Photo: Demonstration to free Salah Hamouri, Morlaix, 6 October. From Liberte pour Salah Hamouri Facebook
The campaign for the release of imprisoned French-Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender Salah Hamouri has continued to expand. Elsa Lefort, Hamouri’s wife and the spokesperson for his support committee, has continued to speak at events and actions across the country as well as meeting with French diplomatic officials to push for meaningful French action to demand Hamouri’s release. He is currently held without charge or trial under a six-month administrative detention order after he was seized from his home near Jerusalem by Israeli occupation forces, who invaded his house in an armed pre-dawn raid.
Hamouri is a field researcher for Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and a newly graduated lawyer who passed the Palestinian bar examination only three days before he was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 23 August. He is a Jerusalemite Palestinian and former political prisoner who was jailed for nearly seven years before being released in the Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange and has been an international spokesperson on the issue of Palestinian prisoners.
Elsa Lefort, Jean-Claude Lefort and Maitre Berenger Tourne, Hamouri’s French lawyer, met on 9 October with a diplomatic advisor to French president Emmanuel Macron, pushing for meaningful action to free Hamouri from administrative detention, where he is held on secret evidence without charge or trial on an indefinitely renewable term.
“As with every French citizen, Salam Hamouri must be able to benefit from the protection and support that the French State grants to its citizens and residents. Beyond consular protection, the French Republic must also take a position in this case against the arbitrary detention of Salah Hamouri and the harassment to which he and his family are subjected,” said the Support Committee.
Front de Gauche elected officials in Saint-Denis support Hamouri. Photo: Liberte pour Salah Hamouri Facebook
A growing number of elected officials and cities and towns in France have expressed their support for Hamouri. The mayors or municipal councils of Nanterre, Nantes, Fontenay-sous-Bois, Villeneuve Saint-Georges, Stains, Cendras, Ivry-sur-Seine, Besancon, Choisy-le-Roi, Martigues, Montataire, Thil, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Gennevilliers, and a number of others have passed resolutions calling for Hamouri’s release and urging French government action.
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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates its urgent demand for the immediate release of Salah Hamouri and all Palestinian prisoners and for the French state to act immediately to defend the rights of their citizen and take action for Salah Hamouri’s freedom. This arduous and endless process of injustice and arbitrary imprisonment without charge or trial is not only an attack on Hamouri, but on all Palestinians who continue to struggle, resist and seek their freedom. This is clearly an attempt on the part of the Israeli state to target an effective, local and international human rights defender working for Palestinian freedom.
The French state must take real action to demand freedom for Salah Hamouri, the Palestinian human rights defender. From the jails and the courts of the occupation to the cities and campuses of the world, he is a consistent and clear voice against oppression and for liberation. Free Salah Hamouri! Libérez Salah Hamouri!
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/
4. ORGANIZE protests and actions to demand Salah’s release and that of his fellow Palestinian prisoners. Events are scheduled in multiple cities – add your own! Email us at samidoun@samidoun.net
International law provides special protections to civilian populations under occupation. One aspect of such protection includes safeguards against arbitrary detention and other measures aimed at preserving and maintaining the human dignity of people inside and outside detention centers. In a context of ongoing violations of its most basic obligations under international humanitarian law and international human rights law, Israeli occupation forces continued their policy of arbitrary detention of hundreds of civilians from the occupied Palestinian territory in September 2017. Arbitrary arrests and detention are serious phenomena that continue to be carried out by occupation authorities in various Palestinian governorates and affect all sectors of society, especially children and women.
The following report was prepared by four partner institutions, Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, Prisoners’ Affairs Commission and the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association. Translation by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.
The report examines the arrests that took place during September and is divided into four parts. The first deals with statistics on the number of Palestinian prisoners, the second on the increasing use of house arrest against children, the third to the campaign of large-scale arrests in Kufl Hares southwest of Nablus, and the fourth provides a legal analysis of the various events reviewed under international humanitarian and human rights law. The report concludes with a set of recommendations and conclusions.
The four organizations reiterate their strong condemnation of Israel’s gross and systematic violations of the rules of international law against Palestinian detainees, especially children, and deplores the continued occupation authorities’ disregard of the legal guarantees provided by the international legal system, in particular the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners of 1955 and other international conventions that ensure the rights of detainees.
The four institutions also call upon the international community to intervene urgently to fulfill its legal and moral obligations towards the population of the occupied Palestinian territories and to take effective measures to compel the occupying state to ensure respect for their rights. It also calls on the local, regional and international levels to activate solidarity campaigns with Palestinian prisoners to pressure the occupying power.
Section One: Statistics on Arrests
In September 2017, the Israeli occupation authorities seized 431 Palestinians from the occupied Palestinian territories, including 98 children, 11 women and three journalists.
According to the monitoring and documentation conducted by the four institutions, the Israeli occupation authorities arrested 133 Palestinians from Jerusalem, 60 from al-Khalil, 45 from Nablus, 40 from Ramallah and el-Bireh, 40 from Qalqilya, 38 from Jenin, 28 from Bethlehem, 15 from Tubas, 10 from Salfit, 9 from Tulkarem, 7 from Jericho and 6 from the Gaza Strip.
In the context of the policy of administrative detention, occupation authorities issued 68 administrative detention orders, 24 of which are newly issued.
Despite the fact that this represents a decline in the numbers from the preceding month, this arrest rate still constitutes ongoing mass imprisonment of the Palestinian people. This means that occupation forces arrested roughly 14 people each night for the past month.
The total number of Palestinian detainees in Israeli jails has reached approximately 6300, including 57 women, among them 10 minor girls. There are approximately 300 child prisoners in Israeli prisons and 450 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention.
Section Two: 250 “house imprisonment” sentences issued against children within a two-year period
Israeli occupation authorities have escalated their arbitrary measures against Palestinian children since the outbreak of the “Jerusalem Intifada” in October 2015, in the context of systematic policies that target Palestinian children.
In this context, Israeli courts issued 250 sentences for “house imprisonment,” mostly against Jerusalemite children, both male and female. These sentences are a substitute for imprisonment and force children not to leave their homes, restrict their freedom and also impose sentences on the entire family, determining who must stay within the house. An adult family member is forced to make a guarantee for this sentence, which turns the family home into a prison and makes parents wardens and supervisors over their children, forcing them to prevent their children from leaving the house even for treatment or study, in accordance with the orders of the Israeli court and threatened with punishment should they diverge.
Section Three: The policy of collective punishment – the campaign of arrests in the village of Kufl Hares
Since the end of August 2017, the village of Kufl Hares southwest of Nablus has witnessed a campaign of arrests by the Israeli occupation army against the youth of the village. The occupation forces accuse the youth of throwing stones and Molotov cocktails on the occupation road that connects the illegal settlements near the village. As of the end of September, there are 19 detainees from age 16 through 24 from the village. During a field visit to the village carried out by Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, the organization observed several punitive measures against the Palestinian villagers.
The main gate of the village that connects its main streets to roads to other cities, like Nablus, Salfit and Ramallah, is fully closed. This forces residents of the village to use unpaved roads that take a much longer time, in order to exit the village. The arrests in the village were accompanied by repeated invasions into homes, late at night, ransacking and looting the contents of the homes by occupation forces. This is in addition to conducting field interrogations against the young people arrested and members of their families, in addition to explicit threats made by intelligence officers against prisoners’ families. The threat made was that if their sons are involved in “acts of terrorism,” the family members will lose their land, including the agricultural land of the village, as well as any permits to enter the occupation state, whether for work or medical treatment. This constitutes collective punishment forbidden under international law.
In a statement to the Addameer Association, M.J., the mother of two prisoners said that:
“On 5 September 2017, the occupation army stormed our home for the third time. There were a large number of infantry soldiers. At the same time, there was an arrest of two of the sons of the village. Our home was raided in a very aggressive, violent way. They searched and rooted through everything. They interrogated my son Mohammed (22) and the officer asked him about the cell phones of the whole family. He threatened to arrest my son Burhan (16), the youngest of them, if we hid any phones and he demanded our passwords. During the interrogation of Mohammed in the other room, we heard their voices screaming and them beating and hitting the walls. Also, in the house, the soldier who identified himself as “Atta” said that ‘Nour, your son who was arrested last month, sends his greetings.’ He also told me that Nour is in the Jalameh interrogation center and that today he came as a surprise to me, by arresting my son Mohammed. Mohammed is now in Megiddo prison and is accused and facing trial in Salem military court. After he had been detained, the army returned and invaded our home for the fourth time. The soldier asked my husband, ‘Do you know why Mohammed and Nour were arrested?’ He replied, ‘I do not know.’ The officer said that they were accused of throwing Molotovs on the main road and that if this is proven the entire family will be affected, we will lose our home, land, and car, and they threatened not to give a permit to his uncle for travel or even treatment for the entire family. After about half an hour, they left the house.”
Another statement was given by N. B., the mother of the detainee Ahmed Bouziya, to Addameer Association:
“They broke into our house and broke down the main door. They invaded and gathered us in the guest room, and we were six people, including my husband and my children, and then they began to ransack the house. They removed the clothes from the cupboards, broke our eggs and mixed the eggs with the flour. They broke apart the contents of the bedroom and after they left, we discovered that they had stolen NIS 2,000 ($500 USD) and my husband told the officer, but they denied it and left. At about 3:15 am on Wednesday, 13 September, while we were sleeping inside our home, the army returned and they invaded our house again, with four soldiers and an intelligence officer. After they invaded, the officer asked my husband about the house we live in, and if it is permitted or not? They also asked if we have property such as a car or land, and the officer told us that our son, Mohammed, is under investigation and that if the charges are proven against him, we will lose the permit for our house, our car and land will be confiscated, and any work permits will be withdrawn, and the entire family will be punished and denied permits to enter the occupation state, even for medical treatment.”
Section Four: Legal Analysis
This report presents the legal protections under international humanitarian and human rights law to detainees, related to the types of Israeli violations during the reporting period and the legal rules that prohibit such violations, as follows:
1 – The arbitrary detention of Palestinian citizens violates the legal guarantees related to the prohibition of arbitrary detention in international human rights law, including article 9 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles 9 and 10 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976).
2 – The policy of administrative detention by the occupation state, in which detention is carried out on the basis of secret evidence and without any charge against the detainee, constitutes a direct violation of fair trial guarantees under the following legal principles:
a) It is contrary to Article 11 (1) of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that: “Everyone charged with a penal offense has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defense.”
b) It constitutes a grave violation of articles 9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of 1976, which guarantees everyone the right to a fair trial, to be informed of the charges against them and to be able to defend themselves.
c) The failure to disclose any charges against the person detained under the administrative detention order precludes every possibility of verifying the compliance of the occupying state with Article 78 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which states that “If the Occupying Power considers it necessary, for imperative reasons of security, to take safety measures concerning protected persons, it may, at the most, subject them to assigned residence or to internment.” It is impossible to verify whether this detention is permitted without knowing what the reasons have been and are.
d) Failure to inform the detained person of the charges against them constitutes a violation of Article 71 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which obliges the occupying power to report charges without delay. They also constitute a violation of article 10 of the Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons in Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment of 1988, which requires the same.
3. The right to education is guaranteed under article 13 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social of Cultural Rights of 1976 and denial of that right violates article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child of 1990.
4. The various forms of ill-treatment during the campaign of arrests carried out by Israeli occupation forces in the village of Kufl Hares, southwest of Nablus governorate, violate article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of 1976 and article 16/1 of the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhumane and Degrading Treatment or Punishment of 1987.
Conclusions:
This report sustains a number of findings, through our analysis of the practices of occupation authorities and the reality of Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons, as follows:
1) The occupying forces are continuing their gross and systematic violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.
2) These Israeli violations have resulted in severe suffering for Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons.
3) The silence of the international community has encouraged the occupying power to increase their violations against Palestinian detainees.
4) The High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions have failed to fulfill their duties and have in fact encouraged the occupation authorities to escalate their violations.
Recommendations:
At the conclusion of the report, this series of recommendations is based on the above-mentioned facts and the systematic and gross violations of international humanitarian and human rights law by the occupying power, as follows:
Recommendations at the international level:
1) Formation of a fact-finding committee by the UN Human Rights Council on Israeli violations against detainees.
2) Activate the mechanisms of accountability by the international community towards the perpetrators of violations in fulfillment of its legal and ethical obligations.
3) The High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions must uphold their responsibilities and pressure the occupying power to respect international humanitarian law.
4) International contracting committees of the Conventions must activate their role to pressure the occupying state to respect the standards for prisoners’ rights.
Recommendations at the local level:
1) Activating local solidarity campaigns with Palestinian prisoners.
2) Media support for detainees through intensified media campaigns.
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network supports the campaign to #FreeAlaa and all political prisoners in Egyptian prisons. Alaa Abdel-Fattah is a longtime activist and blogger and struggler for the Egyptian people – and for Palestine. In fact, he has been denied awards by the EU and attacked at an international level while facing Egyptian state repression because of his support for the Palestinian people and their right to resist occupation and oppression.
The campaign to Free Alaa is highlighting the case of this jailed struggler from 24 September to 19 October; on 19 October, the appeal hearings will begin in the “Shoura Council” case, in which Alaa and other activists were found guilty of protesting outside the Shoura Council building in November 2013 after peaceful protesters against military trials were attacked with massive police brutality and violence. Alaa was sentenced to five years in prison, of which he has served three and a half; the case is now being appealed to Egypt’s highest court, the Court of Cassation.
In addition, Abdel-Fattah is also facing allegations of “insulting the judiciary” in a case that will come to trial in December; he is threatened with a fine and more years in maximum security prison. His release has been called for by dozens of human rights groups including the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, and his trial was judged unfair by Euromed Rights.
The Free Alaa campaign urges: “Once upon a time the international solidarity was really helpful and made a great difference supporting the revolution(s), right now we are in such a different moment though, Egypt is currently under a severe online crackdown and hundreds of websites, including nearly all critical media, are blocked inside the country. So we are again asking for help from outside to relay information, mobilize media, attract attention and build pressure.”
Today, Alaa Abdel-Fattah is only one of thousands of political prisoners in Egypt. We express our solidarity with Alaa and join the Days of Action to #FreeAlaa, and similarly declare our solidarity with all of those unjustly held behind bars as the Egyptian regime pursues closer and closer military and economic ties with the Israeli occupation and continues its role in the siege on Gaza. We urge the immediate release of Alaa Abdel-Fattah and all political prisoners in Egyptian jails.
As Khadija Rabie, 30, was seized by occupation forces in an overnight raid on her home in Yatta on Tuesday morning, 10 October, Palestinian lawyers Hanan Khatib and Wahba Masalha reported that there are currently 58 Palestinian women political prisoners imprisoned by Israel, including 10 minor girls. The lawyers reported following their visits to HaSharon and Damon prisons, where women prisoners are held.
The two lawyers reported that Palestinian women prisoners are located next to Israeli “criminal” prisoners’ sections, from whom they receive harassment as well as frequent disturbances at night. This is particularly troubling to a number of ill prisoners, who do not receive appropriate treatment and hospitalization or diagnosis is frequently delayed. For women prisoners who receive medication, their medication will frequently end at the end of the month and there will be a delay before the medication is refilled or sometimes replaced with a different drug.
In addition, prisoners living with mental illness, frequently as a result of trauma, often do not receive treatment at all, and if they do, they are given only sedatives.
Palestinian women prisoners also raised once more the torturous experience of the “Bosta,” the van in which prisoners are transported to military courts or other prisons. The ride has frequent stops and prisoners are forced to board and deboard repeatedly and ride on hard metal benches, often shackled. Prisoners often do not receive food during the transit periods and transportation takes excessively long periods of time due to frequent and lengthy stops. They also noted that they are subject to provocations and harassment by the Nachshon forces responsible for prisoner transfers.
Women prisoners going to the military court are often subjected to a two- day journey with an overnight stay at the Jalameh interrogation center, notorious for insect infestations and filthy conditions of life.
The women prisoners also emphasized their experiences under interrogation. Ibtisam Mousa, a prisoner from Gaza, said that she was held for 27 days in the Ashkelon interrogation center, interrogated for many hours at a time and shackled to a chair as interrogators screamed curses at her, threatened to shell her family’s home in Gaza and hurt her children and husband. She noted further that conditions in the interrogation center were filthy, with little toilet facilities and dirty bedding, part of a comprehensive attempt to wear down and break the will of prisoners facing interrogation.
The Asra Media Center reported on the experience of the four children of Sabah Faraoun, 36, a seamstress from Jerusalem, who is one of four Palestinian women currently held without charge or trial under administrative detention. Her four children are Abdel-Razak, 16, Alaa, 14, Tala, 7, and Leen, 6. Their mother has been held without charge or trial since 19 June 2016.
Her husband, Issa Faraoun, noted that when ocupation forces surrounded and stormed their home after midnight, they immediately began questioning Sabah about her brother, Omar al-Shurbaji, a freed prisoner displaced to Gaza upon his release. He noted that the scene was very difficult for the children as occupation forces “armed as if prepared to fight a fierce battle” invaded the family home in the middle of the night.
He said that Leen repeatedly goes to the front door of the family home, looking for her mother and asking when she will return. The children refused to celebrate on Eid, thinking only of their mother and when she would return. He noted that “the visits are difficult for all of us, especially for the children who see their mother behind plate glass and strain to hear her voice over the visitation phone.”
He also noted that she suffers from joint disease that is exacerbated by the use of the “bosta” for transportation and receives little to no treatment and is suffering physically as well as from the separation from her family. He noted that he tries to support the children and alleviate their psychological pain, but that “their mother is still missing and no one can fill that hole.”
Sick Palestinian prisoners are continuing to struggle for their lives and health inside Israeli prisons. The Palestinian Prisoners’ Affairs Commission has submitted an appeal for the early release of Sami Abu Diak, 35, from the village of Silat al-Zuhair, south of Jenin.
The appeal in the case of Abu Diak, who was sentenced to three life sentences and 30 years and has been jailed since 17 July 2002, will be heard on 25 October. He has colon cancer and his health has been severely declining for years. Two years ago, he underwent four operations to remove tumors and 80 cm of his large intestine was removed. However, he developed an infection when he was returned to Ramleh prison clinic due to a lack of hygiene and was in a coma and in critical condition for a week. At the time, his request for early release was denied. However, his suffering has only continued in the ensuing years and his health is precarious.
Early release applications were also filed for several other Palestinian political prisoners, including the child prisoner Khaled Dabaya, 16, who is suffering from serious depression, does not speak to anyone and has lost a great deal of weight. He was held in solitary confinement for a long period of time. A petition was submitted to have him examined by a specialist, Mahmoud Saleh, who will submit a report on his case.
In addition, Nisreen Hassan, 40, from Gaza, has petitioned to undergo a screening for breast cancer. Fadi Abu Attia, from the al-Amari refugee camp in Ramallah, is serving a 12.5-year sentence and is currently suffering from severe psychological distress and loss of memory. He previously petitioned for release after a psychological crisis after the last hunger strike; however, a new request has been submitted as his psychological condition has only worsened since that time.
Mansour Moqtada from Salfit is sentenced to life imprisonment and is held permanently in the Ramle prison clinic. He was paralyzed due to his injuries from being shot by occupation forces at the time of his arrest and relies on colostomy bags and a “plastic stomach” for digestion. His health condition has remained continually very serious; the early release committee will hear his case on 27 December in the Ramle prison.
Hussein Atallah, from Nablus, is serving a 32-year sentence and is currently suffering from cancer and a severe health condition. An urgent petition has been filed for his early release. Meanwhile, Mohammed Bisharat, from Tubas, is serving an 18-year sentence and is suffering from life-threatening kidney disease. An outside doctor, Mohammed Masarwa, visited him on 5 October after a petition by the Commission’s lawyers, and a hearing on his early release will be heard on 19 October.
Meanwhile, ill child prisoner Anas Adnan Hamarsheh, 17, from the village of Yabad, had his detention extended for 11 days on Tuesday, 10 October; he was seized on Sunday morning in a pre-dawn raid when occupation forces invaded his family home. He is a high school student and the son of former prisoner Adnan Hamarsheh, who spent 11 years in Israeli prisons. Anas suffers from Perthes disease and requires treatment; he is in danger of losing his ability to walk.
Palestinian lawyer Moataz Shqeirat also urged legal and humanitarian action for Palestinian prisoner Khaled al-Shawish, held in the Ramle prison clinic. Al-Shawish used a wheelchair to move around and his right hand was hit by four bullets and was shattered, receiving a platinum implant. Two months ago, he received a bone graft in his hand and it was rejected, causing severe pain and infection. The graft and implant were removed, which could lead to the amputation of his hand. He was told he would receive a further operation to restore the original metal implant, but has since been told that the operation will not be carried out.
Shqeirat highlighted the cases of the 15 sickest prisoners held in Ramle prison clinic who continue to suffer not only from their illnesses but from the medical neglect of the Israel Prison Service.
Hundreds of Palestinians marched against the so-called “Electronic Crimes Law” on Tuesday, 10 October before being blocked by Palestinian Authority security services from reaching the PA Prime Minister’s office in Ramallah.
The march began from the Palestinian Legislative Council office in Ramallah but was blocked by PA security forces’ barricades along its path; it was organized by civil society groups protesting the new law, created by a decree by PA president Mahmoud Abbas.
Numerous Palestinian activists and organizers have been arrested under the law, which attempts to criminalize social media posts and other online publications critical of PA officials. Palestinian civil society organizations have demanded its immediate cancellation, noting that it is an attack on public freedoms and deepens Palestinian division at a time that Palestinian expression is under massive attack by the Israeli occupation.
The “Electronic Crimes Law” has been widely condemned by political parties and organizations throughout occupied Palestine. The PA law, which attempts to criminalize Palestinian political expression on Facebook and in the media, comes alongside systematic Israeli attacks on Palestinian expression, including the persecution of hundreds of Palestinians for their posts on social media and the jailing of teens, journalists and elders in Israeli occupation prisons.
Amnesty International has joined the denunciation of the law created by decree of PA president Mahmoud Abbas, due to its use against journalists, writers and human rights defenders like Issa Amro. Zaher al-Shammali and Nassar Jaradat were subject to detention for Facebook posts critical of PA officials, and Palestinian-American activist Mashal Alkouk was detained for several days last week, also in the context of the law, as was youth activist Ahmed Abdel-Aziz. A number of journalists have been interrogated and detained for publishing critical material about the PA as well.
The “Electronic Crimes Law” goes so far as to threaten sentences of hard labor against people convicted of committing “offenses” with the “purpose of disturbing public order…or harming national unity.” Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association has published a lengthy analysis of the dangers posed by the law.
FREEDOM FOR SALAH HAMOURI & GEORGES IBRAHIM ABDALLAH
SJP-NL calls on everyone to protest this Friday 20 October in The Hague (location ASAP) to demand the freedom of Salah Hamouri and Georges Ibrahim Abdallah. We call on the French Government to take action in the case of Salah Hamouri and put pressure in Israel to end his illegal. We also call on the French Government to immediately release Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, who has been imprisoned in France for 33 years and has been eligible for release under parole since 1999.
French-Palestinian human rights defender Salah Hamouri was seized from his home in the Jerusalem-area village of Kufr Aqab in a pre-dawn raid by Israeli occupation forces on 23 August. On Sunday 27 August, Salah had his detention period extended by the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court allowing further interrogation. On 14 September, Salah Hamouri received a six months administrative detention order meaning that he is further deprived of his freedom without a charge and trial.
Two weeks before Salah’s arrest, some members of SJP NL had the chance to talk to him on a field trip to Palestine where he shared his experiences as a former political prisoner, while also giving mention to the torture, as well as inhumane and degrading treatment that he has received during interrogations.
Together with Samidoun, Amnesty International and Addameer Prisoner Support & Human Rights Association, where Salah Hamouri works as field researcher, SJP NL has called for action to pressure France to release Salah Hamouri.
Georges Ibrahim Abdallah is a Lebanese struggler for Palestine who has been imprisoned for over 33 years in France. While he has been eligible for parole since 1999, which has been confirmed by the court, French ministers have refused to cooperate with his release, with the involvement of Hillary Clinton.
Show solidarity by demanding that France put pressure on Israel to release Salah Hamouri and all 6,128 Palestinian political prisoners! Join thousands of protestors around the world in demanding the immediate release of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah from French jails.
Let’s protest together against the illegal detention of Salah!
Let’s put pressure on France to protect its own citizen from arbitrary detention!
Let’s put pressure on France to immediately release George Ibrahim Abdallah!
Free Salah Hamouri!
Free Georges Ibrahim Abdallah!
Free all Palestinian Political Prisoners!
When: Friday 20 October, 14:00h – 16:00h
Location: Announced ASAP
Goal: Call on the French state to free Georges Ibrahim Abdallah and put pressure on Israel to release Salah Hamouri
SRP-NL roept iedereen op om vrijdag 20 oktober om 14:00u te protesteren in Den Haag (locatie ASAP) om de vrijheid van Salah Hamouri en Georges Ibrahim Abdallah te eisen. We roepen de Franse overheid op om actie te ondernemen in de zaak van Hamouri en een einde te maken aan zijn opsluiting door de Israëlische bezettingsmacht. We roepen de Franse overheid ook op om Georges Ibrahim Abdallah onmiddellijk vrij te laten na ruim 33 jaar gevangenschap
De Frans-Palestijnse mensenrechtenverdediger Salah Hamouri werd gearresteerd in zijn huis in het dorp Kufr Aqab, vlakbij Jeruzalem, tijdens een nachtelijke inval door de Israëlische bezettingsmacht op 23 augustus. Op zondag 27 augustus werd zijn hechtenis verlengd door de Jeruzalem Magistraat rechtbank voor verdere ondervraging. Op 14 september kreeg Salah zes maanden administratieve detentie opgelegd, opsluiting zonder aanklacht of proces.
Twee weken voor Salah’s arrestatie hadden enkele leden van SRP-NL de kans om met hem te praten tijdens een reis naar Palestine. Salah deelde zijn ervaringen als voormalig politieke gevangene en sprak over de marteling, als ook de onmenselijke en onterende behandeling die hij had gehad tijdens ondervragingen.
Samen met Samidoun, Amnesty International en Addameer, waar Salah Hamouri werkt als een veldonderzoeker, heeft SRP-NL opgeroepen tot actie om druk te zetten op Frankrijk om Salah vrij te laten.
Georges Ibrahim Abdallah is een Libanese activist voor Palestina die nu ruim 33 jaar gevangen zit in Frankrijk. Hoewel hij al sinds 1999 in aanmerking komt voor voorwaardelijke vrijlating, en dit zelfs door het gerechtshof is bevestigt, hebben Franse ministers geweigerd hieraan mee te werken, mede op aandringen van Hillary Clinton.
Wees solidair door te eisen dat Frankrijk Israël onder druk zet om Salah Hamouri vrijlaat en alle 6,128 Palestijnse politieke gevangenen! Eis samen met duizenden anderen de vrijlating van Georges Ibrahim Adbdallah!
Vrijheid voor Salah Hamouri!
Vrijheid voor Georges Ibrahim Abdallah!
Vrijheid voor alle politieke gevangenen!
WANNEER: Vrijdag 20 oktober, 14:00u – 16:00u
LOCATIE: Wordt zsm bekendgemaakt
DOEL: De Franse staat oproepen Georges Ibrahim Abdallah vrij te laten en druk op Israël te zetten om Salah Hamouri vrij te laten
This week, Elsa Lefort, Jean-Claude Lefort and Maitre Tourne met with the diplomatic group from the French government. They stated following the meeting: “We understood from our conversation with the diplomatic cell of the Elysée that France’s action would not be limited to consular protection alone, but that to intervene so that the arbitrary detention of a French national, in this case Salah Hamouri, ceases. We remain mobilized and waiting for concrete progress.”
We must amplify the movement and not lose the pressure. On the agenda for this meeting are updates on the situation, organizational mobilizations and future events. Contact the committee at libertepoursalah@gmail.com.
Assemble 12pm, Wednesday 18 Oct, outside Uni of Manchester Students Union.
24 October 2017 marks the 33rd anniversary of the arrest of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah by French police. Since 1984, he has remained behind bars, one of the longest-held political prisoners in the world. From 14-24 October 2017, RCG – Revolutionary Communist Group and BDS Campaign – University of Manchester join Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and organizations in France and around the world to call for a week of international actions to demand freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah and all Palestinian prisoners!
Georges Abdallah has been committed throughout his life to the revolutionary struggle in Lebanon and the liberation of Palestine. He was involved with the Palestinian Marxist-Leninst revolutionary organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, resisting Israeli attacks on Lebanon. Later, he joined the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions, pointing to a non-sectarian, socialist and revolutionary path to liberation for the people of Lebanon, faced with civil war militias and Israeli invasion and occupation in the south of Lebanon.
Imperialist nations have been complicit in the Zionist Apartheid state of Israel since Balfour signed away Palestine from the British empire to the Zionists in 1917.
All welcome and encouraged to protest loudly and angrily and Israeli, British and French repression.
Fight racist, imperialism, Zionism!
Fight for socialism!