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19 September, Chicago: Send-off for Rasmea Odeh at O’Hare Airport

Tuesday, 19 September
4:30 pm-6:30 pm
Short Term Parking at O’Hare Airport
International Terminal 5

Organized by the Rasmea Defense Committee


#HonorRasmea

We now have the departure date for our dear Rasmea Odeh.  She will be leaving the U.S. for Jordan on Tuesday, September 19th, 2017.

She was officially sentenced in August by Judge Gershwin Drain, who did not allow her to make a final statement in open court, but the Rasmea Defense Committee published that statement here, and now we are asking supporters to join us at O’Hare Airport on September 19th for Rasmea‘s final send-off.

This is our last opportunity to say goodbye before she is forced to depart the U.S. after an almost four-year legal and political struggle, a struggle in which the defense committee organized day and night for #Justice4Rasmea, educated thousands about her case and the cause of Palestinian liberation, and made the name Rasmea synonymous with all of the other major social justice fights in the country.

As she and the defense committee have said many times, regardless of where she lands, Rasmea will never stop working and organizing for justice and for the liberation of Palestine and other oppressed communities.

On September 19th, she will be moving on to the next chapter of her life, and we invite you to be with us that day.

WHEN: Tuesday, September 19th, 2017, from 4:30 PM to 6:30 PM

WHERE: Short-term parking lot at O’Hare Airport International Terminal 5

For more information, email justice4rasmea@uspcn.org or visit justice4rasmea.org.

The Rasmea Defense Committee is led by USPCN and the Committee to Stop FBI Repression.  Donate at www.justice4rasmea.org/donate.

Military court extends detention of severely wounded Palestinian child Haitham Jaradat

Severely wounded Palestinian child Haitham Jaradat, 15, from Sair near al-Khalil, has had his detention extended by the Ofer military court for 11 days, even after he lies in intensive care in Shaare Tzedek medical center, shot with a bullet in his back that penetrated his abdomen and stomach.  His lawyer, Karim Ajwa, said that he has had part of his intestines removed and is using artificial respiration, although he can see and hear. Despite his desperate and life-threatening medical condition, he is shackled to the hospital bed, Ajwa reported.

Along with Jaradat, the military court also extended the detention of Laith Muammar Daraghmeh, 18, from Tubas; Daraghmeh was also shot with a live bullet, in his case during a violent “arrest raid” as occupation forces invaded his city, and is too injured to attend the court hearing.

Both of these cases are particularly poignant following the death of Raed Salhi, shot six times by Israeli occupation forces who invaded his home in Dheisheh refugee camp, accusing the unarmed youth – a camp activist involved with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – of “fleeing.” Salhi, from an impoverished refugee family in the camp, was targeted in a violent arrest raid that his comrades and family have underlined as an assassination raid, especially following threats from notorious Israeli commander “Captain Nidal” to “shoot him in front of his mother.”

After nearly a month in intensive care, in a coma, hooked to artificial respiration, throughout which his detention was repeatedly extended, he was held under armed guard, and he was denied visits from his family, he died of his injuries on 3 September. His body was withheld from his family for several days until they filed a court challenge for his return, when he was buried in a mass funeral of resistance that marched through Bethlehem and Dheisheh.

Ajwa, a lawyer for the Palestinian Prisoners’ Affairs Commission who now represents Jaradat, also represented Salhi. Haitham, 15, was accused of “attempting a stabbing” at the Kiryat Arba settlement when he was shot by occupation forces, after settlers claimed he was running towards them with a knife. No occupation soldiers or illegal settlers were injured. Haitham was interrogated on video as he lay injured on the ground after being shot by Israeli occupation forces, during which he asked for water and said that he had come “to commit suicide.”

Meanwhile, Laith Daraghmeh was shot in the left leg with live ammunition on 13 September as occupation forces invaded Tubas in a pre-dawn raid, also reminiscent of the attack on Dheisheh in which occupation soldiers fatally wounded Salhi and shot another Palestinian refugee youth, Abdel-Aziz Arafa, in the leg.

The ongoing detention of Haitham and Daraghmeh comes as Abdel-Nasser Ferwana, head of the Prisoners’ Studies and Documentation Unit, said that occupation forces have arrested 927 children so far since the beginning of 2017, while over 300 children remain imprisoned in Israeli jails. Palestinian children in Israeli interrogation and detention have been subject to numerous forms of torture and mistreatment, including humiliation, physical abuse, psychological threats and cruelty and denial of access to lawyers or their family, as well as the use of solitary confinement in order to extract confessions or seek information from minor children. 22 Palestinian teens have been held without charge or trial under administrative detention in the past two years.

Six-month administrative detention order reimposed on Salah Hamouri

Paris protest against the labor law changes, 12 September

An Israeli military court ordered Salah Hamouri to six months imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention on Thursday, 14 September, reinstating the order against him by ultra-right, racist Israeli defense minister Avigdor Lieberman. Hamouri, 32, a French-Palestinian lawyer, human rights defender and former prisoner who works as a field researcher at Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, had been sentenced by the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court to a three-month sentence, the remainder of his original prison sentence before he was released in 2011 in the Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange.

Hamouri was seized by occupation forces from his home in Jerusalem on 23 August 2017 in a pre-dawn raid, only three days after he passed the Palestinian bar exam to become a lawyer. He was shortly thereafter ordered to six months in administrative detention, indefinitely renewable imprisonment without charge or trial. On 5 September, however, rather than confirming the order as written, the court ordered him to serve out the remainder of his sentence from the time of his release in 2011, a three-month period. While this sentence was indeed shorter, his lawyers, family and supporters around the world highlighted that it remained unjust, unaccountable, arbitrary and unacceptable.

However, the Israeli prosecution appealed the sentence, calling for the administrative detention order to be reinstated. On 12 September, a hearing was held on the appeal. While previously the ruling had been announced as delayed, on 14 September, the higher court ruled in favor of the prosecutor’s appeal, ordering Hamouri to administrative detention for six months, an indefinitely-renewable and nearly unchallengeable sentence in the Israeli courts. A new confirmation hearing for the order will take place on 17 September. There are nearly 500 Palestinians held without charge or trial out of nearly 6,200 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails; because these orders can be renewed indefinitely, Palestinians have spent years at a time in administrative detention.

This outrageous decision was met by supporters of Hamouri in France issuing urgent statements and demands that French President Emmanuel Macron take action on the case of Hamouri, a French-Palestinian dual citizen subject to arbitrary imprisonment without charge or trial that is subject to indefinite renewal. This is only the latest in a long campaign of harassment to which Hamouri has been subject; he was banned from the West Bank for several months, preventing him from attending law school classes. His French wife, Elsa Lefort, was denied entry to Palestine while pregnant and is now banned from entering Palestine.

The Association France-Palestine Solidarite wrote, “ENOUGH! How many twists, deferrals, changes in tactics, prisons or tribunals, provisional convictions, new convictions, announcements of release or administrative detention, orders of the Minister of Defense, appeals of the prosecutor, provisional decisions, how many blows to the heart will Salah Hamouri still have to undergo before the President of the Republic realizes that on the other side of the Mediterranean there is a real scandal, a denial of justice, a violation of basic human rights which should have already attracted his attention since 23 August?…Salah Hamouri must not stay one more day in jail; it is your responsibility!”

A number of French parliamentarians, writers, activists and trade unionists have joined in the call for freedom for Salah Hamouri, and dozens of protests have been organized across the country and internationally. Contingents of support for Hamouri have also been part of mass demonstrations against the state of emergency in France and proposed neoliberal, austerity-minded changes to French labor law.

**

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!

TAKE ACTION

1. SIGN this petition to French president Emanuel Macron and European officials. Demand that they act now to free Hamouri: https://www.change.org/p/emmanuel-macron-demand-the-immediate-release-of-human-rights-defender-salah-hamouri

2. SIGN this French-language petition to the French government to demand they act for Hamouri’s freedom: http://liberezsalahhamouri.wesign.it/fr

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 prisonersEvents are scheduled in multiple cities – add your own! Email us at samidoun@samidoun.net

5. DEMAND the Israeli occupation release Salah. Take action in the alert from Addameer: http://addameer.org/news/take-action-demand-israeli-officials-immediately-release-salah-hamouri

 

Kamil Abu Hanish: Racism and medical mistreatment in the occupation prisons

Kamil Abu Hanish

One of the most difficult aspects of imprisonment that Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails face is medical neglect and mistreatment. While cases like those of Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh and Jaafar Awad are well-known, Palestinian prisoners struggle daily with access to proper medical care. They frequently report being given only painkillers if they receive treatment at all as well as lengthy delays in receiving necessary procedures.

Currently, Palestinian prisoner Mohammed Bisharat, 32, from the town of Tammun. He has reportedly been returned to the Assaf Harofeh hospital after he again lost consciousness. He is suffering from renal failure and kidney disease in both of his kidneys. He had been returned from Assaf Harofeh hospital to the Ramle prison clinic last Thursday but continued to suffer from poor vision, difficulty speaking and severe weight loss. He is currently held in the intensive care unit, Asra Media reported. Bisharat is serving an 18-year sentence; he has been imprisoned since August 2001, at the age of 16.

Bisharat’s life is at urgent risk; he is one of the most severely ill Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails. His family noted that he must receive dialysis three times a week and he and his family were prevented from testing for the possibility of a kidney transplant from a living donor.  Among other severely ill prisoners is Moatassem Raddad, 35, suffering from colon cancer, severe pain and infections

In this context, we present the below essay by Palestinian prisoner and prisoners’ movement leader Kamil Abu Hanish on medical neglect and mistreatment in the occupation prisons, focusing on the case of Jalal al-Faqih:

Racism and medical mistreatment in the occupation prisons
By Kamil Abu Hanish

From: Handala Center for prisoners and former prisoners

The catastrophic health conditions of Palestinian and Arab prisoners in Israeli jails require in-depth studies to reveal and expose the crimes committed by one of the most prominent institutions of the occupation over the prisoners for the past decade. This article seeks to sound the alarm for all involved, focusing on the situation in recent years in regard to Palestinian prisoners’ health. The prisoner Jalal al-Faqih, who has been detained since 2003 and is sentenced to life imprisonment at age 37, suffers from several health problems, including back pain and hemorrhoids, for years. This struggler is frequently in the clinics and hospitals of the prison service without succeeding in extracting his human right – the need for surgery for his hemorrhoids. Every time, the prison administration in Gilboa prison, where he has been held for years, procrastinates and delays while al-Faqih’s situation worsens.

Since the beginning of 2015, they have been preparing him for the surgery in the language of numbers. He visited the prison clinics about 70 times between 2015 and 2016. In the same period, he was referred for further treatment 15 times, and each time, they hint at an approaching date for surgery. This date was treated as a highly important security secret and left as one promise after another, his condition worsening all the while until the life and health of the prisoner was in danger.

After pressure exerted by the prisoners on the prison administration, they informed Jalal that his operation will take place in November 2016. Jalal approached the date with assurance but his hopes were disappointed. The months of November and December 2016 passed, and we entered the new year 2017. Every day, the administration further procrastinated and invokes the argument that it is not in charge of the surgery, but instead the hospitals and their bureaucracy are responsible for. The struggler has no choice but to go for an open hunger strike to seek a date for surgery. He was promised treatment in February without a specific date, but then al-Faqih was ordered to undergo further tests prior to treatment, which means a journey of severe suffering before the procedure. In the first week of February, Jalal was taken for tests in Afula hospital and a week later taken to a final test in the Ramle prison clinic, on a dangerous road journey where dozens of prisoners are crammed in the transport vehicles.

Jalal must go on this hellish journey standing on his feet with his hands and feet shackled because he cannot sit on the cold iron seats for the full eight-hour journey. The transport vehicles stop at a number of prisons before they arrive at Ramle prison and are held overnight in the prison cells, which are not suitable for people suffering from health conditions.

The next morning, they took him from the cell to the hospital to meet with the doctor, who only sat behind his desk, flipping through te papers of Jalal’s medical file without examining him or asking any questions. After two minutes of this inhumane interview, he was told again to come out despite Jalall’s protest. He found himself shackled again, returned to the cell, to stay another night, and the disastrous journey back again to prison the next day, returned to us with a much worsened health condition after this journey of more than sixty hours of suffering to be viewed by the doctor for the period of a few minutes only.

After a few days of suffering and on the morning of 22 February, Jalal was told that he must prepare quickly to travel to Afula hospital for the operation. The operation was carried out the next day on Thursday, 23 February, and the hospital management did not accept to host him for more than one night. He was removed on the morning of Friday, 24 February, after a complicated procedure to remove internal and external fissures and damage. In the normal circumstances of a similar operation, the patient stays at least a week in the hospital. However, in the “democratic, human-rights-respecting Israeli” hospitals, the prisoner stays only one night. The prisoner Jalal was returned once again. His situation was difficult after the operation and we thought that he needed several days of care and attention by his comrades and he will start to recover. However, his condition worsened day by day and he suffered day and night.

On the seventh day after the operation, his condition worsened and his pain was unbearable. After a two-hour delay, the clinic transfered the prisoner for treatment and then shocked him again, as the doctor refused to examine him in the clinic and only provided him with pills. Jalal refused to return to his section without a medical examination. The doctor then threatened to throw him in the cells, and in front of this fascist doctor, a security officer and several jailers appeared and raised the stretcher on which Jalal was laing, lifting it vertically from the front and throwing him to the ground despite his extreme pain and then sending him to the section. He told us from his pain and tears what happened to him, which instantly raised a tense atmosphere as prisoners closed the section and demanded the administration would be responsible for what will happen in the prison if Jalal is not immediately transferred to the hospital.

The prison administration was forced to move Jalal to the hospital after calling an ambulance, and there he was subject to new tests and found to have infections and given new medications, mostly painkillers, and returned him on the same day. The atmosphere was tense on that day, as the prison administration and its officers attempted to contain prisoners’ anger and justify what had happened and to emphasize their own human feelings after being confronted with their lack of care. Especially after his condition is now improving, slowly, day by day.

The case of the prisoner Jalal is one of hundreds of such difficult cases in the occupation prisons. This is an example of what has become known as a deliberate policy of medical or health neglect or negligence, which has led to the martyrdom of dozens of prisoners in past years.

The policies and violations by the prison administration against the Palestinian prisoners are expressed as a form of retaliation. The doctors in the clinics are cold as well as lacking necessary medical qualifications, and we also note their lack of human care, which is one of the most important elements of the medical profession.

The concept of medical neglect is not a passing concern and only harms the prisoners. It is a daily fact of human rights violations and crimes. This is a call upon the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission and all human rights organizations to engage in a serious investigation into what is happening in Israeli jails. They can begin to take statements from thousands of former prisoners and hundreds who are still in prison to uncover all of the terrible facts that expose the crimes of the occupation and its repressive institution, the Prison Service, against the prisoners, for more than five decades. We must start by compiling hundreds or even thousands of files that will expose Israel’s false democracy and its crimes against humanity and hold it accountable for prosecution.

Kamil Abu Hanish is the leader of the prison branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Abu Hanish, from Beit Dajan, is serving nine life sentences in Israeli prisons for his role in the Palestinian resistance, especially during the second Intifada. He is known as a writer on political, social and economic affairs and has written several books, including poetry collections and short stories, all written behind bars in occupation prisons.

18 September, NYC: In Our Own Words – Voices from the Nakba

Monday, 18 September
6:00 pm
Lester Pollack Colloquium, 9th Fl. of Furman Hall, 245 Sullivan St
New York University
New York, NY
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/519821578409627/

Khawla Hammad has been a stateless refugee in Lebanon for 69 years. At the age of sixteen, she was expelled from her village of Kabri, in Palestine. Now she is 84 years old, and and still a refugee in Lebanon, with no citizenship in any country at all. Israel expelled most of the population in 1948, and has prevented them from returning to their homes. Kabri and hundreds of other towns and villages were levelled to the ground, a crime that Palestinians call al-Nakba (the Catastrophe).

But Israel did not stop there. It repeatedly attacked Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, killing three of Khawla’s children among many others. Before the Nakba, Khawla’s father also lost his life as a Palestinian freedom fighter. Khawla has a message that she wants to bring to North America. So does 23-year-old Palestinian refugee, journalist and translator Amena Elashkar, whom many of you know from the 2016 Nakba Tour. She and her parents were born as stateless refugees in Lebanon and have never lived in their own country.

Khawla and Amena have a different message from other Palestinians. They are not living under Israeli occupation. Israel does not allow them to visit their homes, much less live there. As exiles, they have a different perspective from Palestinians in Jerusalem, the West Bank, Gaza and the part of Palestine that became Israel.

Hear Khawla and Amena speak!

This is an event of the North America Nakba Tour
This event is co-sponsored by:
NYU Students for Justice in Palestine
NYC Students for Justice in Palestine
NYU Law Students for Justice in Palestine
NYU Law National Lawyers Guild
Al Awda – NY
Students for Justice in Palestine @ St. Joseph’s College
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Labor for Palestine
American Muslims for Palestine — Upper NY
American Muslims for Palestine — NJ

To learn more about the North America Nakba Tour in your city visit http://nakbatour.com

18 September, NYC: Protest to support Issa Amro and stop HP

Monday, 18 September
4:30 pm
Hewlett-Packard Chelsea
556 W. 22nd St
New York, NY
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/284233215395686/

Palestinian human rights defender Issa Amro, who is facing 18 charges by an Israeli military court for his popular advocacy against illegal settlements in al-Khalil, was also jailed on September 4 by Palestinian authority security after posting critical commentary about the PA to Facebook, before his release on bail on September 10.

Stand with Amro to demand that Israel and the PA end their prosecution of him, that Israel free 6,128 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.

Help build a growing international campaign to 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.

16-17 September, Bredene (Ostende): Palestine at ManiFiesta

ManiFiesta
Bredene
Ostende, Belgium
More information: https://www.manifiesta.be

ManiFiesta is an annual celebration of solidarity held at Bredene Sur Mer in Ostende, Belgium. There are a number of events and activities for Palestine taking place at the 2017 ManiFiesta.

Samidoun will be participating in tabling at the event along with the Boycott Israel tent and Plate-Forme Charleroi-Palestine as well as tabling for Raj’een Dabkeh Troupe and other Palestinian community initiatives.

In addition to constant tabling throughout the festival, events for Palestine at ManiFiesta include:

Saturday, 16 Sept. 11 am – 12:30 pm – Forum on 100 years of colonialism and complicity in Palestine with Richard Falk and Alain Gresh https://www.facebook.com/events/494994997503339/

All day – Making a giant pie for Palestine to sell to support the “Medicine for the People” partner clinics in Gaza and Batir, which partner with clinics in Molenbeek and Schaerbeek https://www.facebook.com/events/1470080676408998/

Saturday, 16 Sept. 3 pm – 4 pm – Main Stage indoor; 5 pm – 6 pm, Intal tent – Ibdaa Traditional Palestinian Dance from Dheisheh refugee camp https://www.facebook.com/events/2049702025252514/

15-17 September: Palestine and Georges Abdallah at Fete de l’Humanite

15-17 September
Fete de l’Humanite
Parc Georges Valbon – La Corneuve
Paris, France

Festival Website: http://fete.humanite.fr/

A number of events will be taking place at the annual Fete de l’Humanite in La Corneuve – Paris, especially highlighting the cases of French-Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender Salah Hamouri and imprisoned Lebanese struggler for Palestine, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah.

Many organizations, including AFPS, CAPJPO-EuroPalestine, AFD, UJFP, BDS France and others, will be hosting tables and tents at the festival, as will Palestinian chef Rania.  Events of particular interest are highlighted in bold below.

Some of the events for Palestine and Georges Abdallah taking place at the festival include:

Friday, 15 September:

6:30 pm, Village du Monde: Solidarity Evening with Political Prisoners in Palestine, Turkey, the United States, Morocco and Djibouti. With speakers: Palestine (Elsa Lefort, wife of Salah Hamouri; Taoufik Tahani, former president of the Association France-Palestine Solidarite; Yasser Qous, former prisoner and Addameer activist); Turkey (Sylvie Jan); United States (Johanna Fernandez); Djibouti (Berenger Tourne); Morocco (Ouadie El Hankouri, Olfa Ouled)

Saturday, 16 September:

11:00 am, Stand of Loiret: Solidarity with the Palestinian people, with Fadwa Khader of the Sunflower Association

11:30 am – 12:30 pm, AFPS Stand: Solidarity event with Salah Hamouri, featuring a discussion with Elsa Lefort, activist and the wife of Salah Hamouri.

1:30 pm – 3:30 pm, BDS stand: UJFP and cinema – 10 clips about racism

2:00 pm, Stand for Jeunes Communistes 94: The role of women in struggles in France and internationally. Speakers include Elsa Lefort and Fadwa Khader.

2:30 pm – 4:30 pm, AFPS Stand: The role of French businesses with the Israeli colonization project

3:00 pm, DEMONSTRATION for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah – meet at the intersection of Tubman and Guevara streets in the Village du Monde and march throughout the Festival: http://liberonsgeorges.samizdat.net/mobilisation/georges-abdallah-a-fete-de-lhumanite/

4:00 pm, Stand of Creteil: Lecture with Fadwa Khader, organized by the Creteil Palestine collective.

4:00 pm – 5:30 pm, BDS Stand: Everything you want to know about the BDS Campaign for Palestine

5:00 pm – 6:30 pm, AFPS Stand: Popular resistance against settlements

7:00 pm – 8:30 pm, AFPS Stand: Film screening, “Behind the fronts,” by director Alexandra Dols.

Sunday 17 September:

11:00 am, Village du Monde – How to achieve peace in Palestine? With Richard Falk, Pierre Barbancey and Bertrand Heilbronn

11:00 am – 1:00 pm, AFPS Stand: The dismantlement of Israeli apartheid, the only road to peace

1:00 pm – 2:30 pm, BDS Stand: Military embargo, cultural and academic boycott of Israel, why these three tools are important for BDS

1:00 pm, RATP Stand: Solidarity talk with the Palestinian people, with Fadwa Khader

2:30 pm – 4:30 pm, AFPS Stand: Freedom of expression – the right to oppose Israeli policies

2:30 pm – 4:00 pm, BDS Stand: Anti-Zionism, Zionism and racism

3:00 pm, Stand of Choisy le Roi: Friendly, informal meeting with Fadwa Khader

4:30 pm – 6:00 pm, AFPS Stand: Film screening of “Behind the fronts,” by Alexandra Dols

Canadian teacher Nadia Shoufani defeats silencing campaign against her advocacy for Palestinian freedom

Canadian teacher Nadia Shoufani has won a significant free-speech victory after a year-long battle and a prolonged campaign by pro-apartheid Zionist organizations attacking her and attempting to have her fired from her job for speaking about Palestinian prisoners at a public rally in 2016.

“A victory for myself, for the Palestine solidarity movement, for freedom of expression! A victory for the Palestinian cause and the struggle of Palestinians!” said Shoufani in a Facebook post on 8 September offering thanks to friends, colleagues and supporters for their consistent support throughout a year of struggle. Shoufani kept her job and defeated the allegations that targeted her as well as ongoing racist campaigns of harassment carried out by far-right groups and individuals. Organizations including B’nai Brith Canada, the Center for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center Canada were actively involvedi in the campaign to silence Shoufani.

“Their goal was to destroy my reputation and livelihood and ultimately make me lose my job, but they were defeated! It’s true they targeted me but their ultimate goal was to send a silencing message to intimidate and scare anyone who speaks in support of Palestinians and to put a chill on people,” Shoufani wrote, but the attack in fact led to “more support and created more awareness of the Palestinian cause.”

“The attack that I was put through was not just an attack against me, it was ultimately against every voice that speaks and calls for the freedom and justice of Palestinians who are living under and suffering daily from a brutal occupation and apartheid, with the ultimate aim to silence them and silence any criticism of ‘Israel’, the occupying power,” Shoufani wrote in her social media post.

Shoufani was attacked for her remarks at the 2 July 2006 Al-Quds Day protest, particularly her comments about Ghassan Kanafani and her support for imprisoned Palestinians and strugglers for Palestine, specifically Bilal Kayed – then on hunger strike – and Georges Ibrahim Abdallah.

Shoufani quoted Ghassan Kanafani, the Palestinian writer, political leader in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and intellectual assassinated by Israel on 8 July 1972: “The Palestinian cause is not a cause for Palestinians only, but a cause for every revolutionary…a cause of the exploited and oppressed masses in our era.”

“On this day…we need to salute and acknowledge, stand in solidarity and demand the release of prisoners, Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons,” said Shoufani in her speech. “We salute and demand the freedom of Bilal Kayed…who was scheduled to be released on June 13th after 14 and one-half years of imprisonment. Instead of being released, he was ordered to six extra months of adminsitratioe detention without charge or trial…Bilal Kayed has launched an open hunger strike demanding his freedom. This illegal Israeli order of administrative detention is seen as an attempt to set a precedent of the future indefinite detention of Palestinian prisoners after the completion of their sentence.”

She linked the attack on Kayed and fellow Palestinian prisoners to the imprisonment of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Lebanese Arab struggler for Palestine, imprisoned in French jails for 33 years, demanding his immediate release.

“I urge you to speak up, to resist this occupation, and support the steadfastness of Palestinians, support their resistance, in any form that is possible. I urge you to support BDS – boycott, divestment, and sanctions against Israel. This is the least we can do here in Canada,” said Shoufani, closing with a rousing chant, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”

Shoufani was defended after being suspended with pay by her Toronto-area Catholic school board by her trade union, the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association.  Union activists, Palestine solidarity organizers, professors and organizers collectively spoke out in support of Shoufani and against the attacks from right-wing organizations attempting to silence her and force her from her teaching position.

The attack on Shoufani has come in the context of ongoing attacks on freedom of speech about Palestine in Canada, including attempts to legislate against BDS and parliamentary resolutions denouncing boycott campaigns.  This comes amid an ongoing, relentlessly pro-Zionist policy pursued by the Liberal government under Justin Trudeau, continuing the notoriously anti-Palestinian policy of Conservative Stephen Harper. Canadian support for Israeli occupation didn’t begin with Harper, but dates back to the Balfour Declaration and Lester Pearson’s recommendation to the United Nations to create the Israeli state. This role has always been distinctly related to the Canadian state’s own settler colonial nature, based on the continuing dispossession and genocide of Indigenous peoples.

Recently, Niki Ashton, a leading candidate for the leadership of the New Democratic Party (NDP) in Canada, was attacked by B’nai Brith and other pro-apartheid organizations for participating in a rally commemorating the Nakba and in support of Palestinian political prisoners.

In particular, right-wing Zionist organizations attacked Ashton for speaking in front of a sign urging freedom for imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat, the General Secretaty of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Following the attacks, rather than backing down, Ashton reiterated her support for Palestinian rights and noted that it was “powerful to join many at a rally in solidarity with those on hunger strike in Palestine.” Ashton is one of the front-runners in the NDP leadership campaign and has won support from many youth and progressive voices.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Nadia Shoufani and all of those involved in the campaign to defend her right to speak and right to teach. Her clear and principled voice in defense of Palestinian rights and freedom – and the struggle of Palestinian prisoners in particular – is one that cannot be silenced. As she noted, “Our fight for justice and a free Palestine will not be over and the path ahead will always have obstacles and difficulties, but as long as we believe in a cause so embedded in us, we will persevere! No such attacks will stop us, nor will they intimidate or silence us. On the contrary this will make us stronger believers in our fight for justice and freedom. We will never be silent until we win and justice prevails!”

Israeli Supreme Court rules stripping of Jerusalem residency of imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarians was illegal

After 10 years of litigation by forcibly displaced Palestinians and human rights organizations, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday, 13 September, that the Israeli interior minister cannot revoke Palestinian Jerusalemite parliamentarians’ Jerusalem ID and residency for “breach of loyalty.” However, despite the ruling, the court gave a six-month delay in its implementation for the Knesset to consider new legislation to legitimize the stripping of the residency of Jerusalemite PLC members – and two of the parliamentarians in question are currently imprisoned by Israel without charge or trial under administrative detention orders.

The case was filed by Palestinian Jerusalemites Mohammed Abu Teir, Ahmed Attoun, Mohammed Totah and Khaled Abu Arafeh. Abu Teir, Attoun and Totah were elected to the Palestinian Legislative Council in January 2006 as part of the Change and Reform Bloc, while Abu Arafeh was a minister in the PA government formed through that election. In June of that year, Israeli interior minister Roni Bar-On moved to revoke their residency permits, claiming that they were in “breach of loyalty” for sitting in the PLC and association with Hamas.

The four were arrested in June 2006 and imprisoned until 2010. After their release, they were given one month to leace Jerusalem; after that period ended, Abu Teir was seized by occupation forces.  Attoun, Totah and Abu Arafeh engaged in a sit-in in the offices of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Jerusalem, which was invaded twice by special units to arrest them on 23 January 2012 and forcibly displace them to Ramallah.

Since that time, the four have been repeatedly arrested and imprisoned by Israeli forces, often held without charge or trial under administrative detention. Currently, Abu Teir and Attoun are among 12 PLC members imprisoned by Israel. Both are held under indefinitely-renewable administrative detention orders without charge or trial.

Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel submitted an amicus brief in the case, “emphasizing that Interior Minister Bar On’s decision gravely violates their rights, and that the law does not give the minister any legal authority to cancel permanent residency for ‘breach of trust’ or due to membership in a foreign parliament.”

While the Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 majority decision that the revocation was not legal, it also suspended the resumption of their Jerusalem residency for six months, creating time for the Knesset to change the law to allow the revocation of residency. If such a new law is not passed, the decision authorizes the four to return to their homes after six months, said lawyer Fadi al-Qawasmi.

Abu Arafeh posted on Facebook that the six-month delay indicares that the court does not intend to allow the parliamentarians to return, saying “We are likely to enter into a new spiral with the prosecution an the court..”

Adalah and ACRI issued a press release, noting their arguments:

Adalah and ACRI argued that Bar On’s decision violated the legislators’ constitutional right to continue to live in their place of residence and homeland without the threat of expulsion. The expulsion of a person from his place of permanent residence violates his constitutional rights to dignity, personal liberty and property.

Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, ACRI and Adalah stressed, never entered Israel and acquired the status of immigrants. Therefore, their residency status was never made conditional to any terms, and there is no justification for its cancellation.

The human rights organizations also stressed that the issue entails a particularly complex status, because East Jerusalem is occupied territory under international law and the East Jerusalem residents are protected civilians. Moreover, Israel itself recognized that East Jerusalem Palestinians are part of the Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and consequently permitted them to vote and be elected in the PLC elections. Only after the petitioners were elected, and because the election results were not welcomed by the Israeli government, did Israel decide to cancel their residency status in severe violation of their rights.