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Dignity and freedom: Palestinian organizations and figures on the collective hunger strike

As over 1,500 Palestinian prisoners launch a collective hunger strike on Palestinian Prisoners’ Day, Palestinian prisoners, political organizations and social movements have issued statements and positions on the strike. In that context, we present excerpts from the position of each organization below:

Fateh:

“In the name of Fateh, the revolution and the revolutionaries, the spirit of the eternal leader Abu Ammar, the blood of the martyrs and the tears of mothers, the name of the people of Palestine, the land and the identity, in the name of pride, dignity and freedom…we announce that tomorrow, 17 April 2017 will launch the battle of freedom and dignity in an open hunger strike.” – Fateh prisoners in Nafha

Marwan Barghouthi, Member of the Fateh Central Committee, spokesperson of the Fateh prisoners:

“Our brothers in Fatah movement are facing a great challenge yet it is an opportunity to rehabilitate the role of the prisoners, who have obtained the most prominent achievements of the movement. We have no choice but to enter this battle, in which Fatah prisoners will prove their ability to secure the human rights of prisoners. This is an opportunity to end all the negative manifestations that the movement suffered from during past years, in an attempt to establish a new era of unity and strength.” – Marwan Barghouthi, Asra Voice

“Some 1,000 Palestinian prisoners have decided to take part in this hunger strike, which begins today, the day we observe here as Prisoners’ Day. Hunger striking is the most peaceful form of resistance available. It inflicts pain solely on those who participate and on their loved ones, in the hopes that their empty stomachs and their sacrifice will help the message resonate beyond the confines of their dark cells.

Decades of experience have proved that Israel’s inhumane system of colonial and military occupation aims to break the spirit of prisoners and the nation to which they belong, by inflicting suffering on their bodies, separating them from their families and communities, using humiliating measures to compel subjugation. In spite of such treatment, we will not surrender to it.”  – Marwan Barghouthi, New York Times

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine:

“On the occasion of Palestinian Prisoners’ Day, we salute every prisoner, the heroes and heroines of the battles of will and steadfastness, to every flower and cub, to the sick prisoners, administrative detainees and imprisoned leaders, led by the imprisoned General Secretary, Comrade Ahmad Sa’adat, Marwan Barghouthi, Hassan Salameh, Wajdi Jawdat, Anas Jaradat, Bassam Kandakji and the long line of leaders who represent the national struggle and the prisoners’ cause.

On this occasion, we make a particular salute to the martyrs of the prisoners movement and to all of those engaged in confrontation and the struggle for victory. We are firmly committed to see each battle of confrontation with the Prison Service and its instruments of repression and intelligence agencies as a collective battle. Every action initiated by any faction is all of our battle….In this context, we affirm that we stand hand in hand and shoulder to shoulder in any struggle waged by the prisoners, and we consider the decision to engage in the battle of dignity and honor against the jailer, beginning on Monday, April 17, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day 2017, to be one which we support and which we are part of. This comes in two ways, both through the decisions and guidelines for the comrades to engage in the battle, and through approving a program of support for the strike in all prisons and among our comrades outside.

In this context of high appreciation and support for this battle and all the heroic prisoners who will engage in it, we affirm our continued struggle for the unity of the prisoners’ movement and the escalation of confrontation against the prison administration. Thus, we call on all the Palestinian people and their supporters and friends around the world to stand side by side with the prisoners in their continuing battles inside the prisons, escalating the mass movement to support the battle of wills, challenge and confrontation, and to once again reaffirm the centrality of the cause of the prisoners.”  – Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Prison Branch statement

Hamas:

“The leadership body of Hamas prisoners declares their full support for the strike of Freedom and Dignity, which a group of brave prisoners in Israeli jails will begin tomorrow in order to reclaim our usurped rights and defend the dignity and freedom of the prisoenrs. In this context, we emphasize the full participation of our prisoners in Hadarim prison along with their brothers of different factions in this strike. And as we salute all prisoners engaged in this blessed battle, we confirm that the leadership is following alongside the brothers in all factions the latest developments, and will not hesitate to support the strike by all means.” – Hamas leadership in Israeli prisons statement

Islamic Jihad Movement:

The prisoners’ leadership of Islamic Jihad confirmed that nearly 100 prisoners of Islamic Jihad, including 52 in Nafha, 13 in Hadarim and 30 in Gilboa, are participating in the hunger strike from 17 April.

“It is clear to everyone that Nafha prison is a primary target of the ongoing attacks that aim to break our will and which require us to stand up in every way for our pride, dignity and stolen rights…The brothers in Fateh are launching a strike for a legitimate goal, to return our rights and stolen achievements, for which we paid a price in flesh, blood and lives, which affect all national forces in prison. This strike is a fair and necessary step with simple and comprehensive demands for all aspects of our lives, most importantly, the sick prisoners and family visits. Accordlingly, we have found as the Islamic Jihad prisoners in Nafha that we must strengthen this strike and push for its success as a religious, national and moral duty.” – Islamic Jihad prisoners statement, Nafha prison

Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine:

Helmi al-Araj, member of the Central Committee of the DFLP, said that “The members of the Central Committee and leadership of the Front in prison…all confirm the Democratic Front’s commitment to engage in this strike for its just demands…The strike represents an opportunity to follow up on the internationalization of the prisoners’ issue and draw the attention of the entire world to the suffering of our people and our brave prisoners, and the justice of their cause and their demands. The issue of the prisoners and their freedom is an integral part of the Palestinian national struggle for freedom and independence.”

Palestinian People’s Party:

“The Palestinian People’s Party greets the prisoners’ movement inside Israeli prisons and jails on the occasion of the declaration of hunger strike in protest of the conditions of their detention by the occupation, in order to improve those conditions through achieving their just demands in this strike…the battle for freedom and dignity waged by the prisoners also requires the Palestinian leadership to prioritize the issue of prisoners.”  – Palestinian People’s Party statement

Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee:

“On the occasion of Palestinian Prisoners Day, the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee salutes the brave prisoners in Israeli jails and renews the commitment to struggle for their freedom through the escalation of boycott campaigns to isolate the occupation and settler-colonial, apartheid system and Israeli institutions and corporations involved in its crimes against the Palestinian people and prisoners in particular.” – BDS National Committee Statement

Archbishop Atallah Hanna, Archbishop of Sebastia:

“These heroes, prisoners of freedom, deserve the support of the Palestinian people, the Arab nation and all the free people of the world, with everyone standing by their side in this strike until they obtain their rights and their just, human demands, and, most importantly, the freedom of these heroes held behind bars. We express our support to the prisoners in Israeli jails and adopt all of their just demands and we urge the widest actions of solidarity and sympathy with these heroes until their message reaches to every location in the world.” – Archbishop Atallah Hanna, in Ma’an News

Mustafa Barghouthi and the Palestinian National Initiative:

“The Palestinian people as a whole stands by the prisoners in their heroic hunger strike, which represents the finest form of popular resistance against the occupation and for freedom and dignity…these activities will contribute to the popular national struggle for the freedom of the entire Palestinian people. There is no Palestinian house without a prisoner. The Palestinian people carry the title of the people of one million prisoners, and so the battle of the prisoners is that of the Palestinian people as a whole.” – Mustafa Barghouthi, chair of the Palestinian National Initiative, in Ma’an News

Palestinian Human Rights Organizations Council:

“Palestinian political prisoners are systematically subjected to torture and ill treatment with continued impunity – highlighting the need for the international community, as well as individuals, to intervene and call for immediate protection for these prisoners and detainees, long-denied basic rights.

While Palestinian prisoners are about to launch a hunger strike to end Israel’s ongoing violation of Palestinian prisoners human rights, including its rejection to fulfill its obligations in accordance to provisions of third and fourth Geneva conventions, the international community is asked to fulfill its responsibility through tangible and practical measures to ensure the protection for prisoners legitimate struggle and human rights.

PHROC therefore calls on the International Criminal Court to immediately open an investigation into the case of Palestinian prisoners and detainees, and bring those who have tortured, extrajudicially executed, forcibly transferred, and arbitrary detained Palestinians to be held to accountable.” – Statement of the Palestinian Human Rights Organizations Council

Palestinian Liberation Front:

The Palestinian Liberation Front confirmed its “full support for the battle for freedom and dignity that will be waged by prisoners from the various forces and factions, led by the prisoner Marwan Barghouthi, in conjunction with the Palestinian Prisoners Day. This is an important occasion of struggle in the history of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement, and a signpost in the march of the national liberation movement. The brave prisoners are carrying out this strike to express their rejection of the fascist practices and procedures of the prison administration and to claim their fair and legitimate rights. It is nationally symbolic and embodies the spirit of Palestinian national unity inside the prisons and detention camps of the occupation, confronting the daily policies of criminality and oppression practiced by the occupation against our people.” – Statement of the PLF, Ma’an News

Palestinian Popular Struggle Front:

“The start of this strike in Israeli jails is a turning point in the lives of prisoners and their demands of struggle, with great importance in coinciding with popular and official events on the ground for supporting the prisoners in their battle of struggle…It is critically important to strengthen this unity in the battle of the prisoners of freedom, in which are participating prisoners from all factions, including the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front….We in the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, before our brave, suffering prisoners in Israeli jails, affirm that it is time for a broader popular mass movement for the prisoners’ cause, to deliver the message and the voice of the prisoners’ movement to the world.” – Palestinian Popular Struggle Front statement, in Ma’an News

Palestinian National Council:

“The Palestinian National Council called upon all Palestinians, in all classes and factions and forces, to participate widely and support the prisoners’ strike and to provide all forms of support for the success of their struggle to achieve all their demands and rights that are violated daily by the occupation authorities. The issue of prisoners and detainees is a distinguished national issue and a key pillar of the national struggle. The prisoners are the vanguard of the struggle of our people, who have sacrificed their freedom for the freedom of their people. We urge the strengthening of the steadfastness of the Palestinian people and the escalation of official action in support of their cause.” – Palestinian National Council statement

Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions:

“All trade unions and labor organizations and all Palestinian workers stand solidly with the demands of the strike for freedom and dignity. We are certain of the victory of the will of the prisoners for their freedom and dignity. Their strike will have the interest and support of the whole world. This is a strike for humanity…to achieve their legitimate rights.” – Shaher Sa’ad, president, Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions

Riyad al-Maliki, Palestinian Foreign Minister:

“The Foreign Ministry has mobilized its diplomats all over the world to defend the rights of prisoners, and the ministry is following with great interest the developments in the open hunger strike launched today by 1300 prisoners, with all states, relevant international bodies and human rights organizations in the world….The detainees are aware of exactly the price they may incur in this strike; their lives may be at risk of death, especially amid the fragility of their bodies, already suffering due to medical neglect and illness due to prolonged detention. This is before the punitive, barbaric repression from the jailer to attempt to break the steadfastness and will of the prisoners.” – Riyad al-Maliki, in Ma’an News

Walid Assaf, Commission Against the Wall and Settlements:

“The hunger strike decision is the most difficult decision in prisons, because they resist the occupation through hunger. We are required to stand by our prisoners.” – Walid Assaf, in Quds Net

Arab Higher Follow-Up Committee in Palestine ’48:

“1300 prisoners begin today the battle of empty stomachs. This battle requires a wider solidarity campaign from us, to raise the attention of public opinion to the suffering of imprisoned freedom fighters under repression and abuse in prisons.

The Israeli government is stepping up repression of the Palestinian people and imprisoning over 6,500 Palestinian prisoners in prisons, including hundreds of girls and boys and dozens of women and youth, and hundreds of prisoners subject to administrative detention. All of them face the harshest conditions of detention and deprivation of communication with their families, along with the continued crime of the denial of their freedom.” – Statement from the Arab Higher Follow-Up Committee

19 April, Vienna: Day of Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners

Wednesday, 19 April
4:00 pm
Pestsäule, Graben
Vienna, Austria
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/435769400097679/

“They will not criminalise us, rob us of our true identity, steal our individualism, depoliticise us, churn us out as systemised, institutionalised, decent law-abiding robots. Never will they label our liberation struggle as criminal.” Bobby Sands

17 April is traditionally marked as the International Day of Solidarity with palestinian Prisoners. On this day, many worldwide protests, demonstrations and actions are held to support the struggle of imprisoned Palestinians for freedom. Today, there are nearly 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails, including women, men, children and elders. Approximately 600 are held in administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial, a massive violation of rights. Hundreds of Palestinian children under 16 are held in Israeli jails.

Today we call for an end to the colonial administrative detention, freedom for Palestinian prisoners and freedom for Palestine!

Organized by BDS Austria

19 April, Leuven: Israel tortures, KULeuven Ignores

Wednesday, 19 April
8 pm
Van Den Heuvelinstituut 29-2
Dekenstraat 2
Leuven, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/301448586940488/

KULeuven is a partner in the LAW-TRAIN project about interrogation police with the Israeli police, in which Israeli “expertise” is being used. Israel has violated Palestinian rights for decades through use of the police force. Heavy-handed arrests and harassment of Palestinians, including children, are commonplace.

Speakers: Eva Brems (Human Rights professor, University of Ghent), Lieven De Cauter (philosophy professor, KULeuven), Thomas Van Riet (physicist, KULeuven), Reine Meylaerts (literature, KULeuven)
Moderator: Tine Danckaers (MO)

Sign the petition: http://stop-law-train.be/

19 April, Brussels: Demonstration in Solidarity with Palestinian Political Prisoners

Wednesday, 19 April
2:00 pm
Rond-point Schuman
Brussels, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1367332569989947/

Rally to support Palestinian Prisoners
Demand their freedom!
Support the Hunger Strike!

Organized by the Palestinian Community in Belgium and Luxembourg, with the European Alliance in Defence of Palestinian Detainees, the Arab Cultural Center of Liege, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, Plate-forme Charleroi-Palestine, Comite de Vigilance pour la Democratie en Tunisie (CVDT), Association Belgo-Palestinienne – Liege

17 April, Los Angeles: Talk on Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

Monday, 17 April
7:00 pm
Room 2343, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs
337 Charles E Young Dr. E
Los Angeles, CA
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1903054056631965/

April 17th is the International Day of Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners and SJP at UCLA will be hosting Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi and Henry “Hank” Jones for a talk on the intersections between Black Americans and Palestinians regarding incarceration as a tool for their continued oppression, moderated by Dr. Robin D.G. Kelley.

Dr. Abdulhadi and Mr. Jones were members of The U.S. Prisoner, Labor and Academic Solidarity Delegation to Palestine in March of 2016. During their trip, they heard from a diverse group of Palestinians who resist executions, imprisonment, land confiscation, house demolitions, restrictions to water access and restriction of movement.

They will be speaking about: Israel as a colonial carceral state, colonial violence and indigenous resistance, Palestinian workers’ rights, the struggle for land and return, and anti-colonial cultures of resistance.

Join us for this talk, and bring your questions!

Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi is an Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies/Race and Resistance Studies and the Senior Scholar of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative, at the College of Ethnic Studies, San Francisco State University. Before joining SFSU, she served as the first director of the Center for Arab American Studies at the University of Michigan, Dearborn. Her scholarship, pedagogy and public activism focuses on Palestine, Arab and Muslim communities and their diasporas, race and resistance studies, transnational feminisms, and gender and sexuality studies.

Hank Jones is an original member of the Black Panther Party. He is a former political prisoner and was recently targeted for political prosecution as one of the San Francisco 8. Jones has been a fighter for social justice and human rights most of his life. He has worked as an organizer with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Currently, he does human rights, social justice, and political prisoner advocacy work.

Dr. Robin D.G. Kelley is a Professor of History at UCLA. His research has explored the history of social movements in the U.S., the African Diaspora, and Africa; black intellectuals; music; visual culture; contemporary urban studies; historiography and historical theory; poverty studies and ethnography; colonialism/imperialism; organized labor; constructions of race; Surrealism, Marxism, nationalism, among other things. Dr. Kelley has writtern a series of book, and is currently working on a biography of journalist, social critic, adventurer, and activist Grace Halsel.

17 April, NYC, Berlin, Stockholm, London, DC, Los Angeles, San Diego, Boston, more: End PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation

The following events were organized by an international Palestinian campaign to end security coordination, demanding freedom of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails and marking the 40th day after the assassination of Basil al-Araj. Follow their events at: https://facebook.com/EndCoordination

Malmo, Sweden – 3 pm to 4:30 pm, Möllevångstorget, 214 24 Malmö: Protest PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/775623225947822/

London, UK – 1 pm, 52 Galena St, London: Protest PA Security Coordination w/ Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/283079908796371/

Berlin, Germany – 3 pm to 5 pm, Hermannplatz, Berlin: Protest PA Security Coordination w/ Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/810752369078977/

Stockholm, Sweden – 4 pm to 6 pm, Rådmansgatan 48, SE-113 57 Stockholm: Protest PA Security Coordination w/ Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/752153938293311/

Amman, Jordan – 6 pm to 8 pm, Riyad al-Mufleh 27, Amman, Jordan: Protest PA Security Coordination w/ Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/1885979978336285/

New York City, US – 5 pm to 7 pm, 115 E 65th St, New York: Protest PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/1857531881194874/

Washington, DC, US – 4:30 pm to 6 pm, 1732 Wisconsin Ave NW, Washington, DC: Protest PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/246258285781904/

Boston, MA, US – 4 pm, Park Street MBTA Station, Boston: Protest PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/458303734505885/

Los Angeles, CA, US – 3 pm to 5:30 pm, 11766 Wilshire Blvd #1600, Los Angeles: Protest PA Security Coordination with Israeli Occupation. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/273747333066325/

San Diego, CA, US – 7 pm to 9 pm, UCSD Raza Resource Center, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla: Discussion on Prisoners Day and Security Coordination. For more information: https://www.facebook.com/events/668576439996111/ 

 

17 April, Madrid: International Day for Palestinian Prisoners

Monday, 17 April
7:00 pm
Salon de Plenos
Junta Municpal Retiro
Metro Pacifico
Madrid, Spain


Speakers include:

Mauricio Valiente
III Teniente Alcalde Ayto, Madrid
Expert on Human Rights

Ana Sanchez De Mera
Palestinian Boycott National Committee
Specialist in international humanitarian law

Musa’ab Bashir
TV journalist and former political prisoner

Jaldia Abubakra
Spanish-Palestinian activist, Women’s Boat to Gaza – Unadikum

Organized by Sodepaz, Women’s Boat to Gaza, Unadikum, Paz Con Dignidad and more

17 April, Paris: Commemoration of Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

Monday, 17 April
6:30 pm to 8 pm
Librarie Quilombo
23 rue Voltaire, Paris 11th

Followed by:
8 pm
CICP
21 rue Voltaire, Paris 11th

Facebook for both: https://www.facebook.com/events/278186659307004/

In 1975, this date was adopted by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and has since become an international day of solidarity for all strugglers imprisoned for their anti-colonial, anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist commitment. The objectives of this day are to fight against isolation and invisibility, bring forward the history of struggle and support the demands of our imprisoned comrades. April 17 is a day of global mobilization.

Palestinian prisoners will begin an open hunger strike on 17 April, following the last open collective hunger strike of 2014 and the strike of 2002 involving 2,000 prisoners. Let us show our solidarity with them!

Program of the event – part of the Week of International Solidarity with Political Prisoners (16-22 April 2017)

6:30 to 8 pm – inauguration of the exhibition, “In Between,” an artistic homage to Palestinian political prisoners. Includes reproductions of works by Palestinian youth from Dheisheh refugee camp as well as original pieces by the French painter Sania.

This event will also include the screening of a video project shot in Palestine and a discussion with Sania and Reihanna, a vounteer with CICP who will speak about work in Dheisheh with the Center Laylac.

8 pm – Commemoration of Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. The evening will include the screening of short films by youth from Dheisheh refugee camp and the testimonies of former child prisoners.

Presentations will follow, with Youssef Habache, former Palestinian political prisoner and member of Addameer; Naji Owda, former prisoner and director of Laylac Center in Dheisheh; and presentations by the Unified Campaign for the Liberation of Georges Abdallah.

**

C’est en 1975 que cette date a été retenue par le Front Populaire de Libération de la Palestine, et relayée depuis par de nombreux mouvements internationaux pour l’instauration d’une journée internationale de solidarité avec tous les militants emprisonnés en raison de leur engagement, qu’il soit anticolonialiste, anticapitaliste, anti-impérialiste, etc. Les objectifs de cette journée sont de lutter contre l’oubli, transmettre la mémoire des combats et rappeler les revendications de nos camarades emprisonnés.
Le 17 avril est désormais devenu une journée de mobilisation mondiale.

Des prisonniers politiques palestiniens commenceront une grève de la faim illimitée ce 17 avril prochain. La dernière grève de la faim illimitée date de 2014. Elle s’inscrit suite à celle de 2012 impliquant 2 000 prisonniers. Démontrons notre solidarité avec eux ! Venez nombreuses et nombreux !

★ Programme de cette journée du 17 avril, incluse dans la semaine internationale de solidarité avec les prisonniers politiques (du 16 au 22 avril 2017) :

☞ 18h30-20h : Inauguration de l’exposition « In Between » (Hommage artistique aux prisonnier.e.s politiques palestinien.ne.s)

Reproductions d’œuvres réalisées par des jeunes palestiniens du Camp de réfugiés de Dheisheh et l’artiste peintre française Sania, qui exposera également quelques œuvres originales.

☞ A partir de 18h30, vernissage de l’exposition autour d’un verre de l’amitié et de la solidarité – Diffusion d’une vidéo sur le projet tourné en Palestine – Discussion avec l’artiste peintre française Sania, à l’origine du projet et de Reihanna, volontaire du CICP et d’Échanges et partenariats qui sera de retour de sa mission au Centre Laylac – Présentation d’un ouvrage trilingue sur le projet.

Librairie Quilombo
23 rue Voltaire, Paris 11e
Métro : Rue des Boulets (L9) ou Nation (RER A / L1, L2, L9)
Entrée libre

☞ 20h : Célébration de la Journée des prisonniers palestinien.ne .s :

N’oublions pas les enfants palestiniens incarcérés !

Vidéo – Projection de courts-métrages réalisés par les jeunes du camp de réfugiés de Dheisheh avec le soutien de Regarde à vue, suivie de trois témoignages recueillis en 2015 d’enfants palestiniens ayant connu la prison.

☆ Cours d’Arabe Palestinien

Les mots et les choses… Une petite introduction linguistique à la pensée politique des jeunes du camp de Dheisheh. Regarde à vue – 7min43

☆ NightTime Stories

Histoires du camp de refugiés de Deheisheh (Palestine). Regarde à vue – 19min05

★ Intervention de Youssef Habache, ancien prisonnier politique palestinien, membre d’Addameer (association pour la défense des prisonniers palestiniens – Palestine), représentant du Comité pour le Respect des Libertés et des Droits de l’Homme en Palestine et CDP-Palestine

★ Intervention de Naji Owda, ancien prisonnier politique palestinien, directeur du Centre LAYLAC – centre social autogéré qui favorise l’action des jeunes pour le développement local dans le camp de réfugiés de Dheihsheh, près de Bethléem, membre de Defense for Children International – Palestine (DCI-P, Défense internationale des enfants – section Palestine) qui travaille notamment sur la question des enfants et adolescent.e.s palestinien.ne.s incarcéré.e.s

★ Intervention de membres de la Campagne unitaire IDF pour la libération de Georges Abdallah.

Organisée par la Campagne unitaire IDF pour la libération de Georges Abdallah, le secrétariat international de la CNT, le Comité pour le Respect des Libertés et des Droits de l’Homme en Palestine, CDP-Palestine et le Centre Laylac.

Centre international des cultures populaires (CICP)
21ter rue Voltaire, Paris 11e
Métro : Rue des Boulets (L9) ou Nation (RER A / L1, L2, L9)
Entrée libre

1500 Palestinian prisoners launch largest collective hunger strike in years: Take action in support!

Take Action | Demands of the Strike

Over 1,500 Palestinian political prisoners have announced they will launch a collective hunger strike today, Monday, 17 April, on Palestinian Prisoners’ Day 2017. The strike, which will come under the slogan “Freedom and Dignity,” highlights a number of key demands of the Palestinian prisoners, including family visits, appropriate medical care, ending abusive conditions and stopping the use of solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. As the strike begins, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges supporters of justice around the world to take action to support the Palestinian prisoners whose bodies and lives are on the line for freedom and dignity.

Palestinian prisoners from across political lines announced they would participate in and support the strike, especially in Hadarim, Gilboa, and Nafha prisons. Prisoners in Beersheva, Ashkelon and Ramon prisons will also launch their participation in the strike today, with more to come in the future, Ma’an News reported.  The strike’s demands were announced by Fateh prisoners with imprisoned Fateh Central Committee member and prominent political leader Marwan Barghouthi serving as the spokesperson for the strike. A statement by Barghouthi highlighting the strike’s causes was published in the New York Times on 16 April.

“Israel’s prisons have become the cradle of a lasting movement for Palestinian self-determination. This new hunger strike will demonstrate once more that the prisoners’ movement is the compass that guides our struggle, the struggle for Freedom and Dignity, the name we have chosen for this new step in our long walk to freedom,” wrote Barghouthi.

Israeli Minister of Public Security Gilad Erdan, known for his denunciation of hunger strikers as “terrorists,” has threatened to move all Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike to the Negev desert prison and establish a “field hospital” to deny the prisoners access to medical care in civilian hospitals – and potentially threaten them with force feeding. Indeed, the Israeli Prison Service announced “punitive measures” against 700 Palestinian prisoners who began the open hunger strike on the evening of 16 April, declaring that “the strike and other protest activities are illegal and will be dealt with firmly.”

As the strike begins, Israeli jails hold approximately 6,500 Palestinian political prisoners. This number includes nearly 60 women and 300 children. Nearly 600 are imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention, while over 1,000 are sick and require medical treatment.

This is the largest collective hunger strike of Palestinian prisoners since 2012 and before that, 2004, when mass hunger strikes united thousands of Palestinian prisoners for key demands, many of which were achieved in those strikes yet have come under repeated and sustained attack. There is a lengthy history of collective hunger strikes in Israeli jails organized by the Palestinian prisoners’ movement, stretching back decades.

While the strike was announced by Fateh prisoners with Barghouthi as their spokesperson, prisoners from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Islamic Jihad, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Hamas, the People’s Party and others have declared participation in the strike, especially in prisons like Hadarim, Gilboa and Nafha, where there is nearly unanimous participation in the strike among political prisoners. Perhaps the last mass strike which saw such broad participation was the 2014 administrative detainees’ hunger strike which involved all of those Palestinians held without charge or trial – at the time, a number below 200.

In Barghouthi’s piece, he urged international solidarity, noting the support of South African former prisoners of the anti-apartheid struggle for Palestinian prisoners. “Israel is not the first occupying or colonial power to resort to such expedients. Every national liberation movement in history can recall similar practices. This is why so many people who have fought against oppression, colonialism and apartheid stand with us.” Fateh prisoners also emphasized the importance of support for the strike, noting that it was “urgent” that their cause becomes an Arab and an international one, instead of only being supported on the local and national level.

The Prison Branch of the PFLP also highlighted the importance of Palestinian support and international solidarity: “we call on all the Palestinian people and their supporters and friends around the world to stand side by side with the prisoners in their continuing battles inside the prisons, escalating the mass movement to support the battle of wills, challenge and confrontation, and to once again reaffirm the centrality of the cause of the prisoners.”

As 1,500 Palestinian political prisoners launch their hunger strike, we urge all supporters of Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian people to urgently take action and join in the campaign of solidarity to achieve their demands.

Take action:

1) Organize or join an event as part of the Week of Action for Palestinian Prisoners’ Day 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: https://samidoun.net/2017/04/schedule-of-events-actions-around-the-world-for-palestinian-prisoners-day-2017-week-of-action/

2) Join the social media campaign to support Palestinian prisoners. Take a picture of yourself or send a graphic with the hashtags below. Post on your own Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and share with the Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/225669854578279/ Slogans via Addameer:
Palestinian Human Rights Defenders are #NotATarget #PalestinianPrisonersDay
Palestinian children are #NotATarget #PalestinianPrisonersDay
Stop Administrative Detention #StopAD
Freedom for Palestinian Political Prisoners #April17 #PrisonersDay
I stand in solidarity with Palestinian Political Prisoners #PrisonersDay

3) Write letters and make phone calls to protest the violation of the rights of Palestinian political prisoners and urge your government officials to pressure Israel to accept the demands of the Palestinian political prisoners.

4) Boycott, Divest and Sanction. 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.

Materials to support your events and organizing are available for download here: https://samidoun.net/2017/03/call-to-organize-palestinian-prisoners-week-of-action-14-to-24-april-2017/ Please contact samidoun@samidoun.net or reach out to us on Facebook for questions or to share your actions.

Demands of the Strikers

The demands of the strike:

1) Installation of a public telephone in each prison and section for Palestinian prisoners to communicate with their loved ones.

2) Family Visits

A) Resume the second monthly visit, which was cut by the International Committee of the Red Cross
B) Regular visits every two weeks without cancellation or interference
C) No prevention of visits by relatives of the “first and second class”
D) Increase the duration of visits from 45 minutes to 1 1/2 hours
E) Allow photography with parents every three months
F) Facilities for the comfort of prisoners’ parents at the prison entrance
G) Children and grandchildren under the age of 16 allowed visitation at each visit

3) Medical Care

A) Close the so-called “Ramle prison hospital,” as it is unfit for necessary treatment
B) End of the policy of medical neglect against prisoners
C) Regular, scheduled periodic medical examinations
D) Surgical procedures received quickly and without delay
E) Introduction of specialist doctors from outside the prison system
F) Release of sick prisoners, especially those with disabilities and terminal illnesses
G) No transfer of the cost of treatment to prisoners and their families

4) Respond to the needs and demands of the Palestinian women prisoners for private transportation and direct visits with their family members without barriers

5) “Bosta” and Transportation

A) Secure the humane treatment of prisoners during transportation and movement
B) Prisoners must be returned to prisons, clinics and courts and not kept at crossing points for lengthy periods.
C) Rehabilitation of these crossing points to make them fit for human use, including providing meals

6) Access to satellite channels tailored to the needs of prisoners

7) Installation of a cooling system in prisons, especially Megiddo and Gilboa

8) Reform kitchens for all prisons and put them entirely under the supervision of Palestinian prisoners

9) Introduction of books, newspapers, clothing, food and other gifts for prisoners from their families during visits

10) Ending the policy of solitary confinement

11) Ending the policy of administrative detention

12) Re-introducing access to education via the Open Hebrew University

13) Allow the prisoners to provide high school (tawjihi) examinations under officially agreed-upon guidelines

Lena Jarbouni released after 15 years of Israeli imprisonment

Photo: Mohammed Kana’aneh

Palestinian prisoner Lena Jarbouni, the longest-serving woman prisoner in Israeli jails, was released from HaSharon prison on the morning of Sunday, 16 April. Jarbouni, 43, from Arraba al-Botouf village near Akka in occupied Palestine ’48, was welcomed by her family and friends who greeted her after 15 years of imprisonment.

In a brief interview with Asra Voice Radio immediately following her release, Jarbouni urged Palestinians to rally around the prisoners’ struggle, including the strike that will begin on Monday, 17 April, calling for unity around the cause of Palestine.

Jarbouni was the elected representative of the Palestinian women prisoners in HaSharon prison and known for her advocacy for Palestinian girls’ right to education inside prisons. Despite an agreement to release all women prisoners in the 2011 Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange, Jarbouni (and several other women serving shorter sentences) was excluded from the exchange as a Palestinian citizen of Israel and so remained imprisoned for over five years after her fellow prisoners were released.

Photo: Asra News

She has been imprisoned since 18 April 2002 and was accused of providing support to the Palestinian resistance and membership in the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Movement. When she was seized by Israeli forces, she was working in a sewing workshop and helping to support her family, including her parents, brother and sister.  Israeli forces ransacked the home with dogs in April 2002 at 2:00 am, claiming they were searching for “drugs;” however, Lena was seized and held under interrogation for 40 days. Her sister, Lamis, was also seized by Israeli forces and reported her own torture under interrogation before her release.

Jarbouni’s father and grandfather were both political prisoners in Israeli jails, and her uncle was reportedly jailed for 14 years for his participation in the Lebanese resistance to Israeli occupation.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes and welcomes Lena Jarbouni upon her freedom. Throughout her years inside prison, she was always on the front lines of struggle, involved in hunger strikes, prisoner organizing and protest. She was thrown in solitary confinement for her participation in prisoner protests and denied appropriate medical care for ongoing illnesses, yet always remained committed to building resistance and mutual solidarity among the women prisoners. As we enter Palestinian Prisoners’ Day 2017, we recall Lena Jarbouni’s words one year before and echo them in our organizing:

“On Prisoners’ Day, I greet the Palestinian people and all of the free people of the world…Hundreds of women prisoners held behind bars have stood firm in the struggle, along with the sons of our people, confirming that the Palestinian women are struggling against the occupation and fighting for social justice, emancipation and equality in all spheres of life.

On this day, we salute the longest-serving prisoner Karim Younis, and all of the prisoners throughout Palestine, the Palestinian prisoners’ national movement, and the Arab prisoners, and we salute the child prisoners, boys and girls, sick prisoners, and those in solitary confinement and all of our steadfast people. We assure you that we are held as captives behind bars, but we are free in our minds, and in our convictions. Our freedom remains in our hope and our conviction in the freedom of Palestine.”