Wir gedenken der Nakba und erinnern die Welt daran, dass über 6,5 Millionen vertriebene Menschen in ihre Heimat Palästina zurückkehren werden!!
We commemorate the Nakba and remind the world that more than 6.5 million displaced people will return to their homeland: Palestine !!
later in the day in Berlin:
Saturday, 13 May 6:00 pm Potsdamer Platz Berlin
Palestinian and Arab organizations in Berlin call for you to attend a solidarity demonstration with:
1800 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli jails
Remembering the 69th anniversary of al-Nakba and the 50th anniversary of the Israeli occupation of the rest of Palestine including Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque in 1967.
Calling for an end to the blockade of Gaza
Solidaritätskundgebung in Berlin am Samstag, den 13. Mai 2017 ab 18 Uhr auf dem Potsdamer Platz.
Palästinensische und arabische Vereine in Berlin rufen zu einer Solidaritätskundgebung mit den
1800 hungerstreikenden palästinensischen Gefangenen in israelischen Gefängnissen auf.
Gleichzeitig werden wir sowohl an den 69. Jahrestag der Al-Nakba erinnern
als auch an den 50. Jahrestag der israelischen Besatzung des restlichen Palästinas mit Jerusalem und der Al-Aqsa-Moschee nach dem Krieg von 1967.
Wir fordern die sofortige Aufhebung der Blockade von Gaza.
New York activists rallied on Friday, 5 May in support of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli prisons. The demonstration was organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and American Muslims for Palestine-New Jersey.
Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace
The rally took place outside of the Best Buy electronics store in Union Square; participants distributed flyers and materials highlighting the involvement of Hewlett-Packard corporation in profiting from Israeli apartheid, including maintaining the database system of the Israel Prison Service as well as HP’s contracts with the Israeli military and involvement with the apartheid system of checkpoints and ID cards. Participants called on customers to boycott HP and demand the corporation end its business with Israeli occupation and apartheid.
Participants, including Adnan Farsakh of Samidoun, led chants in support of the Palestinian hunger strikers. 1500 Palestinian prisoners launched the strike in Israeli prisons on 17 April, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. They are demanding basic human rights, including an end to the denial of family visits, proper medical care and treatment, and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.
Sayel Kayed of American Muslims for Palestine – NJ also spoke, emphasizing the importance of organizing to support the prisoners, including the work of Samidoun. He also highlighted the centrality of the prisoners’ struggle for the Palestinian cause.
During the protest, a passing Zionist started to heckle protesters for their support for Palestinian rights and freedom; however, several Puerto Rican passers-by, unaffiliated with the protest, interrupted to stop him. They emphasized that they shared Palestinians’ experience with colonialism and repression and expressed their solidarity with the Palestinian struggle.
Palestinian prisoners are entering their 26th day of hunger strike in Israeli jails on Friday, 12 May. 1500 Palestinian prisoners launched the hunger strike, called the Strike for Freedom and Dignity, on 17 April, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. The strikers have a number of demands that focus on basic human rights, like an end to the denial of family visits, appropriate medical treatment and health care, the right to distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.
Originally on Thursday, Fateh officials had declared that they were calling on all Fateh members in prisons, aside from sick prisoners and children, to join the hunger strike. However, later on Thursday evening, Fateh officials retracted the call after a reported three-hour-long meeting of the Fateh Central Committee. Fateh Central Committee member Marwan Barghouthi is one of the leaders of the strike. Barghouthi received a visit from the International Committee of the Red Cross on Thursday; all legal, family and ICRC visits to Barghouthi had been blocked since 17 April. However, no information was released from the visit except for him sending his greetings to his wife and family.
Ma’an News reported that negotiations between the strikers and the Israel Prison Service may be beginning shortly; previously, the prison administration has refused to conduct negotiations with the leadership of the strike.
The hunger strike includes Palestinian prisoners from all factions, including prominent leaders such as Ahmad Sa’adat, the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, fellow PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, Hamas leaders Abbas Sayyed, Ibrahim Hamed and Hasan Salameh, Islamic Jihad leader Zaid Bseiso, and longest-serving Palestinian prisoners Nael Barghouthi and Karim Younes. Many of these leaders have been repeatedly denied legal visits.
Prisoners are reportedly suffering from severe dehydration, low blood pressure and inability to move in a number of places. In the Eshel prison, hunger strikers were isolated in the sections of criminal prisoners and subject to numerous raids by repressive forces. In addition, 47 sick prisoners on hunger strike were reportedly transferred from Nitzan Ramle prison to a so-called “field hospital.” Palestinian prisoners are also facing the threat of forced feeding from Israeli officials, including far-right internal security minister Gilad Erdan.
In Nitzan Ramle prison, around 70 hunger strikers are facing serious health conditions and are subject to punitive treatment including isolation, denial of access to recreation, frequent repressive raids, confiscation of salt and blocking of the windows to prevent sunlight from entering their cells. In Nafha prison, the media committee for the strike reported that multiple repressive units had invaded the cells of the strikers and beaten striking prisoners and sprayed tear gas after striking prisoners did not stand during inspection. Samer Abu Diak, one hunger striker held in the prison, told a lawyer at his legal visit that prisoners are repeatedly transferred inside the prison as a means of inducing stress and pressure on strikers, saying that “prisoners do not stay in a room for more than three days.”
Meanwhile, the Handala Center for Prisoners reported that 32 of the striking prisoners in section 3 of Ashkelon prison have declared a boycott of medical examinations in protest of the repeated raids and attacks by repressive forces, including forcing the striking prisoners to stand, handcuffed, in the middle of the prison yard from 8 am to 4 pm.
As the struggle inside the prisons deepened, Palestinians continued to protest to support the strikers and international efforts in solidarity with the strike continued to grow. In South Africa, a series of prominent government ministers and officials have joined a 24-hour hunger strike in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. In Paris, participants in a solidarity hunger strike organized a demonstration, posted materials about the Palestinian prisoners, and participated in a vigil outside Pizza Hut, and were visited by Jean-Louis Chalanset, the lawyer of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, among others.
In Brussels, students at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles and the Universite Catholique du Louvain – Alma participated in a 24 hour hunger strike with tents and displays informing the student population about the struggle of the Palestinian prisoners. Striking students in Puerto Rico protesting austerity plans that threaten education also displayed their solidarity with the strike. Also in Chicago, the US Palestinian Community Network and other organizations held a large open solidarity tent with the prisoners and a one-day hunger strike.
Protests are being organized on Friday, 12 May in New York City, where Samidoun will again protest to support the hunger strikers; London, Madrid, Lyon, Paris, cities throughout Chile, Sacramento, Santa Clara, Brussels, Dungannon, Edinburgh, Kildare, Porto and more are also hosting demonstrations to support the prisoners.
Samidoun urges the organizing of events and actions to support the prisoners, rallying at Israeli embassies, federal buildings and public squares. These actions around the world will help to underline the global support for Palestinian political prisoners in their struggle for freedom, and the struggle of the Palestinian people for liberation. You can download flyers and posters for your events to support the prisoners among our resources.
On Thursday, 11 May, Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli prisons entered their 25th day of the Strike for Freedom and Dignity. nearly 100 Palestinian prisoners from a range of political affiliations are reportedly joining the strike today, as the International Committee of the Red Cross announced that it would visit Marwan Barghouthi, a strike leader and prominent imprisoned Fateh Central Committee member, in isolation in Jalameh prison today. The Fateh movement has now officially called upon all of its members in prison to join in the strike, except for sick prisoners and child prisoners. Update as of 11 May evening: Fateh’s central committee has retracted this call.
The new strikers will join a campaign launched by 1500 Palestinian political prisoners on 17 April 2017, with a series of demands for basic human rights: an end to the denial of family visits, the provision of appropriate health care and medical treatment, the right to pursue distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.
Tbe strikers have faced harsh repression, including repeated and abusive transfers that are highly physically damaging to the already-weakened bodies of hunger strikers, solitary confinement and isolation, denial of access to appropriate water, confiscation of salt, frequent night-time raids involving ransacking of prisoners’ sections, confiscation of personal belongings including clothing and blankets and denial of legal and family visits. Despite an order obtained by Adalah and the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission against the Israel Prison Service’s denial of legal visits to hunger strikers, many strikers and particularly leaders continue to be denied legal visits. Imprisoned PFLP General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat, PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh and Marwan Barghouthi were all denied legal visit in recent days.
Barghouthi has also been denied visitation with the International Committee of the Red Cross since the strike began on 17 April. He has also been denied a visit by Knesset member Yousef Jabareen, which Adalah is contesting. However, the ICRC reported on Wednesday, 10 May that they would visit Barghouthi on 11 May inside Jalameh prison, where he is held in isolation.
At the 25th day of hunger strike, prisoners who are striking are faced with the threat of severe health deterioration, including dehydration, low blood pressure, heart disorders and inability to walk. A number of prisoners are unable to stand, many have lost 15 to 25 kg in weight, and some have begun to vomit blood, reported the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission.
Meanwhile, Palestinian lawyer Karim Ajwa, who met with hunger striker Nasser Abu Hmaid in Nitzan Ramla prison said that the strikers are being held in filthy cells with repeated confiscation of salt. He noted that this was retaliation against the strikers, and that Abu Hmaid had been transferred seven times since the beginning of the strike on 17 April. On Wednesday, 10 May, 13 more hunger striking prisoners were transferred from Petah Tikva to Negev and Hadarim prisons.
Israeli intelligence agency have been reportedly stepping up the psychological pressure on Palestinian striking prisoners; the Palestinian Prisoners Center for Studies reported that hunger strikers who were taken to military courts in the previous days were shown photos which were claimed to depict Marwan Barghouthi eating and then pressured to end the strike. This comes in addition to ongoing threats of torturous forced feeding, including threats to import doctors from other countries to carry out the procedure against striking prisoners in so-called “field hospitals.”
The Palestinian National Committee to support the strike called for a day of anger to demand victory for the strikers, with demonstrations and actions in all areas of Palestine. Arab writers convening at the First Palestine Forum for the Arab Novel also called for action to support Palestinian prisoners.
Meanwhile, the Canadian Labour Congress at its 28th Constitutional Convention in Toronto officially adopted an emergency resolution in support of the hunger strike, calling on the Canadian government to pressure Israel over the detention and treatment of Palestinian prisoners and pledging to campaign in support of the prisoners. This followed dozens of European trade unions and declarations from the International Confederation of Trade Unions and World Federation of Trade Unions in support of the prisoners and their strike, exhibiting widespread labor solidarity for the hunger strikers.
A hunger strike continued in Paris in support of the Palestinian prisoners. On the second day of the strike, 10 May, the strikers reported that “After a night under shelter where they have continued fasting, the Paris citizens on hunger strike in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners are now back in the street, at the same place of Fontaine des Innocents, in central Paris.
Overnight, new volunteers have joined, and there are now a dozen people on hunger strike. Appointments have been prepared with various media (TV, radio, print), and we have the luck to enjoy a lovely sunny weather.”
A solidarity hunger strike is also continuing in Brussels, where students at the Universite Catholique du Louvain and the Universite Libre de Bruxelles are launching a 24-hour hunger strike to support the prisoners. Also being organized on Thursday, 11 May is an all-day hunger strike and solidarity gathering in Chicago, led by a range of Palestinian community, student and solidarity groups. Among others, Rasmea Odeh, the former Palestinian prisoner, torture survivor and community leader, took the #SaltWaterChallenge in Chicago to support the prisoners’ strike and encourage participation in the action.
Events will also take place in Anaheim, Paris, Cambridge and Maastricht in support of the strike; on Wednesday, 10 May, protests in Toulouse, Brussels, Karachi, Cape Town, London and Barcelona, among others, supported the strike. A full schedule of upcoming events is available at the Samidoun website.
Projection in New York City by Decolonize this Place
Palestinian prisoners’ 24th day of hunger strike comes as lawyers continue to be denied access to prominent leaders among the prisoners, including prominent Palestinian leaders and hunger strikers Ahmad Sa’adat, Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh and Marwan Barghouthi. These visit denials come as increasing numbers of Palestinian prisoners face risky health conditions well into their fourth week without food as part of the Strike for Dignity and Freedom.
Over 1500 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails launched the hunger strike on 17 April 2017, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. The strike has grown and includes Palestinian prisoners from all political forces and factions. The strikers’ demands are for their basic human rights, including ending the denial of family visits, providing appropriate health care and medical treatment, the right to pursue distance higher education and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.
Despite the efforts of Adalah and the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission at the Israeli Supreme Court to compel access for lawyers to Palestinian hunger strikers from the Israel Prison service, legal visits continue to be denied, especially to prominent Palestinian political leaders, such as Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat. Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association reported that “Addameer’s attorney Farah Bayadsi was prevented today, 9 May 2017, from visiting PFLP leader Ahmad Sadaat, who was transferred to isolation in Ashkelon prison. Despite the Israeli High Court ruling to allow prisoners see their attorneys, the IPS frequently denied visits upon request. Addameer anticipates that the IPS will continue to use such tactics in order to systematically prevent lawyers from having access to the hunger strikers, such as moving prisoners to other prisons without informing their lawyers, in an attempt to further isolate the hunger strikers and undermine their strike.”
Fellow imprisoned PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, who joined the strike with Sa’adat on 4 May, was also denied a legal visit from lawyer Amani Ibrahim. In addition, Fateh leader and key strike spokesperson Marwan Barghouthi was also denied a legal visit on Tuesday, 9 May by the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society lawyer Moataz Shqairat.
Ma’an News reported that dozens of hunger striking prisoners were transferred to a so-called “field hospital” after experiencing fainting, vomiting blood and severe pain. The creation of this “field hospital” has raised particular concern that Israeli occupation forces will forcibly feed Palestinian prisoners, including with doctors brought from abroad in order to perform the internationally-condemned practice. Ahmad Hamamrah, 19, a hunger striker facing serious health deterioration, was transferred to Shaare Tzedek hospital.
The strikers have been met with constant repression, including frequent and abusive transfers that physically tax and stress the weakened bodies of the hunger strikers, solitary confinement and isolation, confiscation of all personal belongings, and denial of legal and family visits. Widespread abusive and arbitrary transfers continued on Tuesday, 9 May; all of the prisoners in Section 8 in Ohli Kedar prison were transferred to section 4, while 120 Palestinian prisoners in Nafha prison were transferred to Shatta prison.
Palestinian lawyer Khalid Mahajna was able to visit with hunger striking prisoner Aroun Ayad in Ohli Kedar prison, who reported that prison doctors are displaying food to striking prisoners and attempting to negotiate with prisoners to eat and break their strike in exchange for treatment. He also reported that the strikers are isolated and denied access to recreation. While their personal clothing and blankets have been confiscated, they have also been denied access to the canteen (prison store) and each fined 300 NIS (approximately $80 USD). He also reported that repressive units and guards storm and inspect the prisoners’ sections up to three times daily, a mechanism to harass the strikers and force them from their rooms despite their deteriorating health. The Prisoners’ Society said that this legal visit was obtained only after multiple rejected requests and lengthy negotiations.
Meanwhile, prisoners in the Negev desert prison were also subject to ongoing punitive and repressive practices, including searches and raids using dogs and one guard pouring water on the head of Mohammed Abu Rub from Jenin, according to Palestinian lawyer Yousef Nasasreh. Prisoners in multiple prisons have reported routine denials of access to the normally-provided bottled water, including many prisoners forced to drink from the hot bath tap and others given small amounts of water to be shared among multiple prisoners.
The home of former long-term hunger striker and imprisoned journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, one of 50 prominent Palestinian political prisoners who joined the strike on 4 May, was invaded by Israeli occupation forces in the early morning hours of Tuesday, 9 May. Fayha Shalash, al-Qeeq’s wife, said that 20 occupation soldiers stormed the home, ransacking the family’s belongings. She stated that this was an attempt to pressure her husband into ending his strike, and would fail.
Al-Qeeq issued a statement from inside prison on 9 May. He emphasized that the hunger strikers are “steadfast in their commitment despite the hunger and the pain that they are experiencing, in order to achieve their legitimate rights.” Al-Qeeq urged the student movement in Palestinian universities to take a leading role in the struggle to support the prisoners; he is a former chair of Bir Zeit University’s student council, which was the subject of his first arrest by occupation forces. “The Israeli occupation will not be able to break the hunger-striking prisoners,” said al-Qeeq.
The longest consecutively-held Palestinian prisoner Karim Younes, one of the leaders of the strike, also issued a statement from isolation in Ayalon prison on 9 May, emphasizing that “We assure you that we continue the strike of freedom and dignity until victory. Either victory or martyrdom. There is no life without dignity.” Younes also denounced the alleged video shared by Israeli officials that claims to depict Fateh leader Marwan Barghouthi secretly eating a nutrition bar, which the Israeli prison administration claims to have been videotaped during the strike. The blurry video, which does not show the face of the person in the prison cell, was denounced as a fabrication by the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society. Palestinian lawyers demanded access to Barghouthi, noting that they had been denied legal visits with him since 17 April, the day of the launch of the strike.
An advertisement by Israeli Pizza Hut sparked outrage online after it mocked the hunger strike, using a still from the alleged video, into which was photoshopped a Pizza Hut box and slice of pizza. Following a widespread call to boycott Pizza Hut internationally after this mockery of Palestinian prisoners whose lives are on the line after three weeks of hunger strike, Pizza Hut International released a statement apologizing for the advertisement and claiming that it was unauthorized by the corporate body and that the advertising agency involved had been fired.
Arab and international actions also continued in support of the hunger strike. Dozens of Sudanese and Palestinians held a sit-in on 9 May at the UN headquarters in Khartoum in support of the prisoners. The Tunisian Quartet, winners of the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize, issued an appeal to United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to pressure the Israeli occupation to release Palestinian prisoners and accept the demands of the hunger strikers. The organizations in the Quartet are the Tunisian General Labor Union, the Tunisian Union for Industry, Commerce and Handicrafts, the National Commission of Tunisian Lawyers and the Tunisian League for the Defense of Human Rights.
On Tuesday, 9 May, events and protests took place in Paris, San Francisco, Bologna, Coventry, Santiago de Compostela, Bern and Geneva. In Paris, six hunger strikers from CAPJPO-EuroPalestine launched a hunger strike in the center of the city to support Palestinian political prisoners. On Wednesday, 10 May, protests are being organized in Toulouse, Brussels, Karachi, Cape Town, London, and Barcelona, while one set of Brussels students will launch their 24 hour hunger strike from the Universite Catholique du Louvain today. Upcoming international actions and events to support the prisoners are available at Samidoun’s Global Schedule of Events.
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges ongoing and escalated action to support the strikers at this critical moment.
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. Building this strong list of actions around the world will help to underline the global support for Palestinian political prisoners in their struggle for freedom, and the struggle of the Palestinian people for liberation. You can download flyers and posters for your events to support the prisoners among our resources.
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. Take the #SaltWaterChallenge! Drink water and salt on video and add a message of support for the hunger strikers. Share and reshare information about the #DignityStrike.
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.
We are very happy to announce that on May 11th UNICEF Student team Maastricht and Students for Justice in Palestine are hosting a special event on the situation of Palestinian children.
Join us for what is going to be a really interesting talk from two experts on the situation of children’s rights in the region.
Mieke Zagt, Director of Tadamun, a partner organisation of Defence for Children International Palestine (DCIP) will present the situation from a children’s rights perspective focussing on the military system of arrest and imprisonment and Palestinian children’s lack of access to justice.
Charlotte Kates, International Coordinator of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network will analyse case studies of child arrest and imprisonment and the impact on children e.g. in terms of mental health.
After their presentations there will be plenty of time for a Q&A round in which you can ask all of your questions!
We are really looking forward to an evening looking at this important topic and learning more with you all about the underrepresented case of Palestinian children. If you have any quesitons of course, just comment in the event or message us and we’ll get right back to you 🙂
See you in the Feestzaal , Law Faculty at 6.30pm on Thursday May 11th!
Join the Palestinian Community in Boston to stand in solidarity with political prisoners. #DignityStrike
More than 1,500 Palestinian political prisoners have been on hunger strike since April 17 (25 days on Thursday) for better conditions inside Israeli jails. Their demands include: access to education, proper medical care, regular visitation rights, respectful treatment of families by prison administrators, and an end to the practice of solitary confinement. Finally, they are also striking to protest one of the most obviously unjust Israeli policies—administrative detention, or imprisoning people indefinitely without charge. Israel holds 6,300 Palestinian political prisoners—300 of whom are children.
We also wish to call out the ways in which mass incarceration harms communities of color in the United States. According to the NAACP, one in six African-American men has been incarcerated. According to the Palestinian human rights group Addameer, approximately one in five Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian territories has been jailed since Israeli occupation began in 1967. All prison is political.
More info on the Palestinian prisoners at Addameerhttp://www.addameer.org/
Day-long hunger strike and encampment in solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners Thursday, May 11th, in Burbank, IL
WHAT: Join us in a day-long hunger strike and encampment in solidarity with the over 1,500 Palestinian political prisoners currently on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli prisons.
WHEN: Thursday, May 11th, 2017, from 10 AM to 7 PM. Press conference at 4 PM.
WHERE: Parking lot in front of 8527 S. Harlem Ave., in Burbank, Illinois.
WHO: Chicago-based family members of Palestinian political prisoners and hunger strikers, U.S. Palestinian Community Network (USPCN), Palestinian American Community Center, Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)-DePaul University, and other community activists and institutions.
ALL THIS WEEK:
Call Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson at 202.647.9572
Amnesty International USA Headquarters 212.807.8400
International Red Cross 202.587.4600
Senator Richard Durbin 312.353.4952
and ask them to pressure Israel to agree to the Palestinian hunger strikers’ basic humanitarian demands!
According to Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, as of April 2017, there are 6,300 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli prisons. More than 1,500 of them are on their 3rd week of an open-ended hunger strike. We join Palestinian organizations and solidarity groups around the world, and continue to heed the call of the Strike of Freedom and Dignity until the prisoners’ demands are met.
Deplorable conditions within Israeli prisons have caused considerable health concerns for all prisoners, especially those on the hunger strike. The practice of isolation (solitary confinement), for example, holds prisoners alone or with an additional person for 23 hours a day, allowing only one hour for solitarily walking around while shackled. Family members wishing to visit those detained in Israeli prisons face overwhelming restrictions on their movement, which make even semi-regular visits nearly impossible. While completely isolating the prisoners, the Israeli Prison Service also commits deliberate medical negligence and deprivation of basic educational access for children as well as adults. And the situation grows graver, as the Israelis plan to enact harsher repression and unlawful treatment practices, including confiscation of salt used by strikers for survival. There are also reports that Israel may begin force feeding them as well.
Now in Day 21 of the strike, as the strikers begin to experience loss of balance, muscle, and fatigue problems, people around the world continue to rise up in solidarity to respond to the calls of the prisoners. Student groups, community members, political figures, and other sectors of society are organizing around the cause for dignity, while some have actively joined the strike, including Archbishop Atallah Hanna.
1600 Palestinian political prisoners have been on hunger strike in Israeli apartheid regime prisons since 17 April. In launching this hunger strike, they are, above all, protesting their inhumane conditions of detention.
11 May will mark the 25th day of strike. We, students of UCL and ULB, are launching 24 hour hunger strikes in solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners.
Please join us and share on social media with the hashtags #DignityHungerStrike and #BrusselsStudentsHungerStrike