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8 March, Manchester: Women’s Day – Free Lena Jarbouni and all Palestinian Prisoners

Wednesday, 8 March
12:00 pm
University of Manchester Students Union
Oxford Road
Manchester, UK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/221202825016038/

Responding to the call of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, Manchester Uni Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! society is calling for action on International Women’s Day for the release of all political prisoners in Israeli jails. Lena Jarbouni is the longest serving female prisoner locked up by the Israeli occupation and is one of over 7,000 Palestinians currently in jail.

For more info on the female prisoners see:
https://samidoun.net/2016/03/international-womens-day-imprisoned-palestinian-women-and-girls-struggle-for-freedom/

Britain is complicit in this systematic oppression. British company G4S – which operates at Manchester Uni – profits from its operations in Israeli prisons, while Barclays bank funds arms companies which provide weapons to the fascist regimes of Israel, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

At a time when racist Zionist forces are attempting to ban all BDS/pro-Palestine activism from British universities, we must take a stand on the side of the oppressed. We will not back down!

Free all Palestinian political prisoners!
Boycott Israel!
Victory to Palestine!

Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine!
Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! (FRFI) Manchester
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

www.frfi.co.uk

Beirut protest denounces French defense minister, demands freedom for Georges Abdallah

Organizers in Beirut protested on Monday evening, 6 March outside the French embassy in the Lebanese capital, on the occasion of a reception for the French Defense Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, to demand freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, the Arab revolutionary struggler for Palestine imprisoned in French jails for 32 years. He has been eligible for release since 1999, yet it has been repeatedly denied through the intervention of the highest levels of the French and U.S. governments.

The protesters carried photos of Abdallah and banners with slogans demanding his release. They also called upon the Lebanese government to demand the release of Abdallah before meeting with any French officials and to act responsibly to protect this Lebanese citizen who has lost 32 years of his life in prison. Lebanese security forces set up a large cordon and pushed protesters far away from the entrance to the embassy during the event.

[fbvideo link=”https://www.facebook.com/FreeGeorgesAbdallah/posts/744833705691556″ width=”800″ height=”” onlyvideo=”1″]

French organizers for Abdallah’s freedom also launched their new website, with detailed information and frequently-updated content about the case. The new site is available at: http://liberonsgeorges.samizdat.net/

Protest, outrage follow assassination of Palestinian youth leader Basil al-Araj by occupation forces


Basil al-Araj
stood “with his gun in one hand and his pen in the other, a solid, conscious fighter who would not compromise one iota on principles or constants and who did not melt like some intellectuals in the acid of temptations or acceptance of the status quo,” said imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat, the general secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Palestinian leftist party, in a statement from Israeli prison on the assassination of the Palestinian youth leader by attacking Israeli occupation forces on Monday, 6 March.

Al-Araj “gave his life for Palestine at a time when some traders seek to sell it piece by piece. He never fell or wavered before the rubble of reality, the enormous challenges, the attempts to liquidate the Palestinian cause or divert it from its natural course…His experience of struggle and rich cultural work is an inspiration and compass for revolutionary Palestinian youth, and his luminous flame illuminates their struggle and uprising,” said Sa’adat.

As Sa’adat spoke from prison and Palestinians took to the streets, the Palestinian Prisoners Affairs Commission filed a petition in Israeli occupation courts in Jerusalem for the release of Al-Araj’s body. The Palestinian youth activist, 32, was gunned down in a massive assault by Israeli occupation forces on Monday morning, 6 March, in el-Bireh.  Al-Araj’s family said that they received notice from the occupation authorities said they would only transfer his body if his memorial will not be held in his family hometown of al-Walaja, for the protection of nearby illegal occupation settlements.


Protests rang out in Palestine and the refugee camps in memory of Al-Araj on Monday, in Ramallah, el-Bireh, Haifa, Dheisheh refugee camp and elsewhere, including Nahr el-Bared camp in Lebanon. Protesters denounced the killing of Al-Araj, a beloved youth leader and demanded an end to Palestinian Authority security coordination with the Israeli occupation.

He was brutally shot down in a hail of bullets in an assassination raid by Israeli occupation forces after being pursued for months and his family home repeatedly raided. Al-Araj was a prominent Palestinian youth activist involved in grassroots organizing, cultural preservation and Palestinian oral history and writing and theorizing about Palestinian resistane and the future of the liberation struggle. The Palestine Chronicle quoted al-Araj, “If you want to be an intellectual, you have to be an engaged intellectual, and if you refuse to do so, it is no use to be intellectual.”

He and five of his friends and comrades were imprisoned by the Palestinian Authority for months without charge after PA President Mahmoud Abbas boasted of their arrest and the value of PA security coordination with the Israeli occupation. After a hunger strike and widespread support, they were released from PA prison; however, they were then pursued by the Israeli occupation. Four of al-Araj’s fellow hunger strikers, Mohammed al-Salameen, Seif al-Idrissi, Haitham Siyaj and Mohammed Harb, are currently imprisoned without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention. The integral role of PA security coordination in the pursuit, arrest and now murder of al-Araj was reflected in the chants and demands of protesting Palestinians. On Tuesday, 7 March, a protest will gather in Beirut outside the Palestinian embassy to demand an end to security coordination as a crime against the Palestinian people after the extrajudicial execution of al-Araj.

Al-Akhbar newspaper in Lebanon reported that al-Araj rented an apartment from a foreigner in el-Bireh for two and a half months while he was incessantly pursued, especially in his hometown of al-Walaja in Bethlehem, by occupation forces.  His father said that the family predicted Basil’s killing after the threats of occupation forces if he did not give himself up. He had with him a large number of books and magazines, including books by Antonio Gramsci, “Palestine Studies’ magazine, the novel, “Al-Moskobiyeh” and the Qur’an. Al-Araj resisted and fought back against the invading forces until his last breath.

Palestinian political parties widely denounced the assassination of al-Araj. “The martyr Basil Al-Araj was a freedom fighter, intellectual and theorist of the uprising of Palestinian youth. He was dedicated to a path of resistance, intifada, unity, return and liberation of the entire land of Palestine. He was a revolutionary intellectual who put all of his cultural and intellectual energies in the service of the resistance together with his own actions on the ground, confronting security coordination and collaboration.

The assassination of the martyr struggler Basil al-Araj is the ugly fruit of the continuation of security coordination. Basil al-Araj and his comrades were chased by the Palestinian Authority security apparatus and were imprisoned for several months, and this detention was directly followed by the occupation’s hunt for him until his death,” said the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Hamas spokesperson Hazem Kassem said that “the martyrdom of Basil al-Araj is the embodiment of resistance of the youth of the West Bank in the Jerusalem intifada, expressing their rejection of compromise and acquiescence to the occupation, or the illusion that the relationship of the Palestinians and the occupation is normalized or a relationship of security and negotiations.”  Islamic Jihad issued a statement saying that “the martyr al-Araj was an exceptional struggler, alongside all free palestinian youth, struggling to bring an end to the occupation of our land,” denouncing the role of the PA and noting “the suffering of thousands of detainees in the prisons of the Palestinian Authority who have been arrested and detained by the hands of their own countrymen…betting falsely on settlement.”  Fatah spokesperson Ziyad Khalil Abu Zayyad denounced the killing of al-Araj as “another escalation (by Israel) against Palestinians,” calling it a “hideous act of the occupation.”

Araj’s will, written to be released if he was slain by occupation forces, was translated by Ma’an News:

“Greetings of Arab nationalism, homeland, and liberation,

If you are reading this, it means I have died and my soul has ascended to its creator. I pray to God that I will meet him with a guiltless heart, willingly, and never reluctantly, and free of any whit of hypocrisy….How hard it is to write your own will. For years I have been contemplating testaments written by martyrs, and those wills have always bewildered me. They were short, quick, without much eloquence. They did not quench our thirst to find answers about martyrdom. Now I am walking to my fated death satisfied that I found my answers. How stupid I am! Is there anything which is more eloquent and clearer than a martyr’s deed? I should have written this several months ago, but what kept me was that this question is for you, living people, and why should I answer on your behalf? Look for the answers yourself, and for us the inhabitants of the graves, all we seek is God’s mercy.”

Administrative detention renewed for Shadi Jarrar; two more Palestinian legislators seized by occupation forces

Palestinian administrative detainee Shadi Jarrar was issued a “final” administrative detention order of an additional three months on Monday, 6 March at the military appeals court in Ofer. Jarrar, 40, is from Wadi Burkin west of Jenin; this is his fourth administrative detention order.

He has been imprisoned by Israeli occupation forces since 12 March 2016 after he was stopped at a military checkpoint between Ramallah and Nablus. On the pretext of a “secret file,” he was ordered to administrative detention four times consecutively; he will be released on 17 July 2017. Jarrar has spent 13 years in Israeli prison and was released in 2014 and has been one of the prominent leaders of the Palestinian leftist party, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, in Jenin.

Occupation forces targeted more political leaders – two members of the Palestinian Legislative Council – amid 24 arrests in pre-dawn invasions and raids on Monday, 6 March. Khaled Tafesh and Anwar Zboun, both members of the Palestinian Legislative Council representing the Change and Reform bloc associated with Hamas, were seized by occupation forces in Bethlehem.  Riyad al-Ashqar of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies said that a large military forces surrounded their homes before invading them, ransacking them and destroying furniture and belongings and confiscating computers and mobile phones.

Zboun, 50, and Tafesh, 48 are two of now nine PLC members imprisoned by the Israeli occupation. Zboun has spent over 6 years in Israeli prison including several months in administrative detention in 2014; Tafesh is also a former prisoner held under administrative detention in 2014 and a former deportee to Marj al-Zouhour.

Fellow imprisoned PLC members include Hassan Yousef and Ahmad Mubarak of Ramallah and Azzam Salhab and Mohammed Jamal Natsheh of al-Khalil, all of whom are held in administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. Imprisoned General Secretary of the PFLP Ahmad Sa’adat is serving a 30 year sentence; Fateh leader Marwan Barghouthi is serving several life sentences. Jerusalemite PLC member Mohammed Abu Teir, who was also expelled from Jerusalem, is serving a 17-month sentence in Israeli prisons. Ashqar urged action by international parliamentarians against the targeting of PLC members and to demand their immediate release.

Abu Leil transferred to isolation in Ramon prison on 20th day of strike; al-Qeeq on hunger strike for 30 days

Hunger-striking Palestinian administrative detainee Jamal Abu Leil was transferred from his isolation cell in Ashkelon prison to an isolation cell in Ramon prison on Monday, 6 March. Abu Leil, 50, has been on hunger strike for 20 days against the renewal of his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. He joins imprisoned journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, 34, on hunger strike against his own imprisonment without charge or trial for 30 days.

Al-Qeeq is held in the Ramle prison clinic and has so far been denied transfer to a civilian hospital; his health status is precarious as he won his freedom in May 2016, when he was also held in administrative detention, with a 94-day hunger strike.

Al-Qeeq has been on hunger strike since 6 February 2017. He launched his strike after he was ordered to administrative detention following 22 days of interrogation; he was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 15 January at a checkpoint as he returned home from a demonstration in Bethlehem demanding the return of the detained bodies of Palestinians killed by Israel. A journalist, his 94-day hunger strike in 2016 saw widespread Palestinian and international support and publicized the issue of both administrative detention and the imprisonment of Palestinian journalists. He is the former student body president at Bir Zeit University and is married to fellow journalist Fayha Shalash, with two children, Islam and Lour.

Abu Leil has been on strike since 16 February 2017. He has been imprisoned without charge or trial since 15 February 2016 and launched his strike in protest of the renewal of his detention for the third six-month order. He is a prominent leader of Fateh in the Qalandiya refugee campa and a former member of Fateh’s Revolutionary Council. He is a member of the camp’s Popular Committee, an administrator of the Qalandiya youth center and the director of the children’s club in the camp. He is married and the father of three sons.

Abu Leil and al-Qeeq are among approximately 520 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are issued for one to six months at a time and are indefinitely renewable, meaning that Palestinians can be imprisoned for years without charge or trial under administrative detention.

February 2017 report: 498 Palestinians arrested, 99 administrative detention orders issued

Palestinian prisoners’ institutions, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission and the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, issued a report detailing the arrests and imprisonment of Palestinians in February 2017. This report is translated by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.

498 Palestinians were arrested by Israeli occupation forces in the West Bank including Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in February 2017, including 108 children, 19 women and one journalist; one Palestinian prisoner, Mohammed al-Jallad, died in occupation custody of his injuries at the hands of Israeli occupation forces.

The four institutions documented that occupation authorities arrested 161 Palestinians from Jerusalem, 90 from al-Khalil, 55 from Bethlehem, 43 from Ramallah and el-Bireh, 39 from Nablus, 32 from Qalqilya, 25 from Jenin, 22 from Tulkarem, 10 from Tubas, 9 from the Gaza Strip, 7 from Jericho and 5 from Salfit.

In the context of the ongoing policy of administrative detention, the Israeli occupation authorities issued 99 administrative detention orders, including 25 new orders. These included administrative detention orders against journalists Mohammed al-Qeeq and Hammam Hantash, as well as the renewal of the administrative detention order against Sabah Faraoun.

There are approximately 7,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, including 61 women prisoners, of which at least 12 are minor girls. There are a total of approximately 300 children in Israeli prisons, 516 administrative detainees and 23 detained journalists.

Last month, two repressive units, the Masada and Keter units, invaded section 16 in the Negev desert prison, severely beat the prisoners held there and sprayed gas inside the section, imposing a series of harsh sanctions and tampering with and ransacking the belongings of the detainees.

The occupation also continued its policy of medical neglect against hundreds of ill prisoners, alongside increased rates of administrative detention, isolation, the arrest of children and women, the imposition of heavy financial fines against Palestinian detainees and the denial of family visits to hundreds of prisoners.

The institutions also warned of the seriousness of the conditions inside Israeli jails heading toward an explosion, amid the continued repressive measures against Palestinian prisoners.

They also strongly condemned the ongoing grave Israeli violations of international humanitarian and human rights law against Palestinian detainees and expressed pride in the struggle of the Palestinian prisoners confronting their tormenters, confirming their continued efforts to defend Palestinian prisoners and expose the abuses committed against them.

Further, they emphasized that the issue of prisoners, in addition to being a Palestinian national issue and a humanitarian and moral issue, must also receive significant Arab and international efforts to put maximum pressure on the occupation state to stop its gross and systematic violations of international humanitarian law and human rights principles and to work to liberate Palestinian prisoners. In this context, they renewed their call to institutions of civil society and human rights organizations, political parties and progressive forces around the world to work to expose abuses and violations of international law by the occupying forces.

They also called for the United Nations and the international community to take action to stop the grave violations against Palestinian detainees, particularly the ongoing use of torture and other cruel and degrading treatment, and the continued violation of the human rights of children, whether through arbitrary arrests among children or during interrogation and detention. They also called for international action to hold Israeli authorities accountable to their legal obligations to respect the rights of detainees to be protected from torture and ill-treatment and to receive their health care needs, family visits and proper access to communication. They urged the release of child prisoners, women prisoners and administrative detainees on the road to the release of all Palestinian prisoners.

Basil al-Araj assassinated by Israeli occupation forces after PA imprisonment and months in hiding

In a pre-dawn raid attacking a home in el-Bireh, Basil al-Araj, 31, Palestinian youth activist and writer pursued by Israel for nearly a year, was assassinated by invading Israeli occupation forces this morning.

Al-Araj, from the village of Walaja near Bethlehem, fought back and resisted the invading forces for two hours before the attacking occupation soldiers broke into the home where he was staying and executed him at close range. They then seized his body and took it to an unknown location.

The attack on the home included rocket fire as well as al-Araj’s extrajudicial execution in a hail of bullets. Al-Araj’s family home in al-Walaja had been repeatedly raided by occupation forces for months.

Al-Araj, a writer and activist involved in a wide array of Palestinian grassroots struggles for liberation, was among the Palestinian youth dedicated to reviving the Palestinian national liberation movement. One of six Palestinian youth released from Palestinian Authority prisons after nearly six months of detention when they launched a hunger strike, Al-Araj and other youth had been seized in April in what was touted as a victory for security coordination between the PA and Israel. While they were imprisoned by the PA, they were subject to torture and ill-treatment by PA security forces.

After their hunger strike and widespread attention to their case, including protests after reports of their torturesecured their release, four of the youth – Mohammed al-Salameen, Seif al-Idrissi, Haitham Siyaj, and Mohammed Harb – have been seized by Israeli occupation forces. All four have been ordered to administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

The extrajudicial execution of Basil al-Araj is yet another example of the ongoing use of “arrest raids” as assassination raids against Palestinian strugglers, including the killing of Abdullah Shalaldeh in the hospital and the murder of former prisoner and struggler Muataz Washaha. It also highlights once again the devastating and deadly reality of “security coordination” between the Israeli occupation and the Palestinian Authority for Palestinians struggling for their liberation, pursued and imprisoned through this coordination up to the point of their execution.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes and remembers Basil al-Araj, who struggled all his life for Palestine and its people, committed to a radical vision of justice and liberation, and determined to take up the struggle by all means to secure that freedom against the occupation. We demand real justice for Basil al-Araj, the prosecution and accountability of all those responsible for his execution, and the immediate release of his body, as well as his imprisoned comrades and all 7,000 Palestinian prisoners of freedom in the jails of the occupation.

We once again demand an end to the policies of security coordination that further threaten Palestinian life and freedom at the behest of the occupation.  We know that the vision and the dream of Basil al-Araj can only be fulfilled with the liberation of Palestine from occupation, oppression, racism, Zionism, apartheid and settler-colonialism and we pledge to intensify our work and struggle to make that vision a reality.

Palestinian human rights defender Salah Khawaja sentenced to 12 months in Israeli prison

Palestinian human rights defender and boycott activist Salah Khawaja was ordered to 12 months imprisonment by the Ofer military court on Sunday, 5 March. Khawaja, a member of the Secretariat of the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee and a leader of the Palestinian Grassroots Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign (Stop the Wall Campaign), was also ordered to pay a fine of 5000 NIS ($1250 USD).

Khawaja was seized from his Ramallah home on 26 October 2016 in a pre-dawn military raid by Israeli occupation forces. During his lengthy interrogation, he was subjected to torture, ill-treatment, beatings and denied access to his lawyer.

He was eventually charged with contact of an “agent of an enemy state,” an allegation frequently leveled against Palestinians who travel to other Arab countries and meet Arab or exiled Palestinian activists and media figures from countries like Lebanon, Syria or Algeria. Similar charges are frequently used against Palestinians who attend conferences and public political events in Lebanon, the home to hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees, or other Arab countries. In Khawaja’s case, the charge was quite weak; he was accused of meeting an unspecified person in Jordan, reported the Stop the Wall Campaign. In order to bolster the weak allegations, military prosecutors submitted a “secret file” to supplement the charges, to which Khawaja and his lawyer were denied access.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network condemns the sentencing of Salah Khawaja, the latest sentence imposed on a Palestinian human rights defender for participation in Arab and Palestinian political events and activities, and demand freedom for Khawaja and all Palestinian prisoners.

Take Action:

1. Participate in the Front Line Defenders action, urging the Israeli state to immediately release Khawaja and end its persecution of Palestinian human rights defenders. Join in here:  https://www.frontlinedefenders.org/en/action/take-action-salah-khawaja

Ihsan Dababseh ordered to six months in administrative detention; Rawan Shyoukhi expelled from Jerusalem

Rearrested Palestinian prisoner Ihsan Dababseh was ordered to six months in administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, by the Israeli occupation military on Sunday, 5 March.  Dababseh, 31, had been seized by occupation forces in a pre-dawn raid on her home in the town of Nuba south of al-Khalil on Monday, 27 February.

Her story is featured in “For the Love of Palestine: Stories of Women, Imprisonment and Resistance,” created by members of the Prison, Labor and Academic Delegation to Palestine. Dababseh had been released on 10 July 2016 after 21 months in Israeli prison. She had been imprisoned since 13 October 2014 on charges of membership in a prohibited organization, in her case the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement. Dababseh is engaged to Osama Mohammed Hroub of Jenin, currently imprisoned in the Negev desert prison.

She previously spent two years in Israeli prison from 2007 to 2009 on similar charges. All major Palestinian political parties are labeled prohibited organizations by the Israeli occupation. During her imprisonment she had been isolated with four other Palestinian women as punishment for raising the Palestinian flag on the anniversary of the Nakba. During her prior arrest from 2007 to 2009, the Israeli occupation soldiers who had arrested and blindfolded her made a video of themselves dancing around her as she was blindfolded and held against the wall, which they distributed.

Dababseh is one of approximately 600 Palestinian prisoners held without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable in periods of one to six months. Two administrative detainees, Mohammed al-Qeeq and Jamal Abu Leil, are on open hunger strike for 28 and 18 days, respectively, against administrative detention.

As Dababseh was ordered imprisoned without charge or trial, he Israeli prison administration transferred 16 Palestinian women prisoners from HaSharon prison to Damon prison, stating that renovations are being done on Section 11 of HaSharon. Prisoners have filed dozens of complaints demanding that something be done about the unacceptable conditions of both Damon and HaSharon prisons.

There are approximately 51 women prisoners, for whom the living conditions worsen daily, said Amina al-Tawil of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies, who said that the women prisoners are denied basic necessities of life within the prisons.

Dr. Raafat Hamdouneh of the Prisoners Studies Center said that Palestinian women’s sections are overcrowded and denied appropriate cleaning materials and appropriate, healthful food, especially for injured or youth prisoners. He noted that the rooms are often infested with insects and have little ventilation.

Among the prisoners who were transferred to Damon prison are Aisha al-Afghani, Ansam Shawahneh, Falasteen Najm, Ghadeer al-Atrash, Asmaa Balawi and others.

Among the women prisoners are 12 injured, often with severe injuries from live ammunition, as well as 13 minor girls under the age of 18.

Meanwhile, on Saturday, 4 March, Rawan Shyoukhi, 21, was released from detention but ordered forcibly transferred from the city of Jerusalem and held in home imprisonment in Nazareth for six months. Shyoukhi’s brother, Ali, was killed by Israeli occupation forces on 11 October 2016 as he protested in Silwan. He was left to bleed and denied access to medical care for three hours before his death, despite the presence of Palestinian ambulances and medical crews demanding access. Rawan and Ali’s brother Mohammed is currently serving a 10-months sentence in Israeli prison.

Diana Khuwaylid, 19, was released on Wednesday, 1 March from Damon prison after 15 months of imprisonment, welcomed back to her home in Tulkarem. Upon her release, she urged support for all of the prisoners in Israeli jails against the attacks od the prison administration.

New York City protest demands freedom for Lena Jarbouni, all Palestinian prisoners

Photo: Joe Catron

Protesters in New York City gathered outside the Best Buy at Union Square on Friday, 3 March to protest the imprisonment of Lena Jarbouni and fellow Palestinian women prisoners and urge Hewlett-Packard (HP) corporations to get out of the business of profiting from occupation, apartheid and colonialism.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network organized the protest in advance of International Women’s Day to highlight the situation of approximately 51 Palestinian women held in Israeli jails, among nearly 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners. They include 13 minor girls under the age of 18, and Palestinian women prisoners have recently escalated complaints regarding their conditions of imprisonment, especially for the 14 women prisoners who are injured, shot by Israeli occupation forces and requiring extensive medical care and personal assistance, provided mostly by fellow women prisoners.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

In particular, protesters highlighted the case of Lena Jarbouni, the longest-held Palestinian woman prisoner. Jarbouni, from Akka, is a Palestinian citizen of Israel who worked in sewing workshops and was arrested in 2002. She is ill and suffers from a number of diseases. Lina is the spokesperson and representative of women prisoners in HaSharon; sentenced to 17 years, she has three years remaining in her sentence. She received this lengthy sentence for “aiding the enemy” – Palestinian resistance. She was denied essential medical treatment until her fellow women prisoners launched a strike for her treatment. She has played a critical role in advocating for the educational rights of imprisoned Palestinian girls.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Protesters carried signs with images of Jarbouni and fellow women prisoners, highlighting the role of women in the Palestinian national liberation movement, including the prisoners’ movement.

Photo: Joe Catron

The demonstration also focused on the complicity of Hewlett-Packard (HP) corporations in Israeli occupation, apartheid, colonialism and oppression, including the imprisonment of thousands of Palestinians. Participants distributed flyers and leaflets calling on HP to end its contracts with the Israel Prison Service along with other Israeli entities, and urging shoppers to boycott HP products, including computers, printers and ink, until the corporation stops profiteering from the jailing of Palestinians. There is a growing international campaign against corporations like HP and G4S for their role in the imprisonment of Palestinians, part of the global campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun activists will be participating in a wide array of protests and actions in the coming weeks. On Saturday, 4 March, Samidoun joined the March 4 Standing Rock protest, which launched from the NYC Public Library in support of the indigenous struggle to defend the water and land of the Standing Rock Sioux against the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Photo: Joe Catron

On Wednesday, 8 March, Samidoun will join Palestinian and Palestine solidarity organizations across NYC along with a wide range of women’s organizations and social justice movements as part of the International Women’s Strike. The New York City protest will launch at 4:00 pm from Washington Square Park. The struggles and demands of Palestinian women will be prominently featured in the program, urging reproductive justice, an end to gender violence, labor rights, full social funding, environmental justice, and anti-racism and anti-imperialism.

Photo: Bud Korotzer/Desertpeace

Samidoun NYC will also take the streets for International Women’s Day on Saturday, 11 March at 12 noon at Herald Square, followed by a roundtable on women’s organizing, organized by the International Working Women’s Day Coalition.

Photo: Joe Catron

protest on Tuesday, 14 March is being organized by Samidoun outside the New York Hilton Midtown against the “Friends of the Israel Defense Forces” annual gala, where fanatical Zionists gather each year alongside Israeli soldiers to raise tens of millions of dollars to support Israel’s political imprisonment and other war crimes against occupied Palestinians. The protest will take place at 5:30 pm outside the hotel and is endorsed by a number of organizations, including Al-Awda NY, the Palestine Right to Return Coalition, the Committee to Stop FBI Reception NYC, International Action Center, Jews for Palestinian Right of Return, NY4Palestine and the United National Antiwar Coalition.