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Argentine parliamentarians demand freedom for Jarrar and Saafin

Photo: iFalasteen on Twitter

Argentine parliamentarians have submitted a motion to the country’s National Parliament, calling for the national executive and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to protest the arrest and imprisonment of Palestinian political and women’s movement leaders Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin by Israeli occupation forces and demand their immediate release.

It was submitted by V. Soledad Sosa and Pablo S. Lopez, members of the National Chamber of Deputies of Argentina with the Partido Obrero, the Argentinian section of the Coordination for the Refoundation of the Fourth International (CRFI). People, political parties and movements around the world have called for the freedom of Jarrar, Saafin and their fellow Palestinian prisoners.

Both were seized in the pre-dawn hours of 2 July and both have been ordered to imprisonment without charge or trial – Jarrar to six months and Saafin to three months. Both sentences are indefinitely renewable. The leftist parliamentarian and feminist leader join 500 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention and nearly 6,500 total Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

An English translation follows and the Spanish original is below:

Honorable National Chamber of Deputies

PROPOSED RESOLUTION

The Honorable National Chamber of Deputies

RESOLVES

To reject the arbitrary detention of parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar of the Palestinian Parliament, abducted and imprisoned on 2 July together with Khitam Saafin, President of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, by armed Zionist forces.

To call on the national executive power to act, through the Ministry of Foreign Relations, to protest this treacherous, anti-democratic attack and to demand the freedom of the parliamentarian and the leader of the women’s movement, directed to the Israeli ambassador to Argentina and to the Israeli government.

FUNDAMENTALS

Mr. President,

On 2 July, the commander of Zionist occupation forces in the occupied Palestinian territory of the West Bank ordered the abduction and arrest of the member of Palestinian parliament, Khalida Jarrar, as well as the leader of the women’s movement, Khitam Saafin.

After several days of arbitrary detention without charge or trial, they were ordered by the military commander to so-called “administrative detention.” This is an arbitrary, unlawful practice that violates the Geneva Conventions and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This practice is in widespread use by the Zionist government and armed forces. There are more than 6500 Palestinian political prisoners and more than 500 held without charge and without trial, only under the pretext of “administrative detention.”

Previously in the year 2015, the deputy Khalida Jarrar was detained and ordered to six months in “administrative detention.” While international mobilization was able to lift the order, she was then arbitrarily sentenced and imprisoned for over a year. Jarrar is responsible for the Prisoners’ Commission of the PLC that works for solidarity with the Palestinian political prisoners, those who have just organized a massive hunger strike for the Zionist government to loosen the repressive grip on the prisons. The Israeli government does not respect parliamentary privileges. They intend to install a puppet government in the “self-rule” territories. It is necessary to add the voice of the Argentine Parliament to demand the liberation of these two emblematic women figures of the Palestinian people’s struggle.

South African government calls for freedom for Khalida Jarrar

Palestine protest in South Africa, 2014. 

On 21 July, the South African government issued a statement urging freedom for imprisoned Palestinian leftist parliamentarian and national leader Khalida Jarrar. Seized on 2 July alongside fellow Palestinian activist Khitam Saafin, the president of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, Jarrar is a prominent member of the Palestinian Legislative Council as well as a feminist, leftist and advocate for the freedom of Palestinian political prisoners. She has been ordered to six months in administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial – and Saafin to three months in detention without charge; both orders are indefinitely renewable. Organizations and movements around the world have joined in the call to free Jarrar and Saafin.

The statement follows:

The SA Government calls for the release of a Palestinian Legislative Council member.

The South African Government notes with concern the arrest and subsequent imprisonment of Palestinian Legislative Council member, Ms Khalida Jarrar, who was arrested in Ramallah (Area A and under Control of the Palestinian Authority) on 2 July 2017 by the occupying Israeli military.

The arrest was subsequently followed by a six month administrative detention order on 12 July 2017 without charge or trial.

Ms Jarrar in addition to being a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) is also a civil society leader and one of approximately 500 Palestinians currently in Israeli jails under administrative detention measure.

South Africans are too familiar with the administrative detention measure which is similar to “detention without trial” under which political leaders could be imprisoned for days without due process at the behest of the apartheid security forces.

Israel is a signatory of the Fourth Geneva Convention which embodies fair trail and the right of an accused to defend him or herself. The South African Government calls upon Israel to abide and respect the provisions of this convention as an occupying force.

South Africa calls for Ms Jarrar, Vice-President of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and a respected leader of her people, to be accorded the space to play her rightful role in the development of the State of Palestine.

Enquiries: Mr Clayson Monyela, 082 884 5974

ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND COOPERATION

O R Tambo Building
460 Soutpansberg Road
Rietondale
Pretoria
0084

Shireen Issawi released from solitary confinement after over one month; Sabreen Abu Sharar re-arrested by occupation forces

Imprisoned Palestinian lawyer and prisoners’ advocate Shireen Issawi has been released from solitary confinement and will be returned to HaSharon prison in the coming days, reported the Palestinian Prisoners’ Affairs Commission on Thursday, 27 July. Issawi has been held in solitary confinement for over one month in the Jalameh/Kishon interrogation center since she and other prisoners were assaulted by Israeli occupation guards in Damon prison on 22 June.

Issawi is imprisoned alongside two of her brothers. Medhat, who was tried with her in the same case for providing funds to Palestinian prisoners from their families. Samer, a re-arrested former prisoner released in the 2011 Wafa al-Ahrar exchange and a former long-term hunger striker, is one of approximately 60 released prisoners whose original sentences has been reimposed. Shireen Issawi was a highly visible international spokesperson during Samer’s hunger strike and the leader of the campaign to free Samer Issawi.

Following the violent raid on Palestinian women prisoners in Damon, Issawi was fined 700 shekels, banned from family visits for a month and denied access to the canteen (prison store). She had declared that she would launch a hunger strike if her solitary confinement was not immediately ended, and told lawyer Hanan al-Khatib that she was subject to surveillance cameras inside her cell, the blocking of the cell window and racist slurs from prison guards in isolation in Jalameh.

On Friday, 28 July, protests in London were organized by Inminds to demand freedom for Issawi and her fellow Palestinian prisoners, highlighting her lengthy solitary confinement and her imprisonment for the purpose of suppressing advocacy for imprisoned Palestinians.

Issawi is one of approximately 60 Palestinian women and minor girls imprisoned by the Israeli occupation, mostly held in HaSharon and Damon prisons. They include prominent political leaders Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin as well as Jerusalemite teens Tamara Abu Laban, 16, and Alaa Ruweidi, 16, both detained last week for posting on social media about the uprising in Jerusalem. The teens’ detention was extended until Tuesday, 1 August.

Sabreen Abu Sharar, photo via Asra Media Office

In addition, on 26 July, Israeli occupation forces seized Dr. Sabreen Abu Sharar, 29, from her home in Dura near al-Khalil, only eight months after her release from Israeli prison. She was detained for 18 months and was the representative of the Palestinian women prisoners in Damon prison.

A medical doctor engaged to a fellow doctor from Gaza working in the United States, she was told on Wednesday, 26 July that she would receive a decision within 48 hours about a permit to travel to unite with her fiance. Former prisoner Haifa Abu Sbeih told the Asra Media Office that the arrest was the answer Sabreen received. Abu Sbeih said that she expects that Abu Sharar will join several other Palestinian women in being held without charge or trial under administrative detention.

Meanwhile, the Ofer military court ordered the release of Ibtisam al-Abed, the mother of prisoner Omar al-Abed, who carried out an attack on the illegal occupation settlement of Halamesh last week. Al-Abed was seized from her village of Kobar near Ramallah and accused of “incitement” for her public statements about her son; she paid a 10,000 NIS bail ($2809 USD) in order to secure her release.

 

Bilal Diab on 16th day of hunger strike, ordered to six months in administrative detention

Bilal Diab, Photo via Asra Voice

Palestinian prisoner Bilal Diab, 32, former long-term hunger striker currently engaged in a hunger strike since his seizure by occupation forces on 14 July, has been ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial. Israeli occupation authorities issued a six month administrative detention order against Diab on Tuesday, 25 July.

Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable; some Palestinians have spent years at a time imprisoned without charge or trial. Diab, who previously went on hunger strike for 78 days against his imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention in 2012, winning his release, launched his new strike specifically in protest of this practice.

There are nearly 500 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial – out of over 6,200 Palestinian prisoners in total – under administrative detention orders.

Diab has continued his strike and is now on his 16th day, demanding his release drom administrative detention. Muhja al-Quds Foundation reported that he is held in solitary confinement and has lost 7 kilograms (15 pounds) since he launched his strike.

Waed al-Haq al-Hadmi, photo via Asra Voice

On Thursday, 27 July, the mother of Waed al-Haq al-Hadmi, 28, from the town of Surif near al-Khalil, announced that her son had also launched an open hunger strike immediately after his seizure by Israeli occupation forces, who ransacked the family home. Al-Hadmi’s wedding is scheduled in two weeks; he has spent 6 and one-half years in Israeli jails in previous imprisonments.

Samidoun stands with Palestinians in Jerusalem and urges international action in support

Photo: ActiveStills.org/Oren Ziv

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the thousands of Palestinians who have taken to the streets in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine against the latest manifestations of the settler colonial attack on  Jerusalem as a Palestinian and Arab city. The imposition of electronic security gates at Al-Aqsa Mosque by Israeli occupation forces is a symbol and representation of the ongoing siege, strangulation and ethnic cleansing of Jerusalem under the false rubric of security that provides no security, peace or freedom from terror for Palestinians in Jerusalem while further emphasizing the denial of sovereignty and self-determination in the city. 

Month after month, hundreds of Palestinians are seized in Jerusalem as monthly reports document the use of mass arrests against the population. Organizers in the city are subjected to ongoing attacks that attempt to strip their residency while families face ongoing land confiscation, home demolitions and settler attacks. Nevertheless, Jerusalem remains a center of resistance to occupation, apartheid and settler colonialism despite all of the “security” measures visited upon the Palestinian people for the purposes of repression.

The attacks on Jerusalem have included Israeli firing on demonstrators, killing of Palestinian teens, arrests of Jerusalemite activists including bans on the use of social media, banning Jerusalem activists from Al-Aqsa and arrests of mosque employees.  Indeed, two Jerusalemite teen girls, Tamara Abu Laban, 16, and Alaa Ruweidi, 16, were seized by occupation forces in night raids on Saturday, 22 July with allegations of “incitement” for posting about their city and struggle on social media.

Palestinian prisoners have emphasized the importance of the struggle in Jerusalem, as well as the centrality of the struggle of Palestinians to break the siege on Gaza as their electricity is cut to one hour a day and as their land becomes increasingly uninhabitable under ongoing Israeli siege with the full complicity of international powers.

Photo: ActiveStills.org/ Yotam Ronen

Prisoners of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine issued a statement from Israeli prisons saluting the three Palestinians shot down as they rose up in the streets of Jerusalem on 21 July, Mohammed Mahmoud Khalaf, Mohammed Abu Ghannam and Mohammed Mahmoud Sharaf. They also urged Arab and international action in defense of the Palestinian people:

“The blood of the martyrs on the streets and alleys of Palestine and the squares of Jerusalem, will not be wasted. In this context, we call for the organization of marches and symbolic gatherings everywhere to commemorate the martyrs and emphasize the continuity of resistance and intifada on the road to return and liberation….We salute the heroism of the Palestinian people in Jerusalem and support their steadfastness in the face of the systematic oppression and war waged against them by the occupation. We also record our pride in all of the Palestinian masses in the villages, cities, refugee camps and everywhere in diaspora who defend Jerusalem and the Palestinian people…We demand to continue the days of action to support the Palestinian people in Jerusalem and defend the holy sites, embodying the slogan of the continuation of intifada.”

Samidoun stands with the Palestinian people in rejecting the Israeli attacks on Al-Aqsa and Jerusalem. We urge supporters and friends of Palestine and the Palestinian prisoners’ and Palestinian people’s struggle for freedom to join in the international protests and actions to stand with Jerusalem and all of occupied Palestine and its people, in Palestine and in exile.

Many people around the world, especially Palestinian communities in exile and diaspora, have taken to the streets in cities like Athens, Berlin, New York, Rotterdam and London to stand with Jerusalem as a unified Palestinian people. These demonstrations must grow and strengthen to place maximum pressure on the Israeli occupation and the international powers like the United States, Canada and the European Union that continue to provide cover and massive military, diplomatic and/or political support and alliances to the settler colonial project in Palestine.

Palestinian parliamentarian among 42 seized by Israeli occupation forces

Photo: Omar Abdel-Razak, via Asra Media Office

Palestinian parliamentarian Omar Mahmoud Abdel-Razak, 53, was seized by Israeli occupation forces in a pre-dawn raid on his Salfit home on Sunday, 23 July, raising the number of imprisoned members of the Palestinian Legislative Council to 12. Abdel-Razak was seized along with at least 41 more Palestinians in a series of violent raids and attacks overnight throughout occupied Palestine in which a number of former prisoners as well as two teen Palestinian girls were arrested.

Abdel-Razak is a member of the Change and Reform Bloc, associated with the Hamas movement. His home was invaded by a large number of occupation soldiers and intelligence officers who ransacked his belongings before seizing him and taking him to an unknown destination. He has spent over 7 years in Israeli prison, most recently held in 2014 in administrative detention without charge or trial.

His arrest follows that of Khalida Jarrar, the leftist feminist parliamentarian and Palestinian national leader who was seized alongside Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees president Khitam Saafin on 2 July. Jarrar, like nine other Palestinian parliamentarians, is held without charge or trial under a six-month administrative detention order.

The Palestinian parliamentarians held under administrative detention are Jarrar, Mohammed Badr, Ibrahim Dahbour, Mohammed al-Tal, Hassan Yousef, Ahmad Attoun, Ahmad Mubarak, Azzam Salhab and Mohammed Jamal Natsheh. Jarrar is a member of the Abu Ali Mustafa Bloc while the others are members of the Change and Reform bloc like Abdel-Razak.

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

The arrests on Sunday morning and late Saturday night especially targeted former prisoners, with a number of the 42 Palestinians seized having been imprisoned before in Israeli jails, including Abdel-Salam Jamal Abu al-Hija, Ashraf Daraghmeh, Jaafar Arouj, Nidal Abu Sneineh, Ahmad Khalayleh, Alaa Zaaqiq, Mohammed Ikhlayyil and Nidal Abu Remaileh.  Four children from Jerusalem, including two teenage girls, Tamara Abu Laban and Alaa Ruwaidi, both 16, who were detained and accused of “incitement” on social media. Their detention has already been extended until Tuesday, along with that of the two imprisoned boys, Hassan Abu Najma and Hamza Abu Khater.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network condemns the ongoing attacks and arrests targeting Palestinian leaders and the entire Palestinian people as a means of attempting to suppress the Palestinian struggle for liberation carried out by the settler-colonial Israeli apartheid regime. We demand the release of all imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarians and all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

U.N. official in Gaza seized by Israeli occupation forces

Israeli occupation forces have seized Hamdan Temraz, 61, the deputy director of the United Nations’ Department of Safety and Security in Gaza. Temraz was seized by occupation forces as he attempted to cross via the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing – where he had a permit – on 12 July.

Journalist Richard Silverstein reported that the arrest of Temraz is being held under gag order in Israeli media, while a number of Palestinian media outlets have reported on the seizure of Temraz.

Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights and other Palestinian human rights organizations in Gaza denounced the arrest, noting that Temraz was traveling to Jerusalem for his work with the United Nations. They further noted that eight people working for international human rights organizations in Gaza have been seized since 2014, usually at Erez/Beit Hanoun while crossing under previously issued permits.

The seizure of Temraz follows two other high-profile cases heavily promoted by the Israeli occupation centering on dubious charges. Two of the more prominent cases in question were those of Waheed Borsh of the UN Development Program and Mohammed el-Halabi of World Vision.

In the Halabi case, which continues in Israeli courts,  the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade reported in March that “an internal review into World Vision funding in Gaza has uncovered nothing to suggest any diversion of government aid funding to Hamas.”

Al-Halabi was seized by Israeli occupation forces at the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing and in August 2006, Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, went on a propaganda offensive, claiming that Halabi had redirected World Vision funds to the Palestinian resistance organization, Hamas. Israeli occupation officials declared that he had diverted $43 million in charitable funds to the Palestinian resistance, including a video from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accusing Palestinians of not caring about their people.  The amounts cited dwarfed the actual budget to which al-Halabi had access, by all accounts.  These seemingly impossible claims were made after nearly a month of interrogation, during which Halabi was subjected to torture and inhumane treatment.

The claims against Halabi were accompanied by similarly touted claims against civil engineer Waheed Bursh, a contractor with the UN Development Program, also accused of redirecting resources to the Palestinian resistance – in his case, rubble from the Israeli bombing of Gaza. However, despite the large-scale publicity surrounding Borsh’s arrest, he was released seven months later following a plea bargain, indicating that no serious charges were ever made. He was cited as a “witness” againat al-Halabi, and later confirmed that he completely denied any allegations against the aid worker.

Rather than presenting any evidence to back up the widely-publicized public claims against World Vision and Halabi, Israeli occupation officials have instead submitted additional, lesser charges against Halabi that have no relation to diverting funds or his work with World Vision, including making personal small donations of less than $100 USD to a mosque and “aiding and abetting the enemy,” with the “enemy” here being Palestinians in Gaza; Halabi is, of course, a Palestinian from Gaza.

The roots of the seizure of Temraz, the prosecution of Halabi and Bursh, the shuttering of World Vision’s programs and the threat of further raids and prosecutions against Palestinian staff of international organizations can also be found in the use of “foreign terrorist lists” by international states and bodies to criminalize Palestinian political life and resistance.

While the United States, European Union, Canada, UK, Australia and other states are clearly not opponents of either state-sponsored or non-state violence when carried out by allies and agents, and while Palestinians are internationally recognized as an occupied people with rights to sovereignty and self-determination, Palestinian resistance organizations are routinely labeled as “terrorist.” The use of the terror label is then used to justify a wholesale war against Palestinian existence and even international organizations by a colonial occupying power. The use of the “terror” label is also used to justify the ongoing siege on Gaza for over ten years, growing and intensifying as electricity is now denied to Palestinians in Gaza for 23 out of 24 hours in every day.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges action and solidarity against the growing attacks on Palestinian workers with international organizations at the hands of Israeli occupation forces, as part and parcel of the besieging of Gaza and the Palestinian people. We stand in solidarity with the people of Gaza and all Palestinians struggling to break the siege and achieve liberation and return throughout Palestine.

Bilal Diab launches hunger strike for freedom

Photo: Bilal Diab

Re-arrested former Palestinian prisoner and long-term hunger striker Bilal Diab has launched a hunger strike to demand his freedom. Diab was seized by occupation forces in a pre-dawn raid on his home in the village of Kafr Ra’i near Jenin on Friday, 14 July.

The Mohja Al-Quds Association announced that Diab, 32, is entering his eighth day of hunger strike; he began refusing food on the same day he was seized by occupation forces, 14 July.

He has been seized and imprisoned by the Israeli occupation on multiple occasions, frequently being held without charge or trial under administrative detention. He has also been jailed under allegations of participation in a prohibited organization, the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine. He was last released from Israeli prison on 15 December 2015.

In 2012, he engaged in a 77-day open hunger strike alongside Thaer Halahleh to demand his freedom from administrative detention without charge or trial. Following his hunger strike, he was released on 9 August 2012.

24 July, Madrid, Castellon, Valencia: Protest to free Palestinian Prisoners

MADRID:
Monday, 24 July
8:00 pm
Plaza de las Provincias

CASTELLON:
Monday, 24 July
8:00 pm
Placa de la Pescateria

VALENCIA:
Monday, 24 July
8:00 pm
Calle Colon 60

Two Palestinian feminist leaders, Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin, are being imprisoned without charge or trial for six and three months under administrative detention, by the Israeli occupation forces.

Join us to demand their freedom.

Protests organized by Alkarama Palestinian Women’s Movement and the Solidarity Network Against the Occupation of Palestine

 

25 July, Berlin: Protest to Stop Hewlett-Packard (HP)

Tuesday, 25 July
6:00 pm
Alexanderplatz
Berlin, Germany
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1468488509864039/

BDS Berlin is organizing a protest against Hewlett-Packard’s contracts with the Israeli occupation!

When: Tuesday, 25 July 2017 – 6 pm to 8 pm
Outside Saturn in Alexanderplatz, Berlin

This protest is part of the international campaign against Hewlett-Packard.