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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.

24 August, Liege: “Palestine: La Case Prison” at 100 Visages Festival

Thursday, 24 August
2:00 pm – 9:00 pm
CPCR Center Polyculturel Resistances
Rue Jonruelle 11
4000 Liege, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/110045256365981/

As part of the 100 Visages Festival organized by the SCRC, the Association Belgo-Palestinienne of Liege presents the film, “Palestine: La Case Prison” by Franck Salome.

Here is the program:
2:00 pm – Palestinian cooking workshop
7:00 pm – Palestinian tasting plates and falafel
8:00 pm – Screening: Palestine – la case prison

As part of the campaign: “50 years of occupation and colonization, 70 years of dispossession, 100 years of injustice,” we will screen the film “Palestine: La Case Prison,” a documentary by Franck Salome on the situation of Palestinian political prisoners and the violation of international law. The film depicts the mechanisms of a system of oppression that goes beyond prison walls and keeps an entire society under constant threat of arbitrary imprisonment. Successive Israeli governments have made imprrisonment a policy of repression against the Palestinian struggle for rights and self-determination. The Israeli prison system is an essential instrument for the control of the occupied territory and its people.”

The 9th edition of the 100 Visages festival brings debates, screenings, workshops and more to Liege, with no less than 20 partners. Full schedule: https://www.facebook.com/events/261790740968720/

Dans le cadre du Festival ‘100 visages’ organisé par le CPCR, L’Association Belgo Palestinienne régionale de Liège vous présente le film « PALESTINE LA CASE PRISON » de Franck Salomé.
Voici le programme : jeudi 24 août 2017 – rue Jonruelle, dans le quartier Saint-Léonard!
14h > Atelier cuisine palestinienne
19h > Assiette dégustation spécialité palestinienne ‘ Falafel ‘
20h > Projection “Palestine la case prison”

< Dans le cadre de la campagne « 50 ans d’occupation et de colonisation, 70 ans de dépossession,
100 ans d’injustice » diffusion du film ‘Palestine la case prison’ documentaire de Franck Salomé sur la situation des prisonniers politiques et d’opinion palestiniens au regard du droit international. Comprendre les mécanismes d’un système d’oppression qui dépasse les murs de la prison et maintient toute une société sous la menace permanente d’un emprisonnement arbitraire.
La plupart des gouvernements israéliens successifs ont fait de la prison une politique de répression de la lutte des Palestiniens pour leurs droits et leur autodétermination.
Le système carcéral israélien reste un instrument essentiel du contrôle du territoire occupé et de sa population. >

< Ici, aux pentes des collines, face au crépuscule et au canon du temps (…) Nous faisons ce que font les prisonniers, (…)
Nous cultivons l’espoir. » M. Darwich >

100 VISAGES 2017, 9e édition, un festival riche en couleurs, festif et résistant ! rue Jonruelle, dans le quartier Saint-Léonard!
Du mercredi 23 au samedi 26 août, à partir de 14h tous les jours, des débats, animations, ateliers, projections, concerts, repas… avec pas moins d’une vingtaine de partenaires.
Programme complet du festival : https://www.facebook.com/events/261790740968720/?acontext=%7B%22

Belgian youth call for freedom for Khalida Jarrar

Translated from Pour La Palestine (Plate-forme Charleroi-Palestine)

Photo: Comac

The youth of Comac, the student movement of the Workers’ Party of Belgium (PTB/PVDA) returned from a solidarity delegation to Palestine on 27 July. For two weeks, a group of 13 students were introduced to the daily life of Palestinians in Israel and the West Bank.

They also met the daughter of Palestinian parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar, imprisoned since 2 July in an Israeli prison. “The story of Jarrar is that of thousands of Palestinian political prisoners and their families,” said Comac vice president Olivier Goessens, one of the participants in the delegation.

Comac called upon Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders to admonish the Israeli government. “We call on the Belgian government to pressure Israel for her immediate release and to end all Belgian partnerships with the Israeli army and prisons.”

During the trip, the Comac delegation met with Suha Jarrar in Ramallah, the daughter of Khalida Jarrar. She recalled the brutality with which her mother was taken from her bed in the middle of the night by Israeli soldiers.

Her mother was elected in 2006 to the Palestinian Legislative Council and represented Palestine in the Council of Europe. She has previously been imprisoned because of her human rights activism and political work. In 2015, she was arrested by the Israeli army after playing a key role for Palestine at the International Criminal Court, where Israeli officials could be pursued for their violations of international law. At the time, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz called her trial “a Kafkaesque perversion of military law” that followed a campaign of international support.

“Suha highlighted the fear and uncertainty that the family experiences today, that of thousands of Palestinian families,” Goessens said. According to the NGO Addameer, there are currently at least 6,200 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Of these, there are at least 200 under the age of 18, including many who are 13 or 14 years old.

The circumstances in which these political prisoners are held and the inhumane interrogations used by the Israeli army and police are, according to Amnesty International, techniques of psychological and physical torture. Last spring, 1,700 Palestinian prisoners conducted a hunger strike for 40 days against mistreatment during prison transport and denial of basic rights like regular family visits.

“Comac calls for the release of Khalida Jarrar in respect of her rights, but also as a symbolic first step to put an end to the political imprisonments in Israeli prisons,” Goessens said.

“We expect the Belgian government to not only passively observe how parliamentarians and human rights activists are locked up. We sent a request to Foreign Minister Didier Reynders to pressure Israel for the release of Khalida Jarrar. In addition, we ask him to end all Belgian partnerships with the Israeli army and prisons. In particular, the Belgian government, along with KULeuven, is involved in the LAW-TRAIN project which researches interrogation techniques in collaboration with the Israeli police. It is not acceptable to support torture ill-treatment, and the imprisonment of political prisoners by Israel, and moreover, to import these pratices in Belgium!” concluded Goessens.

Palestinian youth activist Tareq Mattar ordered imprisoned without charge or trial

Palestinian youth activist Tareq Mattar was ordered to six months imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention on 10 August 2017. The order was issued by the Israeli occupation military commander over the West Bank and a confirmation is expected from an Israeli military court within 72 hours.

Mattar, 28, is a Palestinian youth leader who is active in a variety of projects, initiatives and forums to organize Palestinian youth and promote study and discussion of the Palestinian cause. He was previously jailed for his Palestinian political activities.

Mattar was seized on 3 August after Israeli occupation forces invaded his family home twice in two days, ransacking and destroying his family’s belongings. While in the family home, occupation forces threatened his family members that they will return every day, tear apart the home and harass and even arrest if Tareq did not report for interrogation. When Mattar appeared at the occupation military base with his family, he was seized by occupation forces and his family sent back. Only days later, he has joined 500 other Palestinians in being ordered imprisoned without charge or trial under an indefinitely renewable administrative detention order and 6,200 total Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails.

Administrative detention orders are frequently used to target and imprison community leaders and Palestinian organizers. The orders are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians have spent years at a time held in indefinitely-renewable administrative detention.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces the seizure of Tareq Mattar and demands his immediate release and the release of all Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention. The targeting of Tareq Mattar is part of a systematic policy of attacks on prominent youth activists and influential young leaders among Palestinians under occupation and stands alongside the ongoing imprisonment of Palestinian political leaders. We urge friends and supporters of Palestine around the world to join in the call to free Tareq Mattar and all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Veteran Palestinian leftist leader Badran Jaber among 25 Palestinians seized by occupation forces

Prominent Palestinian leftist leader Badran Jaber was among 25 Palestinians seized overnight by attacking Israeli occupation forces. Jaber, 69, is a former political prisoner, the father of several political prisoners and a longtime leader in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

He has lived a lifetime of struggle, including many years as a Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails, and remains not only a prominent political leader but an active participant in numerous popular events and activities, including tents of support for the prisoners. Five of his children, Ghassan, Nasser, Fadi, Tahrir and Wadie, have been imprisoned by the Israeli occupation for various periods of time; Ghassan was recently released after 21 months of administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, and has spent a total of over six years in Israeli prisons.

He was a founding member of the PFLP and its student branch and has spent many years in administrative detention; he has a long history of participation in hunger strikes and was one of the first prisoners to enter the Negev desert prison immediately after it was opened in 1988.

“The official Israeli policy is to try to break the human spirit of Palestinians by refusing to recognize their human rights inside and outside of prisons. What distinguishes Bilal Kayed and his comrades from people outside of prisons is the immediacy with which they face the occupation and its full control over them. In those moments, he and others are given the choice of abandoning their Palestinian-ness or risking death in the pursuit of freedom. Bilal Kayed is not facing this choice alone. We currently have 50 prisoners on open-ended hunger strikes … So what the Israelis need to understand about their detention policies is that prisoners become, first off, heroes of the national liberation struggle. These heroes form the base of a leadership that articulates the alternative to this close collaboration with the occupation,” said Jaber in 2016 in an interview with the Alternative Information Center.

The Human Rights Defenders organization published a video of Jaber during the April-May 2017 hunger strike in support of the strikers at a support tent in al-Khalil:

He is a teacher and educator and is known as a vocal and sharp critic of the Palestinian Authority, particularly its “security coordination” with the Israeli occupation.

Israeli occupation forces invaded his home in the Farah al-Hawa area in al-Khalil in a pre-dawn raid on Wednesday, 9 August. Also seized in al-Khalil were Nasser Masoudi of the Palestinian police, Palestine Polytechnic University student Amjad Salhab and Yousef Halaiqa. Meanwhile, in Azzun, east of Qalqilya, occupation forces stormed 30 homes and seized seven Palestinians after 20 military vehicles invaded the neighborhood and set up checkpoints. Those arrested include Nidal Radwan, Mustafa Riachi, Ali Hussam Sweidan, Bahaa Shalou, Abdel-Aziz Hussein, Yahya Abu Haniyeh and Abdel-Aziz Abu Haniyeh.

Two more Palestinians were seized in Nablus, Qutaiba Azem and Mohammed Qat, both former prisoners. In Tulkarem, occupation forces seized Bakr Kraiyoush, while four children and one of the children’s father were seized in Taqu’a, near Bethlehem: Nizar Nimr al-Amour, 17, Mahmoud Diab al-Amour, 15, Amir Walid al-Amour, 15 and Mahmoud Mohammed al-Amour, 15, as well as Diab al-Amour, Mahmoud’s father. In Dheisheh refugee camp south of Bethlehem, two Palestinians wee injured by Israeli occupation forces. Raed al-Salhi and Aziz Arafa were wounded and seized by invading forces.

In Kobar, near Ramallah, occupation forces stormed the village and imposed a blockade, deploying snipers on rooftops of homes in the village and arresting Abdel-Jalil al-Abd and Ibrahim al-Abd, the father and the uncle of Omar al-Abd, who carried out an armed attack at the illegal Halamesh settlement. Invading occupation forces also excavated land around the family’s home, declaring their intention to demolish it.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network demands the immediate release of Badran Jaber and all Palestinian prisoners inside Israeli jails. We urge supporters of Palestine around the world to protest and escalate campaigns of boycott, divestment and sanctions to demand freedom for Badran Jaber and his fellow 6,200 Palestinians behind Israeli bars.

Five Palestinian journalists seized by PA security forces

The Palestinian Authority’s intelligence services have launched a campaign of arrests against a number of Palestinian journalists in the West Bank on Tuesday, 8 August. Five journalists were seized by PA intelligence agents, including Qutaiba Qasem and Mamdouh Hamamreh in the Bethlehem governorate, Amer Abu Arafa and Ahmed Halaiqa in al-Khalil and Tareq Abu Zeid in Nablus.

Hamamreh, a correspondent for al-Quds TV, was arrested when PA forces broke into the studio in Husan, west of Bethlehem. His colleague, Qasem, was called for interrogation at the headquarters of the security services after they encircled his home, demanding that he turn himself over.

Abu Arafa is the correspondent of the Shehab News Agency; when he was seized, his cellular phones and computers were also taken. Halaiqa, also seized in al-Khalil, reports for al-Quds TV.

Abu Zeid was arrested from his home in Nablus; he is a correspondent for Al-Aqsa TV. Meanwhile, the journalist Islam Salem was summoned for interrogation.

The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate strongly condemned the arrests as a systematic attack on freedom of the press and freedom of expression. The union also denounced the Palestinian Authority’s justification for the detentions, that the journalists were “leaking sensitive information to hostile parties,” including, apparently, other Palestinian political parties. The syndicate considered this justification “worse than the detention.”

These arrests come as the latest in a series of attacks by PA security forces on journalists, writers and other critical voices, including detentions of journalists and banning of over 20 websites inside the West Bank, generally Palestinian news sites with differing political perspectives from the PA’s leadership.  Many of those targeted have been particularly critical of Palestinian Authority “security coordination” with the Israeli occupation and the “revolving door” between PA detention and Israeli prisons.

Palestinian prisoner Nurhan Awad achieves excellent results in high school graduation exams

Palestinian prisoner Nurhan Awad, 18, from Jerusalem, received an excellent result in her general high school graduation examinations, which she took from inside Israeli prisons, achieving an average score of 94 percent.

Nurhan is serving a 13-year sentence imposed upon her as a minor girl; she was in the process of studying for her high school examinations when she was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 23 November 2015.

Her cousin, Hadeel Awad, 14, was shot dead by Israeli occupation forces on the same day at close range as she lay already injured on the ground. Nurhan and Hadeel were accused of attempting to stab a man with scissors; in this case, a lightly-injured 70-year-old Palestinian man. The event was captured on video; Nurhan stood in place holding a pair of scissors. She was hit from behind by a chair and as she lay injured in the ground, she was shot again at close range. Nurhan was severely injured after taking two bullets in her chest. After her cousin was extrajudicially executed, Nurhan was imprisoned.

She still has a goal of studying law; always an excellent student, she has expressed her conviction that she will not allow the occupation to prevent her from academic achievement and study, even behind bars in HaSharon prison.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Nurhan Awad on her accomplishment and all of the Palestinian child and youth prisoners who continue to struggle to achieve their right to education denied to them by the Israeli occupation. We demand the release of all Palestinian child prisoners and Palestinian prisoners sentenced as children in Israeli jails, as part of the freedom of all Palestinians imprisoned by the occupation. 

New York protest demands freedom of Bilal Diab, calls for boycott of HP

Photo: Joe Catron

Protesters in New York City gathered in the rain on Monday, 7 August to demand freedom for Bilal Diab and all Palestinian prisoners. Diab, a Palestinian prisoner held in isolation in the Israeli Megiddo prison, has been on hunger strike for over three weeks against his administrative detention without charge or trial.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network organized the protest outside the Best Buy electronics store in Manhattan’s Union Square. Participants chanted and carried signs depicting Diab, who is on his second long-term hunger strike against imprisonment without charge or trial. Diab went on hunger strike in 2012 alongside Thaer Halahleh when the two were similarly jailed under administrative detention to demand their freedom; they ended their strike in an agreement after 78 days.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

They distributed information and materials about the global campaign to boycott Hewlett-Packard corporations because of HP’s contracts with the Israeli occupation, including the identity card and checkpoint system, the Israeli occupation military and the prison system that holds approximately 6,200 Palestinian political prisoners, including over 500 administrative detainees like Diab. The protests are part of a growing international call for a boycott of HP consumer products, including computers, laptops, printers and accessories. Labor unions and churches are involved in declaring themselves HP-free zones in protest of the corporation’s involvement and complicity in human rights violations.

Administrative detention orders are issued by Israeli military commanders or the defense minister for periods of one to six months. They are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians have spent years at a time imprisoned without charge or trial. Diab is demanding his release and an end to the policy of administrative detention.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun activists will also support people facing political repression in New York City. Activists will be participating on Thursday, 10 August in a court support action for Darryl Goodwin, a New York City transit worker facing serious charges because he did not immediately stop assisting a passenger and open subway gates for an NYPD lieutenant, despite MTA rules requiring workers assisting passengers before addressing gate access issues. Goodwin is a member of TWU Local 100 and a 27-year veteran of the MTA.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun is also organizing a protest on Monday, 14 August at 4:30 pm in Union Square in support of Rasmea Odeh. The protest comes as part of a series of nationwide events – including the Farewell to Rasmea Odeh organized in Chicago by the Rasmea Defense Committee and an action in Detroit to support Rasmea in court on 17 August – supporting the former Palestinian political prisoner and revered community leader as she faces deportation from the United States. All supporters of Palestine are urged to attend the events in support of Rasmea.

Photo: Joe Catron

14 August, NYC: Rally to Support Rasmea Odeh

Monday, 14 August
4:30 pm
Union Square Park
New York City
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/802496649921497/

We urge all to join us on 14 August in NYC to show our love and support for Rasmea Odeh before her sentencing in federal court three days later in Detroit. The will be her last court appearance and Rasmea is planning to make a statement.

The plea agreement that has already been reached states that Rasmea will not get additional jail time – but she will have to leave the U.S. This rally will express our support for a legendary former political prisoner and beloved community leader.

Endorsed by:

Al-Awda NY: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition
American Muslims for Palestine – NJ Chapter
Committee to Stop FBI Repression
International Action Center
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 Shut It Down: The Grand Central Crew #blacklivesmatter
Pakistan USA Freedom Forum
Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM)- حركة الشباب الفلسطيني
Party for Socialism and Liberation – PSL
Release Aging People in Prison – RAPP
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
United National Antiwar Coalition
Workers World Party

10 August, NYC: Pack the Court! Support Transit Worker Arrested on False Charges

Thursday August 10
9:00 AM
100 Centre Street
Fourth Floor, Part E, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/122660075016957/

Petition: http://tinyurl.com/yb95pd5r

A fifty-four year old African American public transit worker is facing unwarranted serious charges, for doing his job according to MTA rules.

Because he didn’t immediately stop assisting a passenger and open the gate for an NYPD lieutenant, Darryl Goodwin is charged with obstruction of governmental justice, assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest.

The charges are absurd, because all NYPD members are equipped with MetroCards that give them unlimited subway access — as well as keys that open the gates. On top of that, station agents assisting passengers are required by the MTA to handle those passengers before turning their attention to anyone asking for gate access.

For this adherence to guidelines, Goodwin was arrested and suspended from his job without pay.

Goodwin, a 27-year MTA veteran and member of TWU Local 100, is now back at work. But the serious charges have not been dropped.

June 29 was the first court date, where dozens of transit workers showed up to support their union brother. On August 10, the next date, let’s join them – with a packed court, showing community support for Goodwin, station agents and all transit workers who do the hard work of running public transportation 24/7.

If you can’t make it, support the fundraising campaign to help defray legal expenses: http://tinyurl.com/funds4defense