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21 August, NYC: Protest to free Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin and Stop HP

Monday, 21 August
4:30 pm – 6 pm
Best Buy Union Square
52 E. 14th St, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/124173111556874/

Khalida Jarrar, Palestinian national leader, leftist parliamentarian, feminist and advocate for Palestinian political prisoners, was issued a six-month administrative detention order on Wednesday, 12 July 2017. The order was signed by the Israeli occupation military commander over the West Bank.

Jarrar was seized by Israeli occupation forces who invaded her home in a pre-dawn raid on Sunday, 2 July, along with multiple other Palestinians subjected to early-morning raids including Khitam Saafin, president of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees. Jarrar is a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, head of its Prisoners Committee and Vice-Chair of the Board of Directors of Addameer.

The order came three days after Saafin was also ordered to three months in administrative detention without charge or trial. Administrative detention orders are issued for one to six months at a time, but they are indefinitely renewable. Palestinians have been jailed for years under administrative detention.

Stand with Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin and demand that Israel release them, 448 other administrative detainees and all 6,200 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.

20 August, Manchester: Remembering Ghassan Kanafani – Palestinian revolutionary socialist

Sunday, 20 August
2:00 pm
Cross Street Unitarian Chapel
M2 1NL Manchester, UK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1606654362678293/

Filmshow, discussion and music 🇵🇸

This year marks 45 years since the assassination of Ghassan Kanafani and his niece Lamees by Israeli Mossad agents who planted a bomb in their car in Beirut. Kanafani was a pioneering novelist and literary figure whose influential works are seen as conscious classics in Palestine and around the world. He was also a Marxist, PFLP activist and editor of leftist newspapers demanding Palestinian liberation and an end to imperialist intervention in the Middle East. Kanafani’s contribution was vital for the rebirth of the Palestinian movement and remains relevant as Israel intensifies its occupation crimes today.

Join us on 20 August for an afternoon of film and discussion showing the classic movie Return to Haifa, based on Kanafani’s book.

Donation on the door
Wheelchair accessible

🇵🇸

Part of a weekend of action: on 19 August we will take to the streets in protest at Britain’s ongoing support for Israel. Meet at 12 in Piccadilly Gardens with banners, flags and loud voices!

🇵🇸

Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine!
Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! (FRFI) Manchester
Victory to the Intifada
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
RCG – Revolutionary Communist Group

 

Rasmea Odeh’s silenced statement to Detroit federal court + hearing report from Rasmea Defense Committee

Reposted from the Rasmea Defense Committee:

On Thursday, August 17th, Judge Gershwin Drain again violated the rights of Palestinian-American icon Rasmea Odeh, this time by not allowing her to read her entire statement to the court.

Close to 150 supporters joined Rasmea in Detroit for what was supposed to be a routine sentencing hearing. The defense, prosecution, and judge had already agreed to a plea agreement finalized in April, and Rasmea was looking forward to finally being able to tell her entire story, but Drain interrupted her three separate times, the last with a threat to jail her for contempt of court.

Prior to Rasmea’s statement, her lead attorney, Michael Deutsch, chastised the prosecution for bringing the indictment in the first place.

Although the Rasmea Defense Committee has insisted for almost four years that the immigration case brought against her in October of 2013 was nothing but a pretext to attack the Palestine support movement in the U.S., Drain tried to protect Israel and the U.S. government from Rasmea’s brutal description of their crimes against her, her family, and the Palestinian people as a whole.

Forced to stop reading her statement, Rasmea ad-libbed: “I’m not a terrorist and my people are not terrorists. [The Israeli military] tortured me. They raped me. They destroyed my house…I will raise my voice to say this: we have the right to struggle for our country.”  And at a post-hearing press conference, she added, “Really, I feel angry because the judge didn’t allow me to [tell] my story…but we will continue to struggle for our cause. We will liberate our Palestine, all [of] Palestine.”

Drain ended the proceedings by restating the agreed-upon sentence, which includes no further jail time, the revocation of Rasmea’s U.S. citizenship, and deportation. He also fined her $1,000. Rasmea and her attorneys met after the hearing with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, but did not yet agree upon a departure date.

A number of solidarity messages followed Rasmea’s address to the media, and the supporters were loud and passionate in their defense of her and of Palestine.

Kristian Bailey of Black4Palestine said, “We all know it was a political case. Palestine was on trial. But we…put Israel on trial. Rasmea put Israel on trial.”

And Joe Iosbaker, a leader of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression (CSFR), concluded by asking, “Is Rasmea the bravest person you’ve ever seen in your life?…If you ever doubt that you can be brave, we have our icon, we have Rasmea Odeh [as an example]!”

Rasmea’s statement to the court

On this court’s platform, I’m standing today to raise my voice on behalf of myself as a Palestinian woman and on behalf of all Palestinian people, whether under occupation, in refugee camps, or scattered in exile across the world.

Honorable Judge Drain: First, I would like to clarify that my following message is not directed at you personally.

I am a Palestinian woman who was born into a family that had simple dreams and desires to live in peace and tranquility, far away from bombs, explosions, murder, and displacement.

But those dreams turned into a nightmare at the hands of the Zionist Haganah gangs whose crimes are hard to imagine. The Zionists committed massacres, killing children and the elderly without any consideration of human values. They displaced hundreds of thousands of my people, and killed thousands more, in 1947 and 1948, upon the establishment of the state of Israel. They turned us into strangers in our own country, and pushed us into the inhumane conditions of refugee camps inside Palestine and other Arab countries.

The Israeli goals were not satisfied in 1948, so they pursued the ambitions of Zionism and launched another war in 1967, illegally occupying the rest of Palestine and parts of surrounding Arab countries.

International law prohibits the following practices, and considers them punishable offences:

The Israeli occupation of Palestine is a crime; its use of biological and chemical weapons is a terrorist crime; demolishing schools, homes, hospitals, clinics, and places of worship is a crime; imprisoning hundreds of political organizers and resisters (including dozens of children) without charge is a crime; putting up the Apartheid Wall is a crime; killing people is a crime; and collective punishment is a crime!

Many countries in this world have struggled to win their independence.  International law and all the United Nations conventions state that people have the right to fight for their independence, and to expel the colonizer and the occupier.

People in the U.S. struggled against British colonialism for their independence, and that is the reason the 4th of July is celebrated.  Why are the Palestinians prohibited from struggling for our independence?

When Palestinians have fought for our rights over the years, all U.S. administrations have responded by supporting Israeli crimes and brutal aggression, falsely describing Israel’s acts as “self-defense.” At the same time, the U.S. government calls us terrorists by placing all of our legitimate resistance organizations on its terrorist list!

I wonder how the U.S. or any other country would respond if they were invaded by a foreign force?  If people in the U.S. were to defend themselves, would they be considered terrorists, and would their resistance organizations be placed on a terrorist list?

I am sure that they would have the full right to protect their country, just as my people should have the right to protect our country.

The Arms Export Control Act of 1976 prohibits the U.S. from exporting arms in situations where such arms would “…aid in the development of weapons of mass destruction… [or] increase the possibility of outbreak or escalation of conflict…,” and also prohibits use of such arms against civilians and innocents.

Thus, the U.S. government or any U.S. company violates the law if it exports weapons to a state or group that uses them in this way.  The reality is that the U.S., as Israel’s patron, violates its own laws by supporting Zionist aggression. That means the U.S. is also guilty of crimes against the Palestinians.

This country’s military, political, economic, and diplomatic support allows Israel to continue its colonization and military occupation of Palestine, and to commit crimes prohibited by international law and U.S. law.  That is why we organize for Palestinian rights in the U.S., because it is this government that must also be held responsible for Israel’s state terrorism against my people.

We, the Palestinians, have been struggling against oppression for one hundred years, ever since the British Balfour Declaration promised the world that it would support the colonization of our country. And for almost 70 years, the manufactured state of Israel has been doing the bidding of the powerful British and U.S. empires. This Israel has no right to exist as a racist state of white settler colonialists, just like South Africa had no right to exist as the racist, Apartheid state it was.

This Israel represents nothing but violence and ethnic cleansing against my people. Many years of negotiations for a political settlement have been a huge failure, because Israel continuously demands recognition as a Jewish state, which goes against all notions of equality and democracy; and because it wants to liquidate all the rights of the Palestinians, including our rights to return, self-determination, equality, and political independence.

Each Israeli government moves more and more to the extreme right, and Netanyahu’s is the worst of them, launching three horrible wars on Gaza. He destroyed homes, schools, health clinics, and our infrastructure as a whole, killing thousands, and finally imposing a siege on the entire Gaza Strip.

Recently, Israel installed metal detectors and security cameras at the entrance to the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, prompting weeks of massive protests. Three Palestinians were killed, and a thousand injured, before Israel was forced by our mass movement to remove the barriers.

At the same time, Israeli laws that discriminate against Palestinians in Jerusalem, as well as settler violence against Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank, are official policies meant to force more and more Palestinians out of our country, and to consolidate Israeli control over Greater Jerusalem. It is quite clear that many, if not most, Israelis do not want Palestinians around at all.

I personally experienced a harsh, unstable, and terror-filled life in Palestine, like all my people under occupation. I was pushed off my land two separate times, my family home was destroyed twice, and my young sister was killed by the trauma of war. I was a political prisoner who was brutally tortured and raped by Israeli soldiers and prison authorities, and was almost killed more than once.

I continue to be terrified of the future for myself and my people. I can still almost feel the accelerated pounding of the people’s hearts while they are running to find shelter, the horrific screaming of the children, the moans of the people under the rubble of their homes, and the sounds of them dying from bombs, missiles, and bullets.

My people have the right to struggle to rid ourselves of the Israeli occupation of our country.   The U.S. government must stop disavowing our rights, and stop working with the Israelis to prosecute activists and organizers here. Most of the people and governments in the rest of the world are with us. Millions of people are supporting the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.

Black-Palestinian unity and solidarity is at its absolute height in the U.S., because both peoples recognize that the racist nature of the U.S. government and the racist nature of Israel are the same. When I saw those white racists marching in Virginia, all I could think of was the white settlers in Israel burning Palestinian children to death or marching to attack my people in Jerusalem.

Many of the social justice forces—from the Women’s March, the Movement for Black Lives, and anti-occupation and anti-Zionist American Jews, to immigrant rights, anti-torture, and civil liberties organizations—that supported my defense campaign did it not only because they support me as a survivor of torture and injustice, but also because they support the much more important cause of the liberation of all of Palestine—a democratic, secular Palestine for all.

Historic #HonorRasmea event in Chicago

Beautiful photos by Sarah-Ji

Video recap by teleSUR / Tom Callahan

A few days before the hearing, a standing room only crowd of over 1,200 supporters attended an event to #HonorRasmea on Saturday, August 12th.

The powerful event, hosted by the defense committee, USPCN, CSFR, and the Chicago Coalition to Protect People’s Rights, featured a keynote address by Dr. Angela Davis, the scholar and Black Liberation Movement legend who cut short her vacation to stand in support of Rasmea.

In her speech, Davis commended Rasmea for linking justice in her own case to justice for political prisoners all across the world, and added, “We follow the example of Rasmea Odeh when we stand up and fight back!”

The hosts gave awards to Rasmea’s incredible legal defense team, as well as to the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, which mobilized members for every hearing and the trial in Detroit. Frank Chapman accepted on behalf of the Alliance, and explained the importance of unity between the Black and Palestine liberation movements.

A statement from CSFR leader Meredith Aby, and electrifying performances from Rebel Diaz, KoStar, and Shadia Mansour, rounded out the evening, which was described by long-time solidarity activist Reverend Don Wagner as a “brilliant, inspirational, and utterly fantastic sendoff for dear Rasmea…it was one of the finest evenings the Palestine support community has witnessed in my 40 years of involvement.”

Media reports on the hearing and the #HonorRasmea event

Rasmea Odeh unbowed as judge passes sentence – Electronic Intifada

‘Palestine was on trial’: Rasmea Odeh defiant in final court appearance – Middle East Eye

Rasmea Odeh at Detroit sentencing: ‘We will continue to struggle for our cause! We will liberate our Palestine – Fight Back! News

Farewell rally for Rasmea Odeh, Palestinian icon – Fight Back! News

Canadian NDP leadership candidate Niki Ashton stands out on Palestine, including prisoners’ struggle

Many Canadian progressive and social justice organizers have expressed support for the leadership campaign of Niki Ashton in the New Democratic Party, particularly in relation to her expressed support for Palestinian rights. Ashton, a Member of Parliament from Manitoba, came under attack from Zionist organizations, including B’nai Brith Canada, for her participation in a rally in commemoration of the Nakba and in support of Palestinian political prisoners on hunger strike in May 2017.

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.”

While the NDP is known as the more progressive major party in Canadian politics, it has, in particular in recent years, participated in the broad Canadian ruling-class political support for Israeli occupation and apartheid. While NDP parliamentarians have taken a stand against attempts to ban campaigning for BDS, party officials have also joined in denunciations of Israeli Apartheid Week events, the global week of campus organizing that began over a decade ago in Toronto, and BDS organizing.

In 2005, candidates were purged from the parliamentary nominations list for their support for Palestinian rights. Ashton denounced this action, noting in an interview that “I am the only candidate in the leadership race that has identified what our party did to those that ran for us but then were treated so poorly because of their stance on Palestine. It’s totally unacceptable. We obviously, of course, shouldn’t have people who don’t share our values running for our party– However, justice for Palestine and all oppressed people IS one of our values.”

Ashton, however, has found wide support among progressive youth, not only for her support for Palestine but for her broadly leftist positions within the party on labor issues, the environment, the Black Lives Matter movement and Indigenous struggles. Ashton denounced actions to remove the term “socialism” from the NDP’s constitution.  Groups like Students Against Israeli Apartheid at York University and the Palestine Aid Society have expressed support officially for Ashton’s candidacy.

“We’ve called for things like free education. We’ve called for things like public ownership and nationalization. That means not only opposing privatization, but proposing public ownership. In terms of the environmental front, we’ve talked about the need to stand up to big oil and oppose pipelines. We’ve talked about indigenous justice and moving towards a carbon free economy,” said Ashton.

Ashton has significant support in the leadership elections, with polling showing her support hovering at around 20 percent, around 2 percentage points below the top-polling candidate, Charlie Angus.  She has strongly denounced racist profiling and policing, demanding an end to the practice of “carding,” the repeal of Bill C-51, and noting that “racial targeting in our police system is the result of centuries of colonization and systemic racism.”

17 August marks the last day for Canadians to join the NDP in order to participate in the upcoming leadership election, and many organizers who have left the party in the past have rejoined in order to support Ashton’s bid.

In 2016, advocates for Palestinian rights won a major victory in Canada’s Green Party, whose convention endorsed the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign in August of that year.  Unfortunately, party leaders joined Zionist organizations in crusading against the measure; however, while the policy itself was changed in December, the Green Party’s final resolution did uphold Palestinian rights.

This comes amid an ongoing, relentlessly pro-Zionist policy pursued by the Liberal government under Justin Trudeau, continuing the policy of Conservative Stephen Harper.  Of course, Canadian support for Israeli occupation didn’t begin with Harper, of course.  It 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 dispossession and genocide of Indigenous peoples that continues to the present day.

 

New York City protesters support Rasmea Odeh and confront racist JDL

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

New York City protesters raised signs, spoke and chanted in support of iconic Palestinian community leader and former political prisoner Rasmea Odeh in Union Square on Monday, 14 August. The protest comes three days before Odeh will face a federal court in Detroit for sentencing on charges of unlawfully procuring naturalization; she will be deported from the United States.

Photo: Nick Maniace

People from a range of social justice organizations in New York participated in the rally in support of Odeh who is known not only for her experience as a torture survivor and a political prisoner held for 10 years in Israeli jails, but also for her role in organizing hundreds of Arab women in Chicago as leader of the Arab Women’s Committee and associate director of the Arab American Action Network.

Photo: Joe Catron

Speakers from organizations including the New York Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines, the International Action Center, the Pakistan USA Freedom Forum and a variety of others saluted her role as an inspiration and a mentor to generations of youth in Chicago and across the United States.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

The protest was also met with racist chants and taunts from the violent, ultra-right Zionist Jewish Defense League, who came to Union Square to shout epithets against Palestine and Rasmea Odeh. They were met by a strong response from the crowd present defending Palestinian rights.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Following the rally in support of Rasmea, the political alignments of the JDL were further illustrated as they headed north to Trump Tower to counter-protest, taunt and attack an anti-racist demonstration in solidarity with Charlottesville. On the other hand, many participants in the Palestine demonstration also headed uptown to join the anti-racist, anti-fascist protest and denounce white supremacy.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Participants included activists with Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, New York City Students for Justice in Palestine, NY4Palestine, BAYAN USA, NY4Palestine and a number of groups. Nick Maniace spoke on behalf of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.

Photo: Joe Catron

“We are here to salute Rasmea Odeh for her sacrifice and service in the cause of liberation for the Palestinian homeland. She is an icon for everyone who stands for social-justice and independence. Rasmea Odeh endured brutal torture by the zionist occupation forces for her courageous devotion to the fight for Palestinian rights and liberation,” said Maniace. “Despite the brutality she endured from the state of Israel, she continued to work actively for the rights of the Palestinian people from the United States. The fact that the zionist trash of the “Jewish defense league” (a racist terrorist organization deemed terrorist even by the occupation government they advocate for) took their time to come out and “counter-protest” us today is a positive indication of the ground being gained by the anti-Zionist movement. These rabid-zionists condemnation of Rasmea Odeh was also yet another indication of Rasmea Odeh’s heroism and justness.”

Photo: Joe Catron

Sara Flounders spoke for the International Action Center, urging ongoing support for Rasmea Odeh and persecuted Palestinians under attack.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Laura Whitehorn, former US-held political prisoner, spoke on behalf of the Northeast Political Prisoner Coalition and the Release Aging Prisoners Project (RAPP). She brought greetings from all political prisoners in the United States, emphasizing that they are unanimous in their support for Rasmea and for Palestine.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Berna Ellorin spoke on behalf of BAYAN USA, while Lydia of Samidoun and Jackie Mariano of the New York Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines emceed the rally. Joyce Chediac Wilcox delivered a speech for the Party for Socialism and Liberation, while Suzanne Ross represented the International Concerned Friends and Family of Mumia Abu-Jamal.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

The program continued as Michael Letwin gave a talk on behalf of Labor for Palestine, emphasizing the growing support in the labor movement for the Palestinian cause and Palestinian prisoners. Yoko of NYCHRP, Thomas Cox of Brooklyn for Peace and Jorge of the Brooklyn Revolutionary Collective spoke at the protest.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

“It makes us both sad and angry to think of our loss in deporting Rasmea Odeh: her skills as a community organizer, a leader for positive change in the community, a role model for girls and women, a person of great personal integrity and compassion,” said Cox.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Shahid Comrade of the Pakistan USA Freedom Forum, who also livestreamed the protest as it was taking place, spoke as well at the event.

The New York City protest followed a reception with over 1,200 attendees in Chicago on 12 August organized by the Rasmea Defense Committee.  Dr. Angela Davis, former political prisoner, spoke at the event alongside Rasmea Odeh and multiple performances in the packed community salute. Protesters will gather in Detroit on 17 August to support Rasmea Odeh in court at her sentencing hearing.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Endorsers of the protest included:

1916 Societies
Anakbayan New Jersey
Al-Awda NY: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition
American Muslims for Palestine – NJ Chapter
Black4Palestine
Brooklyn For Peace
Brooklyn Revolutionary Collective
Coalition To End Broken Windows
Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine
Committee to Stop FBI Repression
Freedom Socialist Party – U.S.
International Action Center
International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal
International League of Peoples’ Struggle – ILPS US
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return
Labor for Palestine
Majlis Ashura -Islamic Leadership Council- of New York
Northeast Political Prisoner Coalition
NY4Palestine
NYC Jericho Movement
NYC Students for Justice in Palestine
NYC Shut It Down: The Grand Central Crew #blacklivesmatter
New York Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (NYCHRP)
Pakistan USA Freedom Forum
Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM)- حركة الشباب الفلسطيني
Party for Socialism and Liberation – PSL
Peoples Power Assemblies
Radical Women – U.S.
Release Aging People in Prison – RAPP
Saoirse Palestine
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Students for Justice in Palestine at Hunter College
United National Antiwar Coalition
Workers World Party

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Mother of Palestinian prisoner seized again as home demolished by occupation forces

Israeli occupation forces are now seeking to prosecute Ibtisam al-Abed, the mother of Omar al-Abed, 19, on the same day that they demolished her family home. Omar, from the village of Kobar outside Ramallah, carried out a Palestinian resistance attack in the illegal settlement of Halamesh which killed three settlers.

Since that time, his village and his family have come under repeated revenge attacks by Israeli occupation forces, including the arrest of his father, mother, brother and uncle. While his mother and uncle were earlier released on bail of 10,000 NIS ($3,000 USD) each, his mother, father and brother were once again seized today.  Omar al-Abed is also currently imprisoned by the Israeli occupation.

At the same time, on 16 August, Israeli occupation forces demolished Ibtisam and Omar’s home as over 15 military units invaded the village with two destructive bulldozers in the early hours of the morning. As the occupation forces invaded and attacked the village, they wounded photographer Mohammed Radi, shooting him in the head with rubber-coated metal bullets.

Issa Qaraqe, chair of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Commission, denounced the arrest of Ibtisam al-Abed and her family, noting that it is part of a policy of collective punishment against the Palestinian people.

Palestinian intellectual Ahmed Qatamesh released after three months imprisoned without charge

Palestinian writer and intellectual Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh was released from Israeli occupation prisons on Sunday, 13 August after three months held without charge or trial under administrative detention.

He had been held without charge or trial since 13 May 2017, when he was seized from his family home in El-Bireh by Israeli occupation forces. Qatamesh, 63, was last released from administrative detention nearly 4 years ago; at the time, he had been imprisoned without charge or trial for two and one-half years. Between 1992 and 1998, he was the longest-held Palestinian prisoner in administrative detention; his detention was renewed every six months for nearly six years. Since his release, he has been banned from leaving Palestine and traveling by Israeli occupation military orders.

He has been arrested repeatedly by Israeli occupation forces over the years, including in 1969 and again in 1972, when he was jailed for 4 years. He lived “underground” evading capture by occupation forces for 17 years.

His memoir, I Shall Not Wear Your Tarboush, recalls his time in prison as well as the 100 days of torture he underwent during interrogation in 1992. Since his release in 1998, he has become a prominent Palestinian intellectual, writer and teacher; he is the founder of the Munif Barghouthi Research Center.

His case was taken up by Amnesty International, among others, who demanded his release as a prisoner of conscience.

There remain approximately 500 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable and can be issued for up to six months at a time. Like Qatamesh was in the past on multiple occasions, Palestinians can be imprisoned indefinitely for years on end under these orders.

Sheikh Raed Salah seized again by Israeli forces, accused of “incitement”

Prominent Palestinian religious and political leader Sheikh Raed Salah was seized by Israeli occupation forces on Tuesday, 15 August after they invaded his home in Umm al-Fahm, occupied Palestine ’48. Salah is the leader of the Islamic Movement in Palestine ’48.

Police and special units stormed his home, confiscating two computers and seizing Salah. Lawyer Khaled Zabarqa stated that Sheikh Salah refuses to submit to interrogation without legal advice and noted that Israeli police are seeking to extend his detention further, saying that he is being accused of membership in a prohibited organization, activities on behalf of a prohibited organization and incitement to violence. The incitement allegations are based on Salah’s public speeches following the recent Israeli occupation attempts to impose electronic security gates on Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Zabarqa said that the seizure of Salah is part of the continued incitement against the Palestinian masses and Palestinian leaders, and that the process of incitement is led by the leaders of the Israeli state.

Salah has been arrested on multiple occasions and was released in January 2017 after being imprisoned for nine months on charges relating to a sermon he delivered in Jerusalem in 2007; he spent most of his imprisonment held in solitary confinement and was threatened with extended sentencing before release. 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.

The seizure of Salah came as Israeli occupation police announced on Wednesday, 16 August that they had arrested 72 Palestinian Jerusalemites for participating in a sit-in against Israeli occupation attacks on Al-Aqsa. An Israeli police spokesperson declared that 43 people were indicted and ordered detained until the end of legal proeedings on charges of “involvement in the disturbances” in defense of Al-Aqsa.

The Islamic Movement, Salah’s political movement, was banned in Palestine ’48 and many associated institutions closed and raided. Palestinian organizations across the political spectrum denounced the ban on the Islamic Movement as an attack on all Palestinians.

Rasmea Odeh to make statement at August 17th sentencing hearing

Photo: Fight Back News

A statement by the Rasmea Defense Committee:

WHEN: Thursday, August 17th, 2017, at 1:30 PM Eastern Time (rally at 1:30 PM, hearing starts at 3:00 PM)

WHERE: U.S. District Court, 231 W. Lafayette Blvd., downtown Detroit, Michigan

Today, August 17th, Palestinian American icon Rasmea Odeh will appear for the final time in a Detroit courtroom, for what would normally be a routine sentencing hearing. The sentence has already been agreed upon by both the defense and the prosecution, as well as by Judge Gershwin Drain, but since Rasmea will be making a public statement to the court, the hearing will nonetheless attract hundreds of her supporters from all across the Midwest, according to the Rasmea Defense Committee.

In March, rather than risk 18 months or more of imprisonment, and the possibility of indefinite detention by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Rasmea pled guilty to Unlawful Procurement of Naturalization, which came with it the loss of her U.S. citizenship and her forced departure from the country. She will exit the U.S. without serving any more time in prison or ICE detention, a victory for her defense committee and legal team, considering the government’s sought after sentence of 5-7 years.

“No matter where Rasmea lands,” said Nesreen Hasan of the defense committee, “we know she will continue working and organizing to uphold the rights of her people.

“This hearing is extremely important because we are all looking forward to hear what she has to say, and because it will be the final court appearance in a long battle against the U.S. government. The case against her was never about immigration; it was always about attacking the Palestine liberation movement. Rasmea and the defense fought the good fight.”

The exact date of Rasmea’s departure may be made known sometime soon after the sentencing hearing.

Many traveling to Detroit were also in attendance this past Saturday, when a standing room only crowd of 1,200 people, including Dr. Angela Davis, honored Rasmea in Chicago.

Rasmea Defense Committee is led by U.S. Palestinian Community Network and Committee to Stop FBI Repression.

www.justice4rasmea.org  uspcn.org   stopfbi.net   #HonorRasmea

Palestinian prisoners launch protest steps over isolation

Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails said that they will begin protest steps after occupation prison authorities isolated several leading prisoners, breaking agreements reached with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad leadership in occupation prisons to end their solitary confinement.

On Tuesday, 15 August, Thabet al-Mardawi was returned to isolation in Hadarim prison and Anas Jaradat was attacked in Nafha prison and threatened with a return to solitary confinement. Previously, occupation forces had agreed to remove Mardawi, Jaradat, Hamza Abu al-Sawawin and Munir Abu Rabie from isolation in Hadarim prison.

Muhja al-Quds Foundation released the statement of Islamic Jihad prisoners’ leadership, noting that they are determined not to bow to the will of the prison administration.

This came alongside the Amaz repressive unit of the Prison Service storming section 2 in Ramon prison on 15 August, transferring the prisoners there arbitrarily to section 1 in Ramon.  Amina Tawil of the Palestinian Prisoners Center for Studies said that the administration of Ramon prison deliberately creates instabiity through frequent transfers.