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3-8 April, Italy: Day of the Land commemorations with former prisoner Ayman Hajj Yahya

On the occasion of the 40th commemoration of Land Day, Fronte Palestina in Italy will be hosting a series of events, focusing on the Intifada developing since October 2015, the Palestinian struggle for freedom against Zionist colonialism, and the struggle for the liberation of Palestinian prisoners.

The events will feature Ayman Hajj Yahya, from occupied Palestine ’48, vice-secretary of the Kefah movement and a former prisoner in Israeli jails.

The events are scheduled as follows:

Turin, Italy
Sunday, 3 April
10:30 am
Corso Vigevano 33
https://www.facebook.com/events/1701552333434043/

Milan, Italy
Monday, 4 April
9:00 pm
Calusca City Light
Via Concheta 18, Milan
https://www.facebook.com/events/1104327106256041/

Padua, Italy
Tuesday, 5 April
6:00 pm
Mensa Marzolo Occupata
Via Marzolo 4, Padua

Parma, Italy
Wednesday, 6 April
9:00 pm
Infopoint Barricate
Palazzo Stimmatini P.le San Giacomo 7

Florence, Italy
Thursday, 7 April
10:00 pm
Cantiere Sociale Camilo Cienfuegos
Via Chiella 4, Campi Bisenzio

Rome, Italy
Friday, 8 April
7:00 pm
Villaggio Globale – Lungotevere Testaccio, Roma

Parma, Italy – Event and Location TBA.

Flyers below:

Photos and Video: New Yorkers protest against G4S, for release of Palestinian prisoners

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New York activists protested on Friday, 1 April outside the NYC office of G4S, the British-Danish security corporation that provides security systems, control rooms and equipments to Israeli prisons, checkpoints, police training centers and the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing with Gaza. Because of its involvement in the imprisonment of oppression, Israeli apartheid and even the siege of Gaza, a Palestinian and international boycott campaign has highlighted G4S’ role, demanding that G4S get out of Palestine and that institutions and businesses end their contracts with the corporation.

G4S is also involved with the detention of migrants, including children, in the United States; deportations and juvenile detention in the UK; and repressive actions in Canada, South Africa, Australia and elsewhere. After international pressure, including losses of contracts in Jordan and Colombia, G4S announced that it will sell off its Israeli subsidiary and get out of the business in Palestine within one to two years. However, Palestinian BDS organizers have emphasized that it is critical to keep up the pressure, both to make G4S stick to its commitment and because Palestinians are currently suffering due to G4S’ security systems.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network organizes weekly protests outside the offices of G4S in New York, to support Palestinian prisoners and demand G4S get out of the business of providing security equipment to imprison Palestinians.

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The protest also highlighted the struggles of hunger striking Palestinian prisoners, including Sami Janazrah, Imad Batran, Abdel-Rahim Sawayfeh, Abdul-Ghani Safadi, all on administrative detention without charge or trial and demanding their release; Mohammed Daoud, a re-arrested former prisoner who has had five years imprisonment reimposed without charge or trial; and Nahar Saadi, Abdullah Mughrabi and Essam Zeineddine, all demanding their release from solitary confinement and return to general population.

Photos and footage by Joe Catron

17 April, NYC: Speak out for prison divestment on Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

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Join CUNY Prison Divest, NYC Students for Justice in Palestine and Samidoun: Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network as we launch the second Prison Divestment National Week of Action and mark the 42nd Palestinian Prisoners’ Day.

Speak out against massive public investments and subsidies for private prison companies that profit from social repression and mass incarceration from New York to Palestine.

Demand boycotts and divestments against G4S and other prison contractors, and fight the tax breaks that help some of these companies, like the Corrections Corporation of America and the GEO Group, buy elections and own politicians through tax-free Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) status for their private prisons.

Facebook event
Sunday, April 17 at 1:30 PM
Cadman Plaza Park (Tillary Street between Cadman Plaza East and Cadman Plaza West)
Brooklyn, New York 11201

#PalestinianPrisonersDay #PrisonDivest #RevokeREIT #StopG4S

17 April, Toulouse: Palestine Afternoon for Refugees and Prisoners

Sunday, 17 April
1:00 pm
La Chapelle
36 rue Danielle Casanova
Toulouse, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/568947733283747/

As part of the 10 Days of Popular Self-Defense (15-24 April), organized by the CREA in Toulouse, anti-imperialist collective Coup Pour Coup 31 is organizing a Palestine Afternoon at 1 pm at La Chapelle (36 rue Danielle Casanova).

On the International Day for Palestinian Prisoners, we will connect the struggles of Palestinian prisoners and Palestinian refugees. The program will include a graffiti workshop, workshop of writing letters to prisoners, an exhibition and a concert. From 4 pm, we will screen the film, “Ca suffit, on rentre” which highlights the situation of the Palestinian refugees in Ain el-Helweh camp. All proceeds from this event will be donated to the Palestinian Youth Center in Ain el-Helweh, as part of the campaign of solidarity with Palestinian refugees.

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Dans le cadre des 10 jours d’autodéfense populaire du 15 au 24 avril 2016 initié par la CREA (Campagne de Réquisition, d’Entraide et d’Autogestion), le collectif anti-impérialiste Coup Pour Coup 31 organise un après midi Palestine le 17 avril à partir de 13h, à La Chapelle (36 rue Danielle Casanova – Métro Compans Cafarelli). A l’occasion de la Journée Internationale des Prisonniers Palestiniens, nous ferons le lien entre la situation des prisonniers et celle des réfugiés palestiniens.

Au programme : Cantine populaire, atelier graff, atelier écriture aux prisonniers, expo, concert. A partir de 16h, nous diffuserons le film “Ca suffit, on rentre” qui revient sur la situations des réfugiés palestiniens dans le camps d’Ain El-Héloué au Liban. La diffuserons sera suivie d’une discussion.

Tous les bénéfices de cet après midi seront reversé à la collecte pour le Palestinian Youth Center d’Ain El Héloué, dans le cadre de notre campagne de solidarité avec les réfugiés palestiniens.

 

8 April, NYC: Protest to demand justice and accountability for Omar Nayef Zayed

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Friday, 8 April
4:00 pm
Bulgarian Consulate
121 E. 62nd St
New York, NY
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/946540888769306/

Join us to remember the life of Omar Nayef Zayed, a Palestinian fighter, former hunger striker and liberated political prisoner found dead inside the Palestinian embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria on 26 February, and to call for justice and accountability in his death.

At 5:00 pm, we will march west on East 62nd Street, north on Park Avenue and east on East 65th Street before rallying outside the Permanent Observer Mission of the State of Palestine to the United Nations at 115 East 65th Street.

The Committee to Commemorate Omar Nayef Zayed issued a call for demonstrations, events and protests inside and outside Palestine to mark the 40th day of his death inside the Palestinian Embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria:

“In order to achieve justice for Omar Nayef Zayed, to build international pressure to deeply investigate the crime against him, in order to hold accountable those responsible and those who were accomplices in his death, the Committee to Commemorate the Martyr Omar Nayef Zayed calls upon the Palestinian people in Palestine and in exile and diaspora, and the solidarity movement and friends of the Palestinian people and Palestinian cause everywhere in the world, to organize protests, demonstrations and actions to mark the 40th day after the death of the martyr Omar Nayef Zayed – on Friday and Saturday, 8 and 9 April, 2016.

“The Committee to Commemorate Omar Nayef Zayed emphasizes that action and international attention is necessary to struggle for justice and accountability in this critical case, and to ensure that the cause for which Omar struggled – freedom for the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, and justice for Palestine – will continue to live and grow.”

 

Protesters in Sofia seek results, action in the case of Omar Nayef Zayed

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The Palestinian community in Sofia, Bulgaria protested outside Sofia’s central courthouse on Friday, 1 April, calling for urgency in following up the case of Omar Nayef Zayed, the former Palestinian prisoner found dead in the Palestinian embassy on 26 February.

Nayef Zayed, 52, had taken refuge inside the embassy from an Israeli extradition demand being carried out by Bulgarian police in December 2015. Nayef Zayed had lived in Bulgaria for 22 years after escaping Israeli imprisonment in 1990 and fleeing Palestine. He was married, with three children, and an active member of the Palestinian community; he was a permanent resident of Bulgaria, while his wife and children are Bulgarian citizens.

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Nayef Zayed’s wife, Rania, and three children participated in the demonstration, as did Mohammed Khatib of Samidoun Europe, urging that the medical report and autopsy report on the death of Nayef Zayed be quickly released. To date, no official report has been released, nor have any conclusions from the criminal investigation been reported.

Palestinian political forces have denounced his killing, and highlighted the Israeli intelligence agency’s historic and present role in assassinations of Palestinian leaders and activists inside and outside Palestine, especially those who have been declared “wanted” by Israel. He was found in the garden of the embassy after being pushed or falling from a height; there were no security cameras or security guards in the building.

They have also emphasized the reaction of the embassy and of the Palestinian Authority to Nayef Zayed’s case, including repeated attempts to pressure him to leave the embassy, denying him visits, and threatening to prevent Rania from seeing him, during his time in the embassy.

Next weekend, 8-9 April, is the date of a call to action for international protests on Nayef Zayed’s case; events are scheduled in New York, Berlin and elsewhere.

Photos: Mohammed Khatib

Report: 647 Palestinians arrested in March; 750 now held in administrative detention

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Four prisoners’ advocacy organizations in Palestine (Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, Prisoners Affairs Commission and Al Mezan Center for Human Rights – Gaza) issued a report on Israeli occupation arrests and imprisonment of Palestinians in March 2016. The following is a translation of their report:

647 Palestinians were arrested in the West Bank and Gaza in March 2016, including 128 children and 16 women and girls. This raises the number of arrests since the beginning of the popular uprising in October 2015 to more than 4,767 Palestinians arrested.

The highest number of arrests was in Jerusalem area, with 149 arrests, followed by 110 in Al-Khalil, 88 in Jenin, 87 in Ramallah, 63 in Bethlehem, 62 in Nablus, 30 in Qalqilya, 24 in Tulkarem, 10 in Jericho, 10 in Tubas, 9 in Salfit and 5 from the Gaza Strip.

192 administrative detention orders were issued in March; 95 of those were new orders and 97 of them were renewals of previous administrative detention orders. There are now over 750 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention in Israeli jails.

There are 68 women and girls imprisoned in Israeli jails, 18 of whom are girls under 18, including the youngest prisoner, Dima Wawi, who is 12 years old. There are over 400 child prisoners in Israeli jails, and 700 ill prisoners.

Repression of Journalists

Over seven Palestinian journalists have been arrested since the beginning of 2016; the offices of satellite channel Palestine Today and Trans Media company were closed by occupation soldiers at dawn in Ramallah on Friday, 11 March. Their equipment was confiscated and bureau chief Farouk Elayyat and journalist Mohammed Amer and camera operator Shabib Shabib were arrested; Amer and Shabib were released after interrogation. On 13 March, journalist Ibrahim Jaradat, also with Palestine Today, was arrested at a mobile military checkpoint. After 20 days of imprisonment, Elayyat and Jaradat were released on 31 March on bail of 2,000 NIS each. Journalist Musab Kufaisheh, 24, was arrested in March as was Mohammed Zaghloul, radio presenter.

Under pressure from the Occupying Power, the French satellite, Eutelsat, removed Palestinian channel Al-Aqsa TV from its broadcast on charges of “incitement.” Palestinian journalists inside Palestine received threats stating that they are under surveillance and threats to “Israeli security.”

The Israeli occupation in November 2015 closed Radio Al-Khalil and Radio Dreams; these closures by occupation forces against media organizations and the ongoing harassment of Palestinian journalists is a continuation of the occupation policy of repressing Palestinians’ expression of their cause and the crimes of the occupation before the world. The occupation is persecuting Palestinian human rights defenders and journalists in an attempt to empty the media and human rights organizations of experienced voices and silence their work, obscure the reality of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by occupation forces against Palestinian civilians.

Administrative and military actions by the occupation forces against Palestinian journalists and human rights defenders violate international humanitarian law and serve only the purpose of attempting to intimidate Palestinian civilians and pushing them to give up their rinalienable rights. The arrest of journalist violates the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Declaration on Human Rights Defenders. The organizations call on the international community to work and take action to stop these violations.

There are currently 16 Palestinian journalists imprisoned; the longest imprisoned journalist is Mahmoud Issa, serving a life sentence, who was a reporter before his arrest in 1993.

Hunger Strikes in Israeli Prisons

During March a number of prisons engaged in open hunger strikes for various periods against administrative detention without charge or trial, and against solitary confinement, including Yazan Hanani of Beit Furik, Nablus; Daoud Habboub of Ramallah; Mahmoud Al-Fasfous; Alaa Rayyan; and Karam Amer.

Other prisoners are continuing their hunger strikes against administrative detention: Sami Janazrah, Imad Batran, Abdel-Rahim Sawayfeh and Abdul-Ghani Safadi.

Abdullah al-Mughrabi, Nahar al-Saadi, Issam Zeineddine are on hunger strike against solitary confinement, as was Zaid Bseisi. Mohammed Daoud of Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem has launched a hunger strike against his re-imprisonment after his release in the Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange.

Arrest and imprisonment for Facebook posts

The Israeli government has, in recent months, formed a so called “cyber unit” in order to surveil, investigate and prosecute Palestinian social media use, in particular focusing on Facebook. Since October 2015 through mid-March, 148 Palestinians have been arrested due to Facebook posts, with many charged with “incitement;” others have been ordered to administrative detention without charge.

These arrests have focused especially on Jerusalem, and in many cases come in response to written statements of solidarity or support for Palestinian martyrs or prisoners, including publishing their photos. This attempt to suppress Palestinian expression on social media has not only been carried out through arrests and imprisonment, but also official attempts to force Palestinian youth, especially in Jerusalem and Occupied Palestine ’48, to be fired from their jobs over Facebook posts, or forcible transfer them from their homes, especially in Jerusalem.

Donya Musleh, 19, a student at Palestine National University, was arrested on 15 November 2015. Her home in Dheisheh camp was invaded by occupation soldiers and ransacked. She is a student activist, but the military court indictment against her was composed of three items, all of which related to Facebook postings, including comments on photos of wounded and killed Palestinians.

The Israeli indictment in the military courts stated that Musleh published a photo of a Palestinian demonstrator throwing stones with lines of Palestinian poetry about stones; the same indictment said that she published a photo of Moataz Zawahreh, Palestinian youth activist shot dead in Dheisheh while attending a demonstration, again with lines of poetry.

She was also accused of membership in a prohibited organization for posting photos of Palestinian martyrs who were part of the same political party, and on the basis of these postings accused of membership in the organization. The indictment also noted that she received numerous “Likes” on Facebook. The military court held that she “encouraged Palestinians to carry out operations against the security of Israel” by these facebook postings which “disturb public order.”

192 administrative detention orders in March

192 administrative detention orders were issued in March by the Israeli military, including 95 new orders, including orders against two women, six children, two members of the Palestinian Legislative Council and a journalist.

Among the most prominent cases of administrative detention in March were those of Mohammed Amarneh, 17 of Jenin, and Hamza Hammad, 15 of Silwad near Ramallah, ordered imprisoned without charge or trial.

Amarneh was interrogated and denied all accusations, yet administrative detention was used to arbitrarily imprison him. On 16 March 2016 an administrative detention order against him for three months was imposed by the occupation military court, alleging that he is a danger to the security of the area. When inquired as to the specifics by Amarneh’s lawyer, references were made to his Facebook account despite the admission of the prosecution that there was no evidence of any particular Facebook post.

Hammad, 15, was ordered to administrative detention for six months. He was earlier arrested in August 2015 and interrogated for 23 days, during which he was interrogated for lengthy periods and beaten, and was released without indictment. When he was arrested, the soldier arresting him told his mother that he “should be in prison” because his father, Mo’ayyad Hammad is serving a life sentence in Israeli jails, accused of participating in the Palestinian resistance and killing soldiers.

Arrests of Palestinians from Gaza

In March 2016, five Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, including three ill patients seeking treatment, were arrested. One of these was Fadi Al-Sharif, 28, a Palestinian football player with the Al-Hilal Football Club in Gaza City, arrested at Beit Hanoun crossing; he had been issued a permit for treatment at Al-Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem. He was then arrested when attempting to return to Gaza. These arrests came as part of the continuing land and sea blockade on Gaza imposed by the occupation, and its absolute authority over borders and the waters of Gaza, depriving the population of basic human rights. The Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing is used as a trap to arrest Palestinians, especially those who are ill. Palestinians’ need to travel through the crossing is exploited, including being issued a permit to pass and then being detained when arriving at the crossing. In addition, ill people in Gaza are vulnerable to deteriorating health conditions caused by procrastination and delays by occupation forces in requests for permits.

Photo: Tal King (Archive photo)

2 April, Oslo: Behind Bars: Palestinian Children and the Israeli Military

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Saturday, 2 April
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Litteraturhuset
Wergelandsveien 29
Oslo, Norway
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1522450111383495/

What do Palestinian children and their families face in Israel’s military courts? Speakers include lawyer and human rights activist Nery Ramati from the Gaby Lasky law office in Tel Aviv, and lawyer Gerald Horton and social organizer Salwa Duaibis from Military Court Watch in Ramallah.

The conference is free and open to all; the first part of the day will take place in English.

Organized by the Campaign for Palestinian Children in Israeli military prisons
https://www.facebook.com/KampanjenPIM/

16 April, London: Palestine Prisoners Parade

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Saturday, 16 April
12:30 pm
Gower Street (Corner of Torrington Place)
London, UK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/600881743402205/

On the occasion of Prisoners’ Day, we invite you to join us in solidarity with all Palestinians currently languishing in Israeli jails. We will march from Gower street to Trafalgar square along with another march that is being held that day (people against austerity). In keeping with the circus theme that has been used to raise awareness about Abu Sakha, a Palestinian clown currently held in administrative detention, we encourage people to come dressed as colourfully and clowny as you dare! We also encourage as many specific performers as possible (circus artists, musicians, dancers etc). If you have a specific tallent to perform, please get in touch at info@freeabusakha.com or private messaging to www.facebook.com/freeabusakha so we can coordinate the acts.

Since the occupation of 1967, an estimated 800,000 Palestinians, roughly 20% of the population, have been imprisoned by the occupying authorities. They have been systematically denied the right to a fair trial, as well adequate health care, access to education, and the right to family visits. Israeli torture of Palestinian political prisoners has historically been endemic and various forms of physical and psychological torture continues to date. On this year’s Prisoners’ Day, Israel holds approximately 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners, among them 406 children and 60 women, as well as 670 so called administrative detainees, who are held for months and years without charge or trial.

Israel has ramped up arrests since October 2015, following the renewal of large-scale demonstrations across the Occupied Territories. The latest escalation in violence unfolds against the backdrop of unrelenting Israeli land confiscation and settlement construction, accompanied by ongoing violence and intimidation by Israeli soldiers and armed settlers. In an outrage that reverberated across Palestinian society, Israeli settlers in July 2015 brutally burned an entire family in their home, the Dawabshehs, in the West Bank village of Duma. A badly burnt 4 year old son was the only survivor.

Israel’s mass incarceration of Palestinians is an inextricable part of the ongoing violence of occupation. Tearing at the fabric of Palestinian society, recent arrest campaigns seek to quash Palestinian ability to endure in their struggles against the occupation. It is important that on Palestinian Prisoners’ day, we all stand united to call for an end to Israeli violations of Palestinian rights. As Israel acts with ever growing contempt for international law and the will of the international community, action is now needed more than ever. We demand that our Government puts pressure on Israel to refrain from abuses against Palestinians, including sweeping arrest campaigns and violations of prisoners’ rights, and to hold Israeli government accountable for its violations of international law.

Palestinian circus teacher’s appeal against administrative detention rejected by Israeli military court #FreeAbuSakha

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The appeal of Palestinian circus trainer and performer Mohammed Abu Sakha against his administrative detention without charge or trial was rejected by Israeli military courts on Thursday, 31 March, reported Addameer.

Abu Sakha, 24, was arrested by Israeli occupation forces at a checkpoint as he traveled from his home to his workplace at the Palestinian Circus School, where he specializes in teaching children with intellectual disabilities. Abu Sakha has performed with the school and its circus troupe around the world.

He was ordered to administrative detention for six months by military order, confirmed by a military court; he was accused of nothing and faced no trial. People around the world – including international circus artists and performers and Amnesty International – have launched a solidarity campaign demanding his release. His appeal was heard in the military courts on 21 March.

Events and actions in London, New York, Brussels, Heidelberg, Madrid, Switzerland, Toulose and more have demanded Abu Sakha’s release, often including theatrical elements of performance and circus. Amnesty International’s campaign has included outdoor protests as well as online actions that have been supported by tens of thousands. Upcoming events focused on Abu Sakha are planned in Brussels, London and elsewhere.

Abu Sakha is among approximately 700 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention and among approximately 7000 total Palestinian political prisoners.

Photo: Amnesty UK

Take action – join the campaign:

1. Sign the online petition calling for Abu Sakha’s release:https://secure.avaaz.org/en/petition/Israeli_Defense_Forces_Free_circus_trainer_and_artist_Mohammed_Faisal_Abu_Sakha/

2. Take the action called for by Amnesty International:

3. Organize a protest performance – or a simple leaflet distribution – in your community. Hand out the “Free Abu Sakha” leaflets  and help support freedom for an imprisoned Palestinian artist. Share it with Samidoun and the Free Abu Sakha campaign facebook.