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New York protesters rally against G4S abuses from Charlotte to Standing Rock to Palestine

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New York City activists took to the streets outside the offices of British-Danish global security corporation G4S on Friday, 11 November, protesting the corporation’s involvement in human rights abuses and settler colonial attacks from Palestine to Standing Rock to Charlotte.

nyc11nov3Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network protested outside G4S’ Manhattan office to demand the corporation get out of the business of profiting from occupation and oppression. Protesters stood in solidarity with and distributed information about the hunger strikes of Palestinian prisoners Anas Shadid and Ahmad Abu Fara, on hunger strike for 50 days against their imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention.

nyc11nov4G4S is subject to a global boycott campaign due to its services to the Israeli state and its repressive mechanisms; it provides equipment, control rooms, and security systems not only to Israeli prisons but also to checkpoints, police training facilities, and even the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing where the siege on Gaza is enforced. After multiple contract and investment losses, G4S has announced that it plans to sell off its “reputationally damaging” businesses; Palestinian activists have emphasized the importance of continued protest as G4S equipment is still being used to repress Palestinians right now.

nyc11nov5The struggle against G4S is not limited to its role in Palestine. The corporation contracts to run private prisons for youth, migrant detention facilities and transportation, and other aspects of the security state in the United States, Canada, Australia, the UK and elsewhere. The New York City protest highlighted the involvement of G4S in Charlotte, North Carolina,  where armed Charlotte Area Transit System officers, a private, G4S-run “company police” force, operate alongside the racist, lethal cops who killed Keith Scott. It also denounced the corporation’s involvement in providing private security for the Dakota Access Pipeline against the Standing Rock Sioux Nation‘s blockade and protest camp in defense of indigenous land and water rights.  Protesters have faced brutality from the array of private security guards attempting to suppress indigenous protest, including the use of tear gas, attack dogs, and rubber bullets.

nyc11nov6Protesters chanted and distributed information outside the building, while groups of protesters entered the building’s corridor, chanting loudly against the role of G4S in Charlotte, Standing Rock and Palestine. Security guards locked the doors to the building’s entrance to prevent protesters from continuing to enter the corridor, a legally-designated public space.

Photos by Adnan Farsakh and Sara Flounders

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Palestinian journalist released – on condition of deactivating Facebook and turning over his laptop

khaledmaaliPalestinian journalist Khaled Maali of Salfit was ordered released on Sunday, 13 November by the Israeli Salem military court – on the condition that he turn over his laptop to Israeli occupation forces and close his Facebook account, as well as paying a fine of 7,000 NIS ($1700 USD).

Maali, 48, was arrested from his home in Salfit last week in a military raid by occupation forces. He is one of hundreds of Palestinians targeted for arrest, interrogation and imprisonment on the basis of their social media posts in support of the Palestinian people’s struggle for liberation. The “evidence” introduced into military court in order to convict these Palestinians – convictions which occur in over 99% of cases before Israeli military courts – include the number of “likes” and “shares” a post receives.  Other prominent cases of Palestinians targeted for social media postings include poet Dareen Tatour, astrophysics professor Imad Barghouthi, and fellow journalists Sami al-Saee and Samah Dweik. Maali earned his PhD from The Hague University after studying at An-Najah University.

Recently, Facebook executives met with Israeli officials, including Ayelet Shaked, announcing “cooperation” against so-called “incitement,” sparking widespread protests among Palestinian and solidarity activists. While pledging to crack down on “hate speech,” they made no mention of Shaked’s genocidal comments about Palestinians posted on Facebook that referred to Palestinian children as “little snakes” and urged the execution of their mothers. Instead, Facebook has granted 95 percent of Israel’s 158 requests to remove content in the last four months. Samidoun in New York City joined the global protest against Facebook with a protest at the social media giant’s NYC offices.

Palestinian re-arrested student Bahaa al-Najjar among 15 Palestinians ordered imprisoned in two days

admin-detentionBahaa al-Najjar, the Palestinian student re-arrested by Israeli occupation forces only one week after his release from imprisonment without charge or trial, has once again been ordered to administrative detention for six months, reported Asra Voice.  Al-Najjar, 21, a student at Palestine Polytechnic University, was released on 2 November from a year in administrative detention. On 9 November, his home was stormed by armed Israeli occupation soldiers and now he has once again been ordered back to prison with no charges against him. Al-Najjar reported that soldiers threatened him with re-arrest upon his release.

The renewed imprisonment of Al-Najjar comes as the Palestinian Prisoners Society reported on Sunday, 13 November that 15 more administrative detention orders for the imprisonment of Palestinians without charge or trial were issued on 9 and 10 November. These included seven new administrative detention orders, not including the re-imposition of Al-Najjar’s detention.

These orders were issued as follows:

1. Mufti Marouf Amro, Bethlehem, 5 months, renewal
2. Malik Ibrahim Hamed, Ramallah, 4 months, new order
3. Yaqoub Imad Turki, al-Khalil, 6 months, renewal
4. Mohammed Mustafa al-Najjar, Bethlehem, 4 months, renewal
5. Ahmad Abdel-Jalil Shahatit, al-Khalil, 5 months, renewal
6. Ashraf Zeidan al-Jadou, Jenin, 4 months, new order
7. Fahmi Hasan Zuhour, El-Bireh, 6 months, new order
8. Mohammed Abu Aisha, Ramallah, 2 months, renewal
9. Mohammed Yousef Al-Darabieh, al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
10. Tariq Rubayah, Ramallah, 4 months, renewal
11. Mosab Saadi Sukhala, Nablus, 4 months, new order
12. Bahaa Taha al-Najjar, al-Khalil, 6 months ** (renewal after re-arrest following one week of release)
13. Yousef Ahmad Nassar, al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
14. Ahmad Salman Arman, al-Khalil, 6 months, new order
15. Louay Mohammed Daoud, Qalqilya, 4 months, renewal

There are over 700 Palestinian prisoners held in administrative detention without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence. Administrative detention orders are issued for one to six months and are indefinitely renewable. Many Palestinian prisoners have spent years at a time in administrative detention.

Riyad al-Ashqar of the Palestinian Prisoners Center for Studies noted that eight Palestinian prisoners’ administrative detention had been renewed for the fourth time in a row so far in November 2016.  Mohammed Ali Tabah from al-Khalil had his detention extended for the fourth time for four months; Jihad al-Aqima had his detention extended for three months; Najib Mohammed Oweiwi had his extended for four months; Anas Wesam Qukor saw his detention extended for for months; Wesam Khashan of Jenin had his extended for six months; Omar Majid Danoun had his detention extended for four months; Ahmad Mahmoud Kharoush had his extended for four months; and Halabi Radi Halabi’s detention was extended for three months. For all eight, this was the fourth consecutive administrative detention order to which they were subject.

Palestinian child prisoner denied transport to military court because of “lack of an ambulance”

osamazeidatPalestinian child prisoner Osama Zeidat was again not brought to Israeli military court on Sunday, 13 November. Osama, 14, was shot in the back and the foot by Israeli occupation soldiers on 23 September and accused of trying to attack settlers in the Kiryat Arba colonial settlement in Al-Khalil. Osama was the only person injured and severely as he was shot in the back by occupation forces.

Osama, from the village of Bani Naim near al-Khalil, as held in Shaare Tzedek hospital for 18 days for treatment; he could not receive family visits for this entire time. On 1 November, he was brought to military court shackled to a hospital bed. On Sunday, Israeli jailers stated that there was no ambulance available to transport Osama.

Osama’s lawyer from the Palestinian Prisoners Society said that he filed an appeal against the Israeli decision to imprison the boy until the end of his trial. Osama’s mother noted that officials had previously said he would be brought in a wheelchair rather than in a hospital bed this time. The military court was postponed again until 21 November.

In related news, the Palestinian Prisoners Society reported that the health situation of fellow wounded child prisoner, Anas Zaid, 15, had stabilized after the boy was shot on Thursday, 10 November by Israeli occupation forces.  Anas is also held in the Shaare Tzedek hospital; he was shot in the right foot, groin, and left hand by the Israeli occupation army near the Atara military camp. Anas spoke to his lawyer, Karim Ajwa, who said that he was going to Deir Ammar to visit relatives when Israeli soldiers began repressing Palestinian demonstrators near the military base and the soldiers opened fire on him.

There are nearly 400 Palestinian child prisoners held in Israeli prisons, including 13 minor girls and several children imprisoned under administrative detention, held without charge or trial.  Defence for Children International Palestine has reported that Palestinian children routinely face beatings, solitary confinement, interrogation without parents or a lawyer, threats of sexual violence and psychological torture during their arrest and interrogation by Israeli occupation forces; many of these child prisoners arrested in pre-dawn violent military raids on their family homes.

19 November, Manchester: Free All Palestinian Political Prisoners! Boycott Barclays!

Saturday, 19 November
12:00 pm
Piccadilly Gardens
Manchester
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/220141705074862/

prisonerTake to the streets and keep up the action in solidarity with Palestine and for the release of all political prisoners in Israeli jails. The prisoners continue to resist their inhuman treatment at the hands of the British-backed occupation regime, including hunger strikers Ahmad Abu Fara and Anas Shadid, who are now in a critical condition. The situation in the jails mirrors events on the streets as Palestinians risk arrest to protest against Israel’s colonisation policies in the West Bank and its blockade of Gaza.

Britain continues to collaborate with the occupation. Barclays bank has become a symbol of this dirty relationship, providing funds to maintain the spread of imperialist backed war from Palestine and Syria to Yemen:

Barclays is the biggest banking investor in the global arms trade. Its history includes loaning $487m to the racist apartheid regime in South Africa. Despite claiming to be an “ethical” bank, its financial dealings support the Israeli army, in addition to feeling imperialist backed wars upon the people of Syria, Kurdistan and Yemen through its support for the Saudi and Turkish regimes. Today they have 4.25% shares in BAE Systems, who supply Israel with F16 jet components; $147.2m investments in Boeing, which produces Apache helicopter gunships; $65m in Lockheed Martin which produces F16s and Apaches; and $34.6m in Raytheon, which has arms factories in Britain.

Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine!
Manchester Palestine Action
RCG Manchester – Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism!
RCG – Revolutionary Communist Group
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

16 November, Majd al-Kurum: Demonstration for Child Prisoner Ahmad Manasrah

Wednesday, 16 November
5:00 pm
Eastern roundabout
Majd al-Kurum, Palestine
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/220641641691443/

In protest of the theft of childhood, the Committee for Freedom for Prisoners urges all to participate in a protest against the Zionist prison sentence of 12 years against the child Ahmad Manasrah.

50 Days of Hunger Strike for Shadid and Abu Farah; Sheikh Raed Salah launches strike

shadidabufaraOn their 50th day of hunger strike, Palestinian administrative detainees Ahmad Abu Fara and Anas Shadid are facing a critical health crisis. Both have been on hunger strike since 25 September to demand their freedom from administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. They are held, shackled hand and foot to their hospital beds, at the Assaf Harofeh hospital.

An appeal filed for Shadid’s release by his lawyer, citing his desperate health condition, will be heard today, Monday 14 November, by the Israeli supreme court. Shadid, 19, from the village of Dura near al-Khalil, is suffering from severe migraine headaches, dizziness, weakness, shortness of breath and sharp eye pain. He was arrested in a raid on his home by Israeli occupation forces on 2 August and ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial.

Also on Monday, the military appeals court at Ofer will hear the appeal of Abu Fara, 29, for his freedom. The Israel Prison Service has been ordered to present a report on Abu Fara’s health, which has also witnessed extreme deterioration in recent days.  Abu Fara is suffering from severe headaches, shortness of breath, blurred vision, and pain throughout his body.  From the village of Surif near al-Khalil, Abu Fara has also been imprisoned without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention since August.

Meanwhile, three Palestinian brothers, Abdel-Salam, Nidal, and Nour al-Din Omar, announced that they have been on an open hunger strike together for 11 days in protest of Nour al-Din’s solitary confinement in Eshel prison. He has been held in isolation for three years and the brothers are demanding his return to general population. The end of solitary confinement has, alongside the end of administrative detention, been a consistent demand of Palestinian hunger strikers.

On Sunday, 13 November, Raed Salah, the imprisoned leader of the northern Islamic Movement in Palestine ’48, launched an open hunger strike against his long-term isolation and mistreatment in Ramon prison, reported his lawyer Mohammed Aghbarieh.  Imprisoned in May on incitement charges dating back to 2009, he was ordered to nine months in Israeli prison and shortly thereafter thrown into isolation. He has also been denied access to books and other items donated to him by family members and political leaders. Salah’s arrest and imprisonment, and the attacks on the Islamic Movement, have been widely condemned across the Palestinian political spectrum as an overall attack on the Palestinian population holding Israeli citizenship. Salah is on hunger strike to demand an end to his solitary confinement.  Earlier, the Israeli courts rejected an appeal by Al-Mezan Human Rights Foundation for Salah’s release from solitary confinement on a “security” pretext.

Samidoun reiterates that the Israeli occupation is fully responsible for the lives and health of Anas Shadid and Ahmad Abu Fara; Abdel-Salam, Nidal, and Nour al-Din Omar; and Raed Salah and all 7,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. We urge international solidarity with these hunger strikers whose bodies are on the line for freedom and against torture at this critical time.

Take action!

1Hold a direct action, protest, picket or demonstration, including building the boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign to internationally isolate Israel, its institutions, and the corporations – like G4S -that profit from imprisonment, occupation, racism, colonialism and injustice. Demand freedom for Ahmad Abu Fara, Anas Shadid and all Palestinian prisoners.  A flyer is provided below for distribution at your events and other actions. Please email samidoun@samidoun.net or post to Samidoun on Facebook about your events and actions.

2. Call political figures to demand action for the hunger strikers. Call your government officials to pressure them to end the silence and complicity with the Israeli regime of political imprisonment and administrative detention.

Call during your country’s regular office hours:

  • Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop: + 61 2 6277 7500
  • Canadian Foreign Minister Stephane Dion: +1-613-996-5789
  • European Union Commissioner Federica Mogherini: +32 (0) 2 29 53516
  • New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully: +64 4 439 8000
  • United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson: +44 20 7008 1500
  • United States President Barack Obama: 1-202-456-1111

Tell your government:

  1. Two Palestinian prisoners, Anas Shadid and Ahmad Abu Fara, have been on hunger strike since 25 September against administrative detention, Israeli imprisonment without charge or trial.
  2. Your government must demand the strikers’ immediate release and end all support for Israel’s political imprisonment and other crimes against Palestinians.
  3. Israel’s use of administrative detention is a universally-recognized violation of human rights and international law.
  4. The government must do more than criticize administrative detention or express concern, but should also take serious measures to end these violations.

Download the leaflet:  Click here to download PDF

 

Rasmea Odeh Update: All Out for November 29 federal court hearing (Time Updated!)

Newest update from the Rasmea Defense Committee – TIME CHANGE:

All out for November 29th federal court hearing—most important of the case—in Detroit!

If you’re not in the Midwest and can’t make it to Detroit, organize a solidarity event in your city!

WHEN: Tuesday, November 29th, 2016, changed to 8 AM Eastern Standard Time (rally at 8 AM, hearing starts at 9 AM)

WHERE: U.S. District Court, 231 W. Lafayette Blvd., downtown Detroit, Michigan

rasmeaThe Rasmea Defense Committee is calling on everyone to mobilize for Detroit on November 29th, and tell us here that you’re attending or if you need a ride or if you can provide transportation!

Supporters from Chicago and other parts of Illinois, Milwaukee, Detroit / Dearborn, Grand Rapids, Minneapolis / St. Paul, Cincinnati, Indiana, and other Midwest areas are already committed to attend.

In addition, NY is organizing a solidarity action on November 28th, Harvard Law School is discussing the case on November 11th, and others in Florida, Texas, and California are planning actions as well.

If you are NOT in the Midwest, we are calling on you to also organize support events for Rasmea on or around November 29th.  Again, it is the most important hearing in the case, and it also falls on the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, so there may already be Palestine support forces near you that are organizing events we can join with Rasmea’s story.

Let us know once it’s scheduled, by emailing info@stopfbi.net.

And continue to support #Justice4Rasmea by donating to the defense, and staying in touch through justice4rasmea.org and justice4rasmea@uspcn.org.

Background:

On Tuesday, November 29th, 2016, the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, Rasmea Odeh will once again be in a Detroit courtroom—this time for the most important hearing in her case to date—before Judge Gershwin Drain.  This Daubert hearing will, in all likelihood, have two mental health experts from each of the prosecution and defense sides testify before the judge, and then he will hear legal arguments as to whether the testimony of Dr. Mary Fabri—the clinical psychologist from the world-renowned Kovler Center for the Treatment of Survivors of Torture, who diagnosed Rasmea’s Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)—is scientifically valid and applicable to the facts of the case.

Recall that before the 2014 trial, Dr. Fabri, who has worked with torture survivors for over 25 years, was prepared to testify as to how Rasmea’s PTSD, caused by the torture and rape she experienced at
the hands of Israeli military interrogators in 1969, affected her answers to questions on complex immigration forms decades later in the U.S.

Judge Drain originally ruled her testimony irrelevant and inadmissible, which led to Rasmea’s unjust conviction; but earlier this year, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that he had erred, and sent the case back to him for the Daubert hearing.

Recently, Rasmea was subjected to 17 hours of mental examination by a government expert.  Her defense had argued strongly to oppose this questioning prior to the November 29th hearing, but Judge Drain still allowed it.  Even though the government continues to try to challenge Rasmea’s story, and claim that she does not have PTSD and did not get brutalized by the Israeli authorities in the 60s and 70s, Rasmea remains steadfast and strong, and will continue to exercise her constitutional right to assert a meaningful defense.

Rasmea and her lawyers are confident that the results of this hearing will lead to a new trial sometime in early 2017, in which Dr. Fabri will testify before a jury, and the details of Israel’s torture and crimes against Rasmea will be heard.  But if Judge Drain rules against her on November 29th, we will again appeal the decision.

That is why we are mobilizing heavy for this hearing.  It is as important a moment as any we have had in the case.

From the beginning, the Rasmea Defense Committee has pointed out that the legal proceedings against Rasmea are nothing but a pretext to intimidate those who organize and struggle to realize a liberated Palestine.  Demonstrations in support of her have taken place across the U.S. since her arrest in 2013, and we are again going All Out for Detroit on November 29th.

The Rasmea Defense Committee is led by the U.S. Palestinian Community Network and the Committee to Stop FBI Repression

November 3rd, 2016

Home of Palestinian youth activist, former PA prisoner Basil al-Araj invaded, family summoned to Israeli intelligence

basilarajIsraeli occupation forces are continuing to harass the family of Palestinian youth activist Basil Al-Araj. On Thursday, 10 November, military occupation forces invaded his family home in the village of al-Walaja near Bethlehem for the seventh time, destroying property and ransacking their belongings, tossing their property around the home under the pretext of a “search”. The occupation soldiers delivered summons to his brothers and father to meet Israeli intelligence agents on Sunday, 13 November for questioning after the soldiers failed to find Al-Araj.

Al-Araj’s mother spoke with Wattan TV, noting that an intelligence officer with the occupation forces repeatedly questioned her about her son’s location despite her repeated affirmations that he has not stayed with the family since his release from Palestinian Authority prison.

summons

Al-Araj, a prominent Palestinian youth organizer, is one of six young Palestinians imprisoned for five months in Palestinian Authority prisons. While PA officials originally highlighted the case as an example of the effectiveness of their “security cooperation” with the Israeli occupation in suppressing Palestinian resistance, the six youth were held for five months with no charge. After launching a hunger strike against their continued imprisonment, the six were released pending the development of potential further court proceedings.

Following their release, four of the six, Mohammed Harb, Haitham Siyaj, Mohammed Elsalameen and Seif al-Idrissi, have each been seized by occupation soldiers and ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial. Despite repeated raids on his family home, Israeli occupation forces have failed to capture Al-Araj.

The case has highlighted the damaging and dangerous role played by Palestinian Authority security cooperation with the Israeli occupation in targeting and imprisoning Palestinian young people as political detainees.

Palestinian student re-arrested one week after release; 50 Palestinians ordered to administrative detention in November

Palestinian student and former prisoner, Bahaa al-Najjar, 21, was re-arrested by Israeli occupation forces on Wednesday, 9 November, only one week after his release from Israeli jails, where he had been held without charge or trial under administrative detention. Al-Najjar is a student at Palestine Polytechnic University. His family home in al-Khalil was stormed in a pre-dawn raid by armed Israeli occupation military forces. He had been imprisoned for a full year without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence, arrested on 4 November 2015 and released on 2 November 2016.  Addameer connected al-Najjar’s case to those of administrative detainees whose orders are renewed only moments after their release, like Shaher al-Rai and Sabah Faraoun.  The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society reported that Al-Najjar had been threatened upon his release with future re-arrest.

The re-arrest of al-Najjar came as the PPS reported that Israeli occupation officials issued 50 administrative detention orders between 1 and 9 November. Those orders included 16 new orders and 34 renewals of existing administrative detention orders for longer periods. Israel’s use of administrative detention, the indefinitely renewable imprisonment of Palestinians without charge or trial for periods of one to six months based on secret evidence, has been widely condemned and ending the use of administrative detention is a key demand of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement.

Nevertheless, the Israeli use of administrative detention has escalated dramatically since the war on Gaza in 2014 and again with the emergence of the popular uprising in October 2015. Today, over 700 Palestinian prisoners – out of a total of 7,000 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel – are held without charge or trial under administrative detention.

Administrative detention has sparked widespread resistance inside the prisons. A series of hunger strikes organized by Palestinian prisoners have demanded the release of individual detainees and the end of the practice; prominent hunger strikers include Khader Adnan, Bilal Kayed and Mohammed al-Qeeq. Currently, two Palestinian prisoners, Ahmad Abu Fara and Anas Shadid, are on their 48th day of hunger strike against their administrative detention.

The 50 administrative detention orders included the imprisonment of former Palestinian Authority prisoners Haitham Siyaj and Seif al-Idrissi, both ordered to six months in administrative detention.

thabet-raidedThabet Nassar, 38, a Palestinian nurse from the village of Madama near Nablus, was ordered to six months administrative detention for the second time consecutively; he was arrested on 9 May 2016 in an Israeli military pre-dawn violent raid on his home, ransacking and destroying his belongings. Nassar has spent nearly 13 years in Israeli prisons, with eight of those years in administrative detention without charge or trial. He was first arrested in 1997 as a student when he was shot in the head with a rubber-coated metal bullet at a Land Day demonstration; he was jailed for 27 months. He has been arrested on multiple occasions since that time, in 2002, 2008, 2009, 2013 and now 2016. He has been repeatedly prohibited family visits and subject to repression due to his involvement in hunger strikes and the prisoners’ movement, including a boycott of the administrative detention court hearings and his participation in the 2014 mass hunger strike of administrative detainees. Nassar was on hunger strike for 60 days to demand an end to the practice.  He was also part of the Battle of Breaking the Chains hunger strike in 2015, refusing food for 40 days to demand an end to administrative detention.  He also participated in the collective hunger strikes for the release of Bilal Kayed, ordered to administrative detention after 14.5 years in Israeli prison.

ribhiAlso ordered to administrative detention for the first time for this arrest was Ribhi Hizneh, 45, of Silwad north of Ramallah. Hizneh was ordered to six months’ administrative detention without charge or trial following his arrest on 31 October when occupation military forces stormed his home, ransacking his belongings and seizing him. He was taken to Ofer prison and promptly ordered to administrative detention. Hizneh spent over 12 years in Israeli prison, from 1996 to 2009, during which he was known as a leader among the prisoners, facing repression and attacks on many occasions because of his role in organizing the prisoners and confronting the attacks of the prison administration.  Anas Qukor, 30, from Jenin, was ordered to four more months in administrative detention; this marked the third consecutive administrative detention order against him since his imprisonment on 29 October 2015.

The full list of 50 administrative detainees ordered to imprisonment between 1 and 9 November follows (via Maan News):

1. Omar Abu Rumi from the district of Jericho, three-month extension
2. Aysar Samhuri from the district of Jericho, three-month extension
3. Amr Abu Rumi from the district of Jericho, three-month extension
4. Khalid Badr from the district of Jerusalem, four-month extension
5. Jawdat Mashaal from the district of Ramallah, six-month extension
6. Hashem Hijazi from the district of Ramallah, six-month extension
7. Yahya al-Saadi from the district of Jenin, six months, new order
8. Hummam Abu Rahma from the district of Ramallah, five months, new order
9. Bakr Khreiwish from the district of Tulkarem, six-month extension
10. Imad Irheimi from the district of Ramallah, three months, new order
11. Saif al-Idrisi from the district of Tulkarem, six months, new order
12. Suleiman Abu Rumi from the district of Jericho, three-month extension
13. Rizq Shreim from the district of Qalqiliya, six months, new order
14. Rafat Abu Rabia from the district of Ramallah, four months, new order
15. Ashraf al-Gadaa from the district of Jenin, four months, new order
16. Ahmad Abu Nasser from the district of Ramallah, three-month extension
17. Adam Abu Sharar from the district of Hebron, six-month extension
18. Omar Dannun from the district of Ramallah, four-month extension
19. Tawfiq Rabayaa from the district of Jenin, three-month extension
20. Ahmad Khrush from the district of Nablus, four-month extension
21. Wissam Khashan from the district of Jenin, six-month extension
22. Omar Muhammad from the district of Bethlehem, three-month extension
23. Halabi Halabi from the district of Nablus, three-month extension
24. Najib al-Uweiwi from the district of Hebron, three-month extension
25. Muhammad Abu Teimeh from the district of Ramallah, three-month extension
26. Muhammad Hammad from the district of Ramallah, four-month extension
27. Muhammad Qawasmeh from the district of Hebron, four-month extension
28. Haitham Siyaj from the district of Hebron, six months, new order
29. Saadi Khdeirat from the district of Hebron, four months, new order
30. Fouad Bisharat from the district of Tubas, four months, new order
31. Saleh Hashashin from the district of Nablus, six months, new order
32. Rauf Jaradat from the district of Jenin, four-month extension
33. Muhammad Mkheimar from the district of Nablus, four months, new order
34. Usama Nijm from the district of Jenin, three-month extension
35. Riyad Jabbour from the district of Nablus, four-month extension
36. Tariq Abu Arqub from the district of Hebron, six months, new order
37. Ashraf Jibril from the district of Qalqiliya, four-month extension
38. Ihab Masalmeh from the district of Hebron, six-month extension
39. Luay Hamid from the district of Ramallah, six months, new order
40. Muhammad Tbeish from the district of Hebron, four-month extension
41. Jihad al-Aqimi from the district of Hebron, three-month extension
42. Muhammad Khluf from the district of Jenin, four-month extension
43. Taysir Hamid from the district of Ramallah, six months, new order
44. Amr Zaarura from the district of Nablus, four-month extension
45. Thabet Nassar from the district of Nablus, six-month extension
46. Muhammad Affaneh from the district of Qalqiliya, four-month extension
47. Anas Qaqur, Jenin from the district of four-month extension
48. Ribhi Hizneh from the district of Ramallah, six months, new order
49. Thabet Masalmeh from the district of Hebron, six-month extension
50. Lutfi Awawdeh from the district of Hebron, six-month extension.