphasizing the suffering of women prisoners and educating them through the exchange of scientific and literary information.
Amal also said that with every prisoner liberated, the story of the flowers comes to light. She noted that Khalida Jarrar, the imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarian, leftist and feminist leader, works especially hard to teach and support the minor girls, taking care of them and following up on their lives as well as focusing on their education.
She emphasized the dire humanitarian situation of women prisoners, especially those who are suffering from a lack of medical treatment alongside serious repression, as well as the prisoners’ demand for appropriate medical treatment and their fundamental calls for Palestinian national unity and the freedom for all prisoners in occupation prisons.