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24 November, Manchester: Charges Dropped! Celebration/Protest at Elbit Arms Factory

Friday, 24 November
9:30 am
UAV Engines, Litchfield
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/484483905267861/

Organizers  have called for a celebration/protest at the Israeli Drone Factory in Shenstone, Staffordshire after the news that the activists who shut if down July 7th have had their charges DROPPED! The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has just decided to drop the case against the remaining two people that were still charged!

On the third anniversary of the Israeli attacks in 2014 that killed over 2200 Palestinians including 500 children, The UAV engines factory was closed through a mass mobilisation on Thursday 6th July and shut down again on Friday 7th July after a blockade from activists from Manchester Palestine Action, Birmingham Palestine Action and others from Brighton and Sheffield. Five were arrested for the blockade, and while three had their cases dropped in September, two charges remained and the trial was expected to be this Friday 24th November.

The CPS dropped the case because the Manager of the Drone engine factory was unwilling to take the stand and be questioned about the weapons deals the company has with Israel and other war criminal states. They said “The decision to discontinue these charges has been taken because there is not enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction”.

Huda Ammori, one of the activists whose charges were dropped said, “As a British Palestinian, I refuse to sit by and allow these injustices to be carried out on British soil and call on every supporter of Palestine to take similar action in Western countries where there is complicity in Israel’s war crimes. It is a green light for more action on weapons factories that are making billions off the rivers of blood that flow through Gaza and many other areas of the Middle East, devastated by such criminal assaults on entire populations.”

Instead of the trial this Friday 24th November, please come to the new celebration protest organised outside the Elbit arms factory in Shenstone this Friday, same time at 9:30am. The best message we can send to Israel and the Palestinians from the outcome of this trial is that we will we will not let UK based Israeli arms factories get away with aiding and abetting Israel’s mass murder of Palestinians and we will not stop until Palestine is free.

24 November, Charleroi: Focus Palestine – special film screenings

Friday, 24 November
9:30 am – “The Wanted 18”
8:00 pm – “3000 Nights”
Quai10
Quai Arthur Rimbaud 10
Charleroi, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/128105107873029/

Two special film screenings organized in collaboration with the Plate-forme Charlero-Palestine.

The Wanted 18, 9:30 am

1987: On a cooperative farm, activists and 18 cows face down the Israeli army. An animated film that humorously tells the story of the Palestinian civil disobedience movement during the first intifada.

Film by Amer Shomali and Paul Cowan

3000 Nights, 8:30 pm

In the 1980s, revolt erupts in an Israeli prison where Palestinian prisoners are held. Layal has been sentenced to 8 years for an incident in which she is innocent. She discovers she is pregnant and against all, she vows to keep her child.

Film by Mai Masri.

The films will be introduced and followed by discussions with young people from Charleroi who recently returned from Palestine: Claire, Deborah, Florence, Margaux, Meryem, Pauline, Sophie, Sorayda, Yasmine and Zuheir.

Organized with Plate-forme Charleroi-Palestine: http://pourlapalestine.be

21 November, Chicago: Talk with Sahar Francis, Director of Addameer from Palestine

Tuesday, 21 November
7:00 pm
Moraine Valley Community College
9000 W. College Pkwy
Palos Hills, IL
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/498655727199828/

The location is Fogelson Theater, Building T of Moraine Valley Community College, 9000 College Pkwy, Palos Hills, IL 60465

US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN) in Chicago and the Palestinian American Community Center are proud to host Sahar Francis, General Director of Addameer, directly from Occupied Palestine!

ADDAMEER (Arabic for conscience) Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association is a Palestinian non-governmental institution that works to support Palestinian political prisoners. The center offers free legal aid to political prisoners, advocates their rights at the national and international level, and works to end torture and other violations of prisoners’ rights through monitoring, legal procedures and solidarity campaigns.

Addameer was the leading organization supporting the historic Dignity Strike in Palestine, while USPCN and PACC helped mobilize the Palestinian and Arab diaspora community in Chicago including family of striking prisoners.

The event program will include an introduction to the organizing work of USPCN, followed by a presentation from Sahar Francis, a cultural performance, and ending with a Question & Answer session. This will be in Arabic with English translation. We look forward to seeing you there!

20 November, NYC: Protest to free Palestinian hunger strikers and stop HP

Monday, 20 November
5:00 pm
Best Buy – Union Square
52 E. 14th St, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/128374414544971/

Two Palestinian prisoners, Hamza Marwan Bouzia, 27, and Salah Khawaja, 50, remain on hunger strike in protest of their administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, on 15 November.

Bouzia, 27, from Kifl Hares in Salfit, has been on hunger strike since 22 October demanding his release from administrative detention without charge or trial, while Khawaja, from Nil’in, is protesting the renewal of his administrative detention only one day before he was to be released. He launched his hunger strike on 13 November.

Bouzia and Khawaja are among over 450 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under indefinitely renewable administrative detention orders. Many Palestinians have spent years at a time jaile under these orders, and ending administrative detention has been a demand of Palestinian hunger strikers continuously for years.

Stand with Bouzia and Khawaja to demand that Israel release them, 460 other administrative detainees and all 6,198 Palestinian political prisoners (addameer.org/statistics), and that Hewlett Packard companies end their contracts with Israeli prisons and detention centers, occupation and security forces, and checkpoints and settlements (investigate.afsc.org/company/hp-incinvestigate.afsc.org/company/hewlett-packard-enterprise,investigate.afsc.org/company/dxc-technology-company).

Help build a growing international campaign to boycott HP (bdsmovement.net/boycott-hp) over the companies’ support for Israeli crimes.

Support the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian Resistance, and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

18 November, Anaheim: Palestinian Political Prisoners: Addameer Benefit

Saturday, 18 November
4:00 pm
Arab American Community Center
907 S. Beach Blvd
Anaheim, CA
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/292107761304461/

The Arab Community of Southern California, Women’s International Network, and Palestine Youth Movement present: Palestinian Political Prisoners & Grassroots Organizing: Addameer Benefit.

We welcome Addameer’s Executive Director, Sahar Farncis, on her speaking tour that directly benefits the efforts of pironser support.

Oud performance with Clarissa Bitar

Addameer (Arabic for conscience) Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association is a Palestinian non-governmental, civil institution that works to support Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli and Palestinian prisons. Established in 1992 by a group of activists interested in human rights, the center offers free legal aid to political prisoners, advocates their rights at the national and international level, and works to end torture and other violations of prisoners’ rights through monitoring, legal procedures and solidarity campaigns.

Light refreshments will be served.

 

Salah Hamouri’s letter from Negev prison: Solidarity with prisoners is a “real hope” for Palestinians

The Committee to Support Salah Hamouri released a letter from the imprisoned Palestinian-French lawyer and human rights defender detained by the Israeli occupation without charge or trial since 23 August 2017. Written in the Negev prison, Hamouri’s letter greets his supporters in France and around the world.

Hamouri is a former prisoner whose case became widely known throughout France; after his release in the 2011 Wafa al-Ahrar agreement several months before his sentence was scheduled to end, he spoke throughout France about the struggle of Palestinian prisoners. He studied law in order to become a defender of Palestinian prisoners, and works as a field researcher for Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association.

A Jerusalemite Palestinian, he has faced frequent harassment and oppression by Israeli occupation forces, including bans on his entry into the West Bank and the 10-year ban against his wife, Elsa Lefort, entering Palestine after she was detained for several days and deported to France while pregnant despite holding a valid visa.

A growing number of prominent French artists, elected officials, political parties, writers and others have endorsed the campaign to free Salah Hamouri. Dozens of municipal councils have voted to demand his freedom. The Israeli ministry of national security recently announced that seven French mayors, parliamentarians and officials would be denied entry to Palestine for their upcoming delegation because of their support for Hamouri, Marwan Barghouthi, and the BDS movement.

Hamouri’s letter follows:

“I felt a strange sensation when, on 23 August, around 4:30 am, if I remember correctly, I was roused from my sleep by loud noises. Someone was outside the door of my apartment and nervously pressed the doorbell repeatedly. I thought I remembered this type of annoyance, but in the first few seconds, I thought it was a dream. I live in a six-story building in East Jerusalem. Each floor has two apartments. The soldiers and their commander did not know exactly which apartment in which I was living, so they banged brutally at each door. Then I had a thought for my neighbors, all awakened for a full night by soldiers terrorizing every family, I could hear children crying.

“The soldiers did not stop to knock on my door until I finally opened it, still numb with sleep. The first soldier I saw wore a hood. I could see that his eyes were filled with hatred. He yelled at me, asking me for my ID. After verification, these soldiers called for reinforcements, shouting that they had found the person they were looking for. The minute I realized that the occupying force was coming here for me, my brain sent me a clear order: ‘A new battle is beginning for you now, this enemy does not defeat you for even a second.’ They forced me to sit on a chair and three soldiers surrounded me, their guns pointed at me. During that time, their colleagues searched the apartment, overturning furniture, books, clothes … I felt feverish, they got upset, they found nothing of what they were looking for in this apartment. The commander finally gave the order to exit. They then ordered me to get dressed to go with them. Walking toward my apartment front door, before leaving for a term that was unknown to me, I stared at the picture of my son on the wall. In his eyes, I drew the strength to face the tough times ahead of me. I imagined him telling me, ‘Dad, be strong, we will soon be together, all three of us.’ I promised him then to stay strong and never give an opportunity to the occupation to forfeit our humanity and destroy our life as it is bent on doing. They then blindfolded my eyes and led me to an armored car. The march to this new destiny began. A painful march towards a world I know only too well. A world in which we have to stay strong and keep our human smile under any circumstance. Once again, I found in this armored vehicle the darkest and most miserable place for a human being: a prison of the occupier.

“Arriving in the Negev jail after two weeks in the interrogation center, everything seemed depressingly familiar. I walked into Section 24, and I quickly recognized the faces I had left a few years ago. I did not know what to say, I was suddenly impressed to find them here. Some of them have been behind bars for more than fifteen years. They questioned me and I did not know what to tell them. ‘What happened, why are you here?’ I did not have the answers to their questions. No more that I could not talk to them about outside – those who have been there for so many years. What do we do for them, while they pay the price of their struggle? When I found them, I wondered if I had done enough to talk about them outside. We then discussed everything. One inmate told me, ‘Oh you’re back, we’ll talk about us in France!’ Then I realized that despite my new deprivation of liberty, I had no doubt that the mobilization would grow in France. This is a real hope for me and for them. I thought about all the people who had struggled during my first incarceration and all those I have met since, in France and Palestine. No doubt they would all again stand together to denounce the injustice that strikes us.

“And with the news that I get in fragments, I know you are even more numerous than last time! Figures whom I deeply appreciate, including elected representatives, citizens and an even greater number of you are all mobilizing to denounce injustice and arbitrary detention and to demand my release.

“I thank you sincerely. I want to tell you that I will be worthy of the support you are giving me. We do not market our freedom even if we sometimes pay a very high price. It is not a question of stubbornness but of dignity and principle, for freedom, that I will never give up. The Palestinian people, like all others, will not live on our knees. And what strength it gives us to know that you also do not intend to give up. This, the occupier does not fully appreciate. I feel it in my heart. And so, even when it rains I can see the sun is coming… “

Salah Hamouri
November 2017,
Negev prison, section 24

**

The campaign to support Salah Hamouri is continuing its active work, inside and outside France. On 15 November, the France Insoumise group and the Communist deputies in the French National Assembly walked out of the hall during the attack on Salah Hamouri promulgated by Meyer Habib and supported by the extreme right, including Front National representative Gilbert Collard.

The campaign noted that Nathalie Loiseau, adjunct minister to the minster for European and Foreign Affairs, urged the rapid release of Salah Hamouri as well as urging that the delegation of French officials and parliamentarians – seven of which were ordered banned by Israel for their support of Palestinian rights – be able to meet with Hamouri.  Over 30 city councils have voted for motions to demand his release.

The Support Committee is organizing events from 27 November to 3 December throughout France to mark the 100th day of Hamouri’s detention; he is imprisoned under a six-mohth, indefinitely renewable administrative detetion order. Actions during the week will include media activities, rallies, events, and group letter-writing to Salah. Hamouri’s wife Elsa Lefort, the coordinator of the support committee, noted that despite hundreds of letters being mailed to Hamouri, he has been deprived of all of them by the Israeli occupation authorities.

Take Action:

1. Sign the appeal to support Salah Hamouri at http://libertepoursalah.fr

2. Organize an action, event or activity between 27 November and 3 December to mark the 100th day of Salah Hamouri’s detention and demand his immediate freedom. Raise his case at events and actions for the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People on 29 November.

3. Like and share the Facebook page for Salah Hamouri, which will be regularly updated with news and actions to demand Salah’s freedom: https://www.facebook.com/freesalahhamouri/

Two Palestinian prisoners remain on hunger strike

Two Palestinian prisoners, Hamza Marwan Bouzia, 27, and Salah Khawaja, 50, remain on hunger strike in protest of their administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, on 15 November. Two more Palestinian prisoners, Bajis Nakhleh, 52, and Hassan Hassanein Shokeh, 29, suspended their hunger strikes on Tuesday evening, 14 November.

Shokeh, 29, spent 35 days on hunger strike without food in protest of his imprisonment without charge or trial. He was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 29 September, less than one month after being released from prison on 31 August. His lawyer, Ahlam Haddad, said that he suspended his strike after the Israeli military prosecution directed him to be indicted in military court rather than be held under administrative detention. From Bethlehem, he is held in the Ramle prison clinic.

Nakhleh, 52, from Jalazone refugee camp near Ramallah, suspended his strike when he was moved to Ofer prison from the Etzion interrogation center. He had launched his strike on 8 November, when he was seized by occupation forces who invaded his family home.

Bouzia, 27, from Kifl Hares in Salfit, has been on hunger strike for 24 days demanding his release from administrative detention without charge or trial, while Khawaja, from Nil’in, is protesting the renewal of his administrative detention only one day before he was to be released.

Bouzia and Khawaja are among over 450 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under indefinitely renewable administrative detention orders. Many Palestinians have spent years at a time jaile under these orders, and ending administrative detention has been a demand of Palestinian hunger strikers continuously for years.

October 2017 report on repression in occupied Palestine ’48

Mada al-Carmel, the Arab Center for Applied Social Studies, and the Institute for Palestine studies issued a monitoring report on the situation of Palestinians in 1948 occupied Palestine. They noted that there were seven cases of home demolitions and five cases of political detention and imprisonment against Palestinian citizens of Israel in October 2017.

The report noted that these home demolitions and political imprisonments reflect the fundamental racism of the state toward Palestinians, including the use of racist laws, policies and discourse of decision-making politicians. “Each month, we see ongoing racist policies against the Palestinian people,” said Khaled Anabtawi of Mada el-Carmel. “There is a clear Israeli strategy in recent years that seeks to ‘resolve’ the issue of Palestinians of the inside through focusing the Zionist nature of the state and imposing this as a practice on the ground.”

Anabtawi noted the repression of the Islamic Movement by the Israeli state, including the harassment of Sheikh Raed Salah, as an ongoing and persistent violation of Palestinian human rights, as well as the latest case of Dr. Suleiman Eghbariyeh, who was refused release by an Israeli court and turned to house arrest, denied contact with anyone except immediate family.

Palestinian human rights bill on child imprisonment introduced in United States Congress

The following press release is reprinted from the No Way to Treat a Child campaign. U.S. lawmakers seek to prohibit taxpayer funds from supporting human rights violations against Palestinian minors in Israeli military detention system

Washington, D.C., November 14, 2017—Members of Congress on Tuesday introduced a bill prohibiting U.S. financial support of abuses against Palestinian children in the Israeli military detention system, putting violations under the magnifying glass of U.S. taxpayers.

The Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act requires the Secretary of State to certify annually that no funds obligated or expended in the previous year by the United States for assistance to Israel have been used to support the ill-treatment of Palestinian children detained by Israeli forces from the occupied West Bank.

Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN) brought the bill to the floor, with eight original co-sponsors, including Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) and Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI), co-chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

An estimated 10,000 Palestinians between the ages of 12 and 17 in the West Bank have been subject to arrest, detention, interrogation, and/or imprisonment under the jurisdiction of Israeli military courts since 2000. This bill was drafted in response to widely documented rights violations carried out by Israeli military and police against children within the military detention system, including torture or cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment.

“Despite ongoing engagement with UN bodies and repeated calls to abide by international law, Israeli military and police continue night arrests, physical violence, coercion, and threats against Palestinian children,” said Khaled Quzmar, general director of Defense for Children International – Palestine. “These practices remain institutionalized and systemic rather than last resort measures, and we call on the U.S. to halt its support of these violations.”

The bill aims to establish, as a minimum safeguard, a U.S. demand for basic due process rights for and an absolute prohibition against torture and ill-treatment of Palestinian children arrested and prosecuted within the Israeli military court system.

Israel has the dubious distinction of being the only country in the world that systematically prosecutes an estimated 500 to 700 children each year in military courts that lack fundamental fair trial rights and protections.

In every annual report on Israel and the occupied territories released since 2007, U.S. authorities have openly acknowledged the prevalence of torture and ill-treatment of Palestinian children and the denial of fair trials rights in the Israeli military detention system.

In 2013, UNICEF released a report titled Children in Israeli Military Detention: Observations and Recommendations. The report concluded that “ill-treatment of children who come in contact with the military detention system appears to be widespread, systematic and institutionalized throughout the process.”

Despite sustained engagement by UNICEF and repeated calls to end night arrests and ill-treatment of Palestinian children in Israeli military detention, Israeli authorities have persistently failed to implement substantive reforms to end violence against child detainees.

Fourth Palestinian prisoner joins hunger strike

Salah al-Khawaja

Four Palestinian prisoners are currently on hunger strike in Israeli prison. Salah al-Khawaja, 50, of the village of Nil’in, launched a hunger strike on Monday, 13 November after his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, was renewed only one day before he was scheduled for release.

Administrative detention orders, which last for one to six months at a time, are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians routinely spend years at a time jailed under administrative detention.

Khawaja is also suffering a delicate health condition. Within days after he was detained, he was taken for a heart catheterization procedure at the Shaare Tzedek hospital, where he was told that an open heart surgery was necessary. The Israel Prison Service refused to authorize the operation and his imprisonment without charge or trial, while needing serious health treatment, continues.

He joins three more Palestinian prisoners on open hunger strike – Hassan Shokeh, 29, on strike for 34 days against his imprisonment without charge or trial, and Hamza Marwan Bouzia, 27, on strike for 23 days against administrative detention. Bajis Nakhleh has been on hunger strike for seven days, a strike he launched immediately upon his arrest by Israeli occupation forces on 8 November, only 2 months after his release on 1 September.

**

In particular, Bouzia and Shokeh have been on hunger strike for an extended period of time, in which they not only are suffering from extensive weight loss, fatigue and pain but also cognitive difficulties. Prior to and after the third week of hunger strike is one of the most dangerous times for a person on strike. The commitment of the hunger strikers to achieve their freedom is so great – and the ability to challenge administrative detention so limited by the occupation – that their bodies and lives are on the line in their bid for freedom.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges support and action to free these four Palestinians whose lives and bodies are on the line for freedom and against injustice.  By taking action, you can show the Israeli occupation and international governments that these Palestinians are not alone and have worldwide support and solidarity with their urgent demands. 

Take action:

1) Organize or join an event in support of the hunger strikers. Protest outside your local Israeli embassy, consulate or mission, or at a public square or government building. You can drop a banner or put up a table to support the prisoners and their strike. You can also bring signs and flyers about the hunger strikers to local events about Palestine and social justice. Send your events and actions to us at samidoun@samidoun.net or on Facebook.

2) Call your government officials and urge action.  Call your foreign affairs officials – and members of parliament – and urge action for the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike.

Call your country’s officials urgently:

  • Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop: + 61 2 6277 7500
  • Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland: +1-613-992-5234
  • European Union Commissioner Federica Mogherini: +32 (0) 2 29 53516
  • New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully: +64 4 439 8000
  • United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson: +44 20 7008 1500
  • United States President Donald Trump: 1-202-456-1111

Tell your government: Three Palestinian prisoners are on hunger strike for their basic human rights – for freedom from imprisonment without charge or trial. Governments must pressure Israel to end administrative detention now!

3) Build the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Campaign! Join the BDS Movement to highlight the complicity of corporations like Hewlett-Packard and the continuing involvement of G4S in Israeli policing and prisons. Build a campaign to boycott Israeli goods, impose a military embargo on Israel, or organize around the academic and cultural boycott of Israel.

Download the flyers and posters for distribution:

Download: Flyer/leaflet – Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike

Download: Poster/Sign – Free All Palestinian Prisoners

Download: Poster Sign: End Administrative Detention