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28 January: Public Launch of the International Peoples’ Tribunal on U.S. Imperialism: Sanctions, Blockades and Economic Coercive Measures

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is excited to be a co-sponsor of this important project.

After two years of dedicated organizing, we are excited to officially announce the launch of the International People’s Tribunal on U.S. Imperialism: Sanctions, Blockades, and Economic Coercive Measures. This project is a first ever international effort to build systems of accountability—rooted in global cross-movement solidarity—both within and outside of the law, to challenge the violence of imperialism through sanctions. With an impressive group of internationally renowned jurists from across the world, we interrogate sanctions not from the perspective of those who enforce them, but from the perspective of those most impacted by them, namely the peoples of Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean.

This half-day event will take place on January 28, 2023, at People’s Forum located at 320 W 37th St, New York, NY 10018, by an international coalition of over 30 organizations. The Tribunal will last for approximately six months and will conclude with a closing event hosted by the Simón Bolívar Institute in Caracas, Venezuela in July 2023.

The launch event will feature a distinguished group of jurists, scholars, and activists, including:

  1. Nina Farnia, Co-chair of the Tribunal Steering Committee & Professor of Law, Albany Law School
  2. Niloufer Bhagwat, Confederation of Lawyers of Asia and the Pacific
  3. Brian Becker, ANSWER Collation
  4. Mireille Fanon Mendès-France, The Frantz Fanon Foundation
  5. Booker Omole, Communist Party of Kenya
  6. Carlos Ron, Vice Minister of Foreign Relations for North America
  7. Suzanne Adely – President National Lawyers Guild & Tribunal Steering Committee
  8. Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, Former United Nations Independent Expert
  9. Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz, Historian & Scholar
  10. Claudia De La Cruz, People’s Forum
  11. Sara Flounders, Sanctions Kill
  12. Helyeh Doutaghi, Co-chair of the Tribunal Steering Committee & Adjunct Professor, Carleton University

Register here for the event.

You can support us by donating to the Tribunal.

We hope to welcome you to this important launch!

Download the booklet here!

People’s Tribunal 2023 booklet

 

Salutes to Karim Younes, Palestinian prisoner, on his liberation after 40 years

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Karim Younes and the entire Palestinian people on his liberation today after serving 40 years as the longest consecutively-held Palestinian prisoner. Imprisoned since 1983, Younes was welcomed home by his fellow residents of ‘Ara, a Palestinian village in occupied Palestine ’48.

Speaking immediately after his release, he confirmed his continued commitment to struggle. “I salute our great people who have engaged in struggle for 100 years without raising the white flag,” he said, draped in a kuffiyeh and carrying a Palestinian flag as he marched with loved ones through ‘Ara. “I am willing to give another 40 years of my life as a sacrifice for my people, and all of the prisoners have the strength and commitment to sacrifice 40 and 50 years for the freedom of their people….The messages of the prisoners are many, but the final message is one of love and gratitude to our great people in all of the places of their presence, our people in the West Bank, in Gaza, in the diaspora, in occupied Palestine ’48, in Jerusalem…The prisoners carry many questions and concerns, and my heart is with those who remained in prison, carrying their bodies on their shoulders and walking with death alongside them.”

The Israeli occupation regime attempted to deny the Palestinian people their joy at the release of Karim Younes, who has become a national symbol of unity through his decades of imprisonment. Rather than releasing him at the prison gates of Hadarim or in his home village, he was instead released at a random bus station, away from his family and crowds, at dawn. However, with the help of another passerby, he was quickly reunited with his family and his liberation celebrated. Zionist interior minister Aryeh Deri also threatened to withdraw Israeli citizenship to impose statelessness on Younes and his cousin Maher, who is himself soon to be released on 17 January.

Nevertheless, with his powerful comments and strong welcoming — as well as messages of support from all Palestinian resistance factions and political parties — Karim Younes once again demonstrated the steadfastness and leadership of the Palestinian prisoners and the unquenched will to freedom of the Palestinian people despite 40 years behind bars, 75 years of Nakba and 100 years of colonialism.

Just days before his release, Younes issued a moving statement about his forthcoming liberation: “I am returning to sing again with my people everywhere the anthem of my homeland, the anthem of the fedayeen, the anthem of return and liberation.”

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network congratulates Karim Younes, his family and the entire Palestinian people upon his release, with a celebration that will only be complete with the liberation of all Palestinian prisoners. We join not only his friends and family in Palestine, but also thousands of friends, comrades and supporters in the Palestinian diaspora, Palestinian solidarity movement and global social justice movement in saluting his ongoing commitment to Palestinian liberation.

Outrageous Escalation by the German State Against Palestinian Organizing in Germany!

https://i0.wp.com/www.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/images/palestinians-demonstrate-in-germany-on-the-anniversary-of-nakba-9785/alternates/BASE_21_9_W1000/palestinians-demonstrate-in-germany-on-the-anniversary-of-nakba-9785.jpeg?w=1200&ssl=1

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network condemns the recent report published by the conference of German interior ministers which aims to target Palestinian communities and Palestine solidarity activism with repression and criminalization. We urge not only all supporters of Palestine but all defenders of basic democratic rights to act now to prevent the ministers from implementing these plans that aim to repress one of the largest Palestinian communities in Europe. 

The conference in question took place between 30 November 2022 and 2 December 2022, involving interior ministers of all 16 German states. Two working groups were assigned by the conference to specifically address “Need for action due to increasing anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli agitation in the context of the Middle East conflict”. Namely the “internal security” and the “Verfassungschutz” working groups (the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Germany’s internal intelligence agency). In other words, the state is moving towards explicitly and admittedly treating Palestinian and Palestine solidarity organizing as a target for criminalization and repression. In addition to the two working groups, federal criminal police officials and “antisemitism commissioners” took part in formulating the report, which aims at laying out a list of recommendations and courses of action for the interior ministries of the German federations. Ten of Germany’s 16 states were explicitly represented in the working group.

It is important to note that many of these “antisemitism commissioners”, rather than dedicating their attention to confronting fascism and Nazism that is on the rise in Germany and in Europe as a whole, instead spend their time promoting the Israeli occupation and war crimes, and attacking Palestinian organizing in Germany. For example, the antisemitism commissioner of Frankfurt, Uwe Becker frequently demands the cancellation of Palestinian events and does not hesitate to appear for photo ops with Israeli military officials promoting the bombing of Gaza.

Following the banning by Berlin’s interior minister of all events commemorating the Nakba, including events and marches organized by Samidoun and Palestine Speaks, in May 2022, the documents produced by the conference specifically call for the targeting of these two groups, as well as campaigns for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel generally. It was this ban on Nakba day that led to the creation of a new coalition to defend democratic rights, especially those of targeted communities and oppressed groups.

In addition, the interior ministers propose a series of criminalizing and politically propagandistic interventions to promote Zionism and suppress Palestinian organizing and narratives, including:

  • Requiring school teachers to promote positive images of “Israel” in German classrooms and implementing educational agendas portraying the occupation more positively.
  • Further implementation of the IHRA definition of antisemitism: a definition whose sole purpose appears to be the stigmatization and criminalization of Palestinian advocacy. With that, it categorized the reports labelling the occupation as an apartheid regime as “anti-Semitic”.
  • Advancing criminal prosecutions for anti-Semitic statements as defined by the IHRA.
  • Prohibiting (and subjecting to criminal sanctions) the slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” and the map of all of Palestine, as they question the occupation’s “right to exist”.
  • Creating “new legal bases” for “prosecuting previously permissible efforts” that challenge the Israeli regime.
  • Moving towards banning pro-Palestinian associations and activities under the guise of “combating Israel-related antisemitism”.
  • Promoting normalization activities and initiatives.

The report identified 35 state-funded projects to “combat Israel-related antisemitism”, 649 such projects to fight antisemitism overall, based on the IHRA definition; and 138 projects targeting schools, kids and youth. It is important to note that such projects specifically aim to target Palestinian and Arab children growing up in Germany as well as a new generation of German youth who share the perspective of young people around the world in rejecting Zionism and racism.

Let us be clear: there is nothing about this meeting and its proposals that is about fighting antisemitism. If it were, it would instead focus on the extreme right, the growth of which has even led to a recent set of arrests around a neo-Nazi coup plot. Instead, the focus is on the interests of German imperialism, U.S. imperialism and the Zionist project in Palestine, at the expense of Palestinians in Germany and in occupied Palestine. Rather than take responsibility for European fascism, neo-Nazi and extreme right elements and German history, these German politicians instead seek to displace that responsibility onto Palestinians, Arabs and Germans who support the rights of the Palestinian people.

Germany votes “no” at the United Nations on resolutions against the glorification of Nazism, attempting to justify that decision by blaming Russia, despite the reality that Russia — and the entire Soviet Union — bore one of the greatest brunts of the Nazi assault in World War II.

These events are not unrelated. By shifting the definition of antisemitism from one that accurately reflects the ideology that motivated Nazism and fascism to one that instead focuses on the legitimization of the Israeli occupation and the Zionist project (the so-called “IHRA definition”), the German government is doing the opposite of taking responsibility for Nazi crimes. It is, in effect, minimizing those atrocities and their ongoing legacy by instead celebrating the Zionist regime and demonizing the Palestinians who defend their land and resist colonization. 

German officials — particularly in Berlin, a city with a very large Palestinian community and an active and mobilized anti-imperialist left — are already pursuing these policies in fact. Multiple Palestinian students have already been threatened with deportation and bans from Germany and Europe for attending or registering a legal demonstration for Palestine with the police. Hundreds of people were arrested or ticketed for commemorating the Nakba in Berlin in May 2022. Palestinian writer Khaled Barakat was subjected to a political ban and expelled from Germany for his political activities, only months after torture survivor and former political prisoner Rasmea Odeh was subjected to a political ban and her Schengen visa revoked.

On multiple occasions, German officials, including interior ministry and immigration department officials in Berlin, have attempted to justify these severe repressive acts — this crisis of democratic expression — by reference to notorious Zionist propaganda arms like NGO Monitor, or by reference to the Israeli regime labeling Samidoun a “terrorist organization”. At the same time, in Ramallah, representatives of Germany’s foreign ministry feign shock at the very same designation applied on an identical basis to Palestinian NGOs in occupied Palestine and note that such allegations are unproven. It is clear that these German officials seem to believe that Palestinians in Germany should have even fewer rights to organize, express themselves, demonstrate and struggle for freedom than those living under military occupation.

In reality, there is a long history in Germany of anti-imperialist organizing and support for Palestine — and for a clear recognition that the two are intimately connected. Of course, recognition of Palestinian rights was the official policy of the German Democratic Republic. In addition, Germans joined people from around the world in travelling to the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon to join the Palestinian revolution as volunteers of all kinds, participating in everything from health support to armed struggle. On the popular movement level, campaigns to boycott Israel and support the Palestinian resistance — including, explicitly, the armed struggle — took place throughout Germany as part and parcel of anti-imperialist organizing, repeatedly coming into confrontation with the Federal Republic of Germany’s government. The attempt to “left-wash” the Israeli occupation through a claimed “anti-German” ideology that in fact mirrors German and U.S. foreign policy largely follows German reunification: advancing, rather than confronting, imperialism.

The Palestinian and Arab community has grown significantly in Germany in the past 10 years, although this builds among an already significant community that has experienced multiple waves of repression in the Federal Republic of Germany, from the large-scale deportation of Palestinian students in the 1970s to the explicit restrictions imposed upon Palestinians from Lebanon seeking to immigrate to Germany or seek asylum. In many ways, these proposals, while threatening, are also a recognition of the growing power and stronger alliances of this community, as tens of thousands have repeatedly taken to the streets to march for the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea. 

From legal battles like those undertaken by the Stuttgart Palestine Committee that secured their right to space and bank account, to Khaled Barakat’s battle that saw his political ban declared illegitimate, to the grassroots organizing that the largely youthful and Palestinian comrades of Samidoun in Germany engage in on the streets on a daily basis, from mass demonstrations to postering and raising the image of the leaders and fighters of the Palestinian resistance, supporters of Palestine and anti-imperialists in Germany have never stopped fighting back and will not be forced into submission by this latest threat.

The International Association of Democratic Lawyers adopted a resolution at its December 2022 meeting, noting that “the IADL condemns these actions to suppress expression on Palestine as a form of German and European complicity with ongoing Israeli colonization, apartheid and occupation in Palestine, including ongoing war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The struggle for the liberation of Palestine is a struggle confronting imperialism, Zionism and the reactionary agents that do their bidding. Inside occupied Palestine, we see the appointment of overtly fascist figures such as Bezalel Smotrich and Itmar Ben Gvir as yet another attempt to intimidate the Palestinian people, who have shown for 75 years of Nakba, 100 years of colonization and more that they will never be intimidated or defeated. Indeed, the rising power of the Palestinian resistance and liberation struggle — including the increased involvement, visibility and action of the Palestinians in exile and diaspora around the world — is provoking alarm in the centres of imperialism and Zionism. These threats by German officials must be met with more organizing, more action and more resistance and with a clear message from all who value human dignity, democratic rights and a rejection of colonialism: that we will stand together against criminalization and repression, and that together, we will struggle — until, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free. 

Support Palestine Action, Free the #Teledyne4: Upcoming court dates to support direct action for Palestine!

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is republishing the following update from Palestine Action on the upcoming court cases for Palestine Action activists, including the four political prisoners, the #Teledyne4. We urge all supporters of Palestine to support these important campaigns and defend direct action to put an end to British-Israeli cooperation in war crimes and crimes against humanity.

This month, numerous actionists will fight in the courts to prove Elbit is Guilty, Palestine Action is not! Most are on bail, but 4 remain imprisoned since December. Below is a list of court battles which require your support.

Free the #Teledyne4

On December 9th, 4 activists allegedly dismantled approximately £1million worth of military equipment, destined for Israel, at the US-owned Welsh based factory, Teledyne Labtech. They’ve remained detained ever since, sacrificing the holidays with their families and loved ones. In our last email, we called out for supporters to mobilise outside Mold Crown Court on the 6th January to attend the plea hearing of the #Teledyne4, where they have another opportunity to apply for bail. However, there is also a bail hearing listed for one of the activists on the 5th January at the same court. We expect that the courts will merge both hearings into one on the 6th January, but we can not confirm yet if there will be another hearing on the 5th January. Please follow our social media (Twitter: @pal_action) for up to date information.

Either way, please get ready to mobilise your friends and families to gather outside Mold Crown Court, County Civic Centre, Mold CH7 1AE from 9.30AM on the 6th January — and watch out for any updates on support needed on the 5th January

Balfour 2

To commemorate 105 years since the Balfour declaration, two activists defaced Balfour’s statue in the private members lobby of the House of Commons, before gluing onto the plinth and explaining: “105 years ago Balfour gave away the land of Palestine, a land that wasn’t his to give”

The action exposed British complicity with the colonisation of Palestine and forced the issue into British mainstream media. Now, the two are possibly the first to be charged with “criminal damage to a memorial” under the new Police, Crime and Sentencing Bill.

Support the two activists on 4th January from 9.30AM outside Southwark Crown Court, 1 English Grounds, London SE1 2HU

Kingsway 4

6 days after the assassination of Palestinian journalist, Shireen Abu Akleh, 4 activists took action to shut down the London HQ of Israel’s largest arms firm. They successfully disrupted Elbit’s criminals operations and contributed towards Elbit abandoning their swanky London offices.

Now, they’ll be facing trial, where they’ll battle charges of “criminal damage” for taking action against a firm who commits criminal damage and murder in Palestine on a near daily basis.

Support the activists and mobilise from 9.30AM on the 10th, 11th and 13th January outside Highbury Corner Magistrates Court, 51 Holloway Rd, London N7 8JA

Leicester 5

Last year, 6 activists were arrested close to Elbit’s Leicester factory, UAV Tactical Systems. Subsequently, 5 were charged with possession of items to commit criminal damage.

They’ll be battling their charges when they face trial on the 10th-12th January.

Mobilise outside Wolverhampton Magistrates Court, 9 North St, Wolverhampton WV1 1RE from 9.30AM each day of the trial, 

Ferranti 2

In February 2021, Palestine Action teamed up with XR North to take down Elbit’s factory in Oldham. Eight activists took to the site to lock down the gates and climb on top of their overhang. The two who scaled on top of the overhang proceeded to smash the windows. In all, the factory was severely disrupted and less than one year later, it was announced that Elbit were packing their bags and leaving Oldham.

Although a huge victory was achieved, the state are still adamant are trying to convict activists who contributed to the success. The two activists will battle Elbit and the state in the Crown Court, to prove to a jury that Elbit is guilty, they are not.

This will be our second case to go to the Crown Court. The first one resulted in a unanimous not guilty jury verdict. There is no doubt that Elbit are the state will be becoming increasingly desperate to convict in the Crown Court. Mobilise on mass from 9.30AM on every day of the trial to show that we are also doubling our efforts in support for the activists who #ShutElbitDown.

The trial will be taking place from the 17th January (scheduled to last 4 days) at Manchester Crown Court, Minshull St, Manchester, M1 3FS

A hearing for legal arguments will be taking place on the 13th January ahead of the trial.

Kingsway 2

Activists took action against Elbit’s former London headquarters, leading to its permanent closure. The trial began last year but was interrupted due to technicalities. Support the activists once the trial resumes.

Mobilise from 9.30AM on 24th and 25th January 2023 outside Highbury Corner Magistrates Court, 51 Holloway Rd, London, N7 8JA

“There is no other way than to put an end to the Zionist project:” Interview with Liliana Córdova Kaczerginski

Samidoun is republishing the following interview, originally published in Spanish, with Liliana Córdova Kaczerginski, co-founder of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN), anti-imperialist activist and member of Samidoun Spain. The interview was conducted when she spoke before the Spanish Congress of Deputies on Palestine and the instrumentalization of anti-Semitism allegations to suppress Palestine solidarity, at an event in November 2022 organized by Podemos Unidos.

Liliana Córdova Kaczerginski is the co-founder of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN). Currently residing in Madrid, the Argentinian activist is the daughter of a Jewish Communist who fought in the Vilnius ghetto in Lithuania during World War II in resistance to the Nazis. She was born in Paris as her family struggled to survive, and later lived in occupied Palestine for 14 years. She knows what Judaism, persecution and Zionism entail and has chosen to become a committed activist, opposing the existence of the State of Israel as we know it and supporting the Arab liberation cause. Today, her voice was heard at a conference organized by Unidas Podemos at the Spanish Congress of Deputies on the situation of the Palestinian people.

Q: “Anti-Semitism as an excuse to undermine solidarity with the Palestinian people”. From the title, the discussion seems sensitive…

The fact is that the Israeli state has a very large propaganda apparatus, like many governments and countries, and it is very easy to label as anti-Semitic, or, in other words, racist, the organizations or people who speak out against its policies. This is intended to always disqualify you from the outset as an interlocutor. You have to prove first that you are not an anti-Semite. If you are not a famous politician, an author who has written things and spoken out, how do you prove that you are not racist? This is why we must talk about this issue. Under this mechanism, the mere fact that you criticize the Israeli governments or the Zionist project is reason enough for them to label you and silence you. People are afraid to face this label. And because you are afraid of this, including being called an anti-Jewish racist, you shut up, and that’s how they prevent the public from voicing their criticism. This is the simplest device there is.

In your case, there is also the fact that you yourself are Jewish. To be a Jew and not to defend the State of Israel and its policies is a sin for many.

For them, we are their Achilles’ heel, because they consider that being Jewish means being completely submissive to the Israeli state and its policies and accepting everything of your own free will. Well, yes, one can criticize a little, but not the very essence of the state, which, let us remember, is a state that practices apartheid, as is already well documented today, a state that practices settler colonialism and treats Palestinians who live inside the Israeli state, within the ’48 borders, as second-class citizens who are heavily discriminated against. The fact that we criticize these things, which address the very nature of the regime, is for them a sign that we are traitors or, as some say, a sign of self-hatred. There are also many Jews who dare not speak out.

Internal critiques of Zionism from within are more unrecognized than new, aren’t they?

It’s true, you must see that criticism of Zionism is not a new thing, an original or exotic invention, but that it was born with the creation of the Zionist movement, within Jewish communities which did not want to be drawn into this nationalist project. In Germany or the United Kingdom, where the movement was particularly strong, from 1880 to 1945, these people expressed themselves as Germans or British, with the addition of a Jewish faith or identity. But rejecting a Jewish national project.

For the propaganda apparatus, this is total heresy, it makes us bad Jews, which is almost funny because, for example, there is a group of very, very religious Jews, the Neturei Karta (ultra-Orthodox ), who really practice all the precepts of Judaism, and who are anti-Zionist and pro-Palestinian activists. Anti-Zionism can be of all kinds: liberal, religious, leftist, revolutionary… but it is a common critique and it is not new.

Beyond the current crisis, you denounce the origin and the creation of the State of Israel. Why ?

I consider that we are not a people, in the sense of a nation. We are a group of people in many countries, like others, just as there are Protestants in many parts of the world, with many currents, and that does not mean that they will ask for a state, is this not the case? In the U.S. too. Judaism is a religion, but not only a religion, because there are many secular Jews for more than 200 years, including almost half of the Jews today. It is an identity which, of course, can be religious, but also cultural or familial. And each Jewish, human, group living in different countries has its own characteristics and tastes, even from the point of view of religious rites. What Jews in Poland and those in Morocco do and how they live is often very different and don’t have much to do with each other,

It is not written anywhere that each human group must have its own state, otherwise imagine what this world would be like! From the first principle, we consider that the Zionist movement has no basis. Finally, it is based on the same framework as anti-Semitism itself. They insist that non-Jews will always be Judeophobic, because it’s already in the DNA of non-Jews and that’s why Jews must concentrate in one place, to have their army, to defend themselves. We say no, we say that racism is a terrible evil, shared by many human groups, and that the solution is to fight against discrimination and not for each group to create its own small state to protect itself. Protection also lies in having another kind of vision of what humanity is.

It is to fight against Israel and against powerful allies, like the United States…

Everything is not uniform. It is precisely in the United States that people are also very divided. Until 1948 – the year of Israel’s creation – a significant number of Jews did not agree at all with the Zionist project. Then there was the creation of the state and, above all, the 1967 war, which brought the Jews into the Western sphere, because before they were considered a little Western, a little Eastern, they were not admitted with full strength to Western identity… Until 1800, it was very rare for Jews to enjoy equal rights in European countries, for example. But from that time, from 1967 and the war, the West began to look at the [Zionist] Jew in a different way. “He’s strong, he’s smart, he knows how to defend himself, he’s technologically advanced…” they said. This new deal allowed Jews to be seen as equals to other whites, it allowed many Jews who were not interested in Israel or who were clearly anti-Zionists to change their coats and join, alongside a state which was clearly associated with international capitalism. The propaganda aimed to make Zionism hegemonic in all Jewish communities. They succeeded.

How do you see the label “Jewish state” applied to Israel today?

It’s always been like that, a form of sectarianism; I think it’s better that it’s made clear, because it was already this reality; the fact is that since it didn’t have that much influence yet, Israel had to hide a bit, but it was never anything else [than exclusive]. It has always seen itself as a Jewish state. They said there was a difference between being an Israeli Jew or not being one. They had all the privileges and non-Jews, especially Palestinians, were deprived of those privileges. The most terrible is all the policies that relate to land. Not only did they confiscate all the land, but the Palestinian population within the ‘48 borders, the Israeli state, increased dramatically, and at the same time, the Israeli state stole more and more land from them. The forced crowding of the Palestinian Arab population into small areas of land in the Israeli state is appalling (they represent today a little more than 20% of the total.)

What do you think the state that should now exist in the region should look like?

I think there is no other way than to put an end to the Zionist project. This in no way means that the Jews living there should leave or be second-class citizens, full respect for Jewish people who want to stay there and live in a state that will normally be a Palestinian state, because the Palestinians are the majority, especially if the refugees return. A country with collective and individual rights for Jews who want to stay there, without any form of hegemony or supremacy over the Palestinians. I don’t see how you can live with a Zionist state that will always be militarist, expansionist, racist, colonialist…

You can’t imagine a Jewish state that isn’t Zionist, it has no reason to exist otherwise, because even before 1948, it was absolutely acceptable that some Jews wanted to live there, because for some of them it is the Holy Land. But it’s one thing to live like inhabitants and to have rights, obviously, it’s another thing to have a national project. It made sense, from a humanitarian point of view, that Jews persecuted from 1933 and in need of refuge would go there, and it was very good that the Palestinians took in many of them, but again, as residents. There is no reason, if they agree to stay there, as inhabitants, with their rights to religion, culture or language, there should be any problems, because the Palestinian population is very diverse, there are all kinds of communities, not only Muslim or Christian, but also Circassian,

Why do you support the boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign?

During the first initiative of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, in San Francisco, in 2006, we had already organized an event to support the boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign. We have fully subscribed to this vision and these demands and goals, but these remain very basic, and we must go further with Israel. There are two things that are essential conditions, let’s say, to weaken its aggressive policies: one is boycott, divestment and sanctions, a popular blockade carried out by people, institutions, parties and states, from the cultural field to sports, and obviously economic , as was done with South Africa.

And the other is the military weakening of the state, which is more difficult, but which happened in Lebanon in the confrontation with Hezbollah. Now, they do not dare to enter on the ground and hardly by plane. The strength it has in terms of security, defense and intelligence gives it a sort of supremacy that some people themselves fear.

What do you think Spain should do about Israel? Congress, for example, has called for recognition of the Palestinian state.

Most important is imposing sanctions at the governmental level, and not to support any project that could benefit the Israeli economy, including the army. No exchange or trade whatsoever should be encouraged. In international institutions where sanctions are proposed, we must demand from Spain proactive support for this path.

Israel has projects with enormous privileges vis-à-vis Europe, it has arms exchanges. Ending these would be a very important way to show support for the Palestinians and international law, ultimately. It would be anti-colonial support, these are important words, to take the side of the peoples who are struggling. Today, the president, Pedro Sánchez, says that he is doing this with Ukraine. I hear him at the G20, speaking for five minutes about his unconditional support…

 

19 February, Online Event: Introducing the International Center for Palestine Studies (ICPS)

Sunday, 19 February
See time details below for Arabic and English sessions
Register to attend: https://forms.gle/i1LSGxPPRft65aba7
Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84829366472
More info: https://palestinestudiescenter.wordpress.com/2023/01/02/event-introducing-the-icps/

The International Center for Palestine Studies (ICPS) invites all writers, activists and creatives to join us for an introduction of the Center.

This webinar is a step toward fulfilling the ICPS’s goal of gathering and uniting people from different geographies, disciplines, and backgrounds to create intellectual and artistic work for the benefit of the Palestinian liberation struggle.

We especially encourage students and youth to engage in this webinar and motivate them to take part in research, analysis, poetry and prose.

Join us on Sunday 19 February to learn more about the ICPS and share your own ideas.

Arabic session at

  • 19:00 Al Quds Time
  • 18:00 European Time
  • 12:00 Eastern time
  • 9:00 Pacific time

English session at

  • 21:00 Al Quds Time
  • 20:00 European Time
  • 2:00 pm (14:00) Eastern time
  • 11:00 Pacific time

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84829366472

Meeting ID: 848 2936 6472

Register at: https://forms.gle/i1LSGxPPRft65aba7

http://www.palestinestudies.net


المركز الدولي للدراسات الفلسطينية يدعو جميع الكتاب والناشطين والمبدعين للانضمام إلينا في اللقاء للتعرف على المركز

هذا اللقاء هو خطوة نحو إتمام أهداف المركز لجمع وتوحيد الطاقات من مختلف المناطق الجغرافية والاختصاصات والخلفيات الثقافية للعمل على خلق أعمال علمية وثقافية وفنية في خدمة القضية الفلسطينية.

ونشجع بشكل خاص الشباب والطلاب للمشاركة في هذا اللقاء ونحثهم على المشاركة معنا في البحث، وكتابة الدراسات والتحليل، والشعر والنثر.

انضمّوا إلينا يوم الأحد ١٩ شباط/فبراير للتعرف على المركز ومشاركتنا بآرائكم ومقترحاتكم.

اللقاء باللغة العربية:

١٩:٠٠ بتوقيت القدس

١٨:٠٠ بتوقيت أوروبا

اللقاء باللغة الإنكليزية:

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“The anthem of return and liberation” : Karim Younes’s letter in advance of his release

Palestinian prisoner Karim Younes, the longest consecutively-held detainee of the occupation, wrote a letter from his cell  in Hadarim prison, to be released in advance of his liberation on 5 January 2023, after 40 years of imprisonment.

Karim Younes has been jailed by occupation forces since 6 January 1983. He was initially sentenced to death for resisting the Israeli occupation, which was later modified to a 40-year term. Younes, from the Palestinian village of Ara, has been repeatedly denied release in multiple prisoner exchanges and agreements, because he is labeled an Israeli citizen by the occupation — even though his treatment and conditions of confinement are equal to those of all of his fellow Palestinian prisoners. His release this coming Thursday is long-awaited by the Palestinian people.

The following is the text of the message, as conveyed by his lawyer Ghaid Qassem, after she visited him on Sunday, 1 January: 

I will leave my cell in a few days, and fear seizes me at the proximity of a world so unlike my own. Here I am approaching a moment when I must pass through my old wounds and my old memories, a moment when I can smile at my old image without feeling remorse or disappointment, and without having to prove the obvious: what I have lived and lived through for forty years, to show that I can adapt to my new mirror. I am returning to sing again with my people everywhere the anthem of my homeland, the anthem of the fedayeen, the anthem of return and liberation.

Here I am, about to leave my dark cell, in which I learned not to be afraid of the dark, and in which I learned not to feel alienated or lonely, because I am among my brothers, the brotherhood of constraint and suffering, a brotherhood that united us under a single oath and a single covenant.

I will leave my cell, from which I have always wanted to leave, taking my freedom, accompanied by my brothers on this path and my fellow fighters in the struggle, imagining a reception that expresses victory and a great achievement. I find myself indisposed, trying to avoid the pain of separation and the suffering of the moment of parting with my brothers. I thought I would complete my life in their company, and they are definite constants in my life, standing like mountains. As the hour of my exit approaches, I feel disappointed and helpless, especially when I look into the eyes of any of them, some of whom have been imprisoned for more than three decades.

I will leave my cell and go, but my soul will remain with those who hold fast to the embers, who keep the embers of the Palestinian struggle as a whole, with those who have not and will not be broken, even as the years of their lives slip away, above them, in front of them, and behind them. Still they aspire to see the sun of freedom in the remainder of their lives, before their desire to live falters and declines.

I will leave my cell, and thoughts suddenly crowd and dance upon the threshold of my mind, confusing my mind, and so I wonder, uncharacteristically perplexed: How long can a prisoner carry his own body on his back and continue his life while death walks with him? How will this suffering and slow death remain his fate for an endless period? In the shadow of an unknown future, a blocked horizon, lost hope and heightened anxiety by what we see and observe of complacency and indifference to the oppression of the gangs that own a state of brutality, taking advantage of the abandonment of the world of a defenseless people whose life is being devoured every day, without them realizing that their wounds will not heal, and there is no hope for a calm and stable life, yet they retained the flame and the ability to continue forward.

I will leave my cell, knowing that our ship is being battered by international waves from all sides, regional storms from east and west, local earthquakes and aggressive volcanoes that are about to swallow it up, as it drifts further away from the shore its captain tried to anchor to over a quarter of a century ago.

I will leave my cell, emphasizing that we were and still are proud of our people, and our people, wherever they are in the homeland and in the diaspora, have embraced us and our cause all of these years, and have been loyal to our cause and the cause of our people, which always gives us renewed hope and a firm certainty in the justice of our cause, the sincerity of our affiliation, and the viability and essence of our struggle.

I will leave my cell, raising my hat to a generation that is certainly unlike mine, a generation of young activists who have taken the lead on the scene in recent years, a generation that is clear that they are stronger, bolder, braver and more deserving of receiving the banner. And those who are interested in implementing the demands, the commandments of our scattered and displaced people, to obtain their right to return and self-determination, so blessed is this rising generation despite the atmosphere of decay.

I will leave my cell in a few days, and fear seizes me at the proximity of a world so unlike my own. Here I am approaching a moment when I must pass through my old wounds and my old memories, a moment when I can smile at my old image without feeling remorse or disappointment, and without having to prove the obvious: what I have lived and lived through for forty years, to show that I can adapt to my new mirror. I am returning to sing again with my people everywhere the anthem of my homeland, the anthem of the fedayeen, the anthem of return and liberation.

Samidoun in 2022, Looking to 2023 and Beyond: Building the Movement for Liberation

2022 has been a year of mobilization, struggle and action for the liberation of Palestinian prisoners and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea. From campaigns, marches and actions to political education and international solidarity, Samidoun is planning to march into 2023 with even more effective actions to support Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian people and their resistance.

From New York to Vancouver, from Germany to occupied Palestine, from Toulouse to Madrid to Sao Paolo, from Beirut to Amsterdam, we are growing, building and organizing.

In order to achieve our goals, we need your support and contributions. When you make a donation to Samidoun today, you are supporting our active work to achieve justice and liberation for over 4,750 Palestinian prisoners and for the land and people of Palestine, including 800 jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention.

In 2023, we want to work with you for our international, Arab and Palestinian movement to grow and build — towards liberation and return.

Deepest thanks to everyone who has already supported this work — not only with your financial generosity, but with your action, involvement and participation for Palestine. 

Samidoun is funded by the movement. As a grassroots organization without foundation funding or full-time staff, your generosity is absolutely critical to continuing to build our work to support Palestinian liberation.  Deepest thanks to all of you who have already donated your time and/or your funds to support the cause. Make your US tax-deductible donation today, and donate safely and securely from around the world. 

Alternately, checks and money orders may be written and mailed to:

AFGJ/Samidoun
225 E. 26th St., Ste. 1
Tucson, A.Z. 85713-2925
U.S.A.

If you would like to make a donation in another form, such as through a corporate program, matching program, a gift of stock or a gift in kind, or to send us a wire transfer, please contact us at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Thank you, as always, for your commitment to the struggle for justice and liberation, in Palestine and around the world. 

Below is a brief overview of just some of our work during 2022. 

The Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat and All Palestinian Prisoners

In January 2022, organizers in cities and countries around the world responded to Samidoun’s call to take action to free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners. Marching and demonstrating from New York to Toulouse to Amsterdam to London and beyond, people gathered in their communities, cities and campuses to call for the liberation of one of Palestine’s leaders, imprisoned behind Zionist bars.

In 2023, we are already preparing for the Week of Action to Free Ahmad Sa’adat — with priority focuses on administrative detention, deportation, medical neglect and the imprisonment of the bodies of the martyrs. Join us to take action in your area.

 

Marching for Return and Liberation

On 29 October 2022, thousands gathered in Brussels, Belgium, for the March for Return and Liberation. This march for Palestinian liberation from the river to the sea, organized by the Masar Badil (Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement) together with Samidoun and allies like EuroPalestine, stood clearly with the Palestinian resistance in all of its forms.

Despite harsh attacks from Zionist organizations seeking to criminalize the march, the size, and the vibrancy of the action made it clear that the Palestinian people and their resistance have only continued to grow. In 2023, we’ll keep on the march everywhere for return and liberation for Palestine! 

 

Free Georges Abdallah: The Movement Grows

 

On Saturday, 22 October, over 1,000 people marched to Lannemezan prison to demand the immediate release of Georges Abdallah, the imprisoned Lebanese Arab Communist struggler for Palestine imprisoned in France since 1984. This mass demonstration, the 12th annual march, was a great success that followed extensive work by many organizations, collectives, campaigns, associations, unions and political parties during a month of action for Abdallah’s freedom.

In 2023, we’ll be working even harder to build the campaign to liberate Georges Abdallah — let us make it the year of his freedom!

Hunger Strike Solidarity: Bodies and Lives on the Line

In 2022, numerous Palestinian prisoners once again put their bodies and lives on the line in ongoing collective and individual struggles for liberation. From Khalil Awawdeh to Raed Rayan to the 50 hunger strikers fighting to end administrative detention, Palestinian prisoners continue to organize and resist behind bars. Around the world, we organized events, actions, mobilizations and campaigns to support their liberation.

In 2023, we can already see that the occupation regime has escalated against the hunger strikers and the freedom they represent — Khalil Awawdeh, Raed Rayan and Ahmad and Adal Musa are continuing to struggle from behind bars. Let’s make this a year of victory for all Palestinian prisoners!

Free the Holy Land Five: Palestinian Political Prisoners in US jails

In November 2022, we joined with our partners at Within Our Lifetime and the Coalition for Civil Freedoms to relaunch the campaign to free the remaining Holy Land Five prisoners: Ghassan Elashi, Shukri Abu Baker and Mufid Abdulqader, serving lengthy sentences in U.S. prison for their charitable work for the Palestinian people.  So far, this has included events, actions and mobilization in the US and internationally.

In 2023, we’ll work to build and expand the campaign until the freedom of these Palestinian prisoners is obtained.

 

Unity of the Fields: Organizing to Stand with the Resistance

In 2022, the Battle of the Unity of the Fields captured worldwide attention and solidarity with the Palestinian resistance, demonstrating once again that the Palestinian people are united and mobilized together for liberation, with the prisoners’ movement at the center of the struggle. From Vancouver to New York to Berlin and Paris, Samidoun organizers held events and actions to build solidarity while also fundraising to support grassroots health care through AWDA in Gaza.

In 2023, we’ll continue to stand with the Palestinian resistance — and show our material solidarity with Palestinians struggling everywhere.

Resisting Repression – From France to Germany to occupied Palestine

In March 2022, the French government officially issued a dissolution order against the Collectif Palestine Vaincra, building upon years of repression targeting Palestine activists and the basic right to boycott Israel. Dozens of organizations in Toulouse and worldwide came together to defend the Collectif — which has already won the first stage of its ongoing court battle, pending the upcoming full appeal in 2023. Meanwhile, in May 2022, the Berlin city government banned all Nakba commemorations, including the mass demonstration organized by Samidoun. In response, many organizations came together to make it clear that Palestine and its people would indeed be seen and heard. Meanwhile, we continue to struggle — like many organizations in Palestine — against the so-called “terrorist” designation imposed on Samidoun in 2021.

In 2023, we’ll keep mobilizing and fighting repression everywhere, inside and outside Palestine. From confronting criminalization to resisting the IHRA definition, we’ll actively defend Palestinian liberation.

Revitalizing the Boycott Movement: Sports Boycott and Anti-Normalization

Boycott campaigns are one effective tactic that people around the world can use to work to cut off the ongoing flow of arms and funds to the occupation regime. Some effective campaigns have moved beyond boycott to direct action, as Palestine Action has done with its successful targeting of Elbit in Britain. Sports boycott is another important frontier for challenging normalization and building a broad base of support for the Palestinian people — and isolation of the Israeli settler colonial project. From the Tour de France to the Tournament of Champions to the World Cup, to joining with our partners to launch the Kick Out Apartheid campaign, Samidoun is taking action.

As shown in the most recent World Cup, sports can be a powerful mechanism to express grassroots support for Palestinian liberation. In 2023, sports boycott will be one part of our array of tactics to confront Zionism everywhere.

 

Raising Our Voices for Resistance: Media and Events for Palestine

 

In 2021, Samidoun activists and chaptersorganized street actions, protests, educational events, film screenings, webinars and conferences for Palestine in cities and countries across the globe. Samidoun also remained a resource for media coverage of Palestine and Palestinian political prisoners, with Samidoun representatives appearing on programs in English, Arabic, French, Spanish and Portuguese to discuss the Palestinian liberation struggle and Palestinian prisoners. With dozens of media appearances and public events, Samidoun is speaking up and being heard — amplifying the voices of Palestinian prisoners marching towards freedom. 2022 also saw the launch of the Al Falasteniyeh Media Network, a new initiative that is already speaking “From the river to the sea to the world!”

In 2023, we’re committed to build an even louder and more visible presence for the Palestinian prisoners’ movement!

Building the Samidoun Network: Growing our Movement

2022 continued to be a year of building and growth for the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, with our chapters and organizing developing in cities and countries around the world. We held a youth camp in Germany in the summer of 2022 which welcomed dozens of members from across Europe and are planning an even larger event in 2023. 

Samidoun organizes with an anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist vision of justice and liberation, confronting imperialism, Zionism and reactionary forces. We work together in anti-imperialist alliances like the International League of Peoples’ Struggles and are joining to plan for 2023’s People’s Tribunal on U.S. Imperialism: Sanctions, Blockades and Coercive Economic Measures. In addition, we do not struggle for justice for Palestine alone, but together with  Black Liberation movement, Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination movements, and anti-imperialist movements around the world. We organize to free political prisoners in the U.S., Britain, Canada, France and elsewhere, and work in solidarity with prisoners’ struggles from Morocco to Turkey to the Philippines. 

In 2023, we’re committed to growing and organizing to make our work even more effective – to liberate all Palestinian prisoners, stand with the Palestinian resistance, and realize a free Palestine from the river to the sea. We invite you to join us! 

Click here to support Samidoun’s work as we organize for 2023 and beyond – toward return and liberation. 

A call from Palestine: Take action for the freedom of Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian prisoners

We urge all friends and supporters of Palestine to read the following statement, first issued in Arabic by the Handala Center for Prisoners and Former Prisoners, and join us to take action this January 14-24, 2023 to free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners! Visit our resource page for posters, flyers, graphics and materials to build the campaign in your area.

Sa’adat turned his trial into a trial of the occupation: Announcing the launch of the International Week of Solidarity with Ahmed Sa’adat

On this day in the year 2008, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the revolutionary leader Ahmed Sa’adat, “Abu Ghassan,” stood up to put the occupier on trial instead, and turn his sham trial into a trial of the occupation, throughout which he refused to engage or recognize the legitimacy of the Zionist entity or its courts. Instead, he boycotted the military courts and emphasized the choice of our Palestinian people to continue their resistance with all their might, confronting in all forms the artificially imposed Zionist entity and transforming the prison into a new arena of struggle and confrontation against the occupier.

In this context, the International Campaign of Solidarity with the Leader Ahmed Saadat announces the launch of the national and international week in an international campaign between the 21st anniversary of his kidnapping by the security services of the Palestinian Authority on 15 January 2023, through 24 January 2023.  This week also comes in a tribute to the martyrs of the massacres committed by the Zionist entity in its brutal aggression against Gaza in 2008 (“Operation Cast Lead”), launched only one day after the trial of Comrade Sa’adat.

The campaign called upon all solidarity networks, resistance forces, support groups for Palestine and the prisoners, and boycott campaigns around the world to participate widely in this call to action and expand the circle of solidarity with Ahmad Sa’adat and all of the Palestinian prisoners in the jails of the occupation. It is particularly important to shed light on their suffering now, as the criminal Itamar Ben Gvir will soon assume the responsibility for the so-called “Ministry of Internal Security” for the Zionist project, which includes the file of the prisoners. These actions further come in rejection of the Palestinian Authority’s “security coordination” approach that was the main reason and context which enabled the occupation’s kidnapping of the leader Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades in 2006, and to pressure the occupation to release the bodies of the martyrs and end the policies of medical neglect and administrative detention. 

This international call for action is a cry of anger by the Palestinian people, the solidarity movement and supporters of the resistance and its legitimacy, which is embodied by the leader Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades in the prisoners’ movement, and of support for the prisoners’ movement in the fierce battle that will only intensify to confront the next fascist government of the Zionist regime after the announcement of its formation.

Ahmad Sa’adat and the prisoners’ movement are resisting on the front lines of struggle and deserve our effort, work and initiative through all forms of solidarity and support.

With loyalty to the leader Ahmad Sa’adat, his comrades, and the prisoners’ movement

Glory to the martyrs and to the martyr of the prisoners’ movement, the imprisoned leader Nasser Abu Hmeid. Victory is certain

The International Campaign of Solidarity with the Leader Ahmed Saadat

25 December 2022

14-24 January 2023: International Week of Action to Free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian Prisoners — Action Call and Materials

Confronting Deportation, Medical Neglect, Administrative Detention and the Imprisonment of the Martyrs

“The Palestinian struggle for national liberation is part and parcel of the international movement of peoples for national liberation, international racial and economic justice, and an end to occupation, colonialism and imperialism.” – Ahmad Sa’adat

As we mark the 14th anniversary of the Israeli sentencing of Palestinian national liberation and international Left leader Ahmad Sa’adat, and the 14th anniversary of the brutal Israeli assault on Gaza, “Operation Cast Lead,” Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all who stand with Palestine and justice for the Palestinian people to join us between 14 and 24 January 2023 in a week of action to free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners. 

Ahmad Sa’adat, his comrades, and their fellow Palestinian prisoners are resistance leaders, on the front lines for justice and liberation, enduring hunger strikes and struggling relentlessly with an unbreakable will toward freedom.

Ahmad Sa’adat is the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a Palestinian national liberation movement leader and a symbol of the international left and revolutionary movements. He was sentenced to 30 years in Israeli prison on 25 December 2008 after being violently abducted from the Palestinian Authority’s Jericho prison in 2006, accused of leading a prohibited organization and “incitement.” The PFLP, like all Palestinian political parties and resistance organizations, is labeled a “prohibited organization” by the Israeli occupation authorities.

Sa’adat is a leader in the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and the Palestinian national liberation movement and a Palestinian, Arab and international symbol of resistance to capitalism, racism, apartheid and colonization. Targeted for his political role and clarity of vision, he remains unable to be silenced despite the oppression imposed upon him and 4,750 fellow Palestinian political prisoners. 

As we organize this week of action, the Palestinian prisoners’ movement is confronting several priorities: Challenging medical neglect, which led to the December death of longtime Palestinian resistance leader Nasser Abu Hmaid, and against which Palestinian thinker Walid Daqqa now struggles. Confronting forced deportation, especially following the forcible expulsion and stripping of Jerusalem identity from Palestinian lawyer Salah Hamouri, now expelled to France. Fighting administrative detention, arbitrary imprisonment without charge or trial under which 820 Palestinian prisoners – out of 4,750 in total – are currently held. Liberating the bodies of the martyrs, including Abu Hmeid and 11 more Palestinians whose bodies remain imprisoned even after their death, a form of collective punishment and torture targeting their families. All of these are key to the ongoing fight to liberate all Palestinian prisoners and all of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

On 15 January 2023, we will mark the 21st anniversary of Sa’adat’s arrest by the Palestinian Authority in the context of “security cooperation” with the Israeli occupation, a practice that continues to this day, despite broad Palestinian rejection. The Palestinian Authority kidnapped Sa’adat and his comrades under false pretenses and imprisoned them for four years before its prison was attacked by the Israeli occupation. This is just one of the devastating consequences for Palestinians of the Madrid-Oslo path and the creation of the Palestinian Authority in the so-called “peace process” that has been in reality a project for the liquidation of Palestine.

Today, Palestinian resistance fighters and strugglers continue to be pursued by the PA, working as an agent of the Israeli occupation, imprisoned in PA jails in a “revolving door” with the Israeli occupation and subjected to torture akin to that from the occupation interrogators.

Sa’adat’s case represents the colonial nature of Israeli imprisonment that aims to target the legitimate leadership of the Palestinian people. His boycott of the Zionist military courts reflects his principled commitment to reject colonization in all forms. His case also reflects the role of imperialist powers like the United States, Britain and Canada, and the collusion of the Palestinian Authority and its “security coordination” regime in the oppression of the Palestinian people and the Palestinian resistance.

While held in the PA’s Jericho Prison, Sa’adat and his comrades were held under U.S, British, Canadian and other foreign guards. Some of those same British guards previously served to guard Irish Republican prisoners in the occupied North of Ireland. After a violent Israeli attack in 2006 designed to prevent new Palestinian leaders from freeing the prisoners, Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades are now serving lengthy sentences in Israeli prisons. 

The direct involvement of the US, Canada and Britain in his imprisonment illustrates why international action in this case is so necessary. The support of these imperialist countries, the European Union, Australia and others for the Israeli colonial project continues to perpetuate its impunity as it carries out land confiscations, home demolitions, mass imprisonment, extrajudicial executions, the ethnic cleansing of Jerusalem, the siege on Gaza and further crimes against humanity and war crimes. 

We also note that prisoners of the Palestinian liberation movement continue to be held in international jails as well, especially Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, jailed in France for 38 years despite being eligible for release since 1999, and Ghassan Elashi, Shukri Abu Baker and Mufid Abdulqader of the Holy Land Five, jailed in the U.S. since 2008 for their charitable work for Palestinians, and we join the call for their liberation.

As Sa’adat was persecuted by the Israeli occupation for leading an “illegal organization”, the PFLP and other Palestinian resistance groups are listed in the U.S., Europe, Canada and elsewhere on so-called “terrorist lists”. These designations are used to criminalize resistance, much as the Palestinian prisoners are criminalized. Now, the Israeli occupation is attempting to use terror designations to suppress organizing and activism from grassroots organizations and civil society groups as well as resistance organizations. “Terror” labels are used as a colonial weapon against resistance movements, and we affirm: Resistance is a right! 

On 14-24 January 2023, join our collective call for the freedom of Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners, with action and global solidarity to escalate the boycott of Israel, end aid and support to Israel, organize for justice in Palestine and resist imperialism and colonialism. 

Take action! 

  1. Organize events, actions and protests to demand freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners! Protest in public squares and other open community spaces. Note that these dates are also the anniversary of Israel’s bloody “Cast Lead” attack on Gaza in 2008-2009 –we urge you to include both in your event. Email us at samidoun@samidoun.net to inform us about your events or actions.
  2. Highlight the key themes of this year’s campaign: Deportation, Medical Neglect, Administrative Detention and the Imprisonment of the Martyrs. Share information on your social media pages, and discuss these issues in your public events and demonstrations.
  3. Join the social media campaign. Post a photo or a video with a message calling for freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat and his fellow Palestinian prisoners and the hashtag #FreeAhmadSaadat. You can use the posters below. Send us your photo by emailing us at samidoun@samidoun.net or contacting us on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram
  4. Include Ahmad Sa’adat and the Palestinian prisoners in your Palestine solidarity, anti-racism, anti-imperialist and social justice events. Bring flyers and posters or share a statement from Sa’adat as part of your program. Let us know what you’re doing: Email us at samidoun@samidoun.net or send us a message on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram
  5. Boycott Israel! Ahmad Sa’adat says: “I call on all forces of progress, freedom and democracy to stand by the struggle of our people through all forms of boycott: political, economic, academic and cultural of the occupation state and the creation of a real economic cost for its industries of colonization and settlement and escalating the global campaigns for boycott of all corporations that support and invest in the occupation militarily and economically.” Don’t buy Israeli goods, and campaign to end investments in corporations that profit from the occupation. Join direct actions to challenge war profiteers (like the Elbit campaign with Palestine Action) and boycott complicit corporations like Puma and HP. 

Free Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners, freedom for Palestine, from the river to the sea! 

Posters and Campaign Materials

Graphics and Posters are available in multiple languages (English, Arabic, French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Farsi, Swedish, Danish, Italian, Portuguese)! Please see below. With any special requests or additions, please contact us at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Double-sided leaflet, The Case of Ahmad Sa’adat: Introduction to Palestinian Political Prisoners

Presentation, The Case of Ahmad Sa’adat (for use in educational events)

Resource Guide, the Case of Ahmad Sa’adat (updated 22 December 2022) – 28 pages

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (English)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Arabic)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (French)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (German)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Dutch)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Spanish)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Farsi)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Swedish)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Danish)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Italian)

Poster: Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat (Portuguese)

Campaign Graphics

ENGLISH

Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat

The General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Sa’adat was arrested by the Palestinian Authority on 15 January 2002 and jailed under US and British guard. After a violent attack in 2006, he was kidnapped by occupation forces; he is now serving a 30-year sentence in Israeli prison.

ARABIC

الحُرّية للقائد الوطني الأسير أحمد سعدات

أحمد سعدات : الأمين العام للجبهة الشعبية لتحرير فلسطين. إعتقلته الأجهزة الأمنية الفلسطينية في مدينة رام الله يوم 15 يناير 2002 وجرى وضعه تحت حراسة أمريكية ـ بريطانية في سجن أريحا . في 14 أذار / مارس 2006 هاجمت قوات الإحتلال الإسرائيلي سجن اريحا واختطفته مع عدد من رفاقه الأسرى. وفي 25 ديسيمبر 2008 أصدرت محكمة صهيونية غير شرعية حُكمًا بالسجن ضده لمدة 30 عامًا .

FRENCH

Liberté pour Ahmad Sa’adat

Sa’adat, secrétaire général du Front Populaire de Libération de la Palestine, a été arrêté par l’Autorité Palestinienne le 15 janvier 2002 et emprisonné sous surveillance américaine et britannique. Après une violente attaque en 2006, il a été kidnappé par les forces d’occupation. Il purge actuellement une peine de 30 ans dans une prison israélienne.

DUTCH

Vrijheid voor Ahmad Sa’adat

De Generaal-Secretaris van het Volksfront voor de Bevrijding van Palestina (PFLP), Sa’adat werd door de Palestijnse Autoriteit gearresteerd op 15 januari 2002. Vervolgens werd hij bewaakt door Britse en Amerikaanse troepen. Maar na een Israëlische aanval in 2006 werd Sa’dat gekidnapt; hij zit nu een 30-jarige celstraf uit.

GERMAN

Freiheit für Ahmad Sa’adat

Der Generalsekretär der Volksfront für die Befreiung Palästinas, Sa’adat, wurde am 15. Januar 2002 von der Palästinensischen Autonomiebehörde verhaftet. Das Gefängnis, in dem Sa’adat inhaftiert war, wurde von US-amerikanischen und britischen Soldaten bewacht. Nach einem gewaltsamen Angriff im Jahr 2006 wurde er von Besatzungstruppen entführt. Er verbüßt jetzt eine 30-jährige Haftstrafe in einem israelischen Gefängnis.

SPANISH

Libertad para Ahmad Sa’adat

Sa’adat, secretario general del Frente Popular de Liberación de Palestina, arrestado por la autoridad palestina el 15 de enero de 2002 y encarcelado bajo vigilancia americana y británica. Después de un ataque violento en 2006, fue secuestrado por las fuerzas de ocupación. Cumple actualmente una pena de 30 años en una prisión israelí.

SWEDISH

Frihet åt Ahmad Sa’adat

Den 15:e januari 2002 arresterade Palestinska myndigheten Ahmad Sa’adat, generalsekreterare för Folkfronten för Palestinas befrielse. Sa’adat sattes därefter i fångenskap under USA:s och Storbritanniens regi. Under ett våldsamt angrepp 2006 kidnappades han av Israels ockupationsstyrkor och nu avtjänar han ett 30-årigt straff på israeliskt fängelse.

DANISH

Frihed for Ahmad Sa’adat

Generalsekretæren for PFLP (Folkefronten til Palæstinas Befrielse), Ahmad Sa’adat, blev arresteret af det palæstinensiske selvstyre (PA) den 15. Januar 2002 og fængslet under US-amerikansk og britisk overvågning. Under et voldsomt angreb i 2006 blev han kidnappet af besættelsesstyrker og har siden været indespærret i israelske fængsler, idømt 30 års fængsel.

ITALIAN

Libertà per Ahmad Sa’adat

Sa’adat, segretario generale del Fronte Popolare di Liberazione della Palestina, è stato arrestato dall’autorità Palestinese il 15 gennaio 2002 e imprigionato e sorvegliato dalle autorità americane e britanniche. Dopo un violento attacco nel 2006, è stato rapito dalle forze d’occupazione. Sconta attualmente una pena di 30 anni in una prigione Israeliana.

PORTUGUESE

Liberdade para Ahmad Sa’adat

Statements and Writings by Ahmad Sa’adat

Resources and Articles on Ahmad Sa’adat