Home Blog Page 36

25 August, NYC/Brooklyn: “Jenin Jenin” Film Screening and Discussion

Friday, 8/25 at 7:30pm
176 St. Nicholas Ave, Bushwick
$5-25 suggested donation
RSVP: https://withfriends.co/event/16572954/jenin_jenin_film_screening_and_fundraiser_for_samidoun

Join Samidoun NY/NJ for a screening of Jenin Jenin at Mayday Space on Friday August 25th at 7:30pm!

Jenin, Jenin is a film directed by Mohammed Bakri in order to portray the Palestinian truth about the Battle of Jenin, an attack by the Zionist army that took place in April 2002.

Screening will be followed by a post-screening discussion.

 

8 hunger strikers fight administrative detention; Sultan Khallouf ordered to four months imprisonment without charge or trial

There are currently 8 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike against administrative detention, and 2 more on hunger strike to address abusive conditions of detention. These hunger strikes are coming amid ongoing tensions and struggles within the prisons, especially after multiple raids and forcible transfers by Israeli occupation forces.

On Friday, 18 August, the Higher Emergency Committee of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Movement announced that 1,000 prisoners who had gone on hunger strike in protest against these actions had suspended their strike after winning concessions from the occupation prison authority, but the prisoners’ movement was continuing its actions to demand justice and liberation. The Palestinian prisoners on strike against administrative detention — imprisonment without charge or trial — have continued their actions.

Currently, Kayed Fasfous and Sultan Khallouf have been on hunger strike since 3 August 2023, Osama Daqrouq since 6 August, and Abdel-Rahman Baraqa, Mohammed Zakarneh, Anas Kamil and Zuhdi Abido have been on strike since 10 August. Reports indicate that Seif al-Din Diab, from the village of Beit Awwa, launched an open ended hunger strike today, 20 August, joining his fellow strikers. On the other hand, Hadi Nazzal and Mohammed Ikhmeis suspended their hunger strikes today, 20 August, after agreements to end their administrative detention.

The occupation prison administration today ordered Sultan Khallouf, 42, from the town of Burqin near Jenin, on his 18th day of hunger strike, to four months in administrative detention. Khallouf launched his hunger strike immediately upon his arrest on 3 August; he previously won his freedom from administrative detention in 2019 in a 67-day hunger strike. He is being held in Megiddo prison in isolation, alongside his fellow hunger strikers who are also isolated. The use of isolation against the hunger strikers is a tactic used by the occupation to attempt to coerce them to end their strikes.

Like Khallouf, Fasfous is also a former long-term hunger striker who previously won his freedom from administrative detention. Fasfous, 34, has been detained since 2 May 2023. Fasfous, whose four brothers are also imprisoned under administrative detention, has spent 7 years in the occupation prisons in total, 4 of them in administrative detention, after he was first detained in 2007. He is held in the Naqab desert prison. In late May and the beginning of June, he went on hunger strike for 9 days, which he ended with a promise to set a limit for his detention. In 2021, Kayed Fasfous conducted a 131-day hunger strike; images of his emaciated body were widely circulated, in sharp contrast to his commitment to fitness and bodybuilding while free. Fasfous is married and a father of a daughter, Joanne. He has been denied family visits since his arrest in May.

There are also two more Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike against arbitrary and abusive prison conditions; they have been on strike for one week: Islam Bani Shamsa, against his transfer to Ramon prison, and Hatem al-Qawasmeh, to demand to see his fellow imprisoned brother, Hazem.

On Saturday, 19 August, a group of Palestinian prisoners continued to protest the attacks on Palestinian leaders, including imprisoned PFLP leader Wael Jaghoub, who has been held in isolation since 31 July, when he and several fellow leaders were seized from their room and taken to interrogation by occupation forces.

What Is Administrative Detention?

Administrative detention was first used in Palestine by the British colonial mandate and then adopted by the Zionist regime; it is now used routinely to target Palestinians, especially community leaders, activists, and influential people in their towns, camps and villages.

There are currently approximately 1200 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, out of nearly 5,000 Palestinian political prisoners, the highest number in 20 years.

Administrative detention orders are issued by the military and approved by military courts on the basis of “secret evidence”, denied to both Palestinian detainees and their attorneys. Issued for up to six months at a time, they are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians — including minor children — can spend years jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. Hundreds of Palestinians have gone on hunger strike to win their liberation from this form of arbitrary detention, which is not only illegal under international law but a form of psychological torture and collective punishment targeting Palestinian families and communities, as detainees are unable to predict or plan for their release.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support these Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. With over 1100 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

Victory for Palestine in Dutch court: From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free

Thomas Hofland of Samidoun NL delivering the speech at the 2021 Nakba rally for which he was targeted by Zionists.

On Tuesday 15 August, a Dutch court confirmed that the slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” falls under freedom of expression and is not punishable by law. The court’s verdict represents a victory for the Palestinian movement in general, and in the Netherlands specifically. Expressions for Palestinian liberation cannot simply be labeled as anti-Semitism and thereby criminalized or subjected to persecution.

The charge was filed in June 2021 by a Zionist activist against Samidoun Netherlands member Thomas Hofland. The Zionist claimed that Thomas’ statement — “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!” — during a speech he gave at the annual Nakba rally one month earlier, was allegedly anti-Semitic. This false accusation is regularly used by Zionist organizations, media and politicians against Palestine activists internationally, in order to equate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism and silence discussion and advocacy for the Palestinian cause.

Both the prosecutor and the attorney general had declared the charges unfounded within a year and declined to prosecute Hofland. “Fact not punishable,” they concluded. However, the case did not end with this denial – instead, it was dragged out two and a half years, because the complainant appealed every time. This latest court ruling, putting an end to the ongoing series of unfounded complaints and appeals, confirms that it is just and legal to call for the liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea.

Watch the full speech of 22 May 2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ft8xKRp6VgQ

Willem Jebbink, Hofland’s lawyer, said the following about the ruling:

“The court has been very brief. But the statement is crystal clear: the phrase ‘from the river to the sea, Palestine shall be free’ is not anti-Semitic. Also not hateful, inciting or threatening. In doing so, the court recognized freedom of expression. That is precisely what is important in the Palestine-Israel debate. Perhaps more than ever. People who speak out against Israel’s continued human rights violations are often labeled anti-Semitic on frivolous grounds. A transparent trick of reasoning that only serves to divert attention from the content of the debate, from what is happening in the occupied territories.

It is elementary that we in our society can sharply criticize Israel’s policies without the risk of criminalization. That the Palestinians should be able to live in their homeland as free and equal citizens. In the geographic and historical unity between – indeed – the sea and the Jordan River, free from oppression by Israel or any Arab regime or whoever.”

As Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, we are pleased that the charges against our member have been declared unfounded. It is a victory for all Palestinians and Palestine activists, especially those who are struggling in the Netherlands. And it is the result of decades of campaigning for and normalizing the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, to liberate their homeland and return to Palestine.

Demonstration in the Netherlands on 11 February 2023 in solidarity with Jenin: “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”

At the same time, we must continue to defend activists for Palestine internationally. Palestine Action activists are imprisoned in the United Kingdom. A case is still pending in France to ban Collectif Palestine Vaincra, a member organization of Samidoun. In Germany, Zionist politicians and media are calling for a ban on Samidoun, and Palestinian activists are facing persecution in workplaces, immigration courts and communities. In Spain, activists are being prosecuted for protesting the Israeli ambassador, even after they were the ones threatened with a gun by an Israeli security agent. And even in the Netherlands, two activists have been arrested for their financial support to Palestinians in refugee camps. The battle against repression is a battle against the Zionist movement and the alliance between Zionism and imperialism, on the same continuum of struggle with the fight to free Palestinian political prisoners. By standing unified to confront repression, it is still possible to defend our rights while advancing the movement for Palestinian liberation.

Freedom for all Palestinian prisoners!

From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!

“We are still on the front lines:” Palestinian prisoners launch collective response after occupation forces attack detainees

Palestinian prisoners are engaged in a sharp confrontation with the Israeli occupation regime, after repressive forces invaded the Naqab desert prison on Thursday, 17 August and attacked the prisoners. Approximately 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in all prisons announced that they would start a hunger strike at 7 pm Palestine time to confront the aggression of the jailers. Prisoners also called upon the Palestinian people to mobilize and support the prisoners’ movement in its battle against repression. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network calls on all supporters of Palestine and Palestinians in exile and diaspora to organize and speak out in support of the prisoners’ struggle.

In the morning hours of 17 August, repressive units brutally stormed sections 3 and 4 of the Naqab prison, assaulting 75 prisoners, ransacking their rooms and transferring them to Nafha prison. This comes amid an extreme heat wave inside the prisons, as the prisoners are forced to live in intolerable temperatures. In addition, Mohjat al-Quds reported that they have been cut off from the Hamas and Islamic Jihad prisoners in sections 5 and 27 of the Naqab prison since Wednesday, after the prison administration sealed the sections on the prisoners.

These attacks come only days after the notorious, extreme-right fascist “Minister of National Security” of the Zionist regime, Itamar Ben Gvir, visited the Naqab desert prison to “see the progress” of implementing even further procedures to harass the prisoners and strip them of their rights. This is also only the latest in a series of atacks inside the prisons, with the latest being a raid just days ago in section 26. This also comes after a series of individual attacks and transfers, especially in Ramon prison, and the isolation and interrogation of Wael Jaghoub, Munther Khalaf Mufleh, Nael Barghouthi and other prominent Palestinian prisoners’ movement leaders.

The Higher Emergency Committee of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Movement issued a statement:

“Together with the ongoing operations of murder, repression, invasions, and attacks by the settler hordes against our people and our land, the reckless and failing Ben Gvir and his agents from the Prison Service officers once again appear to us, attempting to play with fire and impose new repressive measures through raids, isolation, abuse, and provocations, as well as the transfer of leaders of the prisoners’ movement and the provocative tour conducted by the so-called Ben Gvir in the prisons.

We send several messages:

First: Our message to our brave people is that we are committed to you, and we will not submit to the measures of the Zionist enemy. We are still on the front lines, and we will teach this enemy another lesson in resistance, confrontation, and unity if it continues its aggression.

Second: Our message to the enemy is that your foolishness will lead you once again to another disappointment. If you seek an open confrontation, we are ready for it, and if you return , we will return.

Third: We emphasize that in all national and Islamic action factions, we are united in one trench, as one fist, against the aggression. We will shatter the illusions of the occupier before our unity once again.

Mercy to the martyrs, freedom to the prisoners.

Higher National Emergency Committee of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Movement”

This comes as nine Palestinian prisoners continue their hunger strike against administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. Saif Hamdan, Osama Khalil, Qusay Khader and Salah Rabaya suspended their strikes on Tuesday, 15 August after an agreement was reached to end their detention, and Yazan Hanaisha suspended his strike on Wednesday, 16 August. However, Kayed Fasfous, Sultan Khallouf, Osama Daqrouq, Hadi Nazzal, Mohammed Zakarneh, Abdel-Rahman Baraqa, Mohammed Ikhmeis, Anas Kamil and Zuhdi Abido are continuing their strikes against this regime of arbitrary imprisonment. Over 2000 administrative detention orders have been issued in the past year, and there are over 1,100 Palestinians currently jailed without charge or trial, nearly one-fourth of all Palestinian prisoners. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable and Palestinians are routinely jailed for years at a time without charge, trial or evidence, on the basis of a “secret file.” This is the highest number of administrative detainees held at one time in 20 years.

Palestinian prisoners have also been engaged in collective resistance to administrative detention. On Wednesday, 16 August, prisoners in all occupation jails refused to go out for security checks in response to an ongoing series of repressive attacks and the escalation of administrative detention. On Tuesday, 15 August, detainees in Ofer prison declared that they would delay their identification by number during security checks as part of the ongoing program of struggle laid out by the Administrative Detainees’ Committee. The Committee said, “We have determined our ongoing, continuous and open battle to confront this detention, and so that confrontation does not become seasonal or intermittent, we decided upon a program of national and general protest steps that we have begun to implement from the beginning of this month.” The program includes sit-ins in the prison yards, returning meals, refusing to go to the prison clinic and other forms of disobedience, leading up to a collective open strike.

Palestinians from all political factions and resistance movements condemned the attack on the prisoner and expresed their commitment to support the prisoners’ actions. Khader Habib of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Movement emphasized in press statements that “The resistance will not reman silent in the face of the occupation’s crimes against the prisoners…The issue of prisoners is the issue of all sectors and components of the Palestinian pople, and the occupation is delusional if it believes that the more oppressive it is, the more it can control the Palestinian people. What the occupation comitted today against the prisoners in the Naqab prison is a full-fledged crime. The occupation must be forced to conclude an exchange agreement to liberate our prisoners.”

Following the attack on the prisoners, the resistance in Gaza conducted a missile test, firing 50 missiles over the sea in a clear message to the occupation. Ismail Radwan of Hamas said to the press that “During the coming hours, things may expand, and we hold the occupation fully responsible for the lives and of our prisoners. The enemy bears full responsibility for the repercussions of the criminal assault on our prisoners in Sections 3 and 4 in the Naqab prison. The response to the crime of attacking our prisoners will not be limited to the prisons…To the prisoners, we are with you, and we will not let you down, and we are supporting you in your strike to confront the crimes of Ben-Gvir and this extremist zionist government. We say to the occupation that your crimes will not pass without accountability, and these measures and attacks will not break the will of our prisoners.”

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support the Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. With over 1100 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

14 Palestinian prisoners now on hunger strike to confront administrative detention as movement grows in occupation jails

As the struggle continues inside occupation prisons for justice and liberation, there are currently 14 Palestinian prisoners engaged in an open hunger strike to demand freedom from administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. There are over 1100 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under such orders, over one-fifth of all Palestinian prisoners (approximately 5,000) including 19 children and three women, and over 2000 administrative detention orders have already been issued in the past year. The escalation of Israeli arbitrary detention to its highest point in 20 years is accompanied by ongoing raids and assaults on Palestinian prisoners, including the use of isolation and solitary confinement as a further form of torture and abuse against imprisoned Palestinians.

Eight more Palestinian prisoners have joined the hunger strike demanding freedom; on 6 August, Osama Daqrouq, from Salfit, who has been detained since 13 January 2023, joined the strike to demand an end to his continued arbitrary imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention, as did Yazan Hanaisha, 24, from Qabatiya, near Jenin. Hanaisha has been detained for three months and was ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial. On Thursday, 10 August, a further group of six prisoners joined the strike:

  • Hadi Naji Nazzal, Mohammed Tayseer Zakarneh and Anas Ahmad Kamil, all from Qabatiya, near Jenin, detained since May 2023
  • Abdel-Rahman Iyad Baraqa, from Aqabat Jaber camp near Jericho, detained since April 2023
  • Mohammed Bassem Ikhmeis, from Beit Ummar near al-Khalil, detained since November 2022
  • Zuhdi Talal Abido, from al-Khalil, detained since March 2023

They join Sultan Khallouf and Kayed Fasfous who have been on hunger strike for 10 days, and Saif Hamdan, Osama Khalil, Salah Rabaya and Qusay Khader, all of who have been on hunger strike for 16 days.

Palestinian prisoners are also continuing to resist persecution, targeting and isolation and are being further retaliated against for their actions. On Sunday, 13 August, the Handala Center announced that Munther Khalaf Mufleh, director of the Handala Center and a member of the Central Committee of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, had suddenly been seized by occupation forces and taken to an unknown location. This comes one day after prisoners of the PFLP continued their protest steps, wearing prison uniforms to signal their willingness for confrontation on Saturday, 12 August. The prisoners are demanding that Wael Jaghoub, who was transferred to isolation in Salmoun on 31 July — and then transferred again to isolation in Megiddo prison on 9 August — be released from solitary confinement along with other prominent leaders taken to interrogation including Nader Sadaqa, Hikmat Abdel-Jalil and Ahmad al-Ardah.

Also on Sunday, 13 August, prisoners in the Naqab desert prison declared a state of emergency against repressive, abusive “searches” and arbitrary transfers, amid a high state of tension inside the prison after occupation forces stormed section 26 in the prison, ransacking the prisoners’ belongings and transferring them arbitrarily to another section.

What Is Administrative Detention?

Administrative detention was first used in Palestine by the British colonial mandate and then adopted by the Zionist regime; it is now used routinely to target Palestinians, especially community leaders, activists, and influential people in their towns, camps and villages.

There are currently approximately 1132 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, out of nearly 5,000 Palestinian political prisoners, the highest number in 20 years.

Administrative detention orders are issued by the military and approved by military courts on the basis of “secret evidence”, denied to both Palestinian detainees and their attorneys. Issued for up to six months at a time, they are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians — including minor children — can spend years jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. Hundreds of Palestinians have gone on hunger strike to win their liberation from this form of arbitrary detention, which is not only illegal under international law but a form of psychological torture and collective punishment targeting Palestinian families and communities, as detainees are unable to predict or plan for their release.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support the Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. With over 1100 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

 

12 August, Online Event: Palestine Today – Occupation and Resistance, the vision of the Masar Badil with Khaled Barakat

Join us on Saturday, August 12 for a discussion of the current situation in Palestine and developments on the Palestinian, Arab and international scene — with a framework for confronting the occupation and mobilizing to support the resistance.

Featuring Khaled Barakat, Palestinian writer and Executive Committee, Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement (Masar Badil)

Saturday, August 12
9 am Pacific, 12 pm Eastern, 6 pm Europe, 7 pm Palestine

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81380183776

Meeting ID: 813 8018 3776

The “Palestinian Authority” and political arrests: Prison subcontractor of the occupation

The Palestinian Authority in Ramallah has, since its inception, represented a project created as part of the Oslo process, for the purpose of subjugating the Palestinian resistance, replacing the Palestinian revolutionary struggle with a pseudo-state entity, and serving the interests of the security of the Zionist occupation. Sponsored by the United States in security interests and the European Union in social programs, the existence of the Authority further serves to remove responsibility for the Palestinian people under occupation from the occupying power itself. The PA’s practice of “security coordination” means that it is currently detaining over 50 Palestinians for supporting their resistance movement and liberation from Zionist occupation, with two of those detainees on hunger strike for 10 days.

In the aftermath of the battle of Jenin, when the Palestinian people and their resistance made clear that the resistance forces are strong and growing throughout the West Bank and not only in Gaza — and particularly in the northern West Bank of occupied Palestine — the role of the Palestinian Authority has been increasingly and publicly exposed, as it has been unable to uproot the resistance from its popular cradle, despite the ongoing demands and entreaties of the Israeli occupation regime and the United States. The PA’s attempts to suppress the resistance and to fulfill its commitments to “security coordination” with the occupation have taken the form of arrests and imprisonment targeting resistance strugglers, political leaders, student activists and others, especially those from Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Movement.

Jenin and after: Pursuing the resistance

Two of these detainees, Murad Malaysheh, 34, and Mohammed Brahma, 37, leaders of the Al-Quds Brigades, are currently on a hunger strike in Jericho prison for the past 10 days to demand their release. Both were seized as they attempted to travel to Jenin to support the resistance; the PA originally claimed it was detaining Malaysheh to “protect” him yet has since launched an arrest campaign targeting dozens of Islamic Jihad members. While Malaysheh and Brahma were ordered released by a PA court on 19 July, they remain imprisoned; this practice of ignoring court decisions has been routinely implemented against Palestinian resistance detainees. In a letter on 7 August, Malaysheh and Brahma declared that they had suspended their last strike because they had been promised efforts to secure their release, but have relaunched their strike after the claimed efforts led nowhere.

The Islamic Jihad movement in Palestine also noted that among its members imprisoned by the PA include:

  • Arqam Ahmarou, 57
  • Fadi al-Bari, 38
  • Eid Mohammed Hamamra, 28
  • Mohammed Salim Alawneh, 41
  • Mohammed Fayes Malaysheh, 42
  • Mo’men Adnan Fashafsha, 20
  • Imad Mohammed Khaliliya, 25
  • Khaled Ahmad Malaysheh
  • Yazan Munjed Maslamani, 24
  • Ahmad Abdel-Latif Nawasra, 41
  • Yousef Ikhlil, 24

They are among over 52 Palestinian prisoners of the resistance and the liberation movement detained by the PA, frequently former prisoner held in the Israeli occupation jails. Musaab Shtayyeh, the Palestinian resistance struggler from Nablus, has been jailed by the PA for 324 days.

Security coordination targets the “Jenin phenomenon”

Maher al-Akhras, former long-term hunger striker who won his freedom from occupation prisons, said that these attacks represent a plan by the PA security forces — administered and directed by the United States — to end the “Jenin phenomenon,” including setting up a high-ranking security operations team that intends to dismantle the Jenin Brigade, with similar plans used to target the Lions’ Den (Areen al-Osood) in Nablus. “The leadership of the Authority provided the security forces with dozens of personnel, along with armored military vehicles. They are charged with preventing any manifestations of celebration of the resistance in Jenin, and besieging and cordoning off any march of the resistance fighters in the camp.” He ascribed this plan to the Aqaba and Sharm el-Sheikh meetings, which, under U.S. auspices, brought together the Jordanian and Egyptian intelligence with the PA and Zionist representatives, noting that it took on a new priority after the power of the resistance in Jenin camp in the July battle.

This was reflected in the actions of PA security forces on Saturday, 5 August, after PA forces attacked a march in Jenin camp in support of an armed resistance operation in Tel Aviv. Live bullets were fired during the attack on the march, and journalist Mohammed Abed was injured. This followed a crisis at Hebron University, after PA security force members, who also study at the university, assaulted and confiscated the phones of women students participating in a vigil against political arrests by the PA, launching a series of protests and sit-ins. While the university’s staff union and concerned organizations negotiated an agreement between students to end political attacks and arrests, the university administration expelled Ahmad al-Sharif, the spokesperson of the Islamic Bloc, with the Bloc noting that this action “equates the aggressor and the victim,” rejecting “the policy of punishing everyone at the expense of justice and law.”

Student movements have been particularly targeted for PA repression and arrest, with students at Birzeit University, An-Najah University and several other universities detained by PA forces as well as Israeli occupation forces. At both of these universities, election results indicated clear support for the political and social forces associated with the resistance.

Bolstering security coordination at the expense of the Palestinian prisoners

Hussein al-Sheikh, a PA official with an extensive and lengthy history of normalization and collaboration with the occupation regime (profiled in “Foreign Policy” for his extreme unpopularity among Palestinians yet sponsorship by the United States and the Israeli regime), has reportedly been charged with dealing with the Zionist regime to discuss “strengthening the Authority” and its “security coordination” with the Israeli occupation. On Monday, 7 August, the occupation cabinet voted to provide additional (Palestinian) funds, confiscated illegally by the occupation, and facilitation to the PA in order to strengthen the Authority and its role as a security force for the occupier.

The arrests and attacks have continued, particularly on former prisoners; Amjad al-Sayeh, the brother of Bassam al-Sayeh, the prisoner who died behind bars as a result of Israeli medical negligence and whose body is one of the martyrs held captive today, was ordered detained an additional eight days by the PA on Sunday, 6 August. Amjad is himself a former prisoner and an engineer. On the same day, PA security forces detained Muhiydeen Sharawna, the son of released prisoner Ayman Sharawna, now deported to Gaza; while on Monday, they detained former prisoners Yasser Bilal Yamin and Mahmoud Asida after raiding their homes in Nablus.

Detention by the PA is routinely part of a “revolving door” with occupation prisons, whereby recently released prisoners are called for PA interrogation and detained, and detainees released by the PA are seized days later by Zionist occupation forces.

Cairo meeting fails to resolve PA crisis after principled boycott

This escalating situation, mirroring the escalation in Palestinian resistance, has also led to an increasing political crisis in which the broad support for the Palestinian resistance forces renders the Ramallah PA increasingly irrelevant, especially amid a Zionist onslaught of invasions, assassinations, land confiscation, settler attacks and assaults on Palestinian civilians and their land. On 29 July, the PA’s president, Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), called for a meeting of Palestinian faction general secretaries in Cairo, ostensibly to strengthen Palestinian national unity or achieve reconciliation, while ordering yet more arrests, assaults, detentions and attacks on the resistance in Palestinian streets, hand in hand with the Israeli occupation.

The Islamic Jihad Movement announced its boycott of the Cairo meeting, demanding the release of Palestinian prisoners in PA jails and noting that unity could not be achieved while the PA continues to arrest and pursue the cadres of the resistance.

This position was adopted by several other Palestinian factions, including the PFLP-General Command and al-Saiqa. Given the leading role of the movement in the prisoners’ movemnt and the resistance, its boycott of the meeting was a significant blow to the PA’s efforts to impose its security framework over the Palestinian political forces.

At the same time, the Masar Badil, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement, also highlighted the fundamental contradictions in the Cairo meeting, noting that it seeks to resolve the crisis of the PA rather than to support real national unity, which is developed in the field by the resistance on a daily basis.

Real national unity cannot include those who imprison the resistance

Khaled Barakat, co-founder of the Masar and a Palestinian writer, said in an interview with Palestine Today TV, “The real question is, ‘why should we go to the Cairo meeting?’ at all, and not the other way around. The position of the brothers in the Islamic Jihad Movement and any Palestinian faction that later aligns with this position, is justified by logic and national principles to boycott the Cairo meeting. It is clear to see the interests of the Authority and the profit that some regimes reap from these meetings, but where is the interest of the Palestinian people in them?”

Noting the principle of the primary and secondary contradiction for liberation movements and the primacy of confronting the colonizer, he said, “For the Palestinian cause, there is a central enemy for all of us, the Zionist entity, and our collective effort must be united in confronting it. Likewise, liberation movements include political and intellectual currents, multiple parties and visions, and different schools and approaches, and this is very natural. However, this does not apply to the relationship with the security Authority in the West Bank, as it is not part of the Palestinian liberation movement, especially when it targets the Palestinian people and their resistance with arrests, harassment and torture. This principle can apply, for example, to the relationship of the Islamic Jihad Movement with the brothers in Hamas, who can have pluralism in their vision, actions, and tactics, and dialogue, even if it is harsh, can resolve any crisis that may arise.”

Rather than participating in the PA’s meetings, Barakat said that real national unity is built through the resistance and the engagement of the people with the resistance, further urging broader regional unity and action. “What is required now is to strengthen and develop the relationship between the poles of the resistance camp in the region on the basis of the unity of the fronts, especially with Hezbollah, which constitutes the solid nucleus of the resistance in the region,” he concluded.

The road to liberation: the defeat of Oslo

As we noted in a previous report on the PA’s assault on the Palestinian resistance:

We recall the assassination of anti-corruption struggler, the martyr Nizar Banat by PA security forces — for which justice is still delayed and institutionally denied — and the many Palestinian strugglers and resistance fighters imprisoned by the PA over the decades of Oslo as part of “security coordination”; that is, serving as an agent of the occupation.

From Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades (jailed for four years by the PA under British, Canadian and U.S. guard), to Basil al-Araj, to Nizar Banat, to Musaab Shtayyeh, PA imprisonment is used on behalf of the occupation to target the Palestinian resistance, in its form of armed struggle and in its broader popular cradle of support…

The crimes of the Palestinian Authority are not simply independent “human rights violations” or “political detention” targeting rival forces. They are carried out as part and parcel of the Oslo framework that created the PA as a subcontractor for the occupation; and the current Aqaba and Sharm el-Sheikh new security demands to attack the rising resistance in the West Bank and throughout Palestine from the river to the sea. These arrests are the responsibility of Israel, the United States, Canada, the European Union and all parties involved in creating, sustaining and propping up the “security coordination” framework, which benefits only the occupier and colonizer at the expense of the Palestinian people.

As we noted after the assassination of the martyr Nizar Banat: Now is the time to take action to confront the Palestinian Authority and all those responsible for imposing it upon the Palestinian people to the detriment of the Palestinian struggle for return and liberation. The PA and its funders and trainers must be held accountable for its ongoing betrayal of the Palestinian people and its collaboration with the occupation regime and Zionist colonialism. The Oslo project is backed by Zionism, imperialism and reactionary regimes – and it must and will fall on the road to the liberation of Palestine. 

Freedom for all Palestinian prisoners, in PA, Zionist, reactionary regime and imperialist jails — and freedom for all of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

21 October, all out to Lannemezan! International demonstration to free Georges Abdallah and Palestinian prisoners

Join the annual demonstration to free Georges Abdallah, marching to the gate of the prison where he is detained, with the calls and participation of many support committees, associations, unions and political parties.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all to participate in this demonstration to free the Lebanese struggler for Palestine and all Palestinian prisoners in Zionist, imperialist and reactionary regime prisons. Organize to come to Lannemezan for a mass presence that makes our voices heard!

Gather on Saturday 21 October 2023 in front of Lannemezan train station (65) in Lannemezan, France at 2 p.m.

Georges Abdallah is a Lebanese communist activist and struggler for the Palestinian cause imprisoned in France since 1984 and eligible for release since 1999. Having become one of the longest-held political prisoners in Europe, he will begin his 40th year of detention on 24 October 2023. In June, his lawyer filed his ninth request for parole and deportation so that he could return to live freely in his country, Lebanon. More than ever, it is time to build the mobilization for his release!

Departures by bus and carpooling: information to come

Info: https://www.facebook.com/events/6571688702893923/

 

Sixth Palestinian prisoner joins hunger strike as battle escalates inside the occupation prisons

The battle inside Israeli occupation prisons is escalating as a growing number of imprisoned Palestinians are taking protest steps to challenge repression, isolation and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

On Tuesday, 8 August, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society announced that Sultan Khallouf, 42, from Burqin near Jenin, is also on hunger strike against his arbitrary detention, joining Kayed Fasfous, who has been on hunger strike for six days, and Saif Hamdan, Osama Khalil, Salah Rabaya and Qusay Khader, all of who have been on hunger strike for 10 days.

Khallouf also launched his hunger strike since 3 August, the day he was seized by occupation forces from his home. On 8 August, the occupation military court in Salem held a session for Khallouf which extended his detention an additional 72 hours, while the military prosecution declared their intention to consider issuing an administrative detention order against him.

Khallouf is a former prisoner who in 2019 carried out a 67-day hunger strike against his administrative detention, only suspending it after a specific date was set for his release. He previously spent four years in Israeli prisons.

The growing movement against administrative detention inside the prisons, with over 1,200 detention orders issued this year and over 1,100 prisoners jailed without charge or trial, out of 5000 total Palestinian prisoners, is continuing to escalate. Six Palestinians are now on hunger strike, and the Administrative Detainees’ Committee has announced escalating protest steps. This is the highest number of administrative detainees held in 20 years, representing over one-fifth of all Palestinian prisoners.

Today, 8 August, prisoners in Ofer prison refused to stand for roll call or give their numbers in the count. Tomorrow, Wednesday, 9 August, a group of prisoners will leave their cells to protest administrative detention. On Thursday, 10 August, prisoners will hold sit-ins and information sessions in the prison yards, and on Saturday, 12 August, prisoners will close their sections and wear prison uniforms, signalling their willingness to confront the jailers. On Sunday, 13 August, administrative detainees will focus on various protest actions to pressure the occupation to bring this form of detention to an end.

Meanwhile, Palestinian prisoners are also facing ongoing repression while escalating their protests in defense of imprisoned leaders who have been subjected to transfer, interrogation and isolation, including Wael Jaghoub, Nael Barghouthi, Yaqoub Qadri and the Freedom Tunnel Prisoners.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine prisoners launched their protest steps inside the prison following the isolation of Wael Jaghoub and the transfer to interrogation of a number of leaders of the Front in prisons, including Nader Sadaqa, Hikmat Abdel-Jalil and Ahmad al-Ardah. The PFLP prisoners refused to participate in the count or roll call, disrupted inspections of the cells and wore prison uniforms to demonstrate their protest.

After the beginning of these protest steps, the Zionist prison administration in Megiddo prison imposed a number of collective sanctions on the PFLP prisoners, including banning them from family visits, confiscating electrical appliances from inside the rooms (including electric fans, necessary amid the intense summer heat) and locking down the sections of the PFLP prisoners to prevent them from going to recreation or the halls.

Also on Tuesday, 8 August, the prison administration suddenly transferred all the prisoners held in Section 4 of Ramon prison to Nafha prison, several hours after they also suddenly transferred the prisoners from Ashkelon prison to Nafha prison. The prisoners were, in many cases, prevented from bringing their clothing and personal belongings, and the use of frequent and mass transfers is intended to destabilize the prisoners’ lives and deny them the opportunity to organize and confront the occupation. This is a long-standing strategy of the occupation, currently practiced by the notorious far-right fascist Minister of Public Security, Itamar Ben Gvir, who oversees the prison administration.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support the Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. With over 1100 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

 

Palestinian women prisoners struggling for justice, dignity and freedom

Palestinian women prisoners are continuing their battle for justice, dignity and freedom from the occupation prisons. There are currently 32 women prisoners jailed in occupation prisons, with most of them held in Damon prison, while Fatima Shaheen and Etaf Jaradat are held in Neve Tirza prison; three Palestinian women are jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention orders, and one minor girl is behind bars. (There are over 1132 administrative detainees in total, out of nearly 5000 Palestinian political prisoners.)

Shaheen and Jaradat carried out a hunger strike for several days in late July — joined by several male prisoners, including Zakaria Zubaidi, of the Freedom Tunnel prisoners, as well as those in the Ramleh prison clinic — after they were subjected to increasing restrictions and moved to the Neve Tirza prison for Zionist criminal prisoners. The two were transferred suddenly and, after they objected, the guards bound their hands and feet, and their fellow prisoners erupted in outrage. They suspended their strike on 27 July after a commitment to follow up on their situation.

Fatima Shaheen

Shaheen, 33, was shot by occupation soldiers on 15 April 2023 and injured in the spine and abdomen; she was told that she would be unable to walk in the future and is using a wheelchair. Jaradat was transferred to the Ramle prison clinic (and then Neve Tirza) from Damon prison solely to provide assistance with daily life activities to Shaheen, whose severe injuries prevent her from doing those activities.

Etaf Jaradat

Both of them have been held in poor conditions, with Jaradat provided only a chair to sleep on for weeks, despite the fact that she was moved to accompany Shaheen. Meanwhile, Shaheen was denied access to any telephone contact with her family, and the two have been held in a tiny cell with poor ventilation. Jaradat is also cut off from access to her family, including her imprisoned sons, Omar and Ghaith Jaradat.

However, the women prisoners have been continuing to take collective protest steps to demand improvement in their conditions of confinement, and have been subjected to sanctions and collective punishment by the Zionist prison administration, incluing preventing them from using the public telephones, closing the “canteen” (prison store) and denying them family visits.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses our strongest solidarity with the Palestinian women prisoners, and Palestinian women in Palestine and everywhere in exile and diaspora, struggling for justice and liberation for all of Palestine, from the river to the sea. We urge women’s organizations and feminist groups around the world to show their solidarity with Palestinian women and to highlight the struggle of the Palestinian women prisoners, escalate the campaigns to boycott and isolate the occupation, its institutions and complicit corporations, and resist with all Palestinian prisoners as they confront fascism with their bodies and their lives. Palestinian women prisoners are on the front lines of struggle for national and social liberation, and we urge their immediate release, the liberation of all Palestinian prisoners — and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.