Stand with Hamza Marwan Bouzia and Salah Khawaja to demand that Israel release them, 461 other “administrative detainees” imprisoned without charge or trial, and all 6,198 Palestinian political prisoners, and that Hewlett Packard companies end their contracts with Israeli prisons and detention centers, occupation and security forces, and checkpoints and settlements.
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Support the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian Resistance, and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.
Sunday, 26 November
2:00 pm
Arab American National Museum
13624 Michigan Ave
Dearborn, MI
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/337858763290987/
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. Last month, Israeli occupation forces arrested an average of 16 Palestinians per night. Over 6000 Palestinian political prisoners are currently locked up in Israeli military prisons, of which 280 are children, 53 are women, and 12 are legislative council members; 463 of these are being held without charge. Come hear Sahar Francis, director of the Ramallah-based Addameer Palestinian Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, discuss the situation of Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. Learn about Israel’s military court system, arbitrary arrests, the arrests and abuse of children and overall the criminalization of Palestinians in their occupied homeland.
Date: Sunday, November 26, 2017
Time: 2-4pm
Place: Arab-American National Museum – ANNEX
16 November 2017 marks the 34th anniversary of the death of Palestinian prisoner Ishaq Maragha, one of four Palestinians whose lives were taken – three through forced-feeding – during a hunger strike for justice inside Israeli prisons. Maragha, who died in 1983, three years after he was grievously wounded by Israeli forced feeding, was not only a martyr but a longtime leader of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and the Palestinian liberation struggle.
Along with Ali al-Jaafari and Rasim Halawa, he was martyred by Israeli force feeding aimed at breaking the hunger strike of Nafha prison in 1980. Fellow prisoner Anis al-Dawla also lost his life in 1980 from fatigue, malnutrition and disease caused by his solidarity strike in Ashkelon prison in support of the prisoners of Nafha.
Born in the town of Silwan near Jerusalem in 1942, he became a member of the Arab Nationalist Movement – the movement founded by George Habash, Wadie Haddad and other Arab and Palestinian young people looking towards liberation, unity and socialism – and was considered one of the first members of the movement in Palestine, joining in 1959 at the age of 17. He had four children, Jamal, Amal, Amina and Musa.
As a member of the ANM, he traveled to Egypt for military training in 1964. He joined the ranks of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine from the very beginning of its foundation on December 11, 1967 from the Palestine Section of the ANM. Shortly over one year later, in February 1969, he was arrested by Israeli occupation forces on charges of being a leader in the PFLP in the Jerusalem area. After three years in Israeli prison including a period of intense torture under occupation, he was released from prison in August 1972.
As Abdel-Nasser Ferwana, Palestinian researcher on prisoners’ affairs notes, this was only a “fighter’s rest” for Maragha. In February 1975 he was once again seized by occupation forces and accused of participating in the resistance to occupation; he was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment.
Ferwana recalled meeting Maragha several times while visiting his imprisoned father, who would laer be released in the 1985 prisoner exchange with the Palestinian resistance. Maragha said to him as a young man, “The prisons will be destroyed and your father and I will be liberated.”
During his time in prison, he was transferred to Ramle, Beersheba and Nafha prisons; he was well-known among the prisoners as an example of a dedicated worker and a revolutionary leader. Ferwana caled him a “distinguished leader, loved by everyone, a brilliant instigator and a dedicated fighter…one of the pillars of the prisoners’ movement.” He became one of the leaders of the prison organization of the PFLP, responsible for international relations.
In 1980, Nafha prison was opened as an “exile and cemetery for the prisoners’ movement leaders;” Maragha was one of the first to be transferred there. The prisoners began their strike that year, on 14 July 1980. One of the hunger strikers, Abdel-Rahim al-Noubani, chronicled the development of the strike.
The prisoners demanded:
1. The prisoners demand the installation of beds
2. The prisoners demand access to a radio and television
3. The prisoners demand the improvement of the quality and quantity of food
4. The prisoners demand access to Arabic and Hebrew books and newspapers
5. The prisoners demand the expansion of windows, allowing more sun and air into the cell
6. The prisoners demand an end to the policy of collective and individual punishment, solitary confinement, depriving them food during their isolation, and only providing them with bread and water.
7. The prisoners demand the visiting allowance to be prolonged to one hour every two weeks
8. The prisoners demand access to winter and summer clothes, as well as blankets
9. The prisoners demand permission to buy food and vitamins from the prison canteen, which has been hitherto denied
10. The prisoners demand their walk allowance extend from 15 minutes to an hour
As Shahd Abusalama wrote chronicling her own father’s history in the Nafha strike, “Whenever Palestinian prisoners have gone on hunger strike, the Israeli authorities have responded by punishing them collectively. The Nafha hunger strike was no exception.”
After 10 days of hunger strike which drew growing international and Palestinian support, the Israeli occupation attempted a particularly cruel and dangerous form of force-feeding against 26 prisoners in which boiling water and salt were poured down tubes forced down the prisoners’ throats. In the case of Ishaq Maragha, Rasem Halawi and Ali al-Jaafari, the tube was not fully inserted and instead entered their lungs; the boiling water poured into the tube burned and destroyed their lungs. Halawi and Jaafari died almost immediately, killed by Israeli force feeding on their hunger strike.
“When we were put in the waiting room, the three of us collapsed onto a wooden bench, overcome with extreme exhaustion and fatigue. The pain was ripping our chest and gut apart. But it seemed that Ali Jaafari was the suffering the most; he grabbed the bars of the iron door, his drained voice shouting out to the section’s jailer and clinic doctor alternately, asking them to provide us with emergency assistance and treatment. He then turned to me suddenly and said, ‘Abu Jamal, I’m dying, I’m dying!’ I tried to calm him and raise his spirits, and boost his strength – for I had noticed something in him that I myself did not feel, despite the fact that we had both gone through the same torment.
Ali al-Jaafari started shouting again, ‘Abu Jamal, my legs have died, I can no longer feel them, they’re as cold as ice.’ I was helpless, and could do nothing but say to him, ‘Don’t be afraid, Ali, here comes the doctor, don’t worry.’ He suddenly shouted again, for the third and last time: ‘My arms have died, Abu Jamal.’ I was as drained as he was, and as he said this to me, my eyes filled with tears; I saw his last gasp escape from his deteriorated lung to his broken nose by the zonda hose; canals filled with blood and pain opened up inside him. His head was slightly bent over to his right shoulder and his cold hands were still holding onto the bar of that damned iron door. His gracious self slid away, and his pure soul left his body, and all the while he stood there, like a palm tree that had lasted a hundred years drying out. We rested the body of our martyr on the ground, shaking with sobs. In that moment, Rasem and I forgot we shared the same fate as he.”
Maragha also reported that the prison doctor swore that he would not let him die, not out of concern for his life, but because “I will not let them make you a national hero.”
The strike continued after the martyrdom of al-Jaafari and Halawa; Maragha became a key spokesperson for the strike to lawyers and before the world. After 33 days, the prisoners’ ended their strike with a victory in all of their demands.
Maragha was then transferred to Beersheba prison as his health deteriorated further and without the provision of any treatment until he died on 16 November 1983 of his ongoing injuries and wounds caused by his torture under forced feeding during the Nafha strike, leaving a legacy of struggle, sacrifice and commitment above all to the liberation of Palestine, his land and his people.
Ishaq Maragha was a beloved leader of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and a symbol of the leading role of Palestinian prisoners in the struggle for the liberation of Palestine, whose bodies and lives are on the line on a daily basis in a direct confrontation with occupation. The hunger strikes of Palestinian prisoners are a collective means of struggle and immense self-sacrifice for dignity and freedom.
On the 34th anniversary of the passing of Ishaq Maragha, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network remembers him, Ali al-Jaafari, Rasim Halawa and the long legacy of the martyrs of the prisoners’ struggle – and their commitment to Palestinian and global liberation. Their deepest and most precious sacrifice must urge all of us around the world who stand with Palestinian rights, freedom and liberation to intensify and escalate our work for the freedom of the imprisoned leaders of the Palestinian people today. As plans for regional warfare and a so-called “deal of the century” promulgated by the United States and Israel with the backing of Saudi Arabia and reactionary forces threaten the Palestinian people, the people of the region and the world, the legacy of Ishaq Maragha and his fellow Palestinian prisoners can and must inspire us all to struggle at this critical moment to defend the Palestinian cause and struggle to achieve their goals of return and liberation.
New Yorkers protested on Monday, 13 November for the release of hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails held without charge or trial. The protesters also urged shoppers to boycott HP (Hewlett-Packard) consumer products because of HP’s ongoing contracts with Israeli occupation prison system, military and other systems of apartheid and colonization in Palestine.
Photo; Nick Maniace
Organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, the protest took place in front of the Best Buy electronics store in Manhattan’s Union Square. Protesters carried signs and distributed information about Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike. At the time, four prisoners, Hamza Bouzia, Hassan Shokeh, Bajis Nakhleh and Salah Khawaja, were on hunger strike against their imprisonment without charge or trial. Currently, Bouzia and Khawaja are still on hunger strike to demand their freedom from administrative detention.
Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace
The protest came as part of the growing global boycott campaign against HP. HP corporations profit from the Israeli apartheid wall and checkpoint system that imprisons Palestinians and separates them from their land as well as the identity card system used to impose apartheid on Palestinians throughout occupied Palestine. It maintains contracts for database management with the Israel Prison Service imprisoning Palestinian political prisoners and even the Israeli occupation navy imposing the siege on Gaza. Organizations around the world, including churches and labor unions, are adopting the boycott of HP and declaring themselves “HP-free zones” in protest of the company’s profiteering from the oppression of Palestinians nd colonization of Palestine.
Two Palestinians are continuing on hunger strike today. Hamza Bouzia of Salfit has been on hunger strike since 22 October against his imprisonment without charge or trial, while Salah Khawaja has been on strike for eight days against the renewal of his detention only one day before he was to be released. They are among 450 Palestinians – out of a total of 6200 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails – imprisoned without charge or trial under indefinitely renewable administrative detention orders. Palestinians have spent years at a time jailed under these orders.
Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace
Samidoun also participated in the Workers World Party’s national conference over the weekend of 18 and 19 November, marking the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. Samidoun delivered a statement to the conference in solidarity and standing with Palestinian prisoners. The conference also received a statement from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, as well as solidarity messages from movements in the United States and international revolutionary parties from the Philippines to Greece to Puerto Rico and Cuba.
New York Samidoun activists are organizing another protest to free the Palestinian prisoners and support the hunger strikers on Monday, 20 November at 5:00 pm outside the Best Buy electronics store in Union Square in Manhattan. All supporters of Palestine and the Palestinian people are encouraged to attend to spread the word about the HP boycott, especially as the holiday shopping season approaches.
Israeli occupation authorities issued 24 administrative detention orders against Palestinian prisoners since the beginning of November, reported Palestinian lawyer Mahmoud al-Halabi on 16 November 2017.
Administrative detention orders are used to imprison Palestinians without charge or trial. Issued for one to six months at a time, these orders are indefinitely renewable. Palestinians have spent years at a time jailed under administrative detention. There are over 450 Palestinians out of a total of over 6,200 Palestinian political prisoners jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention.
Among the Palestinians against whom orders for imprisonment without charge or trial were issued is Bushra al-Tawil, a Palestinian journalist and prisoners’ advocate from al-Bireh, ordered jailed without trail for six months. She is one of six Palestinian women held without charge or trial under administrative detention.
Another order was issued against Palestinian Legislative Council Ahmed Abdel-Aziz Mubarak, ordering him imprisoned without charge or trial for an additional four months; he is one of 12 elected Palestinian parliamentarians jailed by Israel, and he has been held since 16 January 2017 under repeated administrative detention orders.
10 of the administrative detention orders were new orders, while 14 were renewals of existing orders. The orders were issued against the following prisoners:
1. Fahmi Hassan Zuhour, El-Bireh, 6 months, extension
2. Fayez Salah Najib Halabi, Salfit, 4 months, extension
3. Murad Mohammed al-Zaghari, Bethlehem, 4 months, extension
4. Saad Hassan al-Amour, Bethlehem, 4 months, extension
5. Nadim Ibrahim Sabarneh, al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
6. Nader Mustafa Sawafta, Tubas, 6 months, extension
7. Ahmed Salim Soufan, Ramallah, 3 months, extension
8. Wahid Hamdi Abu Maria, al-Khalil, 4 months, new order
9. Mohammed Sami Ghoneim, Jenin, 4 months, extension
10. Mehdi Jamil Aroq, Jenin, 4 months, extension
11. Ahmed Abdel-Aziz Mubarak, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
12. Omar Mohammed Hamed, Ramallah, 3 months, new order
13. Basil Osama al-Issa, Bethlehem, 6 months, new order
14. Mohammed Suleiman Harithat, al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
15. Ayed Mohammed Dudin, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
16. Ahmed Adnan Salman, Nablus, 4 months, extension
17. Jamal Mohammed Abdel-Kamil, Bethlehem, 3 months, extension
18. Ismail Khalil Alayan, Bethlehem, 6 months, new order
19. Bushra Jamal al-Tawil, Ramallah, 6 months, new order
20. Qassem Majd Barghouthi, Ramallah, 6 months, new order
21. Shadi Mohammed al-Hareimi, al-Khalil, 3 months, new order
22. Raafat Naim Abu Aker, Bethlehem, 6 months, new order
23. Eyad Hosni Bazigh, Ramallah, 6 months, new order
24. Ribhi Said Shqair, Ramallah, 6 months, new order
Palestinian prisoners in the Israeli Ofer prison have been subjected to systematic repression and violence at the hands of guards and repressive forces for several days, reported the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies on 18 November.
Several special units stormed sections in Ofer prison last week and carried out large-scale searches, ransacking prisoners’ belongings, breaking apart walls in the rooms of the prisons, while beating prisoners and cursing at them. Section 12 and 18 were stormed by Israeli units in the early pre-dawn hours alongside dogs and armed police, and many prisoners were forced outside in the cold with tied or shackled hands for four hours. Palestinian political prisoners reported that they were returned to their rooms after the search raid and found that their walls had holes in them and their belongings were ransacked.
The Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies said that the purpose of such raids is not security for the occupation, but intentional sabotage and humiliation of prisoners, destruction of their living environments, cooking utensils and other items in order to impose further restrictions on their lives. The center warned that an atmosphere of tension is rising in the prison and that the prisoners have returned meals in protest as well as planning further escalation of protest if these repressive attacks continue.
Meanwhile, on Thursday, 16 November, the Dror repressive units stormed room 5 in section 3 of Ashkelon prison, ransacking prisoners’ belongings as prisoners were forced into the yards in their sleeping clothes.
Palestinian prisoners in Megiddo prison also spoke about overcrowding in the prison sections. Izzedine Mohammed Attar, 34, from Tulkarem, told the Prisoners’ Affairs Committee that 136 prisoners are held in Section 6 and 16 prisoners sleep on the ground without beds. He also reported ongoing searches and ransacking of prisoners’ belongings on an almost daily basis in the early morning hours.
The family of Ahmad Suleiman al-Sawarka, 33, from northern Sinai, said that the Israeli occupation was convening a military court hearing for Sawarka in Nafha prison on 19 November. Sawarka carried out a 10-day hunger strike to demand his release, as he has already been imprisoned for over a year after his sentence ended in September 2016.
Sawarka was seized by Israeli occupation forces from the Gaza Strip on 16 March 2009 and sentenced to seven and a half years in Israeli prison for participating in the Palestinian resistance and membership in Hamas. His prison sentence expired in September 2016 but he has been held indefinitely since that time. He suspended his hunger strike after the Israel Prison Service declared that he would be deported to Egypt; however, instead of being deported or released to Gaza, he is now facing a military court again.
Two years ago, Sawarka married a Palestinian woman from Gaza while imprisoned.
Photo: ActiveStills.org/Oren Ziv. Photo for illustrative purposes.
On Thursday morning, 16 November, Israeli occupation forces seized at least 30 Palestinians, especially targeting active and involved students at An-Najah and other universities. Occupation forces stormed the city of Nablus from several directions, raiding homes; they seized Musa Dweikat from the town of Balata, a student council representative of the Islamic Bloc.
Ahmed Darwish, another student, was seized from his home in the city, and Walid Louay al-Ashqar from his workplace in a cafe, and Hamid Ayyad and Shadi Issa from their homes in Nablus. Bara Nawaf al-Ammar, previously jailed by both Israel and the Palestinian Authority and a student at the College of Law, was seized from his home in Kafr Qalil south of the city as was fellow student Mohammed Abdel-Latif Ramadan.
Meanwhile, in al-Khalil, Abdel-Hakim Nasser Abu Arqoub, a student at the Palestine Polytechnic University, was seized by the Israeli occupation. Student activists are frequently targeted for arrest and persecution by the Israeli occupation forces, including being held without charge or trial under administrative detention.
They also seized Moataz al-Issam, Hamza Nawawrah, Tamer Sobeh, Mohammed Hamideh and Ibrahim Hamideh from Bethlehem area, as well as Hassan Sajidiyeh and Mahmoud al-Lozi from Qalandiya refugee camp and Jihad Sinjawi from Kafr Aqeb.
Palestinian prisoner Mohammed Mazen Amer Dweikat, 30, from Nablus, has been held in Israeli jails since 6 December 2016. He has completely lost his vision after an inflammation in his eyes which damaged his corneas and retinas, and his family says that the Israeli occupation and its prison administration is fully responsible for the loss of his sight.
Dweikat’s mother said in Asra Voice that her son had not suffered any injury or illness in his eyes before his arrest and noted that he has clearly been suffering for some time in prison. The prison administration cancelled his military court hearing on 9 November as well as his family visit; it was only after his family urged human rights institutions to check up on Dweikat after his sudden disappearance that he was revealed to be in Afula hospital, transferred from Gilboa prison, with a total loss of eyesight. His mother said that he looked tired when she was able to visit him on 24 October, before the sudden denials of visits, and his eyes appeared red, and that his treatment had been delayed. His father has been denied family visits with his son since he was first seized by occupation forces. He has had symptoms of disease for a month and was not treated promptly despite symptoms of infection.
He has still been denied family visits to date and his mother is demanding the opportunity to see her son as well as accountability for the loss of his sight caused by a policy of medical neglect inside Israeli prisons.
The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society noted on Sunday that several more prisoners are also suffering from health conditions that are continually declining, including Mohammed Hisham Alayan, 20, from Ramallah; he has suffered from severe pain yet was denied treatment until he was taken to the hospital two weeks after complaining of pain. One of his testicles was removed, and the doctors told him that his condition was worsened as a result of a treatment delay. Mohammed Jamal Eid, 18, from Nablud, has suffered from bowel problems since his arrest, has been diagnosed in need of surgery, yet still awaits treatment since he was seized by occupation forces since 25 September. Saed Mohammed Salah, 39, from Jenin, has been jailed since 2004; he has lost all of his teeth and needs surgery on his gums.
Join BDS Vancouver – Coast Salish Territories and YCL Vancouver for an evening of discussion and strategizing in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle for liberation. The program will include updates on the campaigns to boycott and divest from G4$, Hewlett Packard and Air Canada, and discussion on how to build and escalate campaigns targetting corporations profiting from Israeli occupation and war crimes in Palestine.