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Sheikh Raed Salah held in solitary confinement; emphasizes commitment to struggle

Sheikh Raed Salah, leader of the Islamic Movement in occupied Palestine ’48 and a prominent defender of Al-Aqsa Mosque against Israeli settler attacks, is currently held in solitary confinement in Ramon prison in the Naqab desert, said his lawyer Khaled Zabarqa after a meeting with Salah on 4 October, as reported by Wattan TV.

Zabarqa said that Salah is charged with “incitement” for speeches about Al-Aqsa during the Palestinian campaign against new electronic gates and other occupation repressive technology installed at the holy site in July 2017, as well as for performing prayers at the funerals of three young men from Umm al-Fahm killed by Israeli forces after participating in an attack that killed two occupation armed “border police” in Jerusalem. He is also accused of supporting a “prohibited organization,” the Islamic Movement, which was declared prohibited in 2015 in what Palestinians from across the political spectrum in occupied Palestine ’48 denounced as an attack on the entire Palestinian people.

“Sheikh Salah will remain faithful to the Islamic, pan-Arab and Palestinian principles despite his arrest and the conditions of his detention,” said Zabarqa, noting that Salah’s morale is high and that he sends greetings to all his supporters. Zabarqa further said that the indictment file against Salah is “fabricated” for political purposes.

Sheikh Salah is prevented from mixing with or seeing other Palestinian political prisoners and has also been denied books for reading. Salah was released in January 2017 after eight months of imprisonment for a speech he gave in 2009; during his imprisonment, he was also held in solitary confinement for the entire time, denied visits, including from Knesset members, and denied access to books and reading material.

Israeli occupation officials have also been involved in attempts, including in the United Kingdom, to deny Salah an international platform for advocacy. He has been subjected to repeated travel bans by the Israeli state and has also been repeatedly barred from entering Jerusalem itself.

63 more Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention

Israeli occupation authorities issued at least 63 administrative detention orders in the latter part of September, reported Palestinian lawyer Mahmoud al-Halabi of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society.

Among those ordered to administrative detention were Sabah Faraoun, a Palestinian seamstress from Jerusalem whose administrative detention has been extended five times since she was seized by occupation forces on 19 June 2016, and Salah Hamouri, the French-Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender who is the subject of a global campaign for his release.

Administrative detention orders, which imprison Palestinians without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence, are issued for one- to six-month periods and are indefinitely renewable. Palestinians have spent years at a time jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. There are currently approximately 450 Palestinians held under administrative detention out of a total of 6,200 Palestinian political prisoners.

The orders issued include the following:

1. Habib Ahmed Mohammed, Bethlehem, 6 months, extension
2. Ibrahim Ismail Zanouneh, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
3. Salah Mohammed Khawaja, Ramallah, 2 months, extension
4. Ghaleb Mohammed Atatra, Jenin, 4 months, new order
5. Moatassem Billah Jiyawi, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
6. Yousef Mohammed Za’ik, al-Khalil, 4 months, new order
7. Omar Fathi Shafi’i, Nablus, 6 month, new order
8. Rabie Salim Abdo, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
9. Nader Abdel-Halim Natsheh, al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
10. Sabah Ahmed Faraoun, Jerusalem, 3 months, extension
11. Ayad Jamal al-Hareimi, Bethlehem, 6 months, extension
12. Suhaib Nasri al-Zeer, Bethlehem, 6 months, new order
13. Abdallah Ibrahim Jawarish, Bethlehem, 6 months, extension
14. Majd Ahmad Amarneh, Jenin, 4 months, new order
15. Bassam Abdel-Rahim Hammad, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
16. Murad Ali Asakra, Bethlehem, 6 months, new order
17. Fathi Mohammed Atoum, Jenin, 5 months, extension
18. Abdel-Khaliq Hasan al-Natsheh, al-Khalil, 4 months, new order
19. Hussein Saleh Abu Aker, Bethlehem, 4 months, extension
20. Diaa Yousef Shehadeh, Ramallah, 6 months, new order
21. Qais Fouad Kharma, Ramallah, 4 months, new order
22. Arib Walid Salem, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
23. Hammam Munir Abu Rahma, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
24. Abdel-Aziz Mahmoud Mubarak, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
25. Mohammed Jamal Sajidiya, Ramallah, 6 months, extension
26. Ahmed As’ad Abu Khalifa, Jenin, 4 months, extension
27. Raafat Jamal Nassif, Tulkaem, 6 months, extension
28. Ahmed Abdel-Karim Dar Mohammed, Ramallah, 3 months, extension
29. Mohammed Jamal al-Natsheh, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
30. Omar Mohammed Barajeh, Jericho, 4 months, extension
31. Ramzi Omar Qawar, Bethlehem, 4 months, extension
32. Mohammed Ahmad Meshaal, Ramallah, 3 months, new order
33. Imad Shafiq Erhimi, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
34. Alaa al-Din Khaled Ali, Ramallah, 3 months, extension
35. Rashid Ibrahim Rashid, Bethlehem, 4 months, extension
36. Montasser Wajih Abu Ayyash, al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
37. Mamoun Faleh Hamdan, Tulkarem, 4 months, extension
38. Ahmad Abdallah Abu Sariyeh, Jenin, 4 months, extension
39. Akram Yousef al-Fassisi, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
40. Osama Khaled Amour, al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
41. Fadi Hamad Ghanem, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
42. Abdel-Razeq Yassin Faraj, Ramallah, 4 months, extension
43. Ibrahim Mohammed al-Rashaydeh, Bethlehem, 6 months, extension
44. Issa Khalil Abu Arqoub, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
45. Musab Akef Ashtayeh, Nablus, 4 months, new orer
46. Mohammed Khader Musa, Bethlehem, 4 moths, extension
47. Amir Nizar Yousef Khawaja, Ramallah, 6 months, extension
48. Thabet Nassar Nassar, Nablus, 4 months, extension
49. Faisal Maahmoud Khalifa, Tulkarem, 4 months, extension
50. Yousef Fakhri Atrash, Jenin, 4 months, new order
51. Louay Sati Ashkar, Tulkarem, 3 months, extension
52. Yousef Omran Abu Hussein, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
53. Yousef Abdel-Aziz Qazzaz, al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
54. Mohammed Abdallah Dar Taha, Ramallah, 2 months, new order
55. Nimer Ali Hamed, Ramallah, 3 months, new order
56. Mohammed Mahmoud Sahwil, Ramallah, 4 months, new order
57. Mohammed Abdallah Atwan, Bethlehem, 3 months, extension
58. Mo’men Hammad al-Obeid, Tulkarem, 6 monhts, new order
59. Abdel-Rahim Sami el-Haj, Tulkarem, 6 months, new order
60. Abdel-Basit Abdel-Jamil el-Hajj, Tulkarem, 6 months, new order
61. Khaled Ibrahim Abu Turki, al-Khalil, 4 months, new order
62. Ayman Mohammed Jabariya, al-Khalil, 3 months, extension
63. Mahdi Majdi Sweidan, Qalqilya, 4 months, extension

12 Palestinian parliamentarians jailed by Israeli occupation

Mohammed Jamal Natsheh

An Israeli military court renewed the administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial – of Palestinian Legislative Council member Mohammed Jamal al-Natsheh. There are currently 12 imprisoned members of the Palestinian Legislative Council in Israeli prisons.

Natsheh’s imprisonment was renewed for six months for the third time; he has been jailed without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence since his home was stormed by occupation forces on 28 September 2016. He had previously been held without charge or trial under administrative detention and had been released for only seven months before being re-arrested. He has spent over 18 years in Israeli prisons.

An Israeli occupation court also rejected an appeal by the lawyer of fellow imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarian Ahmed Attoun, whose administrative detention without charge or trial was renewed for four months. He has been jailed since 12 April 2017.

Mohammed al-Tal

The Ofer military court, however, ordered that PLC member Mohammed al-Tal, from Dahariyeh south of al-Khalil, will be released in approximately two weeks. Al-Tal was seized by occupation forces on 21 March 2017 and ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial for four months. After the expiration of his detention period he was then charged in the Israeli military courts; he was sentenced to nine and a half months in Israeli prison, leaving only two weeks remaining before his pending release.

Similarly, on 13 September, Azzam Salhab was sentenced to 12 months in prison by the Ofer military court; he had been imprisoned since 28 November 2016 under administrative detention before being transferred, like al-Tal, to the military courts. Salhab is expected to be released in late November.

Natsheh, Attoun, Salhab and al-Tal are all members of the Change and Reform Bloc, the parliamentary bloc associated with the Hamas movement. Other PLC members from the bloc held in Israeli jails include Mohammed Abu Teir, Omar Abdel-Razak, Mohammed Badr, Ibrahim Dahbour, and Ahmad Mubarak.

Also held without charge or trial under administrative detention is Khalida Jarrar, the leftist feminist parliamentarian and Palestinian national leader, seized on 2 July by occupation forces; she was ordered to six months in administrative detention. Jarrar is a member of the Abu Ali Mustafa Bloc, associated with the Palestinian Left and the Popular Front for the Liberatin of Palestine.

Fellow imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarians include two of the most prominent political leaders serving lengthy sentences: Ahmad Sa’adat, 63, the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine serving a 30-year prison sentence after he and his comrades were abducted by Israeli forces attacking a Palestinian Authority prison in Jericho in 2006, and Marwan Barghouthi, prominent Fateh leader serving five life sentences and imprisoned since 2002.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network demands the immediate release of all of the imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarians. Their imprisonment reflects an Israeli drive to criminalize and confiscate Palestinian leaders while denying any true political expression to people under occupation.

Palestinian student Kifah Quzmar released after seven months in prison without charge or trial

Kifah Quzmar, 23, Palestinian student and activist, was released on Wednesday, 4 October after seven months of imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention. Quzmar was received by comrades, family and friends upon the moment of release, who welcomed him joyously.

Quzmzr is an active student at Bir Zeit University in the last year of study for his degree in business administration. He was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 7 March 2017 as he returned from Jordan via the Karameh/Allenby crossing and subject to interrogation for 20 days and denied access to his lawyer, sparking his 4-day hunger strike.

Over 70 international organizations signed on to a collective statement initiated by student groups in Belgium, the Netherlands, Canada, the United States and Palestine demanding Quzmar’s immediate release. The statement highlights the ongoing targeting of Palestinian students for arrest and persecution, especially for involvement in student activities, including annual student council elections. It also urges the academic boycott of Israel, particularly in response to the ongoing denial of Palestinians’ right to education.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Kifah Quzmar upon his release from Israeli prisons and urges the immediate end to the policy of administrative detention, the freedom of all student prisoners in Israeli jails and the release of all 6,200 Palestinians held in the prisons of the occupation. We thank all of the international organizations and student groups who joined in the campaign to free Kifah, wrote letters to him in prison and demanded his release.  

Khitam Saafin released after three months of imprisonment without charge or trial

Photo: Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees

Khitam Saafin, prominent social activist and president of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, was released from Israeli occupation prisons after three months of detention without charge or trial on Sunday, 1 October 2017.

She was greeted at Jabara checkpoint upon her night release by dozens of comrades from the UPWC celebrating her release. Saafin had been jailed for three months without charge or trial under an administrative detention order. She was seized in a pre-dawn raid on her home simultaneously with Palestinian leftist parliamentarian and prominent defender of Palestinian prisoners, Khalida Jarrar, on 2 July.

Photo: Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees

She is a well-known international advocate for Palestinian women and freedom and justice for the Palestinian people and their social and national liberation. She has spoken around the world about the struggle of Palestinian women, including at the World Social Forum, and is the chair of the Global Women’s March Palestine.

Photo: Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees

Saafin was ordered to three months in administrative detention and Jarrar to six months of imprisonment without charge or trial. An international campaign has been calling for the release of the imprisoned Palestinian women leaders, with events and statements from numerous international human rights organizations, advocacy groups, political parties and parliamentarians, with demonstrations for their freedom in cities around the world.

Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable and are issued on the basis of “secret evidence.” There are currently nearly 500 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, including four women, amid a total of 6,200 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Photo: Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees

Khitam Saafin’s release is a testament to the power of ongoing campaigns in Palestine and around the world to demand her freedom and that of her fellow Palestinian prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Khitam Saafin upon her release. Her struggle for Palestinian women and the Palestinian people will never be suppressed behind Israeli bars. We urge the immediate release of Khalida Jarrar, an end to the policy of administrative detention and the liberation of all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Jordan BDS: New boycott victory as UN Women drops G4S in Jordan


Jordan BDS announced a new victory in their campaign against G4S in the country on 3 October 2017. UN Women is now the fifth United Nations agency to cut ties with the security corporation in Jordan. G4S is subject to a global boycott campaign; despite the fact that it sold off its G4S Israel subsidiary, that provides security services and equipment to the Israel Prison Service, to an Israeli private equity firm, the British-Danish corporation continues to co-own a stake in Policity, the Israeli national police training center in occupied Jerusalem and is therefore responsible for the training of Israeli “police” forces, including the military-style “border police” that enforce occupation in Jerusalem and surrounding illegal settlements. Further, G4S was also involved in the installation of electronic gates and other colonial “security” devices around Al-Aqsa Mosque in summer 2017.  We reprint below the statement of Jordan BDS and congratulate the campaign on yet another victory over security corporations profiteering from the occupation and oppression of Palestinians:

UN Women becomes fifth UN agency in Jordan to drop its contracts with G4S following BDS pressure

The United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) in Jordan has dropped its contracts with the world’s largest security firm, occupation profiteer G4S, following an ongoing BDS campaign over the firm’s role in Israel’s violations of human rights.

Jordan BDS welcomes UN Women’s decision and salutes the agency for taking a principled step in line with its core values of promoting human rights and human dignity. Accordingly, UN Women has become the fifth UN agency in Jordan to drop its contracts with occupation profiteer G4S alongside WFP, UNOPS, UNICEF and UNHCR.

G4S has a track record in human and refugee rights violations in many countries across the world, which led dozens of universities, unions, pension funds and more to drop their contracts with the company as well as divest their shares from it following calls by the BDS movement worldwide. The #UNDropG4S campaign began in 2015, in which Jordan BDS took an active part through organizing actions and lobbying with different UN agencies, the latest of which was a demonstration outside UN Women office in Amman in commemorating Al Nakba in partnership with multiple Jordanian civil society organizations.

Jordan BDS demands the local and regional offices of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP and UNDP MENA) – the last UN office in Jordan to hold contracts with G4S – to follow the lead of the five UN agencies before it that showed a firm commitment to human rights. Our demand is based on UN documents, which UNDP is breaching, including the UN Supplier Code of Conduct, the UN Special Rapporteur for OPT report, and the UN Global Compact. It is truly shocking that UNDP persists with its breach until now and continues to dismiss the values and principles that the agency itself proclaims to defend.

Finally, Jordan BDS confirms that its campaign against G4S will continue, in parallel with the regional campaigns in Lebanon, Kuwait and Morocco as well as globally, until G4S stops profiting from the occupation and fully withdraws from its remaining contracts in Israel including its agreement with the Israeli Police Academy (Policity) in Jerusalem.

3 October, Vancouver: What is Palestine? SPHR Social and Fundraiser

Tuesday, 3 October
6:00 pm
Liu Institute for Global Affairs, Multipurpose Room
University of British Columbia (UBC)
Vancouver
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/358865001234696/

Samidoun will be participating in the following event:

Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights at UBC, Vancouver is on the unceded and occupied territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musquem) people. In our aim to bring awareness to Israeli settler-colonialism and the occupation of indigenous Palestinian land, it is crucial to acknowledge that we too are settlers here, and are complicit in the ongoing dispossession of Indigenous land and people.

We invites you to an evening of learning and open dicussion while listening to speakers and testimonies, along with food and good company, to see what truly is Palestine.

Speakers TBA

Recommendation donation: $5

Accessibility to building will be updated shortly.

7 October, Beddawi Camp: Seminar on Freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah

Saturday, 7 October
2:00 pm
Palestinian Arab Cultural Club
Beddawi Camp
Lebanon
More information:  https://samidounlb.wordpress.com/2017/09/29/%D8%B5%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%AF%D9%88%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%AF%D8%B9%D9%88-%D9%84%D9%86%D8%AF%D9%88%D8%A9-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%B0%D9%83%D8%B1%D9%89-%D8%A7%D8%B9%D8%AA%D9%82%D8%A7%D9%84-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D9%86%D8%A7/

The first event of Samidoun in Lebanon!

On the 34th anniversary of the arrest of the struggler, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, the Samidoun Network invites you to attend a seminar on “Life of Struggle in the Cells of the Prison,” with Fidaa Abdel-Fattah, lawyer and activist with the international campaign to free Georges Abdallah.

The event is organized by Samidoun Network, the Palestinian Arab Cultural Club and the international campaign to free Georges Abdallah.

Follow the Facebook page of Samidoun Lebanon: https://www.facebook.com/samidounlb/

في الذكرى الـ34 لإعتقال المناضل جورج إبراهيم عبدالله تدعوكم شبكة صامدون لحضور ندوة بعنوان “حياة مناضل في أقبية السجون” تلقيها المحامية و الناشطة في الحملة الوطنية لتحرير المناضل جورج عبدالله “فداء عبد الفتاح “ و ذلك في مخيم البداوي -مقر النادي الثقافي الفلسطيني العربي , بتاريخ 7-10-2017
الساعة :2 ظهراً .

3 October, Bir Zeit University: The Experience of Imprisonment

Tuesday, 3 October
11 am 
Bir Zeit University
Palestine
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/130328914214194/

The first event of Samidoun in occupied Palestine!

The Palestinian and Arab prisoners behind occupation bars have a harsh and difficult life. The true tragedy in the darness of the prison is inflicted by the repressive and inhumane practices of the occupation authorities and the prison administration against the prisoners, who in turn invoke the principles of steadfastness and rejection in confrontation of colonialism and its policies.

Therefore, seeing the issue of prisoners as a major demand of the Palestinian people and that the responsibility to liberate them from the prisons of the occupation is also an international and Arab responsibility, the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network invites you to attend a seminar, entitled “The Eperience of Imprisonment: The impact on the construction of the revolutionary self” at 11 am in the building of the Faculty of Development, Conference Room 316, hosted by Dr. Lena Meari and the liberated prisoner, student Mohammed Badr.

The topics to be addressed include:
Introduction of Samidoun Network in occupied Palestine
Awareness of methods and mechanisms used in Israeli occupation prisons
Experiences of prisoners in the occupation prisons and their role in shaping the revolutionary self
Prisoners and their liberation as an integral part of Palestinian existence

Follow more events of Samidoun in occupied Palestine: https://www.facebook.com/%D8%B4%D8%A8%D9%83%D8%A9-%D8%B5%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%AF%D9%88%D9%86-%D9%81%D9%84%D8%B3%D8%B7%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D8%AD%D8%AA%D9%84%D8%A9-318760335263991/

الأسرى خلف القضبان و نحن خلفهم ، فكيف نتقدّم إذا لم يتحرروا ؟

يعاني الأسرى الفلسطينيون والعرب في سجون الاحتلال حياة قاسية وشديدة الصعوبة، فهناك في غياهب السجن الظالمة تتجسد المأساة الحقيقية، جراء ما يعانونه من الممارسات القمعية واللاإنسانية التي تمارسها سلطات الاحتلال وإدارات السجون بحق هؤلاء الصامدين خلف القضبان والذين بدورهم يسطرون أسمي معاني الصمود والرفض في وجه الاستعمار وسياساته.
وبناءا على ذلك، ايمانا بأن قضية الاسرى مطلب رئيسي من مطالب الشعب الفلسطيني ومسوؤلية تحريرهم من سجون الاحتلال الاسرائيلية مسؤولية عربية دولية، تدعوكم شبكة صامدون للدفاع عن الأسرى الفلسطينيين لحضور ندوة بعنوان “تجارب الأسر: تفاصيلها وأثرها في تشكيل الذات الثورية” وذلك يوم الثلاثاء الموافق الساعة 11:00 12:30في مبنى كلية التنمية قاعة الاجتماعات 316 باستضافة د.لينا معاري والاسير المحرر الطالب محمد بدر.

-أهم المحاور التي ستتطرق لها المحاضرة:
التعريف بشبكة صامدون- فلسطين المحتلة
الوعي بالأساليب والاليات المتبعة في سجون الاحتلال الاسرائيلية
تجارب الأسرى في سجون الاحتلال ودورها في تشكيل الذات المقاومة الثورية

ولتكون قضية الاسرى وتحريرهم جزء لا يقبل التجزيء في نسيج وجودنا الفلسطيني.

7 October, NYC: Rally to Resist War and Empire

Saturday, 7 October
1:00 pm
34th St and 6th Ave
NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/670899453112529/

RALLY TO RESIST WAR & EMPIRE
Saturday, October 7th @ 1pm
Herald Square, 34th Street & 6th Avenue

Why October 7th?

16 years following the US invasion of Afghanistan and the start of the so-called war on terror, the longest war in US history has no end in sight. While the mainstream media would have us believe that the current rise of militarism in the US is a trump phenomenon, we know that the violence of the US war machine is bipartisan, that by the end of Obama’s second term the US was bombing seven Muslim-majority nations on any given day.

In the wake of 9/11 in the US we’ve seen the war on terror materialize in widespread Islamophobic and anti-arab racist violence. We’ve seen it materialize in the surveillance and criminalization of Palestinian youth activists and community leaders. We’ve seen it materialize in the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security, the massive expansion of Border Patrol and ICE, and the hyper-militarization of the police state. The lessons the empire learned in Baghdad and Kabul have been transplanted into oppressed nationality communities, through counter-insurgency tactics, new spying techniques, and a tsunami of military grade weapons in the hands of those who terrorize Black and Brown communities – the police. It’s no accident that the same federal prison where many of the Eastchester 120 are being held right now is where dozens of Arab and Muslim immigrants were disappeared to and tortured in the aftermath of 9/11. In short – the war on terror has really been a war of terror.

On October 7 it’s important that we come together to demand and end to this war of terror. But beyond condemning US imperialism, we are called upon to connect our local struggles against surveillance, criminalization, police occupation, raids, deportations, gentrification and displacement, to the global struggle against US empire.

No to racism & white supremacy! Black Lives Matter!
Stop attacks on migrants, refugees and Muslims!
Bring the troops home and close the bases!
End the sanctions and the threats!
Jobs, education & healthcare, not endless war!

This demonstration is part of the coordinated national effort of many antiwar, antiracist, social justice and community-based groups. See NoToWar.net

Participating Groups – as of Sept 24
Action 21 Jersey City,
Alianza Pais Militantes,
BAYAN USA Northeast,
Bolivarian Circle NYC,
Colectivo Honduras USA Resistencia,
Committee to Stop FBI Repression,
Free Mumia Abu Jamal Coalition,
Gabriela New York,
Haiti Support Network,
Hoods 4 Justice,
International Action Center – IAC,
International League of Peoples Struggles – ILPS,
International Working Women’s Day Coalition,
Jersey City Peace Movement,
Knowdrones.com
Margaret Kimberly & Glen Ford – Black Agenda Report,
New Abolitionist Movement,
Nodutdol for Korean Community Development,
NYC Students for Justice in Palestine
Pakistan USA Freedom Forum,
Parents to Improve School Transportation – PIST,
Peace Action Manhattan,
Peace Action NYS.
Peoples Organization for Progress,
Peoples Power Assemblies – PPA,
Peoples Video Network,
Right to Resist War & Empire
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network,
Shut It Down – NYC,
Socialist Action
Solidarity Center NYC,
Solidarity with Novorossiya & Antifascists in Ukraine,
South Asian Fund for Education, Scholarship & Training,
SPARC – Serve the People, Awaken Revolutionary Consciousness
U.S. Peace Council – USPC,
United National Antiwar Coalition – UNAC,
Veterans For Peace/Chapter 021 NJ,
Workers World Party