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10 December, NYC: Free All Political Prisoners Now

Saturday, 10 December
1:00 pm
Adam Clayton Powell Jr State Office Building Plaza
163 W. 125th Street
NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/544238225772634/

FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS NOW!

Saturday, December 10th is International Human Rights Day! Join us as we rally and call for the release of all U.S. held Political Prisoners.

We will be chanting, giving out literature, collecting signatures for our campaigns, and BUILDING A MOVEMENT TO FREE ALL OUR
FREEDOM FIGHTERS!

Sponsored by: ProLibertad-Free the Puerto Rican Political Prisoners!!, Jericho NYC, NYC Free Peltier, The Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition, Universal Zulu Nation, Safiya Bukhari- Albert Nuh Washington Foundation, Guillermo Morales-Assata Shakur Community & Student Center, 2017 NYC Voter Campaign For Community Control Of The Police, Malcolm X Commemoration Committee, the Northeast PP/POW Coalition, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network…List in formation!

For more information on this rally contact: 718-601-4751

After the rally, check out the Holiday card party for political prisoners in Brooklyn from 2-6pm! https://nycabc.wordpress.com/2016/11/21/bkny-saturday-december-10th-send-love-through-the-walls-2016/

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Detained activist Mohammed al-Najjar to boycott Israeli military courts

mohammed-alnajjar2Palestinian prisoner Mohammed Al-Najjar, a Palestinian refugee from Al-Fuwwar camp near al-Khalil, announced his boycott of the Israeli military courts on Friday, 2 December, after a six-month administrative detention order for his imprisonment without charge or trial was issued against him.

Al-Najjar, 32, was arrested on 27 November in a violent pre-dawn raid on his home by Israeli occupation forces. As he was seized by occupation forces, he was severely beaten on his side and face. A former prisoner, Al-Najjar has been arrested eight times and spent a total of six years in Israeli prisons, including a number of periods in administrative detention. In 2014, he spent nine months in administrative detention in the Negev desert prison. He is married and the father of two children and is president of the Youth Assembly to Support the Prisoners in the West Bank.

Palestinian lawyer Louay Akkeh visited al-Najjar on Thursday, 1 December in Ofer prison, noting that he had been subject to brutality at the hands of occupation forces. Heavily armed soldiers broke down the door of al-Najjar’s home, confiscated all electronic devices in the home, and then beat al-Najjar with a gun, leaving severe bruises and visible injuries. He was blindfolded and marched toward the Haggai settlement, denied medical treatment, and held without food or drink for the next day at the settlement. He was then transferred to Etzion military base, where he was forced to undress and don a dirty blue uniform. He was held handcuffed and denied food, drink, or access to the toilet for 12 hours. After only one and one-half hours of interrogation, he was transferred to Ofer prison and then ordered to administrative detention, Akkeh reported.

Al-Najjar is one of approximately 700 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention, and 7,000 total Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli prisons.

November 2016 report: 111 administrative detention orders issued, 527 Palestinians arrested

kids1Palestinian prisoners’ affairs organizations, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Affairs Commission, Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, and the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, released the following monthly report on Saturday, 3 December, of events relating to the arrest and imprisonment of Palestinians by Israeli occupation forces in November 2016. Translation by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.  (Photo for illustration purposes only.)

In the month of November 2016, 527 Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza were arrested, including 120 children and 11 women. 163 were arrested in Jerusalem (including 74 children) and 100 were arrested in al-Khalil. 50 were arrested in Ramallah and Al-Bireh, another 50 in Bethlehem, 42 in Jenin, 39 in Nablus, 27 in Tulkarem, 17 in Salfit, 11 in Qalqilya, 10 in Jericho, six in Tubas, and 12 from the Gaza Strip.

There are approximately 7,000 total Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, including 48 women prisoners, 11 of them being minor girls. The total number of child prisoners is approximately 350, with the majority held in Megiddo and Ofer prison. There are approximately 700 total administrative detainees. 111 administrative detention orders for imprisonment without charge or trial were issued in November, including 32 new orders.

Continued Arbitrary Detention of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip

Israeli occupation forces are continuing the policy of arbitrary detention against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and violating international human rights law and international humanitarian law. Palestinians are arrested without charge and legal procedures are not followed in the arrest of Palestinians. Moreover, the right to a fair trial guaranteed by international standards and instruments is consistently violated, in particular in the denial of Palestinian detainees’ right to information about their own case, including the reason for their detention and access to a lawyer before they are brought before a military court. In addition, occupation forces regularly use excessive and extreme force during detention operations, for example the use of heavy gunfire against Palestinian fishermen at sea, putting their lives at risk for no reason. During the month of November, six incidents resulted in the arrest of 12 Palestinian civilians, including eight fishermen arrested at sea.

Battle of the Empty Stomachs

At the end of November, four prisoners are engaged in an open hunger strike, three against the policy of administrative detention. Ahmad Abu Fara and Anas Shadid have been on an open hunger strike since 25 September in protest of administrative detention. Both are in a serious health condition at Assaf Harofeh hospital. Their administrative detention has been “suspended” by the Israeli courts and the two detainees have announced their rejection of this action. In addition, Ammar Hmour continues his hunger strike since 21 November in protest of his administrative detention.

Kifah Hattab also announced his hunger strike during the month of November, demanding that Israel deal with him as a prisoner of war. Noor el-Din Amer ended his hunger strike, which lasted for 20 days, against solitary confinement and the dneial of family visits, in an agreement with the prison administration. Under this agreement, his sister will be allowed to visit him in the coming period, he will be able to receive winter clothing during her visit, and conditions of his confinement in Ashkelon prison will be improved.

Injustices Against Children

During the month of November, Israeli occupation courts issued unjust sentences against dozens of children, mostly from Jerusalem, in addition to the imposition of heavy fines and damages in the thousands of shekels. Sentences ranged from months to over ten years. The most prominent case is that of Ahmad Manasrah, sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment and fines of 180,000 NIS ($47,150 USD). The two children Munther Khalil Abu Mayalah, 15, and Mohammed Taha, 16, were sentenced to 11 years in prison each; both had a 50,000 NIS ($13,100) fine imposed upon them. Nurhan Awad was sentenced to a prison term of 13 1/2 years and a 30,000 NIS ($8000) fine was imposed upon her. There are dozens of detained children still awaiting their fate before the occupation court.

Bahaa al-Najjar Imprisoned after One Week of Freedom, Returned to Administrative Detention

On 2 November, 2016, the imprisonment of Bahaa al-Najjar, 21, from al-Khalil expired. On the evening of this date, without receiving any official paperwork for his release, he was told that there was no new administrative detention order issued against him and so he was released – but that did not last long. Bahaa was arrested once again on 9 November, and once again ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial for six months.

The case of al-Najjar represents the policy of administrative detention as a method of psychological torture against prisoners by the occupation. In addition, the United Nations Working Group onn Arbitrary Detention also considers the occupation practices administrative detention systematically and on a large scale against Palestinian civilians. With the denial of the right to a fair trial, this constitutes a grave breach of Article 147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

9 December, Philadelphia: Rally to Save Mumia’s Life and Demand his Freedom

Friday, 9 December
3:00 pm
City Hall, Thomas Paine Plaza
Philadelphia, PA
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/755325587950078/

mumia3-6pm – Rally outside next to the hated Rizzo statue across from City Hall in Thomas Paine Plaza
6-9pm – Indoor event at Arch Street Methodist Church, Arch & N. Broad Street streets (Food will be available for a small donation)

The people got Mumia Abu-Jamal off death row but he is still in prison serving life in prison, or slow death sentence.

– Abu-Jamal is experiencing increased symptoms of the deadly hepatitis C virus. His deteriorating health is again approaching alarming levels as occurred in March, 2015 when he was rushed to the hospital unconscious. He will die sooner than necessary unless he and 7,000 other hepatitits C infected prisoners are allowed to recieve the cure for the deadly disease.

– A Federal Court decision (Abu-Jamal vs Kerestes) on August 31 declared it was unconstitutional for the Department of Corrections to refuse to give hep C-infected prisoners with medicines boasting a 95% cure rate. For Mumia Abu-Jamal and nearly 7,000 other prisoners with hep C, prison authorities continue to refuse effective treatment until inmates are near death. Why is the DOC continuing its deadly protocol of “deliberate indifference”?

– Prisoners at Mahanoy Prison had to bathe in dirty, brown water, and were limited to inadequate rations of drinking water, for weeks until a few days ago. Is the water safe to use, especially for hep C inflicted prisoners with skin complications? Why does the DOC do so little to protect prisoners from unsafe water at SCI Mahanoy, SCI Frackville, SCI Graterford and other prisons?

– A new lawsuit by Abu-Jamal’s attorneys has been filed, based on a recent Supreme Court decision (Williams vs PA) that a prosecutor in a case cannot sit as a judge over the same defendant he prosecuted. A ruling in Abu-Jamal’s favor would reopen all of the legal decisions in the case made since 1998. Acting as prosecutor and later Judge for both Abu-Jamal and Terrence Williams, why did former PA Supreme Court Justice Ronald Castille refuse to recuse himself?

Shadid, Abu Fara on 70th day of hunger strike; reject Israeli proposal to extend detention and release them in June 2017

shadidabufarah70Two Palestinian hunger strikers, Ahmad Abu Fara and Anas Shadid, rejected an Israeli proposal to issue a final four-month administrative detention order against them and release them in early June 2017. The two, who have been on hunger strike for 70 days, since 25 September, are currently in a severely critical health condition. Both are held at Assaf Harofeh hospital and insist on continuing their strike until they achieve their freedom.

According to Mohja Al-Quds Foundation, this proposal was made in writing and includes a one-time four-month renewal of each of their detention orders. The foundation said that the strikers consider this offer to be “not serious or feasible,” as the objective of the strike is to win their freedom, not to renew their imprisonment without charge or trial.

Their administrative detention orders, in place since 2 August, have been “suspended” due to their health condition; however, if they stop their strike and recover, their detention will be reimposed upon them. Ahmad Abu Fara, 29, was seized from his home in the village of Surif near al-Khalil on 2 August in a violent pre-dawn raid by occupation forces. Previously imprisoned for 2 years, he was ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial. Anas Shadid, 19, was seized on 1 August by occupation forces from his family home in the village of Dura near al-Khalil, and also ordered to six months in administrative detention. Both are imprisoned without charge or trial, two of approximately 700 Palestinians held under Israeli administrative detention.

A number of Palestinian organizations have warned that the two strikers are threatened with death at any time. Assaf Harofeh hospital itself underlined their critical condition, including severe weight loss, pain, inability to see, shortness of breath and irregular heart rate. They are threatened with forcible treatment and forced feeding.

At Friday prayers held outside the International Committee of the Red Cross in Gaza City, hundreds of Palestinians expressed their support for Shadid and Abu Fara, urging their freedom. Speaking at the event, Khaled al-Batsh of Islamic Jihad noted that the Israeli occupation is full responsible for any harm that befalls the two strikers. Another protest will gather on Monday, 5 December at the ICRC.

Also on hunger strike for 14 days is the Palestinian administrative detainee Ammar Ibrahim Hmour, 27, protesting the renewal of his imprisonment without charge or trial and demanding his release. From the town of Jaba near Jenin, Hmour is currently being held in isolation in the Negev desert prison. He has been held without charge or trial since 16 February.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the escalation of international solidarity efforts with Abu Fara, Shadid, Hmour and their fellow imprisoned Palestinians. As Abu Fara and Shadid are threatened with death and are risking their lives to struggle for freedom, it is critical that voices are heard around the world to demand their victory and their release.

Salah Khawaja’s military court hearing postponed for 10 days

free-salahThe Ofer military court postponed a hearing for imprisoned Palestinian grassroots organizer, member of the Secretariat of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC), Salah Khawaja, on Thursday, 1 December. Khawaja, 46, is also an active member of the Palestinian National Initiative and involved with the Palestinian Grassroots Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign (Stop the Wall). He was seized by occupation forces in a violent pre-dawn raid on his Ramallah home on 26 October.

Khawaja was subject to harsh interrogation for 40 days in the Petah Tikva interrogation center, during which he was beaten, kicked and subject to sleep deprivation and threats. He was interrogated for up to 15 hours at a time by occupation forces.

The Ofer military court announced that the Shin Bet, the Israeli intelligence agency, was filing an indictment against him, but that the case would be considered in 10 more days; Khawaja is now being held in the Ofer prison.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates the call for international action and solidarity to free Palestinian grassroots leader and campaigner Salah Khawaja.

9 December, NYC: Protest to free the hunger strikers and all political prisoners

Friday, 9 December
4:00 pm
G4S Offices – NYC
19 W. 44th St, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1349883145043524/

samidounsignTwo Palestinian political prisoners, Anas Shadid and Ahmad Abu Fara, have entered a third month on hunger strike against their “administrative detention” without charge or trial by Israel.

They have been joined on hunger strike by others, including fellow “administrative detainee” Ammar Ibrahim Hmour, as well as Nour el-Din Amer, who is protesting his solitary confinement and isolation.

The demonstration will also support ongoing mobilizations to free political prisoners held by the United States, including Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Oscar López Rivera, and build awareness of the December 10 citywide rally to Free All Political Prisoners Now!

Stand with the hunger strikers to demand that Israel release them and all 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners immediately, and that occupation profiteer G4S end its contracts with Israeli prisons and detention centers, occupation and security forces, and checkpoints and settlements now.

Join us to answer a united appeal by Palestinian prisoners for escalated boycotts of G4S.

Support the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian Resistance, and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea

G4S sells off bulk of its Israeli business, including prison operations, in major achievement for global boycott struggle

nyc-standingrock-g4s11Under heavy pressure from the international campaign for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions following calls from the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and Palestinian organizations, G4S – the world’s largest security corporation – announced it had reached an agreement to sell off its Israeli subsidiary to the Israeli private equity company, FIMI on Friday, 2 December. G4S had earlier announced it planned to exit the market, widely attributed to the damage to its reputation caused by its contracts with the Israel Prison Service and related state security agencies.

The announcement is a victory, first and foremost, for the Palestinian prisoners’ movement, whose hunger strikes and other collective struggles inspired years of boycotts and divestments in solidarity. G4S is the world’s second-largest private employer, and was pushed into this action by the mobilization of people’s movements in response to its involvement and complicity in the persecution and torture of Palestinian political prisoners. During the campaign, G4S has lost contracts in the Arab region, South Africa, Latin America, Europe, the United States and elsewhere as a result of its involvement in the imprisonment of Palestinians.

G4S is also a target for global campaigning because of the corporation’s involvement with youth incarceration and migrant detention in the United States, Canada, Australia and elsewhere. Organizations like Columbia Prison Divest, the Afrikan Black Coalition at the University of California, and Black Students United at Cornell University have played leading roles in building university and community boycott and divestment campaigns against G4S as a part of the prison-industrial complex. G4S was highlighted in the Black4Palestine statement as a key target of joint struggle. In addition, G4S is part of the system of deportation and detention that terrorizes migrant families in the U.S., Canada, and elsewhere. In the UK, Jimmy Mubenga died during a deportation flight as he was restrained by G4S guards. In addition, G4S is involved in privatized domestic policing in the United States, including in Charlotte, NC, where the corporation runs the transit police service, working hand in hand with the city police who took the life of Keith Scott. At Standing Rock, G4S is part of the array of private security corporations working for the Dakota Access Pipeline against the indigenous protest of water protectors that has drawn widespread solidarity and international support.

In Palestine, G4S remains complicit in the ongoing violation of Palestinian rights, as it is a co-owner of Policity, a national Israeli police training center, along with Shikun and Binui, the largest Israeli real estate corporation and a settlement profiteer.

This massive exit from the Israeli market is clearly a response to Palestinian and international pressure on the global security giant, evidencing the power of the call of Palestinian prisoners to force G4S out of the business of profiteering from the imprisonment and torture of Palestinians. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes all of the Palestinian, Arab, and international organizations and movements that have been organizing and struggling for years against the role of G4S in Palestine. The campaigns to boycott G4S have borne fruit after many years of campaigning and work. We also join with the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee to note that G4S’ complicity and profiteering from oppression remains a target for campaigning and action.

G4S is, of course, not the only multinational corporation that has been profiting from the imprisonment of Palestinians. Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) currently markets management and database software to the Israel Prison Service along with multiple other agencies and sectors of settler colonial repression. It is the target of a growing international boycott campaign. Today, we salute the Palestinian prisoners whose call for justice and struggle for freedom led to this achievement, and urge all of our movements to redouble our efforts to win their freedom, and the freedom of Palestinian people and land.

3 December: Rally for Palestine

Saturday, 3 December
2:00 pm
Fontaine Saint-Michel
75006 Paris
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1870531493159010/

parisOrganized by CAPJPO-EuroPalestine

On Saturday, 3 December, commemorate the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People in Paris, France. Express your support and solidarity with the Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli prisons struggling for freedom.

Also express your support for Israeli youth who are being jailed for refusing to fight in the army of the occupation. In the current climate of Islamophobia and oppression of refugees and undocumented people, we express our solidarity. Amid wars of chaos and destruction, we will not forget Palestine, a grand laboratory for testing the negation of rights, the militarization of society, and the dehumanization of a people.

8 December, Yonkers: Resisting Incarceration, Colonialism and Racism: Standing Rock, Movement for Black Lives, Palestine

Thursday, 8 December

6:00 pm
Yonkers Riverfront Library
1 Larkin Center
Yonkers, NY
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1722678454723832/

najah-delegationResisting Incarceration, Colonialism and Racism–from Standing Rock and Movement for Black Lives to Palestine

· 2.3 million people are incarcerated in US prisons
· Over 7000 Palestinians are incarcerated in Israeli jails
· US and Israel are collaborating on policing, incarceration and torture
· Indigenous communities, communities of color and other marginal communities are resisting colonialism, racism, incarceration and state violence

Join us for a discussion of these timely questions with members of the 2016 US Prisoner, Labor and Academic Delegation to Palestine:

Thursday, December 8th at 6pm at the Yonkers Riverfront Library, 4th Floor
1 Larkin Center, Yonkers, NY 10701

Panelists include: Rabab Abdulhadi, Senior Scholar of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies, and Associate Professor of Race and Resistance Studies; Johanna Fernandez, Professor of History, Baruch College, City University of New York; Jaime Veve, Co-Convener, Labor for Palestine; and Laura Whitehorn,former US-held political prisoner and representing Release Aging People in Prison.

This event is free and open to the public.