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37th Day of Hunger Strike: Strikers’ health deteriorates rapidly as Palestinians protest Trump visit

Graphic by The Palestine Project (Facebook)

On 23 May, Palestinian prisoners entered their 37th day of hunger strike. 1500 prisoners – out of a total of approximately 6500 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails – launched the strike on 17 April 2017, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. Throughout that time, strikers have consumed salt and water only to protect their lives and health.

Palestinian hunger strikers have faced harsh repression from Israeli occupation prison authorities. They have been denied legal and family visits, thrown in isolation and solitary confinement, abusively transferred repeatedly from prison to prison and had their personal belongings confiscated, including in many cases the salt on which they rely.

On the 37th day of hunger strike, prisoners begin to face very serious threats to their lives and health. There are many reports of fainting, serious fatigue, lowered blood pressure and heart rate and severe weight loss. Nevertheless, Palestinian prisoner Karim Younes, the longest consecutively-held prisoner jailed for 34 years, issued a statement emphasizing that despite their declining health, the strikers would continue and even escalate their strike.

One prisoner, Adnan Sari Hussein, 31, from Tulkarem, has been on hunger strike for 37 days; he is held in Shatta prison clinic and was reportedly treated with a defibrillator after his heartbeat momentarily stopped, reported Asra Voice. Hussein is reportedly still facing a very serious condition.  Meanwhile, in Eshel Prison, a number of hunger strikers are experiencing a sharp decline in weight and blood pressure, with many vomiting or urinating blood and experiencing skin diseases. 10 prisoners have been transferred to the Soroka hospital in the past two days said Palestinian lawyer Yousef Nasasreh, following his meeting with hunger striker Amjad Abu Latifa.  Hunger-striking prisoner Nasser Abu Hmeid said that Ashkelon prison has been “turned into a field hospital,” shortly before an announcement that many Palestinian prisoners would shortly be transferred to civilian hospitals.

The Prisoners’ Affairs Commission demanded on Tuesday that the International Committee of the Red Cross reveal the current situation and condition of hunger-striking imprisoned leader Marwan Barghouthi, who is held in solitary confinement in Jalameh prison and is currently being denied legal visits. The ICRC met Barghouthi briefly once before his one legal visit, but did not disclose information about his condition publicly. Numerous Palestinian activists and families of the prisoners have been sharply critical of the ICRC‘s performance during the hunger strike, particularly noting that one of the prisoners’ demands is for the restoration of the second monthly family visit cut by the ICRC due to “budget cuts” in 2016.

200 more strikers joined the strike on Sunday from prisoners held in Ramon, Eshel and Nafha prisons. The strikers’ demands focus on basic human rights: an end to the denial of family visits, proper medical care and treatment, the right to access distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.  Leaders of the hunger strike include Barghouthi, imprisoned PFLP General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat, longest-held Palestinian prisoners Nael Barghouthi and Karim Younes, and fellow imprisoned leaders Anas Jaradat, Abbas Sayyed, Hassan Salameh, Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh and others.

Hunger striking prisoner Ayed Dudeen joined the strike on 4 May with other prominent leaders and is held in administrative detention without charge or trial, which is indefinitely renewable. Prior to launching his strike, he had been ordered to another 4 months in administrative detention; his family reported that an additional 2 months were now added to his sentence as punishment for participating in the collective hunger strikes.

Palestinian lawyer Jawad Boulos reported on Monday, 22 May that the prison administration has created a list of 30 prisoners, and if a lawyer visits one of these 30 strikers, he will not be allowed to visit the others. Boulos met with striking prisoner Nasser Oweis, held in isolation in Ayalon Ramle with strike leaders including Haitham Hamdan, Ziad Zahran, William Khatib, Samer Ghaith, Ibrahim Hamed, Marwan Fararjeh, Louay al-Mansi, Kamil Abu Hanish, Khalil Shilo and Abdel-Rahman Abu Houli. He reported that the strikers are all experiencing severe health deterioration and that Oweis had lost 17 kg (35 pounds) so far on his hunger strike; however, Oweis told Boulous that “we are more determined than ever to continue our struggle until victory.” At the same time, Boulos was denied access to hunger-striking prisoner Samer Issawi, held in the Ramle prison clinic.

On Monday, 22 May, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine issued a joint statement warning of any attempts to circumvent or undermine the prisoners’ strike in an attempt to break the prisoners’ movement, the backbone of confrontation of the occupation and all projects that aim to undermine Palestinian rights and freedom. They particularly warned of schemes associated with the visit of U.S. President Donald Trump to the region, urging sharp confrontation of Trump and the U.S. role in Palestine.

At the same time, the Committee to Support the Dignity Strike emphasized that there have been no serious negotiations to the present time and that reports that a deal is close are “deceiving and misleading” and meant to undermine popular and official solidarity with the strike.

On Monday, 22 May, Palestinians throughout occupied Palestine engaged in a strike in support of the prisoners’ strike, closing schools, universities, shops, markets, and government institutions. At least 20 Palestinians were shot and injured by Israeli occupation forces as they attacked and violently suppressed rallies for the prisoners.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, 23 May, thousands of Palestinians in Gaza took to the streets in a protest declaring Trump not welcome in Palestine, dedicated to the prisoners on their 37th day of hunger strike. Marchers denounced Trump and the U.S. role in the region and demanded freedom for Palestinian prisoners.

International actions also continued in support of the prisoners, as students and others in the United States participated in a one-day hunger strike and action under the banner of #DignityStrike36, and the US Palestinian Community Network called for a week of action across the U.S.  Solidarity hunger strikes will continue today, and an international solidarity hunger strike is growing for Thursday, 25 May, as well as a one-day hunger strike throughout Ireland on 24 May. Events are being organized in New York, Washington, San Francisco, Houston, Cagliari, Milan, Choisy, Marseille, Paris, Lyon, Albertville, Nimes, Saint-Etienne, Montpellier, Brussels, Berlin, Victoria, Portadown, County Kildare, Dublin, Belfast, Stuttgart, London and more.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to continue to mobilize, demonstrate and organize in public squares, government offices and outside Israeli embassies, as the prisoners have urged. We also urge participation in the urgent call to action to pressure the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to take a real stand and end its complicity in the violation of Palestinian prisoners’ rights. Take Action: 

1) Organize or join an event in support of the hunger strikers. Protest outside your local Israeli embassy, consulate or mission, or at a public square or government building. You can drop a banner or put up a table to support the prisoners and their strike. See the list of current international events here, and add your own: send your events and actions to us at samidoun@samidoun.net, on Facebook, or use the form to tell us about your actions.

2) Hunger Strike for Justice! Join the Palestinian hunger strikers to support their demands with a symbolic one-day hunger strike in your community or on your campus. Tell us about your solidarity strike at samidoun@samidoun.net, on Facebook, or use the form.

3) Call your government officials and demand action.  Call your foreign affairs officials – and members of parliament – and urge action for the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike.

Call your country’s officials urgently:

  • Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop: + 61 2 6277 7500
  • Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland: +1-613-992-5234
  • European Union Commissioner Federica Mogherini: +32 (0) 2 29 53516
  • New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully: +64 4 439 8000
  • United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson: +44 20 7008 1500
  • United States President Donald Trump: 1-202-456-1111

Tell your government: Palestinian prisoners are on hunger strike for their basic human rights – for family visits, medical care, and freedom from imprisonment without charge or trial. Governments must pressure Israel to recognize the prisoners’ demands!

4) Take action on social media! Support the hunger strike on social media. Post a picture of yourself with a sign saying you support the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike! Include the hashtag #DignityStrike when posting your photo to Facebook or Twitter. Share and re-share information about the strike with the #DignityStrike hashtag.

5) Build the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Campaign! Join the BDS Movement to highlight the complicity of corporations like Hewlett-Packard and the continuing involvement of G4S in Israeli policing and prisons. Build a campaign to boycott Israeli goods, impose a military embargo on Israel, or organize around the academic and cultural boycott of Israel.

Karim Younes from isolation: “Weakness and fatigue have hit our bodies, but our will and determination have grown”

Karim Younes, the longest consecutively-held Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails and one of the imprisoned leaders who joined 1500 fellow Palestinian prisoners in launching the Strike for Freedom and Dignity issued a statement from prison on Tuesday, 23 May. The statement was presented by Younes’ brother and lawyer, Tamim Younes:

Our resisting people

I address you from behind the barbed wire on the 37th day of the battle for freedom and dignity to inform you that our bodies may be weakened and barely able to move, but our spirits reach the sky, and despite the stretch of the battle and its ferocity, we are determined to continue until we achieve victory, not only for us but for all of our people.

The prison and security authorities have tried through several meetings offered to us to suspend the strike and discuss our demands after that, but we refused and have categorically rejected this approach.

We are determined to complete the mission to the fullest. This battle is not only a battle of prisoners and their demands, but it is the battle of the people and their dignity.

It is no secret that weakness and fatigue have hit our bodies, but our will and determination have grown and strengthened above the ability of our bodies.

On the 37th day, we assure you that we will not retreat before the escalation and arrogance of the occupier. We will escalate our steps of struggle in the days to come, at the forefront of these steps to refrain from taking salt water.

This requires a parallel escalation of our people and our supporters to expand and take the battle everywhere.

The occupation and its jailers have imprisoned our bodies, but our souls remain resisting and free.

We will not retreat, will not retreat, will not retreat.

Either victory or martyrdom.

Karim Younes
Isolation cells, Ramle Ayalon prison

23 May 2017

Rasmea Odeh addresses homecoming of Oscar Lopez Rivera in Chicago: Read her speech

Rasmea Odeh welcomes Oscar Lopez Rivera, 18 May, Chicago. Photo: Christine Geovanis

Reprinted from the Rasmea Defense Committee. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Rasmea Odeh on her 70th birthday of a lifetime of constant commitment to struggle for justice and liberation and love for the Palestinian people and all peoples working to be free from oppression: 

Today, May 22nd, is Rasmea’s 70th birthday, and she’s been pretty busy the past few weeks.  The Hana Center honored her on May 5th, she spoke at Northwestern University on May 15th, and she gave a powerful welcoming statement at the emotional return of former Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar Lopez to Paseo Boricua in Chicago on May 18th.  (Watch Rasmea’s speech at the 1 hour, 45 minute mark here, and read the full text below.)

On this milestone birthday, the Rasmea Defense Committee is asking for your support to help close out some legal and other expenses.  You all made an incredible commitment to Rasmea and her historic defense campaign, but we are still in need of additional donations.  Please give what you can here, and be on the lookout for an announcement of Rasmea’s farewell event coming soon!  Thank you!

Rasmea Defense Committee – May 22nd, 2017

***************************

Rasmea’s address at the Oscar Lopez homecoming in Chicago

In my organizing career, I have spoken in front of the Palestine National Council, the Palestinian legislative body in exile, and in front of a United Nations special committee in Geneva, but I am as proud to be in front of this audience tonight as I have ever been in my entire life.

Oscar, I was released after 10 years as a political prisoner in Palestine two years before you started your sentence, and I know your story very well, because your life is an example to me and to all of us. You have taught us what it means to be principled and committed to your people and all oppressed peoples of the world.  We thank you for your sacrifice and your strength, and the way you motivate us to fight for our rights and our liberation like you always have.

The Puerto Ricans in this city have always been close to our community. We have faced similar grand jury repression and attacks on our activism. We’ve marched together in dozens of protests for immigrant rights, Palestinian independence, Puerto Rican independence, and other social justice issues. We organized together at UIC in the radical student days, and no other community mobilized like yours when the government came after the Palestine support movement and the Anti-War 23 in Chicago in 2010.

And now we get to celebrate together—with the National Boricua Human Rights Network and the Puerto Rican Cultural Center and all of you—the freedom of your leader Oscar Lopez.  But he is not just your leader. He is our leader too.

Oscar, over six thousand Palestinians are political prisoners in Israeli jails because they fight for what you fight for, self-determination and an end to colonialism and full and complete independence. One thousand eight hundred of them are currently on an open ended hunger strike in its 31stday, and they are in need of your voice of support, because they are inspired by your freedom and your refusal to accept anything less than all of your people’s demands.

I have faced my own criminalization by the U.S. government, and will have to leave my home here in a few months. Wherever I land, I will continue my fight for Palestinian independence, and I will continue to support the independence of Puerto Rico. And I pray that we both live long enough to see our two nations free from the evils of colonialism and U.S. imperialism.  Welcome home, Oscar!

 

New York City protest shows solidarity with Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike, urges HP boycott

Photo: Joe Catron

New York City protesters gathered on Friday, 19 May outside the Best Buy electronics store in Union Square for a protest in support of hunger-striking Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. Organized by Samidoun Palestinian prisoner Solidarity Network, the protest also urged the boycott of Hewlett-Packard (HP) products, including computers, printers and other consumer electronics and supplies. HP is the subject of a global boycott campaign for its multiple contracts with the Israeli occupation military, the prison system that abuses 6500 Palestinian political prisoners and even the Israeli navy as it maintains its siege on Gaza.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Protesters carried signs supporting the hunger strike and distributed leaflets to passers-by with information about Palestinian prisoners, the boycott of HP, and the hunger strike launched by 1500 Palestinian prisoners on 17 April 2017, continuing to this day. The strikers’ demands focus on basic human rights, including an end to the denial of family visits, proper health care and medical treatment, the right to access distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

Photo: Joe Catron

Palestinian prisoners have spent over a month on hunger strike; even as new strikers and prominent leaders have joined the battle, they have faced sharp repression inside Israeli prisons. Leaders of the strike, including Marwan Barghouthi, Ahmad Sa’adat, Abbas Sayyed, Anas Jaradat, Nael Barghouthi and Karim Younis have been repeatedly transferred and isolated. Frequent repressive raids and mass transfers target strikers while their personal belongings – and on many occasions, even the salt that they use with water to sustain their life and health – have been confiscated.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Participants in the protest had lengthy discussions with passers-by, informing them about the situation of Palestinian prisoners. They also chanted in support of the prisoners’ hunger strike and freedom for the Palestinian people. The protesters discussed the widespread international solidarity with the hunger-striking prisoners and the support of other national liberation movements and political prisoner support movements.

Photo: Joe Catron

One protester, Anne Pruden, had recently traveled to Belfast, and spoke about the numerous events and actions in support of the prisoners and the solidarity between Irish republican strugglers and the Palestinian liberation movement. She highlighted the frequent demonstrations focusing on the prisoners’ struggle and support for the liberation of Palestine, as well as the murals on Belfast’s famous International Wall that collectively highlight Irish and Palestinian liberation struggles and the heroism of political prisoners. Irish republican political prisoners themselves recently issued a statement of support for the prisoners’ strike, while dozens of events have been organized in the past month across Ireland by a number of Irish organizations.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun in New York City is planning many more actions and events in support of the prisoners’ hunger strike. It is one of the co-sponsors of the event on Wednesday, 24 May being organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement and Existence is Resistance at 6:30 pm in Times Square in support of the prisoners. Samidoun will also rally and protest once again on Friday, 26 May at 5:30 pm outside the Union Square Best Buy, at 52 E. 14th St. All supporters of justice in Palestine are invited to join the protest to show their solidarity for Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian people.

35 Days on Hunger Strike: Critical moment, solidarity needed for Strike of Freedom and Dignity

Graphic by The Palestine Project (Facebook)

On 21 May, Palestinian prisoners entered their 35th day of hunger strike in the Strike of Freedom and Dignity. Launched by 1500 of the 6500 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails on 17 April 2017, the strike has key demands that focus on basic human rights, including an end to the denial of family visits, proper medical care and treatment, the right to access distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

On the 35th day of the strike, hunger strikers’ health continues to face serious challenges and deteriorating conditions. Hunger striking Palestinian prisoners have been subject to intense repression, including frequent abusive and physically taxing transfers, denial of legal and family visits, confiscation of personal belongings, including the salt that strikers rely on with water to preserve their lives and health, and repressive raids by Israeli occupation forces on a frequent basis.

Meanwhile, the strike’s media committee officially declared that no negotiations have taken place with the leadership of the strike on the strikers’ demands, despite the hunger strike of over one month.  The media committee declared that reports of negotiations are rumors being spread by the Israel Prison Service in an attempt to undermine the morale of the strikers and public attention and support for the strike at this urgent moment.

The Prisoners’ Affairs Commission and Palestinian Prisoners Society noted the desire of the Israeli government to end the strike before U.S. president Donald Trump arrives in the region and is attempting to isolate the strike’s leadership and neutralize its power through avoiding negotiating directly with the leadership chosen by the prisoners themselves.

A number of hunger strikers are experiencing severe weight loss, fatigue, inability to stand, blurred vision and even vomiting blood. While some strikers have been transferred to civilian hospitals, including a group transferred from Ashkelon prison to Barzilai hospital, many more are being held in prisons with so-called “field hospitals” created to hide the strikers from view or public access, pressure strikers into breaking their strike and threaten the strikers with forced feeding.

Former long-term hunger striker Samer Issawi was transferred to the Ramle prison clinic on Sunday, 21 May after the deterioration of his health.  Meanwhile, hunger striker Mohammed Abu Rub told lawyer Khaled Mahajna that 50 hunger strikers are held in Ashkelon prison, where a so-called “field hospital” lacks all medical equipment and only offers glucose to the prisoners who refuse to take it.

Fayha Shalash, the wife of hunger-striking imprisoned journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq – himself a former long-term hunger striker – said that her husband’s health is deteriorating, and that she faces extreme difficulty in obtaining accurate information about her husband’s situation due to the policies of the Israel Prison Service. “There is still uncertainty about the whereabouts of my husband, despite the news we receive about his health….he is one of the most affected among the prisoners in this battle of dignity, because Mohammed has not yet recovered from his first and second hunger strikes,” she said. Reporting what she had been told by a newly released prisoner, she said that “he is a prisoner who has fought two strikes and always calls for collective hunger strikes, so it is not surprising that he participates in this strike.”

Hunger strikers in Ohli Kedar and Eshel prisons issued a message to the world about their continuing strike:

To the masses of our heroic Palestinian people, to the free people and revolutionaries:

We are sending this message with you as we confront with our empty stomach the strongest military power in the Middle East, and we challenge them with our hunger and declare before the world that we will die standing and will not kneel. And we affirm to the steadfast masses of our people that we are continuing our strike until the fulfillment of our just and legitimate demands and that all conspiracies will be destroyed on the rock of our will and steadfastness. The cowardly enemy will see us victorious with the help of God and our will and determination.

To the masses of the Palestinian people…in this moment the jailer practices various types of abuse against us. We call upon all the free people of the world to stand by us and expose this brutal enemy, and we assure our people that we are steadfast until victory.

Throughout Palestine, villages, cities and refugee camps are filled with protests, actions and support tents for the strikers. In Jenin on Saturday, 20 May, former prisoner Lina Jarbouni addressed the participants in the protest tent, urging the escalation of the movement to support the prisoners as they go through this very difficult stage and need popular support more than ever. Jarbouni, freed in April 2017, was the longest-serving Palestinian woman prisoner in Israeli jails. In Ramallah, a women’s march in support of the prisoners included women from villages throughout the area. Saturday events as called for by the National Committee to Support the Strike also included work to implement the boycott of Israeli goods by traders, merchants and people broadly.

On Sunday, various cities conducted a partial strike from 11 am to 2 pm in support of the strike.  On Monday, there is a call for a general strike throughout occupied Palestine – in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Jerusalem, and occupied Palestine ’48 – with participation from the diaspora, with protests starting at 11 am and a one-day hunger strike from 10 am to 10 pm in a national day of anger and protests in response to the presence of U.S. president Trump. On Tuesday, 23 May, the committee is urging marches from the protest tents in all cities and areas, while on Wednesday, 24 May, they are urging night marches in support of the prisoners. The committee is also calling for popular conferences to support the prisoners on Thursday, 25 May and marches to confrontation points with occupation forces after public prayers on Friday, 26 May.

Meanwhile, many Palestinian organizers were sharply critical of the role of the Palestinian Authority in relation to the prisoners’ strike, especially as the PA continues its security coordination with the Israeli occupation despite clear calls for it to end coming from the prisoners’ movement and the Committee to Support the Strike. Abla Sa’adat, Palestinian activist and the wife of hunger striking imprisoned PFLP leader Ahmad Sa’adat said in Sakhnin at a prisoner support tent that PA President Mahmoud Abbas is “wandering from country to country in America, Russia and India as if nothing is happening to our people and our prisoners.”

Palestinian lawyer Muhannad Karajeh of the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association said that arrests of Palestinian activists by PA security services have escalated, particularly among university students and after solidarity activities supporting the prisoners’ hunger strike. Multiple activists arrested by the PA security forces told Quds News that they were interrogated about solidarity actions and social media posts in support of the prisoners’ hunger strike.

International actions also continued in support of the prisoners’ strike. Labor for Palestine issued a call for action from workers in support of the prisoners’ strike. The Union of Palestinian Communities and Organizations in Europe held its fourth conference in Berlin on Saturday, 20 May, which it dedicated to the prisoners. Protests continued in Parma, Montreal, Derry, Thionville, Auckland, Bristol, Paris, Copenhagen and elsewhere in support of the prisoners’ strike. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges further international actions and support for the prisoners at this critical time in their struggle for victory in the Strike of freedom and Dignity.

Prominent Palestinian community leaders and rights activists seized by Israeli occupation forces

At least nine Palestinians were seized by Israeli occupation forces overnight or in pre-dawn raids on Sunday, 21 May 2017. Among these Palestinians include several prominent activists, community leaders and former prisoners, some who have been highly active in the public actions in support of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike since 17 April. Nasser Abu Khdeir, Jerusalemite community leader and former prisoner; Eteraf Rimawi, director of the Bisan Center for Research and Development; and Abdul Razeq Farraj, the administrative and financial director of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees, were all seized by Israeli occupation forces in overnight attacks.

Nasser Abu Khdeir, 55, was just released from Israeli prison after serving five and one-half years in October 2016. He has spent over 15 years in Israeli prisons over multiple arrests and is very active in popular and community organizing in Jerusalem. He has recently been prominent in the prisoner support tents and protests in support of the hunger strike launched by 1500 Palestinian prisoners on 17 April 2017. During his own time in prison he participated in multiple collective hunger strikes and protests, including the 2011 hunger strike against isolation, the 2012 Karameh strike and the 2016 strike in solidarity with Bilal Kayed’s 71-day hunger strike.

Eteraf Rimawi, 41, the Executive Director of the Bisan Center for Research and Development, was last released in July 2016 after being imprisoned without charge or trial for nearly two years, since September 2014. His administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, was renewed repeatedly despite widespread international criticism of his imprisonment. Rimawi is a prominent human rights defender and civil society leader in Palestine. He was arrested five additional times and repeatedly imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention.

Abdul Razeq Farraj, 55, is a writer and journalist who is also the administrative and financial director of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees, an internationally-recognized land defense organization that won the United Nations Equator Prize and is a memer of the Via Campesina network of international peasants’ organizations. He has spent over 12 years in Israeli prisons, many of them held without charge or trial under administrative detention. His son Basil has written on multiple occasions about his experience of forced separation from his father, as well as the vision and political framework of Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strikes in Israeli jails.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network demands the immediate release of Nasser Abu Khdeir, Eteraf Rimawi, Abdul Razeq Farraj and all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails! We urge people around the world to join us in protesting for the immediate release of these human rights defenders and community leaders as well as the implementation of the demands of the over 1500 Palestinian prisoners who have gone on hunger strike for freedom and dignity.

International call to action for 25 May: Day of global one-day hunger strikes for Palestinian prisoners

Internationalist activists and organizers issued a call for a global one-day hunger strike on 25 May in support of hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. On 17 April 2017, 1500 Palestinian political prisoners, out of a total of nearly 6500 in Israeli prisons, launched the Strike for Dignity and Freedom.

The strikers’ demands are for basic human rights: an end to the denial of family visits, proper health care and medical treatment, the right to access distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

A number of solidarity strikes have been organized internationally, including a three-day strike in Paris organized by the initiator of the global call for hunger strike, CAPJPO-EuroPalestine. Additional actions have been organized in Edinburgh, Manchester, Brussels, ChicagoTurin and elsewhere. A one-day hunger strike in South Africa included the participation of Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa and numerous anti-apartheid veterans and former political prisoners.

“Given the critical situation of the Palestinian prisoners and the Israeli refusal to take their just demands into account, an appeal is made to all people of conscience in the world to mobilize in the streets on Thursday, 25 May, by observing a hunger strike to show their solidarity with the heroic resistance of the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike since 17 April,” writes EuroPalestine.

Several cities have already confirmed their participation in a collective hunger strike on this day, including Washington, DC, London, Paris, Sydney, Dublin, Lyon, Nimes and Albertville.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network supports and joins in this call for global hunger strike solidarity actions on 25 May.

In order to join the actions on 25 May – marked as a holiday throughout Europe, the Day of Ascension – contact EuroPalestine at info@europalestine.com. We urge you to also contact Samidoun at samidoun@samidoun.net so that we can include your actions on the global list of solidarity events in support of the hunger strike.

Samidoun salutes Oscar López Rivera and the Puerto Rican people on the occasion of his freedom

Rasmea Odeh and Oscar Lopez Rivera, Chicago, 18 May. Photo: Christine Geovanis.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Oscar López Rivera and the Puerto Rican people on the occasion of his release after over 36 years of imprisonment. The release of López Rivera is a victory for his steadfast through over 36 years of imprisonment and the commitment of the Puerto Rican people to struggle for his freedom and that of all the Puerto Rican political prisoners in colonial U.S. jails.

His over 35 years of imprisonment for “seditious conspiracy” was in fact targeting him as a Puerto Rican revolutionary against U.S. colonialism, struggling for the freedom of his people. He was targeted as part of a systematic attack on the revolutionary Puerto Rican struggle.

Rasmea Odeh welcomes Oscar Lopez Rivera, 18 May, Chicago. Photo: Christine Geovanis

We also salute the joyous anti-colonial reception for López Rivera in Humboldt Park in Chicago, where he was received by the Puerto Rican community and all strugglers for justice. Palestinian organizers and community activists were a prominent part of the occasion, where, in a particulary moving tribute and expression of mutual solidarity, Rasmea Odeh, community leader and former political prisoner, presented Lopez Rivera with a Palestinian keffiyeh. US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN) organizers carried Palestinian and Puerto Rican flags and banners saluting the joint anti-colonial struggle of the Puerto Rican and Palestinian people.

https://web.facebook.com/USPCN/videos/1560056340695869/

The Puerto Rican movement has long expressed its support for the Palestinian struggle, a support that has been reflected in the current hunger strike of 1500 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. Student strikers at the University of Puerto Rico confronting austerity have supported the #DignityStrike, while fellow former Puerto Rican political prisoner Luis Rosa Perez also expressed his solidarity with the prisoners.

“As an anticolonial fighter and former political prisoner, I stood side by side, every day, for the nearly 20 years I and my comrades spent in U.S. prisons, with the hundreds of men, women, and children in the dungeons of Israeli prisons. In addition, I stand today with those who move through the shadows on nightly missions, who give their love, their sweat and blood, for this beautiful cause of freedom.

I thank you for your resistance and your ability to live. You have served as an inspiration to many peoples in struggle. Your ability to love and grow while facing such hatred and destruction nurtures the flames of resistance throughout the world.

The nation of Puerto Rico will continue to struggle against U.S. colonialism and all of its vestiges. Our victories will be our strongest acts of solidarity, just as the victories of Palestinians will nourish our struggle. Thank you for your resistance. We march at your side.”

López Rivera wasted no time in asserting his internationalist solidarity upon his release; not only did he stand with Palestine, he voiced his solidarity with Venezuela in a televised phone conversation with Nicolas Maduro, also on 18 April, and his support for the Black Lives Matter movement. A lifelong anti-colonial struggler, his release is a victory for all peoples of the world struggling for freedom and liberation, and of course for the people of Puerto Rico.

Oscar Lopez Rivera in Chicago, 18 May 2017. Photo: Christine Geovanis

We express our deepest admiration for his sacrifice and his struggle over decades behind bars, without ever conceding on his principles and clarity of vision. Oscar López Rivera is an international figure and symbol of anti-colonial struggle, and a living leader and example for strugglers for justice. On this occasion, we also urge the immediate release of all political prisoners in U.S. prisons, including the prisoners of the Black Liberation movement, Puerto Rican prisoner Ana Belen Montes, Native and Indigenous movements, and Palestinian strugglers like the Holy Land Five. We express our full solidarity with the continuing struggle of the Puerto Rican people for justice and liberation and against colonialism and its imposed austerity. From Puerto Rico to Palestine, the people are struggling to defeat colonialism and free all political prisoners!

33 Days of Hunger Strike: Mass transfers of prisoners as colonial settler murders Palestinian protester

Image by Decolonize This Place

On Friday, 19 May, Palestinian prisoners entered their 33rd day of the collective hunger strike launched by 1500 Palestinian prisoners – out of a total of over 6300 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails –  on 17 April 2017, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. The strikers are demanding basic human rights, including an end to the denial of family visits, proper medical care and treatment, access to higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

On Thursday, 18 May, the 32nd day of Palestinian prisoners’ collective hunger strike, the Israel Prison Service transferred large numbers of strikers to Beersheva, Shatta and Ramle prisons, concentrating the hunger strikers in prisons that are home to the so-called “field hospitals” created by the prison administration. These prisons are also close to Israeli civilian hospitals. These transfers, however, were carried out via the “bosta” through the arduous transfer process that has been used again and again to put additional stress on the weakened bodies of the strikers in an attempt to undermine their strike.

Moataz Bani Shamsa, via Quds News

At the same time that the mass transfers of hunger strikers continued, Israeli occupation forces attacked demonstrations in support of the prisoners’ strike and an illegal Israeli colonial settler murdered one Palestinian protester, Moataz Hussein Bani Shamsa, 23, from the village of Beita near Nablus.

Israeli occupation forces attacked the protesters and defended the settler who killed Bani Shamsa and injured Palestinian journalist Majdi Eshtayyeh. Ma’an News stated that the army “spokesperson said she was unable to comment on whether the Israeli settler had been detained or reprimanded in any way for opening live fire on the Palestinian crowd.” Israeli education minister Naftali Bennett portrayed the settler who murdered Bani Shamsa, shot Eshtayyeh, and then rammed his car into an ambulance coming to assist them, as the victim. The uninjured settler on Palestinian land was “brutally attacked” by the existence of Palestinians on the road throwing stones against the occupying forces on their land, in Bennett’s words; Bennett then claimed that “any one of us…would have acted” as he did in murdering Bani Shamsa as an occupying settler on Bani Shamsa’s land who got out of his car to shoot live fire on Palestinians.

Bani Shamsa is the second Palestinian to be killed by Israeli occupation soldiers or settlers while participating in protests in defense of the prisoners and the fifth Palestinian overall killed by Israeli forces since the beginning of the strike.  Saba Obeid, 22, himself a former prisoner, was killed in Nabi Saleh village by Israeli occupation forces as he participated in a march on 12 May.  Colonial settlers on the road near Huwwara in Nablus celebrated the murder of Bani Shamsa by distributing sweets to other settler cars on the road.

Meanwhile, as the prisoners’ strike for dignity and freedom continued, Israeli occupation forces seized at least 48 Palestinians overnight between Wednesday and Thursday in arrest raids throughout the West Bank.  In Silwad, near Ramallah, occupation forces arrested seven young men and simultaneously demolished the solidarity tent supporting the prisoners’ strike.

As protests continued in support of the prisoners, marchers near Qalandiya refugee camp in Ramallah were attacked on Wednesday night, 17 May, by Israeli occupation forces, shooting live bullets and tear gas at the marchers. In Jerusalem, a sit-in outside the offices of the International Committee of the Red Cross was attacked by occupation forces who seized three participants: Ahmad al-Safadi, director of the Elia Media Group, Mohammed al-Daqqaq and Kayed al-Daqqaq. Areen Zaanin was violently assaulted by Israeli forces and taken to hospital.

As Israeli repression continues to escalate outside the prisons, inside the prisons, the strikers’ health continues to deteriorate. Many strikers are extremely dizzy and fatigues and have difficulty walking or standing, and there are great fears of heart slowdowns or sudden drops in blood pressure. A number of strikers have fainted and some are vomiting blood.

As part of the mass transfer campaign inside Israeli prisons, numerous leaders were once again transferred. Ahmad Sa’adat, the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, fellow PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, Hamas prison leaders Hassan Salameh and Abbas Sayyed, longest-held Palestinian prisoner Nael Barghouthi and journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq were all transferred from Ohli Kedar prison to Nafha prison, all in isolation. Handala Center for Prisoners and Former Prisoners reported that the health of Sa’adat and al-Qeeq is particularly fragile and requires hospitalization.

International actions also continued in support of the strike. United Nations officials, including Special Rapporteur Michael Lynk, expressed concern about Palestinian prisoners, especially the large-scale use of administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, in violation of international law.

In Spain, climber Carlos Blanca displayed his solidarity with hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners while climbing Aneto Peak, the highest mountain in the Pyrenees, on 17 May.

Photo: Carlos Blanca

Chilean Senator Alejandro Navarro spoke about the case of the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in parliament, urging action to support their cause.

In Belfast, protesters gathered at the famous International Wall where the Irish republican struggle is highlighted in murals – along with a number of murals in support of Palestine – for a protest in support of the Palestinian prisoners, while in London, activists responded to the call for action to pressure the International Committee of the Red Cross by picketing and delivering a letter to the ICRC’s office, demanding meaningful action for Palestinian prisoners.

Photo: Lara Khalidi

In Glasgow, Hellemmes, Belfast, Evry, Chicago, Milan, Buenos Aires, Granada, Sevilla, Manila and Malaga, protests were organized in the last days in support of the strikers. On Friday, 19 May, events and actions are scheduled in Saint-Denis, Brussels, Milan, Cadiz, San Roque, Aravena, Mans, New York City, Berlin, Cagliari, and Copenhagen. A full list of actions around the world is available at the Samidoun website.

Palestinian intellectual Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh ordered to three months in administrative detention

Palestinian writer, thinker and previous long-term administrative detainee Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh was ordered on Wednesday, 17 May to three months in administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, only three days after he was seized from his family home in el-Bireh by Israeli occupation forces.

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

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

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

Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh is now one of over 500 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable and can be issued for up to six months at a time; like Qatamesh has been on multiple occasions, Palestinians can be imprisoned indefinitely for years on end under these orders. The use of administrative detention in Palestine dates from the era of British colonization in Palestine and has been maintained and extended intensively by Israeli occupation. The call to end administrative detention is one of the key demands of the approximately 1500 Palestinian political prisoners engaged in an open hunger strike since 17 April 2017.

As Qatamesh was ordered to administrative detention, United Nations Special Rapporteur Michael Lynk drew attention to Israeli violations of Palestinian rights through the use of systematic imprisonment without charge or trial. “I am particularly concerned with Israel’s use of administrative detention, which involves imprisonment without charge, trial, conviction or meaningful due process, as well as the possibility of unrestricted renewal of their detention…Israel’s use of administrative detention is not in compliance with the extremely limited circumstances in which it is allowed under international humanitarian law, and deprives detainees of basic legal safeguards guaranteed by international human rights law,” Mr. Lynk said.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces the administrative detention of Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh and demands his immediate release. The targeting of this Palestinian writer and historic, prominent figure of the Palestinian liberation movement who exposed before the world the experience of torture under interrogation in Israeli prison is part and parcel of the ongoing Israeli assault on Palestinian culture and resistance that predates the Nakba. Palestinian writers from Mahmoud Darwish to Samih al-Qasem to today’s young poets like Dareen Tatour have been targeted alongside countless Palestinian intellectuals and academics for imprisonment, especially when their writing and work enters the sphere of the politics of Palestinian national and social liberation. We urge international support and solidarity to free Dr. Ahmed Qatamesh, put an end to the policy of administrative detention and free all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.