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25 March, NYC: Protest to free hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners

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Friday, 25 March
4:00 pm
G4S Offices – 19 W. 44th St, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/513444195493288/

Two Palestinians held by Israel under administrative detention, without charge or trial, are on hunger strikes: Dawoud Habboub, and Sami Janazrah.

Dawoud Habboub, from al-Amari refugee camp in Ramallah, launched his hunger strike on March 1 to protest his imprisonment under administrative detention.

Sami Janazrah, 43, from al-Fawwar refugee camp in al-Khalil, has been on hunger strike since early March in protest of administrative detention. His own imprisonment without charge or trial was extended by an Israeli military court for four additional months on Sunday, March 13. He has been held in administrative detention since November 15, 2015.

G4S, the world’s largest firm company and second-biggest private employer, equips Israeli prisons and detention centers where 670 administrative detainees and 6,330 other Palestinian political prisoners are held and tortured, as well as the occupation forces and infrastructure that routinely massacre Palestinians while holding millions under military rule.

Join us to answer a united appeal by Palestinian prisoners (https://samidoun.net/2015/08/stop-g4s-a-call-to-the-global-boycott-movement-from-palestinian-political-prisoners) for escalated boycotts of G4S.

Demand G4S immediately end its contracts with Israeli prisons and detention centers, occupation and security forces and checkpoints, and that Israel release Habboub and Janazrah, other administrative detainees and all 7,000 Palestinian political prisoners.

Support the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian Resistance, and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

Palestinian journalists continue to be imprisoned by Israeli military occupation

The Israeli escalation against Palestinian journalists continues, as imprisoned Palestinian journalist Sami al-Sa’ee was transferred from Huwarra detention center near Nablus to Megiddo prison; he is now being charged by the Israeli military occupation with “incitement” via posting on social media about the occupation.

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In addition, the detention of Farouk Alayat and Ibrahim Jaradat, both journalists with Palestine Today TV, which was raided and closed by order of the Israeli military occupation on 11 March, was extended until Sunday, 27 March.

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1 May, Vancouver/Surrey: Let’s Get Free: Workers and Oppressed Peoples Struggling for Liberation

Celebrate International Workers Day in solidarity with peoples struggles from around the world!

Join Red Sparks Union, the East Indian Defense Committee, and the International League of Peoples Struggles for an afternoon of speakers, Punjabi theatre, food, and great company!

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Sunday May 1
3:00 pm
126-7536 130 St Surrey

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/233187730367346/

Program:
* Harbhajan Cheema from the East Indian Defence Committee on Peoples Struggles in India
* Khaled Barakat (via Skype) from the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat on Palestinian Prisoners and the Struggle for Liberation
* Jeff Shantz from the Critical Criminology Working Group on the targeting and criminalization of youth in Surrey
* Martha Roberts from Campaign in Solidarity with Negros Island on Peoples Movements in the Philippines
* Featuring a Theatre Performace by Parminder Swaich (in Punjabi)

Followed by Dinner

Transportation:
-Rides available from Surrey Central Skytrain (details TBA)
-Free parking
-Venue is on Route 323 get off on 76th Ave at 130 St.

24 March, Aix-en-Provence: Film Screening – Palestine: La Case Prison

Thursday, 24 March
7:00 pm
35 impasse Granet
13100 Aix-en-Provence

The third event for Israeli Apartheid Week 2016 will take place on Thursday 24 March with a film screening and discussion, on “Palestine: La Case Prison” (58 Minutes, 2015)

Trailer https://vimeo.com/122109481

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26 March, Paris: Meeting with Salah Hamouri

Saturday, 26 March
7:00 pm
Syndicat Unifié du Bâtiment RP – CNT-F
33 rue des vignoles, 75020 Paris, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1705670039678633/

The General Union of Palestine Students in France invites you to a meeting and lecture with Salah Hamouri, on the occasion of Israeli Apartheid Week and the 40th anniversary of Land Day.

The event will also include a screening of the film, “Palestine: la case prison.”

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3 Palestinians on hunger strike for freedom, against administrative detention

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Palestinians held under Israeli administrative detention without charge or trial are continuing hunger strikes to demand their freedom.

Yazan Hanani, of Beit Furik south of Nablus is on hunger strike for 35 days; he has been held under administrative detention since 28 October 2015. He is demanding his freedom. Hanani, 24, has spent three years in Israeli prisons and was not able to complete his university studies due to ongoing arrests.

The Women’s Committee of Beit Furik is holding an open solidarity tent in support of Hanani’s strike.

Hanani is not the only Palestinian prisoner on hunger strike; Sami Janazreh, 43, from Al-Khalil, has been on hunger strike for 20 days. He has been held without charge or trial under administrative detention since 15 November 2015.

Reports also indicate that Imad Batran, 41, said in a letter to Al-Muhja Jerusalem Foundation on Thursday, 17 March that he hwas been on hunger strike since 25 February in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial since 27 April 2015. Batran also stated that he is boycotting the occupation courts and rejects participation in the administrative detention hearing or transport via Bosta to the court, stating that “they are a sham that implement the orders of the Zionist intelligence apparatus to give a veneer of legality to its decisions.”

Batran has been held in Israeli prisons seven previous times and has served over seven years in Israeli jails. He previously waged a hunger strike for 105 days against his administrative detention without charge or trial in 2013.

On Mothers’ Day: Freedom for Palestinian mothers and their children

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Palestinians and Arabs marked Mothers’ Day on 21 March, at a time when 13 Palestinian mothers are held behind Israeli bars and thousands of Palestinian mothers’ children are imprisoned. Palestinian mothers are at the forefront of the movement to free Palestinian prisoners, leading protests, mobilizations and demonstrations to demand the freedom their sons and daughters and of the Palestinian people.

Imprisoned Palestinian mothers are among over 60 Palestinian women imprisoned by Israel, and 7000 Palestinian political prisoners in total. They suffer alongside their fellow prisoners the injustices of Israeli occupation: torture, abusive interrogation, sleep deprivation, denial of proper medical care, administrative detention without charge or trial, military charges that rubber-stamp their imprisonment. Further, Palestinian mothers, like their fellow prisoners, are frequently denied family visits, including visits with their own children; in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, they are held in HaSharon or Damon prisons, inside occupied Palestine ’48, where their families are often denied special security permits required to visit prisoners. Palestinian mothers are also targeted with their children for “house arrest,” including one case in which a mother has been forced into house arrest herself, preventing her from her work as a schoolteacher, despite there being no allegations against her.

Several Palestinian mothers are suffering severe health situations due to Israeli occupation violence and medical neglect inside the prisons. Addameer highlighted the case of Israa Jaabes of Jabal Mukaber, Jerusalem. Israa’s car burst on fire internally near al-Zayem military checkpoint on 10 October 2015, in which she was severely burned and injured. Addameer notes that “Israeli Occupation Forces accused Israa of attempting to engage in an attack by exploding her car, however, the car did not explode and Israa was the only person injured in the fire inside the car. Israa’s child has been unable to see his mother since her arrest.” She was transfered to Ein Karem Hospital, then Al-Ramle Prison Clinic and then HaSharon Prison, all without completing her necessary medical treatment. She continues to require a wheelchair because of her injuries, and is cared for by fellow prisoners rather than by medical staff.

Abla al-‘Adam, 45, mother of nine, is suffering from severe pain and risk of infection in HaSharon prison. She is supposed to be taken to Hadassah Ein Karem hospital for medical examination, which has been postponed repeatedly. Al-‘Adam was shot in the head by Israeli occupation soldiers in Al-Khalil on 20 December 2015. She was accused of attempting to stab Israeli soldiers; there were no injuries to Israelis. She was held in the hospital before a speedy transfer to the prison, despite the fact that she cannot see from her right eye and suffers constant pain, reported the Palestinian Prisoners Society.

In addition, Palestinian writer Reham Alhelsi reported that seven Palestinian mothers have been killed by Israeli occupation forces since 1 October 2015: Noor Hassan, Huda Darwish, Tharwat Shaarawy, Mahdia Hammad, Zainab Rashayda, Fadwa Abu Teir and Amani al-Sabatin, while 200 Palestinian mothers have lost their sons and daughters killed by occupation forces. Fifteen Palestinian mothers are still awaiting the release of the bodies of their children, which have been held captive by the Israeli occupation for months.

The Palestinian Prisoners Society noted that the following thirteen mothers are imprisoned by Israel:

1 Tamara Shreiteh, imprisoned since 15 November 2015
2. Haifa Abu Remaileh, imprisoned since 14 December 2015
3. Abla al-‘Adam, imprisoned since 20 December 2015.
4. Amira Hmeidat, imprisoned since 16 November, 2015.
5. Yasmeen Shaaban, imprisoned since 3 November 2014.
6. Alia al-Abbassi, imprisoned since 15 April 2015
7. Israa Jaabis, imprisoned since 10 October 2015.
8. Samia Mashahra, imprisoned since 9 November 2015.
9. Khalida Jarrar, member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, imprisoned since 2 April 2015.
10. Helwa Hamamreh, imprisoned since 8 November 2015.
11. Amina Salah, imprisoned since 5 January 2016.
12. Nisreen Hasan, imprisoned since 18 October 2015.
13. Sana al-Hafi, imprisoned since 25 May 2015.

Photo: Joe Catron

Mass march in DC protests AIPAC, demands justice for Palestine

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Large crowds of protesters marched from the White House to the annual convention of AIPAC (America-Israel Public Affairs Committee), denouncing U.S. support for the Israeli state and the racism and colonialism of the Zionist movement, on Sunday, 20 March.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network activists participated in the protest, organized by Al-Awda, the Palestine Right to Return Coalition and the ANSWER Coalition. Buses joined the protest from New York, Cleveland, Chicago and elsewhere. Protesters chanted and carried signs and banners demanding justice for Palestine, the implementation of the Palestinian right of return, and an end to Zionist colonialism and AIPAC’s war-mongering.

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Outside the White House, protesters gathered before marching to the AIPAC convention, where US presidential candidates Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz and John Kasich spoke, each escalating the rhetoric of Zionist racism against the Palestinian people and the centrality of U.S. support and alliance for the Israeli state and its colonization of Palestine. Protesters denounced the statements and participation of the presidential candidates in the AIPAC event, chanting “Shut it down!” as activists sat in front of the doors to AIPAC, blocking entrance and exit to the hall.

Joe Catron of Samidoun, a US-based journalist who spent years in Gaza, living through the Israeli assaults of 2012 and 2014, spoke at the rally. He noted the impact of mass demonstrations in the US in encouraging people in Gaza under siege and under fire, confirming that people are resisting the policies and practices of the US government. In particular, he noted that the Ferguson uprising – coming as it did during the Israeli attack on Gaza – was particularly significant to Palestinians under attack, demonstrating the real power of opposition in the United States and the organized resistance of oppressed communities inside the US.

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Speakers, including Abbas Hamideh of Al-Awda, Brian Becker of ANSWER, kickboxing champion Rami Ibrahim, and Iyad Burnat of the Bil’in Popular Commitee Against the Wall, frequently noted the struggle of Palestinian prisoners for freedom, especially imprisoned Palestinian children and youth and the approximately 700 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention.

The annual AIPAC convention is one of the biggest events of the Zionist movement, fully showcasing its partnership with U.S. imperialism not only in the colonization of Palestine but in threats to the entire region.

Photos by Joe Catron

Maastricht event highlights struggle of Palestinian prisoners for liberation

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network’s international coordinator, Charlotte Kates, presented on the struggle of Palestinian prisoners in the context of the Palestinian national liberation struggle on 16 March at Maastricht University in the Netherlands.

At the event, organized by Students for Justice in Palestine Maastricht, Kates reviewed the current situation of Palestinian political prisoners, as well as the structural framework that sees mass numbers of the Palestinian people incarcerated in Zionist jails.

The event covered the process of violent arrest raids, interrogation and torture, administrative detention and military courts, and ongoing imprisonment, as well as the resistance of Palestinian prisoners through history and the leadership of prisoners in the national liberation struggle.

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Discussion highlighted the fact that political imprisonment is an issue for all Palestinians, including Palestinians in exile, noting the cases of Rasmea Odeh – a former prisoner now persecuted in the United States; the Holy Land Five; and Omar Nayef Zayed, killed in the Palestinian Embassy in Sofia while seeking refuge from extradition to Israel.

In addition, the event highlighted the repression of Palestinian and solidarity political activity not only inside Palestine, where political parties and movements are labeled “illegal organizations” by military order, but outside Palestine, where those same organizations are often labeled on US, Canadian and EU “terrorist lists,” and the grassroots movement harassed and attacked by repressive legislation. For example, the examples of anti-BDS legislation in the United States and the prosecution of BDS activists in France were highlighted alongside such cases as the imprisonment of Lebanese Arab communist struggler for Palestine, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah.

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The cases of specific Palestinian prisoners were discussed, including Mohammed Abu Sakha, the 24-year-old circus trainer held in administrative detention without charge or trial; Shireen Issawi, the Palestinian lawyer and activist imprisoned for helping Palestinian prisoners; Ahmad Sa’adat, Palestinian political leader; and Dima al-Wawi, the 12-year-old girl who is the youngest Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails.

One attendee, himself a former Palestinian prisoner, discussed the long-term impacts of torture and violent interrogation inside Israeli prisons, on both youth and adult prisoners. He also discussed the mass experience of imprisonment for Palestinians under occupation – 40% of Palestinian men in the West Bank have been detained by Israeli occupation forces – and its use to deny visas and travel to former prisoners throughout their lives, noting the case of Bassam Tamimi’s recently revoked US visitor visa. Questions and answers highlighted the use of administrative detention without charge or trial, the impact of political imprisonment and repression on Palestinian citizens of Israel, and the threat of force-feeding against Palestinian prisoners.

Students for Justice in Palestine Maastricht is planning future events in solidarity with Palestine, including actions and meetings focusing on the struggle of Palestinian political prisoners.

16 April, Brussels: Juggling to #FreeAbuSakha

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Saturday, 16 April

2:00 pm
Place de l’Albertine
Brussels
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/201369956898344/

Juggling to support Mohammed Abu Sakha, Saturday, 16 April at Place de l’Albertine in Brussels, near Central Station. Dress up as a clown and show your solidarity with Abu Sakha and other Palestinian political prisoners on the occasion of Palestinian Prisoners’ Day.

Why do we juggle for Abu Sakha?

Mohammed Abu Sakha, 24, is a Palestinian circus trainer with the Palestinian Circus School; he teaches about 150 students weekly, including 30 students with disabilities. On 14 December, he was arrested by Israeli occupation forces and ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial on the basis of “secret evidence” by the occupier.

Every person has the right to a speedy and fair trial, according to the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights. Israel violates these treaties, accusing the prisoner without even allowing his lawyer to see the evidence.

What do we do?

As Friends of the Palestinian Circus School, we want to show our solidarity with Abu Sakha and over 600 other Palestinian prisoners in administrative detention. We will dress as clowns and gather in the square to juggle.

You never juggled?

No problem, we expect a small training so that all can participate. Besides our performance, you can sign the Amnesty International letter and have your picture taken with the “Free Abu Sakha” sign.