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9 July, Enniscorthy: Protest against arms trade with Israel and to free Bilal Kayed

Saturday, 9 July
11:00 am
Office of Paul Kehoe
State Minister for Defence
Weafer Street
Enniscorthy, Wexford, Ireland

ams7On 9 July, activists have organised a solidarity protest in support of Palestinian hunger striker, Bilal Kayed, who is now in his 23rd day. Taking place outside State minister for Defence, Paul Kehoe’s office on Weafer St. Enniscorthy at 11am, we will highlight the injustices carried out by the illegal Israeli State and the twenty-six county governments purchasing of Israeli weaponry for it’s army. Both issues need to be strenuously highlighted both nationally and internationally. Please spare an hour tomorrow. All flags, banners, posters etc. are welcome.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gary.brien.14/posts/10206725103316112

Support Black liberation: Demand justice for Alton Sterling and Philando Castile

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses its strongest solidarity with the Black movement for justice and liberation following the U.S. police murders and extrajudicial executions of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, the two latest Black lives to be taken by police in the United States, on 5 and 6 July.

State terror, whether carried out by racist police, occupation armies, border guards, or other agents of oppression, is a crime that must be met with popular resistance. The Black movement, from the historic struggles for Black liberation to the Black Lives Matter movement and beyond, is at the forefront of confronting state terror – while Black people and Black lives are being relentlessly stolen by racist police oppression.

As Kristian Davis Bailey of Black4Palestine wrote, the Black and Palestinian struggles are “the thorns that exist and resist from different ends of the US colonial and imperial project.” Standing against anti-Black racism and oppression is critical to any meaningful challenge to U.S. imperialism.

The  murders of Sterling and Castile are only the latest in a long line of ongoing police violence and repression directed at Black people in the United States, from the genocide of slavery, to lynching and Jim Crow, to the ongoing racist oppression and police/state violence directed against Black communities and lives that has sparked such powerful resistance. The United States is responsible for occupation, exploitation throughout the world, as its leading imperialist power; the U.S. was created through the dispossession and genocide of Indigenous people and built on the backs of enslaved Black people. The United States, the world’s leading imperialist power, is responsible for occupation, exploitation and oppression around the world.

The United States government is the funder, strategic partner, and strongest ally of the occupation of Palestine, while the Israeli state trains U.S. police in repressive counterinsurgency tactics tested on Palestinians under occupation.

As we struggle to free Palestinian political prisoners, imprisoned for their struggle against racist oppression and settler colonialism, we renew our call for the urgent need to free the Black Liberation, Latino and other Puerto Rican, and Indigenous political prisoners in US jails, as well as Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims imprisoned for their resistance to racism and oppression. We salute and demand the freedom of the Black resistance strugglers, prisoners from the Black Panther Party, Black Liberation Army and MOVE, who led a generations-long struggle against white supremacy and state repression that continues today.

We stand with and join in the struggle against mass incarceration in the U.S., and to dismantle the system of policing and the prison industrial complex that targets Black lives and supports the suppression of all oppressed peoples and communities in the U.S. As we demand an end to Zionist oppression in Palestine, it is critically important to confront, resist and defeat white supremacy and racist oppression in North America.

We urge all friends of Palestine and advocates of justice and freedom for Palestinian political prisoners to take to the streets and support the protests against police terror taking place across the U.S. strongly, to clearly assert that #BlackLivesMatter and that #BlackLiberationMatters, and to challenge all forms of anti-Black racism and oppression.

Justice for Alton Sterling and Philando Castile! Freedom for all political prisoners!

8 July, Naples: Rally for the Liberation of Bilal Kayed and all Palestinian Prisoners

Friday, 8 July
7:00 pm
Largo Berlinguer (near Metro Via Toledo)
Naples, Italy
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/551196948386342/

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Administrative detention is an Israeli policy to indefinitely imprison Palestinian political prisoners without charge or trial. Issued at the discretion of Israeli military judges from one to six months, the orders are indefinitely renewable. Denying people a fair trial or even to know the reason they are held are clear violations of human rights. Despite this, Israel continues to use and expand administrative detention. In the case of the Palestinian prisoner Bilal Kayed, after 14 and a half years in Israeli prison, instead of being released, he was ordered to administrative detention.

Kayed is a representative of the main party of the Palestinian Left (the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine) who was held in Megiddo prison and, according to local sources, played a political role in the prison before being ordered to isolation and then the order of administrative detention. The denial of release to Bilal Kayed is a threat to all Palestinian detainees as a threat to impose a precedent of indefinitely imprisoning Palestinians after their date of release, after 5, 10, 15, 20 years in prison, rather then being freed, instead being held indefinitely without charge or trial under administrative detention.

To protest against all this and against the inhumane conditions of detention (torture, isolation, lack of medical care), hundreds of Palestinian prisoners are protesting and hunger striking. Demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners struggle have taken place in recent days in Berlin, Sakhnin, New York and Asira al-Shamaliyeh (birthplace of Kayed).

We express our solidarity with the struggle of the Palestinian prisoners to end the policy of administrative detention, and demand the immediate release of Bilal Kayed and all Palestinian prisoners. We demonstrate for freedom for Palestine and its people.

Protest
Friday, 8 July, 7:00 pm
Largo Berlinguer near Metro Via Toledo
Committee of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
Campania Palestinian Community

La detenzione amministrativa è una pratica messa in atto da Israele per trattenere in carcere, indefinitamente, senza accuse né processo, i prigionieri politici palestinesi. Per questo gli ordini di detenzione amministrativa, emessi a discrezione dei giudici militari israeliani da uno a sei mesi, ma rinnovabili indefinitamente, negando ai prigionieri palestinesi il diritto ad un regolare processo e non facendo conoscere le ragioni per cui sono trattenuti in carcere sono una chiara violazione dei diritti umani. Nonostante questo Israele continua ad applicare la detenzione amministrativa anzi a renderla ancora più disumana come nel caso del prigioniero palestinese Bilal Kayed il quale dopo aver scontato 14 anni e mezzo di carcere invece di essere rilasciato è stato raggiunto da un ordine di detenzione amministrativa… Kayed è un rappresentante del principale partito della sinistra palestinese (Il Fronte – FPLP) detenuto all’interno della prigione di Megiddo e secondo fonti locali, sarebbe stato il suo ruolo politico all’interno del carcere a causargli l’isolamento per un anno e mezzo e l’ordine di detenzione amministrativa invece della sua liberazione. Il mancato ritorno alla libertà per Bilal Kayed è una minaccia per tutti i detenuti palestinesi, è un tentativo di imporre un precedente a tutti i palestinesi: alla data del loro rilascio, dopo 5, 10, 15, 20 anni di galera, piuttosto che essere liberati, i prigionieri possono essere tenuti dentro indefinitivamente senza accusa, né processo grazie alla detenzione amministrativa. Oltre 700 palestinesi (sui circa 7.000 detenuti totali) si trovano nelle sue stesse condizioni…


Per protestare contro tutto questo e contro le disumane condizioni detentive (torture, isolamento, mancanza di cure ed assistenza sanitarie ai detenuti malati… ) centinaia di prigionieri palestinesi stanno facendo scioperi della fame mettendo a rischio la loro vita.


Manifestazioni di solidarietà con la lotta dei prigionieri politici palestinesi e per chiedere la liberazione di Bilal Kayed sono avvenute nei giorni scorsi a Berlino, Sakhnin (Israele), New York City e Asira ash-Shamaliyeh (luogo di nascita di Kayed).


Manifestiamo anche noi la nostra solidarietà alla lotta dei prigionieri palestinesi affinchè la detenzione amministrativa non venga più praticata, per chiedere l’immediata liberazione di Bilal Kayed e di tutti i detenuti politici palestinesi, manifestiamo per la libertà della Palestina e del suo Popolo


PRESIDIO
VENERDI’ 8 LUGLUIO 2016 h. 19,00
LARGO BERLINGUER VICINO LA FERMATA METRO DI VIA TOLEDO
Comitato di solidarietà con il popolo palestinese
Comunità Palestinese Campania

22nd day of hunger strike: Bilal Kayed encourages solidarity efforts, expresses determination to continue despite health challenges

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Palestinian prisoner Bilal Kayed is continuing his open hunger strike on the 22nd day as of 7 July; Addameer lawyer Mona Nadaf visited him in isolation in Ashkelon prison, where he remains in a very small cell without ventilation. Nadaf reported that he is continuing to refuse any kind of vitamin or salt supplements and medical examinations, and only consumes water.

She also reported that he is in very high spirits with unshaken determination to proceed with the strike until its conclusion. Kayed’s cell is very small; inside his cell he has only underwear and the Quran. He has been denied access to additional clothing or any other books or written materials, and the Israeli prison administration continues to refuse to provide a fan despite the high summer temperatures. In addition, the prison administration refuses to provide mineral water and he can only drink lukewarm water from the tap in the cell’s broken sink.

Kayed has lost a significant amount of weight and suffers from fatigue and dizziness; he is only able to sleep one hour a night.

Kayed sent his thanks and greetings to all of the people standing in solidarity with him, confirming that his struggle will continue until the end, with high morale and solid will.

Bilal Kayed has been on hunger strike since 15 June in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial. He was ordered to administrative detention on 13 June after the completion of his 14.5 year sentence in Israeli jails, where he has been imprisoned since December 2001. His administrative detention was confirmed by the Ofer military court on 5 July after a hearing which he refused to attend, noting the illegitimacy of administrative detention and the military court system. He rejected a proposal to deport him to Jordan for four years and give up political activity in exchange for his freedom.

Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners have engaged in solidarity hunger strikes and protests in support of his demand for freedom. His case represents a threat of indefinite imprisonment without charge or trial for all Palestinian prisoners completing lengthy sentences.

Kayed’s comrades in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine are planning to escalate their protests inside the prisons, up to a collective hunger strike, beginning on Friday, 8 July; prisoners from all Palestinian factions will also engage in protest actions for Kayed’s freedom.

As the protests inside the prison are scheduled to ramp up, imprisoned PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh was transferred on Wednesday, 6 July from Hadarim prison to Ramon prison, days after fellow PFLP leader Wael Jaghoub was transferred from Ramon to Hadarim prison. These events were cited by their imprisoned comrades as an attempt to undermine and prevent the escalation of the struggle to free Kayed.

Protests and marches have taken place across Palestine (photo above from Eid rally in his hometown, Asira al-Shamaliya) for Kayed’s freedom, as well as in cities around the world. Over 150 international and Palestinian organizations have signed on to the call for action to free Kayed, and further mobilizations are planned for the Week of Action to Free Bilal Kayed between 8-15 July. Protests and events will take place in New York; Tampa; Arklow, Ireland; Manchester; London; Beirut; and Milan, with more cities to be announced shortly.

14 July, Milan: Solidarity with the Struggle of the Palestinian Prisoners

Thursday, 14 July
7:00 pm
Via dei Transiti angolo viale Monza
Milan, Italy

More information:  https://www.facebook.com/734054266678507/photos/a.734064736677460.1073741828.734054266678507/1030418307042100/?type=3

Evening of solidarity with Palestinian prisoners, featuring a falafel buffet dinner; speeches, music and art for Palestine; and a lecture on the life of Ghassan Kanafani, writer and Palestinian political leader assassinated in Beirut by the Israeli Mossad on 8 July 44 years ago.

Solidarity with Bilal Kayed, on hunger strike against administrative detention. Support the new intifada!

Organized by Fronte Palestina and Centro Occupato Autogestito T28

Milano

8-15 July, Tampa: Week of Action to Free Bilal Kayed

8-15 July
Tampa, Florida
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/901608496614201/
Organized by Love Has No Borders

smallbanerOn July 8th, Love Has No Borders will answer the global call to action coming from Palestine for prisoner Bilal Kayed who has been on hungerstrike since June 15th to protest his unjust imprisonment under Israel’s illegal administrative detention. Info about Bilal’s struggle – and the struggle of hundreds of other Palestinians, including children, inside of Israeli occupation prisons may be found here:. https://samidoun.net/2016/07/8-15-july-call-to-action-to-free-bilal-kayed-and-commemorate-ghassan-kanafani/

Several LHNB members will be hungerstriking during the entire week of action in solidarity with Bilal, and the hundreds of other prisoners who have vowed to join his hungerstrike in solidarity.

WE WILL BE KICKING OFF THE WEEK OF ACTION WITH A 24 HOUR LONG SOLIDARITY HUNGER STRIKE- ALL ARE WELCOMED TO JOIN! We are asking folks to spend the week raising awareness about Bilal’s struggle! This includes blog posts, articles, poetry and arts shared on the event page through the week. Whether you would like to take a photo of yourself with a sign of support, make a painting, street art, street theatre, writing- let’s quake the occupation jails with our solidarity!

MORE INFO ON BILAL KAYED’S CASE:
Palestinian prisoner Bilal Kayed has now been on hunger strike since the morning of June 15th, demanding his freedom. On 13 June, he was slated for release after 14 and one-half years in Israeli prison. Instead of being released, however, he was ordered by the Israeli occupation military to six months in indefinitely-renewable administrative detention without charge or trial.

On July 5, Kayed will face a hearing to confirm the administrative detention order against him in an Israeli military court. His previous hearing was postponed when he refused to attend, declaring the military courts and the entire administrative detention law to be illegitimate. Within Israeli prisons, hundreds of fellow Palestinian prisoners – many his comrades in the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – are engaged in protest actions, including hunger strikes, demanding Kayed’s freedom. In early July, Kayed’s comrades have declared that hundreds of Palestinian prisoners will join his open-ended hunger strike if he is not released.

Photos: Amsterdam in solidarity with Bilal Kayed and Palestinian Prisoners

People in Amsterdam, the Netherlands expressed their solidarity with Palestinian prisoner Bilal Kayed, on hunger strike since 15 June in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial following the expiration of his 14.5-year sentence in Israeli prisons.

The solidarity photos were taken in Amsterdam on 4 July, at Shir Hever: the military relations between the Netherlands/EU and Israel, by Studenten voor Rechtvaardigheid in Palestina – Amsterdam.  SRP worked with Samidoun and other organizations to protest in The Hague on 25 June to demand freedom for Kayed and an end to state pension benefits for illegal settlers in the West Bank, part of the Global Days of Action to free Kayed.

The expression of solidarity comes as part of the lead-up to the week of action in solidarity with Bilal Kayed on 8-15 July, with events taking place across Palestine as well as in New York; Tampa, Florida; Arklow, Ireland; Manchester and elsewhere around the world. Palestinian prisoners will be announcing their next steps of protest, up to a collective open hunger strike, on 8 July.

Posters and flyers about Bilal Kayed’s case are available here for download, for other groups internationally who would like to express their solidarity with Kayed’s struggle for freedom and the over 7,000 Palestinian prisoners by bringing signs and materials about Kayed’s struggle to existing events about Palestine and social justice. Please send your photos and reports to samidoun@samidoun.net or contact us on Facebook to share!

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9 July, Manchester: Day of Protest – Gaza Two Years on – Free Bilal Kayed and all Palestinian Prisoners!

13443171_10153888563523318_2517053452412397790_oSaturday, 9 July
12:00 pm
Piccadilly Gardens
Manchester
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/201027720296827/

PROTEST TO MARK THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE GAZA INVASION

BOYCOTT ISRAEL – VICTORY TO THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE!

FREE BILAL KAYED AND ALL PALESTINIAN PRISONERS!

In July 2014 Israel launched its murderous operation “Protective Edge” in a bloody attempt to crush the Palestinian resistance in Gaza. In the course of six weeks the Zionist regime bombed hospitals, disabled civilians, schools and religious buildings, killing over 2,200 and forcing over half a million people from their homes.

The mission failed – the steadfast Palestinian movement refused to give in and millions around the world supported their cause. In Manchester hundreds of people spontaneously occupied Barclays and M&S to protest at British corporate support for the Israeli occupation.

In weeks of protest, the rolling pickets came up against the organised forces of the British state – 14 people were arrested, some violently, but 13 of these cases were thrown out or found innocent. The local politicians called us ‘revolutionaries and extremists’. While the bombardment of Palestine was in the news, these were the seeds of a new movement in solidarity with Palestine.

The occupation, the settlement building, the racist apartheid law and the siege of Gaza have not gone away. Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine! is calling on people to take to the streets to build the BDS movement. Like the Palestinian people we must declare to the world: We will not be silenced!

Palestinian prisoner Bilal Kayed has now been on hunger strike since the morning of 15 June, demanding his freedom. On 13 June, he was slated for release after 14 and one-half years in Israeli prison. Instead of being released, however, he was ordered by the Israeli occupation military to six months in indefinitely-renewable administrative detention without charge or trial.
We join the international action demanding the freedom of Bilal Kayed and his fellow prisoners – and the freedom of Palestine and its people.

Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! (FRFI) Manchester
RCG – Revolutionary Communist Group

www.frfi.co.uk

Imprisoned Balboul brothers launch hunger strike, join teen Sharawna and struggler Kayed refusing food

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Palestinian prisoners, brothers Mohammed and Mahmoud al-Balboul have been on hunger strike in Israeli prison since 4 July in protest of their administrative detention without charge or trial, reported their family.

They join Bilal Kayed, fellow administrative detainee on hunger strike for freedom after he was ordered to detention without charge or trial following the completion of his 14.5-year sentence in Israeli prison, and 17-year-old Jalal Sharawna in rejecting food in protest of their imprisonment.

Mohammed, 25, a dentist, and Mahmoud, 21, a university student, have been imprisoned since 9 June, ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence. Mohammed was ordered to six months imprisonment and Mahmoud to five months. Their younger sister, Nuran, 15, is also imprisoned in Israeli HaSharon prison, since 12 April. She is serving a four month sentence after having a verbal altercation with an Israeli occupation soldier at a checkpoint; she was then accused of carrying a knife with her inside her bag.

The three are the children of Sanaa al-Balboul and her husband Ahmad, who was assassinated by undercover Israeli occupation forces on 18 March 2008; he was accused of being a leader of the Fateh movement’s military wing, the Al-Aqsa Brigades, in Bethlehem. Sanaa has been denied permission to visit Nuran in prison and has seen her only once since her arrest, at a military court hearing where she was sentenced. Sanaa – at home alone, her three children imprisoned and her husband assassinated – has become an outspoken advocate for her children’s freedom.

Mohammed and Mahmoud were arrested in a late-night raid on their home where they live with their mother, the door exploded by Israeli occupation soldiers who stormed the home with dogs. Mohammed was held in administrative detention once before, at the age of 17, imprisoned for a year without charge or trial. After his release, he spent six years studying dentistry in Egypt before returning to open his practice, Al Jazeera reported.

Jalal Sharawna, 17, has continued his open hunger strike for the seventh day in protest of his conditions of confinement and the denial of family visits in Ramle prison clinic. Sharawna was arrested on 10 October 2014 after he was shot in the leg with live fire by Israeli occupation forces invading his village of Dura, near Al-Khalil.

After being imprisoned for several weeks and several surgeries, Jalal’s leg was amputed by Israeli surgeons in Assaf Harofeh hospital in early November. Neither his parents nor his lawyer were consulted about the decision to amputate his leg, and all have accused the Israeli prison administration of medical neglect and responsibility for the loss of Jalal’s leg, in addition to the responsibility of the Israeli occupation soldiers for shooting the boy with live bullets.

Jalal’s father, Shaher Sharawna, spoke to Asra Voice radio, saying that his son saw no alternative but hunger strike to address the unacceptable circumstances of his confinement, noting that he has been prohibited family visits as well. He also noted the impact of the arrest and injury on the education of the 17-year-old boy, who should be soon graduating from high school and is instead imprisoned and severely injured.

Bilal Kayed, 35, is on his 21st day of hunger strike against his imprisonment without charge or trial. After completing his 14.5 year sentence in Israeli prisons, instead of being released, he was ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial – an order confirmed yesterday, 5 July, by the Ofer Military Court.

Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners are taking part in solidarity actions with Kayed, a prominent leader within the prisons of the prisoners’ movement. His case is seen as threatening a dangerous precedent of indefinite imprisonment of Palestinians following the expiration of lengthy sentences.

Kayed’s comrades in the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine will announce their next steps of protest on 8 July, said Allam Kaabi.  They are consulting with prisoners in all Palestinian factions inside Israeli jails to discuss the next steps of protest, leading to a collective open hunger strike, demanding Kayed’s release. Kayed is refusing any nutrition, vitamins, or salt supplements and consuming only water.

Protests are taking place throughout Palestine and internationally in solidarity with Kayed. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is urging participation in a week of action for freedom for Kayed, from 8-15 July 2016.

Administrative detainees Eteraf Rimawi and Suad Rezeiqat freed from Israeli prisons

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Families and friends of Palestinian administrative detainees Eteraf Rimawi and Suad Rezeiqat celebrated their releases yesterday, Tuesday, 5 July.

Rimawi, the Executive Director of the Bisan Center for Research and Development, has been imprisoned by Israeli occupation forces without charge or trial since 16 September 2014. His detention was renewed repeatedly despite widespread international criticism of his imprisonment, recognizing his status as a human rights defender.

After nearly two years of imprisonment under administrative detention, he was finally released on 5 July.

Also released after seven months of administrative detention (with a four month and then three month administrative detention order) was Suad Rezeiqat, imprisoned since 3 December 2015. She was arrested in a late-night raid on her family home by Israeli occupation soldiers, who ransacked the home and seized her devices, accusing her of “incitement” for posting on Facebook. She was released from Damon prison on 5 July. She had previously spent one and a half years in Israeli prisons in 2008-2009, accused of communications with “hostile parties” and involvement with the Palestinian resistance.

There are nearly 750 Palestinian prisoners held without charge or trial under administrative detention. Israel’s systematic practice of administrative detention is in violation of the Geneva Conventions and other international humanitarian and human rights conventions and principles. Administrative detention orders are issued for one to six months at a time and are indefinitely renewable; Palestinians under administrative detention are imprisoned without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence, to which both the detainee and their lawyers are denied access.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Eteraf Rimawi and Suad Rezeiqat on their release, and demands the immediate release of all Palestinian prisoners and an end to the policy of administrative detention.