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Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike demand freedom, end to administrative detention

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Adib Mafarjah and Fouad Assi have now been on hunger strike for 44 days against their imprisonment without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention. Both are held in isolation in very difficult conditions, demanding their release from detention; their strikes began on 3 April 2016. Mafarjah was moved today from isolation in Eshel prison to Soroka hospital after a deterioration in his health. He has lost 30 kilograms (over 60 pounds) since he began his strike.

Mafarjah and Assi are joined by Mansour Moqtada, seriously injured and permanently held in the Ramle prison clinic, has been on a partial (liquids only) hunger strike for 36 days in protest of medical neglect, as has Muhannad al-Azzeh, who has undertaken a 26-day hunger strike for medical care. Daoud Habboub has joined Mafarjah and Assi on hunger strike for 11 days in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial, while Mahmoud Issa and Osama Rojbi are on hunger strike against their solitary confinement.

Former prisoner Muhammad Allan, a Palestinian lawyer whose hunger strike won his release from administrative detention, sent a message to the striking prisoners, saying that they are not alone in their battle and that the Palestinian people are with them and will not remain silent, speaking on Saturday, 14 May at a rally in Ramallah in support of the striking prisoners.

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Ayat Mafarjah, Adib’s wife, spoke with Asra Media Center about her husband’s strike, saying that 11 years ago he was a student at Bir Zeit University’s faculty of law, but has been unable to complete his studies due to repeated arrests. He has been imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention since 10 December 2014, his detention repeatedly renewed.

Ayat Mafarjah called for broad support for her husband’s case, calling “on humanity, on every free person who believes in justice, to carry the message of Adib Mafarjah, Fuad Assi and other striing prisoners to international institutions, and pressure the occupation to recognize their minimum rights that have been stolen from them without justification and without charge, through administrative detention, rejected under international law.”

“His health gets worse daily, he vomited blood and could not drink water and his weight has dropped significantly, he always feels sick, and on top of all of that, the occupation imprisons him in a cell full of insects, without bath water, with a foul smell,” she said.

She said that they had organized sit-ins for her husband in front of their home and held seven vigils in Ramallah, but the amount of attention to his case and that of his fellow prisoners does not equal the pain they are currently suffering. “He does not represent himself only, but is demanding the rights of all Palestinians,” Ayat said.

Meanwhile, Sami Janazrah, whose 69-day hunger strike was suspended on 11 May during a new investigation or interrogation following an Israeli Supreme Court hearing, was moved from Soroka hospital to the Negev desert prison. Janazrah continues to consume only liquids and may resume his hunger strike in the coming days if his administrative detention without charge or trial continues.

Conditions at the Negev prison are alarming Palestinian prisoner advocates amid a rising heat wave throughout Palestine. Many Palestinian prisoners are held in tents in the desert prison camp. Riyad al-Ashqar of the Palestinian Prisoners Center for Studies said he feared prisoners would suffer heat stroke or blackouts due to the high temperature. He also noted the danger of reptiles and scorpions in the tents in the high temperatures.

Palestinian journalist jailed for 9 months for alleged Facebook “incitement”

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Palestinian journalist Sami al-Saee, an editor at Al-Fajer TV, was sentenced to 9 months in prison by an Israeli military court on Monday, 16 May, for alleged “incitement” by facebook postings. Al-Saee has been imprisoned since 9 March 2016 when his Tulkarem home was violently raided at 3:00 am while his mobile phone and computer were confiscated.

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Ghaith Ghaith

His detention was repeatedly extended without charge until the imposition of the Facebook “incitement” charges; he is sentenced to 9 months imprisonment and a 12-month suspended sentence for three years. Ghaith Ghaith of Jerusalem was also sentenced today to six months imprisonment over charges of Facebook “incitement.”

Over 150 Palestinians have been arrested and accused of “Facebook incitement” or sent to administrative detention over social media posts

including 22-year-old Palestinian beautician Majd Atwan and poet Dareen Tatour of Nazareth, who is facing imprisonment for posting her poetry on Facebook and Youtube. Palestinian professor Imad Barghouthi, held under administrative detention without charge or trial, is allegedly being imprisoned largely due to allegations over Facebook postings, claim the Israeli military.

Samah Dweik, another Palestinian journalist accused of “incitement” for Facebook postings, was to face a military court also on Monday, 16 May, but the hearing in her case was postponed until at least 1 June. Dweik has been jailed since 10 April since an early-morning raid on her home in the Ras al-Amud neighborhood of Silwan.

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Israeli demolition order threatens home of Issawi family of three prominent Palestinian prisoners

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The Israeli occupation has issued a home demolition order against the Issawi family, including imprisoned family members Shireen, Medhat and Samer Issawi, and their home in Issawiya village northeast of Jerusalem.

The order, which alleges that the home was constructed without an Israeli building permit, states that the home, which has stood since the 1970s, will be demolished. Leyla Issawi, 65, the mother of Shireen, Medhat, Samer and their siblings, said that this comes as an attack against her imprisoned children and the will and steadfastness of their family.

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Construction permits are routinely denied to Jerusalemite Palestinians and their homes targeted for demolition. Fewer than 4,500 construction permits have been issued for Palestinians since 1967; over 48,000 Palestinian homes and buildings have been demolished by the Israeli occupation army in that time period.

Shireen and Medhat Issawi are serving 4 and 8 year sentences, respectively, for their work in helping families to support and gain representation for their imprisoned loved ones; Samer Issawi‘s original 26-year sentence was reimposed after his 2014 re-arrest. He had previously been freed after a lengthy hunger strike.

20 May, Ottawa: Screening of documentary on Dr. Hassan Diab

What: Sneak preview of short documentary on Dr. Hassan Diab
Date: Friday May 20, 2016
Time: 7:00 pm (Doors open at 6.45 pm)
Place: First Unitarian Congregation of Ottawa, 30 Cleary Avenue (off Richmond Road, one traffic light East of Woodroffe Avenue)

Getting there: Take Bus #2 – Map

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Please come out, watch the short documentary, and hear the latest updates from Hassan’s lawyer,  Don Bayne. There will be plenty of time for Q&A.

  • Guest Speaker: Don Bayne (Hassan’s lawyer)

  • Hear Baraa Arar present some of her own powerful poems.

  • Hassan’s wife, Rania, and their two children will be happy to meet you!

There will be refreshments and plenty of yummy finger foods.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

“We now have the classic recipe for the wrongful conviction of a Canadian citizen.” (Statement by Hassan’s lawyer, Don Bayne, on Hassan’s extradition)

Hassan Diab is the Carleton University professor who was extradited to France on November 14, 2014, in connection with the 1980 Rue Copernic bombing. Hassan has been in prison near Paris for over 17 months.

As many of you know, the Canadian extradition judge described the evidence that the French authorities submitted as “very problematic” and “suspect”.

In an unprecedented move, the Canadian judge stated that “the prospects of conviction in the context of a fair trial seem unlikely”.

However the judge said that he felt obliged under Canada’s extradition law to commit Hassan to extradition.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Some links of interest:

Hassan Diab Support Committee
Email: diabsupport@gmail.com
Web: http://www.justiceforhassandiab.org

26 May, London: Protest at G4S AGM

Thursday, 26 May
12:30 pm
Holiday Inn London Sutton
Gibson Road
London
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1592700487707666/

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Join the Stop G4S campaign at the G4S AGM to protest the company’s role in human rights abuses in the UK and across the world.

Join us to Stop G4S and demand that the government stops giving the company control over our public services.

Bring banners, flags and drums and bring yourself and your friends.

–BACKGROUND–

– G4S is facing mounting pressure over abuses in child detention centres it runs for the UK government
– G4S operates 3 immigration detention centres and provides health services to Yarl’s Wood detention centre. Numerous complaints have been made about the health services G4S provides.
– G4S is under investigation for fraud in the electronic tagging systems G4S houses asylum seekers in unsanitary slum conditions and stigmatises residents by marking the doors with red paint.
– G4S helps Israel run prisons where Palestinian political prisoners, including children, are illegally held, often without trial and subject to torture. It also provides equipment and services to Israeli checkpoints, police training centres and military bases
– G4S has been accused ofabuses in detention centres and prisons it runs in the US, South Africa and the Manus Island Detention Center in Papua New Guinea
– G4S has a track record of inadequate screening and training processes for their staff. The same restraints that killed Gareth Myatt and Jimmy Mubenga are still being used in secure training centres run by G4S.

UNICEF, UNHCR and the University of Helsinki are some of the latest organisations to cut their ties with G4S following campaigns over the role of G4S in human rights abuses.

G4S has reacted to growing anger by saying it wants to sell off its Israeli subsidiary and childrens’ services in the UK and its youth prisons in the US.

But we know that G4S has a track record of saying one thing and then doing another and we know that even if these sales go ahead, G4S will remain involved in some of the world’s worst human rights abuses.

31 May, Toulouse: Public Meeting – Support the 4 accused BDS activists

Tuesday, 31 May
8:30 pm
Salle Osète
6 rue du Lieutenant-Colonel Pélissier, 31000 Toulouse, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/970177053089314/

Public meeting to support the 4 accused activists being prosecuted for organizing for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel in support of Palestinian rights. Stand against French repression of the BDS Campaign.

Sign the petition to drop the charges against Bernard, Jean-Pierre, Loic and Yamann: https://www.change.org/p/madame-la-ministre-de-la-justice-christiane-taubira-bernard-jean-pierre-lo%C3%AFc-et-yamann-doivent-%C3%AAtre-relax%C3%A9es

Speakers:

Mohammed Khatib, Palestinian activist and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network Europe coordinator

Eric Hazin, writer, editor and founder of La Fabrique editions.

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16 May, NYC: #PeoplesMonday for Nadim Siam Nuwara

Monday, 16 May
7 pm
39th St and Broadway, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1728822340698555/

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#SolidarityWithPalestine #EndTheOccupation

On 15 May 2014, an Israeli Border Police officer took aim at Nadim Nuwara and pulled the trigger of his M16 rifle.

The live bullet struck Nuwara, 17, in the chest and exited through his back, killing him at the scene. CCTV cameras captured the shooting, allowing for detailed forensic video, sound and spatial analysis to be used to identify Nuwara’s killer. Despite seemingly clear evidence, systemic impunity for Israeli military violence continues to be an obstacle to justice for Palestinian families living under prolonged military occupation like the Nuwaras.

Organized by NYC Shut it Down, part of the Black Lives Matter Movement

Palestinian Human Rights Defender Abdullah Abu Rahma arrested and detained

The following alert is republished from the International Solidarity Movement. Samidoun joins in the call for the immediate release of Palestinian human rights defender Abdullah Abu Rahma.

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On Friday the 13th of May 2016, the internationally recognized human rights defender and coordinator of the Bil’in popular committee against the wall and settlements, Abdullah Abu Rahma, was arrested during the Alwada Cycling Marathon, which took place in the West Bank Friday. Abdullah Abu Rahma is currently still being held under detention by the Israeli military and his case will be brought to the military court in Ofer Military Base tomorrow.

Abu Rahma, who is from the West Bank village Bil’in, was arrested, after the Alwada Cycling Marathon had reached Bil’in. After reaching Bil’in the attending cyclists where met by approximately 150 heavily armed soldiers, who immediately started showering the cyclists with tear gas and blocked the road, where their route was going. Doing this attack of the peaceful demonstrating cyclists, Abu Rahma was arrest along with an international activist from Israel. The Israeli activist was released shortly after her arrest.

The Alwada Cycling Marathon’s intention was to demonstrate against the illegal Israeli occupation and the apartheid system, that Israel is enforcing on the Palestinians through a healthy and peaceful cycling route from Ramallah to Bil’in. By Israeli Forces attacking the peaceful demonstration and arresting Abu Rahma, they once again show the world, that they do not accept the right to protest peacefully and that they do not apply to the international law, that does not allow Israeli Forces to be on Palestinian controlled areas, which the area of Bil’in is.

Abu Rahma is an important activist for the village of Bil’in and a symbol of peaceful resistance all over the West Bank. For now, he is left waiting for his next sentence, after he has already been imprisoned for his non violent resistance multiple times, and has in the past been charged with both “incitement” and “organizing and participating in an illegal demonstration”. Till now, there has not been declared a charge against him in the current case, but the military court will determine his fate , after having hold him in detention for 4 days, even though he did not commit any crime what so ever.

Please spread this message as wide as possible and put pressure on the Israeli Justice system for his release through media attention or presence in the military court.

To hear more about the case, and get further information and updates, please contact:

ISM Media contact:

+972 (0) 597 406 401

For more information about fridays Alwada Cycling Marathon:

https://www.facebook.com/haytham.alkhateeb/posts/10208232017891106?pnref=story

https://www.facebook.com/haytham.alkhateeb/videos/vb.1022320161/10208230395770554/?type=2&theater

For more information on Abdullah Abu Rahma:

Amnesty USA:

https://www.amnestyusa.org/sites/default/files/uaa32014_1.pdf

Human Rights Watch:

https://www.hrw.org/news/2010/09/08/israel-activist-convicted-after-unfair-trial

International Solidarity Movement:

http://palsolidarity.org/2015/03/a-decade-of-civil-disobedience-in-my-west-bank-village/

http://palsolidarity.org/2010/02/letter-from-prison-abdallah-abu-rahmah/

Sami Janazrah suspends hunger strike, Majdi Yassin ends strike

janazrahhOn Wednesday, 11 May, Sami Janazrah, Palestinian prisoner held in Israeli administrative detention without charge or trial, announced that he was suspending his hunger strike for seven days subject to the outcome of the investigation for one week being engaged in by the military prosecutor following Tuesday’s Israeli supreme court hearing.

Janazrah said, through the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, that during that time he will consume only liquids. He stated that if his administrative detention is resumed after the week, he will return to his hunger strike, which he conducted for 69 days.

Late Tuesday, 10 May, Majdi Yassin, 33, a Palestinian and Swedish citizen who has been on hunger strike since his arrest at the border crossing with Jordan on 26 April while returning to Sweden, also announced that he is ending his hunger strike; he is being transferred to a prison and his interrogation ended. He will be brought before a military court next Tuesday.

Several other Palestinian prisoners, including Fouad Assi, Adib Mafarjeh,  Muhannad Al-Azzeh, and Mohammed Qawasmeh, remain on hunger strike in protest of their imprisonment without charge or trial, isolation, or medical neglect. Mansour Moqtada, a seriously ill Palestinian prisoner permanently held in Ramle prison clinic, is continuing his liquid-only fast; the Palestinian Prisoners’ Commission is pursuing a demand for his early release on medical grounds. Moqtada is serving a life sentence; he was gravely injured by Israeli occupation forces in 2002 when he was arrested.

Barghouthi ordered to two months in administrative detention by Ofer military court

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Palestinian astrophysicist Imad Barghouthi was ordered to two months in administrative detention without charge or trial by the Israeli Ofer military court on Wednesday, 11 May, reported the Palestinian Prisoners Society. Barghouthi, whose case has drawn the support of prominent scientists and academics around the world, was originally ordered to three months in administrative detention by military order.

While Israeli administrative detention is without charge or trial and on the basis of secret evidence, Jawad Boulos, Barghouthi’s lawyer, said that his detention was over Facebook postings. Barghouthi, 54, a professor at Al-Quds University and a former employee of NASA in the United States, was detained in late April by Israeli occupation forces at a checkpoint in Nabi Saleh.

Boulos stated that they would be appealing Barghouthi’s detention. He is among 750 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention; 150 Palestinians have been arrested over social media postings. On Monday, 9 May, Majd Atwan, a 22-year-old Palestinian woman, was sentenced to 45 days imprisonment for Facebook postings. Palestinian journalist Sami al-Saee, reporter with Al-Fajr TV from Tulkarem, was accused on Wednesday, 11 May, of “incitement” for posting on Facebook; he will have a military court hearing on 15 May, in which the military prosecution has demanded a nine-month sentence. Al-Saee has been imprisoned since 9 March without charge, among 19 Palestinian journalists in Israeli prisons.