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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.

10 March, Milan: Freedom for Mohammed al-Qeeq and all Palestinian Prisoners

Friday, 10 March
6:00 pm
Corso Sempione
20154 Milan, Italy
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/263868387398318/

On the occasion of the 13th annual Israeli Apartheid Week, commemorated around the world between March-April 2017, in support of the growing campaign for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions, Fronte Palestina Milano is organizing this demonstration in support of the Palestinian prisoners.

Mohammed al-Qeeq is one of approximately 600 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable without charge or trial and Palestinians can be held indefinitely under such orders.

Two Palestinian prisoners continue hunger strikes for freedom

Two Palestinian prisoners are continuing their hunger strikes to demand their freedom from administrative detention, Israeli imprisonment without charge or trial. Mohammed al-Qeeq, 34, a Palestinian journalist, is on his 27th day of hunger strike, while Jamal Abu Leil, 50, a Fateh leader from Qalandiya refugee camp, has been on hunger strike against his own imprisonment without charge or trial for 17 days.

A large rally in solidarity with Abu Leil and his fellow Palestinian prisoners started today from Qalandiya camp and marching to Ramallah. marchers returned to the camp and Qalandiya checkpoint, where Israeli occupation forces fired tear gas, stun grenades and rubber-coated metal bullets at the marching youth.

Abu Leil’s wife confirmed on Saturday, 4 March that her husband is dedicated to continue his battle until he wins his freedom from administrative detention. Abu Leil is held in isolation in Ashkelon prison, while al-Qeeq is held in the Ramle prison clinic.

Journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq won his release from administrative detention in 2016 with a 94-day hunger strike that drew wide attention internationally and across Palestine. His release in May 2016 was widely celebrated; he was seized again by Israeli occupation forces at a checkpoint on 15 January 2017 after leaving a protest in Bethlehem for the return of the bodies of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces. He launched his hunger strike on 6 February after he was ordered to administrative detention following 22 days of interrogation.

Abu Leil is a former member of the Fateh Revolutionary Council and a longtime leader of the political party in the refugee camp. He has been imprisoned since February 2016 and held under administrative detention without charge or trial. He launched his hunger strike on 16 February after his imprisonment was renewed for the third time for another six-month order. He is held in solitary confinement with nothing but the clothes on his back, and all appliances, extra clothes and covers have been removed from his isolated space.

Archbishop Atallah Hanna spoke in support of al-Qeeq and Abu Leil on Wednesday, 1 March at a sit-in in support of the hunger strikers in the courtyard of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City, saying that “We stand in solidarity with our brothers, the prisoners on hunger strike, and reaffirm our support and our stand alongside the prisoners who are defending freedom and the just cause of their people,” urging broader Arab action for Palestine.

Amnesty International issued a statement urging the release of al-Qeeq, as his health continued to deteriorate. Al-Qeeq’s situation is particularly precarious considering his weakness following last year’s 94-day hunger strike. His detention order was confirmed on 28 February. “Today’s decision to approve the administrative detention of Muhammed al-Qiq is an affront to justice. Israel’s administrative detention which is predominately used to detain Palestinians without charge or trial is arbitrary and abusive. The Israeli authorities must end this practice, which itself can amount to cruel and inhuman treatment, once and for all,” said Magdalena Mughrabi, Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.

Al-Qeeq’s lawyer Khaled Zabarqa said on Friday, 3 March that he lost consciousness on Wednesday for about one hour on Wednesday and suffers from a constant and extreme headache and dizziness. Al-Qeeq refuses all medical tests by the Israeli occupation, and Zabarqa also reported that prison officials are demanding he receive a series of medical tests before being transferred to a civilian hospital.

Take Action!

1. Sign and share the public petition to international officials to demand they take a stand on administrative detention and Mohammed al-Qeeq’s imprisonment. Sign and share at: https://www.change.org/p/council-of-the-european-union-take-action-to-free-hunger-striking-palestinian-journalist-mohammed-al-qeeq

2. Organize a protest or a forum for Mohammed al-Qeeq and Palestinian prisoners. Israeli Apartheid Week is approaching and the Israeli injustice system is an excellent example to highlight in IAW activities, especially as your support can help to bring the international attention needed to help Mohammed al-Qeeq in his struggle for freedom. You can invite a speaker, hold a discussion, hold a protest, or just distribute leaflets and information (see below for sample leaflets and posters). To request resources or let us know about your event so we can post it publicly, email samidoun@samidoun.net or contact us on Facebook.

3. Hold a Symbolic Hunger Strike. This is an especially effective tactic on a campus for Israeli Apartheid Week, but can be used anywhere. A symbolic one-day hunger strike in which participants publicly express their solidarity with al-Qeeq and fellow Palestinian prisoners can help to raise local attention. Email samidoun@samidoun.net to let us know about your event!

Flyers and Literature

Mohammed al-Qeeq Leaflet – Download PDF
Mohammed al-Qeeq sign/poster (A3/11×17) – Download PDF
Apartheid in Israeli Prisons – Half-Page Leaflet – Download PDF

 

Palestinians protest as 99 administrative detention orders issued in February by Israeli military courts

The Israeli occupation military courts issued a total of 28 more administrative detention orders between 16 and 28 February, reported Palestinian lawyer Mahmoud Halabi of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society. There have been a total of at least 99 administrative detention orders issued in the month of February.

These orders included the renewal of the administrative detention of Sabah Faraoun and a new administrative detention order against journalist Hammam Hantash, 25, for six months; Hantash has been imprisoned since 15 February.

They are among approximately 600 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention, of 7,000 total Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable, and they are issued in periods of one to six months. Under administrative detention, Palestinians can be imprisoned for years without ever having a charge or trial.

There are currently two Palestinian prisoners engaged in an open hunger strike demanding their freedom from administrative detention: Mohammed al-Qeeq, on strike for 27 days, and Jamal Abu Leil, on strike for 17 days.

Photo; Yoav Haifawi

On Saturday, 4 March, over 100 people protested in Kabul in Palestine ’48 in solidarity with Mohammed Ibrahim, 20, imprisoned since 11 May 2016 under administrative detention without charge or trial.  They demanded freedom for Ibrahim and an end to the policy of administrative detention that targets all Palestinians.

The following orders were issued against Palestinian detainees:

1. Ashraf Ghassan Jibril, from Qalqilya, 4 months, extension
2. Majdi Abdel-Qader Oweidat, from Jericho, 5 months extension
3. Bakr Mohammed Kharyoush, from Tulkarem, 4 months, extension
4. Ahmed Mahmoud Kharyoush, from Nablus, 4 months, extension
5. Bahaa Taha Najjar, from al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
6. Hassan Hassanein Shawkat, from Bethlehem, 4 months extension
7. Samer Mahmoud Hanani, from Nablus, 4 months extension
8. Imad Mahmoud Abadi, from Jenin, 3 months extension
9. Yacoub Imad Abu Turki, from al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
10. Saadi Mohammed Khaddeirat, from al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
11. Nour Shaker al-Atrash, from al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
12. Saif Bassam Abu Eisha, from al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
13. Jadallah Abdel-Halim Da’na, from al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
14. Musab Taha Manasrah, from al-Khalil, 6 months, extension
15. Raafat Khalil Abu Rabie, from Ramallah, 4 months, extension
16. Ramzi Tawfiq Qarini, from Jenin, 6 months, extension
17. Ashraf Zeidan al-Qurei, from Jenin, 4 months, extension
18. Sabah Mohammed Faraoun, from Jerusalem, 4 months, extension
19. Imad Hamdi Abu Khalaf, from al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
20. Hammam Mohammed Hantash, from al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
21. Shahid Ghassan Ziadah, from Nablus, 4 months, extension
22. Mansour Mustafa Bani Odeh, from Tubas, 4 months, extension
23. Mohammed Ghassan Najdi, 6 months, extension
24. Raif Ahmad Jaradat, from Jenin, 4 months, extension
25. Sabri Ismail Jaber, from Bethlehem, 6 months, extension
26. Tareq Anwar Dais, from al-Khalil, 4 months, extension
27. Salem Badi Dirdasawi, from el-Bireh, 6 months, extension
28. Kamal Mazen Boustah, from Jenin, 4 months, extension

9 March, Brussels: Palestine: An Imprisoned People?

Thursday, 9 March
6:30 pm
Université Libre De Bruxelles / Campus Solbosch
Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt 50
1050 Brussels, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1789224864731194/

During Israeli Apartheid Week 2017, the Comité BDS-ULB is organizing an event, “Palestine: An imprisoned people?” We will hear from Charlotte Kates, international coordinator of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, and Salah Hamouri, French-Palestinian former detainee and current advocate for prisoners’ rights.

Location: Campus Solbosch H1301

8 March, Maastricht: Palestinian political prisoners, EU complicity and attacks on BDS

Wednesday, 8 March
7:00 pm
Maastricht University Faculty of Law
Bouillonstraat 1-3
Maastricht, Netherlands
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1056011254502755/

There is an estimated 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners, of which over 300 are children, held in Israeli jails – sentenced in military courts with 99.7% conviction rates, rounded up in night-time raids, often held under administrative detention (without charge or trial) on the basis of “secret evidence”. Since 1967, around 750,000 Palestinians have been in custody. Palestinian political prisoners represent all sectors of Palestinian society – men, women, children, elders, students, teachers, farmers, workers, artists, organizers and strugglers for freedom. Indeed, dozens of Palestinian student activists and student union representatives are currently imprisoned in Israeli jails. There are 750 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention.The massive use of imprisonment in Palestine is as a key weapon of settler colonialism as it attempts to suppress and eliminate Palestinian resistance.

Charlotte Kates, a coordinator of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, will speak about Palestinian prisoners and the treatment they face in Israeli jails (including torture), EU complicity in Israeli occupation, the case for a HP boycott and attacks on the BDS movement.

Samidoun: Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is a network of international organizers working to build solidarity with Palestinian prisoners in their struggle for freedom. Samidoun developed out of the September-October 2011 hunger strike of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, seeing a need for a dedicated network to support Palestinian prisoners. Samidoun works to raise awareness and provide resources about Palestinian political prisoners, their conditions, their demands, and their work for freedom for themselves, their fellow prisoners, and their homeland. We also work to organize campaigns to make political change and advocate for Palestinian prisoners’ rights and freedoms.

Samidoun seeks to achieve justice for Palestinian prisoners through events, activities, resources, delegations, research and information-sharing, as well as building bridges with the prisoners’ movement in Palestine. Samidoun seeks to amplify the voices of Palestinian prisoners, former prisoners, prisoners’ families, and Palestinian advocates for justice and human rights by translating, sharing and distributing news, interviews and materials from Palestine.

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Boycott HP at Maastricht University: https://bdsmovement.net/boycott-hp

Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) is a Palestinian-led movement for freedom, justice and equality. BDS upholds the simple principle that Palestinians are entitled to the same rights as the rest of humanity.

Israel is occupying and colonising Palestinian land, discriminating against Palestinian citizens of Israel and denying Palestinian refugees the right to return to their homes. Inspired by the South African anti-apartheid movement, the BDS call urges action to pressure Israel to comply with international law.

BDS is now a vibrant global movement made up of unions, academic associations, churches and grassroots movements across the world. Eleven years since its launch, BDS is having a major impact and is effectively challenging international support for Israeli apartheid and settler-colonialism.

BDS seeks to prompt the following compliance with international law:

* An end to the 1967 occupation of all Arab lands, particularly the occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and Gaza

* The right of Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality

* Respect, protection and promotion of the right of Palestinian refugees to return as stipulated in UN Resolution 194
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All welcome to join us for this event to mark Israeli Apartheid Week in Maastricht!
Happy International Women’s Day!
Come and learn more about SJP Maastricht’s campaign against HP at Maastricht University!

8 March, Brussels: Palestinian Evening: Prisoners of Occupation

Wednesday, 8 March
6:00 pm
Salle Carrefour
Campus UCL Alma
Brussels, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/110442912816753/

As part of Israeli Apartheid Week 2017, Rise Up is organizing an evening with a quality film, delicious Palestinian cuisine, unforgettable encounters and a warm atmosphere. First, a buffet of falafel, hummus and Palestinian salad will be available throughout the evening from 6:00.

At 6:15 pm, we will screen the film “3000 Nights” by Mai Masri, which describes the Israeli prison experience and the suffering of women in particular, through the story of Layal. The director writes an ode to the resilience of Palestinian women without which the resistance of the Palestinian people would be impossible.

Then, at 8:00 pm, the event will include a videoconference with Lina Khattab, a Palestinian student imprisoned for 6 months by Israel.

Event price: 2.5 EUR for the whole evening, food included