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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.

Message of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah to unified solidarity meeting on 19 March

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The following letter and statement from Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, the Lebanese Communist struggler imprisoned in French jails for the past 32 years, was delivered to the Unified Meeting to Free Georges Abdallah in Paris on 19 March (Statement in French):

Dear comrades and friends,

Your coming together tonight and the diversity of your commitment, fills me with strength and enthusiasm and warms my heart.

These are not merely complimentary words of convenience or politeness. As you see, comrades, when one is behind these heinous walls for decades, one’s speech in such circumstances becomes far more honest than usual.

Indeed, I have followed with great interest and passion the various initiatives that you have been able to develop recently. Certainly, the coordination of various forms of solidarity is not always easy to implement. However, the resurgence of social struggle in the country and the ongoing and significant mobilization of youth and labor unions support, more or less, the emergence and development of an overall atmosphere of struggle, which is generally conducive to local exchanges of ideas and experiences, which thus enrich all activities confronting expressions of counter-revolution. Naturally, such an atmosphere of struggle revives the collective memory about the national and internationalist heritage of the struggles of the popular classes and the countless successful revolutionary experiences..

Comrades, I have often stressed, repeating myself, that “solidarity on the basis of the ongoing class struggle in all of its dimensions is that which provides the most effective support to our fellow prisoners” and that “together we will win, and we will win only together.”

Today, we all live under the hegemony of globalized capital. No country is immune to the destructive mechanism of such hegemony. Certainly, we do not suffer in the same way, in Paris or Cairo, London or Algiers, Moscow or Damascus. However, it is still based on this hegemony that extends and expands class stratification and thus creates the dynamics of the really existing class struggle. And that, at both the regional and global levels, to the extent that the various strategies of imperialist poles are readily visible on this scale.

Of course, it should be noted that the center of gravity of the working class has shifted from the centers of the globalized imperialist system to its peripheries. Certainly this is not the place nor the time to develop this approach, but it is in this context that I write the two quotes above. And it is precisely in this same context that the popular masses (proletarians and other precarious social strata) in urban neighborhoods in the imperialist countries occupy a place of particular importance. Somehow, they serve as a vector and a link between the two shores of the Mediterranean…

Certainly, there is room for another future aside from submission to imperialist dictates, which we have seen over time, the negative consequences in the form of the destruction of entire cities, the dismemberment of states, and the processions of dead, displaced persons, and oppressed migrants.

Comrades, Palestine continues in these days to provide a daily number of young martyrs. The resistance continues, and certainly will continue so long as the occupation continues. Of course, the Palestinian masses can count, more than ever, on your active solidarity. Of course they are well aware of the position of French imperialism which seeks by all means to support the Zionist entity.

May a thousand solidarity initiatives bloom in support of Palestine and the growing intifada!

May a thousand solidarity initiatives bloom for the Lebanese yout in struggle!

May a thousand solidarity initiatives bloom in favor of the Kurdish masses and their brave fighters!

Solidarity with the resistance in Zionist jails, in isolation cells in Morocco, Turkey, the Philippines, and elsewhere in the world!

Capitalism is nothing but barbarism; honor to all who oppose it in all of their diverse means of confrontation!

Comrades, together we will win – we will win only together!

Comrade Georges Abdallah
19 March 2016

23 March, Montreal: Nahla Abdo on Imperialist Feminism and Arab Women’s Struggle: The Palestinian Case

Date: Wednesday, March 23 at 6:30 PM
Location: Concordia Hall Building, 7th Floor, Montreal

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/184895415219645/

This event is presented as part of Israeli Apartheid Week Montreal
March 14-23
IAW Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1508245686151460/

The struggle of Arab women goes back as far as the beginning of colonialism. Throughout the Arab world, from al-Mashreq (the Eastern part of the Arab world) to al-Maghreb (the Western part of the Arab world), women have been heavily involved in the anti-colonial anti-imperialist struggle. This is also, and perhaps more true for Palestinian women. Still, and not unlike the struggles of their people in general, women’s struggle has largely been ignored, if not silenced. Both western (including Israeli) imperialist/Orientalist voices along with local/national masculinist voices have contributed to the silencing of women’s voices and ignoring their experiences. When Palestinian women began to be involved in the armed struggle against settler colonialism, the west in general and its feminist movement more specifically began to take interest in their struggle: an interest that was mostly damning, and incriminatory. This talk focuses on the Western feminist discourse on Palestinian women’s struggle and the responses to such discourse by Palestinian women political activists. Special emphasis in this talk will be placed on the struggle of Palestinian women Political prisoners.

Dr. Nahla Abdo is an Arab feminist activist and Professor of Sociology at Carleton University. She has published extensively on women, racism, nationalism, and the State in the Middle East, with a special focus on Palestinian women.

7 April, NYC: Resistance & Bil’in: In Conversation with Iyad Burnat

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Thursday, 7 April
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
St. Joseph’s College, Tuohy Hall Student Lounge – 245 Clinton Ave, Brooklyn
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1619137931640134/
Organized by Students for Justice in Palestine at St. Joseph’s College

FREE REFRESHMENTS AND ADMISSION. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
TUOHY HALL STUDENT LOUNGE AT SAINT JOSEPH’S COLLEGE

Contributer to and brother of the director of Oscar nominated documentary “Five Broken Cameras” comes to SJC to discuss facts on the ground highlighted in his new book, “Bil’in and the Nonviolent Resistance.” It explores Israeli occupation, land grabs, and the expanding apartheid wall since 2005 from a deeply personal perspective. He is head of the “Bil’in Popular Committee Against the Wall” and in 2015 received the James Lawson Award for Achievement in the Practice of Nonviolent Conflict.

Paris event demands freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, revolutionary prisoners of imperialism

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The Unified Meeting to Free Georges Ibrahim Abdallah convened in a packed room in Paris on Saturday, 19 March, demanding freedom for the Lebanese communist struggler who has spent over 30 years in French prison, despite his eligibility for release.

Speakers at the event, including Khaled Barakat, coordinator of the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat, and Kristian Davis Bailey of the US-based Black4Palestine, urged freedom for Abdallah and fellow revolutionary political prisoners around the world, including Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and US prisoners, including Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Mutulu Shakur, Oscar Lopez Rivera, and Sundiata Acoli.

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Speakers from a number of organizations linked Abdallah’s case to the repression being carried out by the French state today, including the attempts to suppress and criminalize organizing for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel, as part and parcel of a French colonial policy toward Palestine working hand in hand with U.S. imperialism and the Zionist state.

“There are two central issues that Georges Ibrahim Abdallah reminds us of: international solidarity of peoples, and the centrality of Palestine to the struggle against imperialism and occupation, and for liberation. Today, we need Georges Ibrahim Abdallah’s thoughts and ideas more than he needs us,” said Barakat. “The fact that he is in prison shows that we have not yet achieved the strength that we need in order to free him and to free Palestine. The responsibility for the continuation of his imprisonment lies primarily with the French government, Lebanese government, U.S. and Israel – in other words, the camp of imperialism, Zionism, and reactionary forces.”

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“No faction, party or group by itself can confront the challenges and tasks facing us alone. We need an international anti-imperialist front because our struggles are connected. As the enemy forces back each other, support each other, we need to do the same, but for justice and liberation, rather than for oppression and exploitation. Today, there is a new generation on the rise, in Palestine and in the impoverished areas and oppressed communities in the United States, France and around the world. This generation is living up to the legacy of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Malcolm X, Fred Hampton, Che Guevara and many other leaders who continue to represent the true need to revive the revolution,” said Barakat.

Bailey highlighted the role of Black political prisoners within the Black Liberation Movement, not only as symbols of oppression and struggle, but also as leaders of the movement. He highlighted the case of Assata Shakur, labeled as one of the US’ “most wanted,” who continues to be pursued in Cuba today, as well as the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal, who is currently being denied necessary and life-saving Hepatitis C treatment by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections.

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Screening the video, “When I see them, I see us,” which highlights Black-Palestinian solidarity and joint struggle, Bailey discussed the history and present of connections between the Palestinian and Black liberation movements on grassroots and political levels. He noted the involvement of Black leaders such as former political prisoner and renowned academic Angela Davis in the campaign to support Rasmea Odeh – former Palestinian prisoner and torture survivor today facing imprisonment and deportation in the U.S. – as well as the involvement of Odeh and others in supporting Black movements in Chicago. He also called for a united movement to confront oppression, racism, imperialism and capitalism.

A letter from Georges Ibrahim Abdallah from inside Lannemezan prison was read to the event, which joined parallel events in Bordeaux and Grenoble. A live Skype link with the event in Bordeaux shared greetings between the two mobilizations. “The resurgence of social tensions in the country and the significant ongoing mobilization of youth and unions are leading to the emergence and assertion of an overall atmosphere of struggle, which is conducive to an exchange of ideas and experiences, and thus enriches all of our activity…such an atmosphere of struggle revives our collective memory and the national and international heritage of the struggles of the masses, and the countless revolutionary experiences that are necessary for victory,” wrote Abdallah.

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Speakers were frequently interrupted with enthusiastic chants in Arabic and French calling for freedom for Abdallah and liberation for Palestine. Barakat, Bailey and others particularly highlighted the case of Omar Nayef Zayed, former Palestinian political prisoner who escaped Israeli custody in 1990, killed on 26 February inside the Palestinian embassy in Bulgaria, where he had sought refuge for 72 days from an Israeli extradition demand. The discussion of Nayef Zayed’s case – which will be focused on in worldwide events on 8-9 April – was highlighted by enthusiastic chanting in honor of Omar and his struggle.

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Bailey presented a poster designed by Noura Ballout as a collaboration between Black4Palestine and the z collective, an Arab and Muslim Feminist Collective in Detroit, to Barakat and Mohammed Khatib, Palestinian youth activist and Samidoun organizer. Numerous organizations and parties came together to organize the event, which was also part of Anti-Colonialism Week and Israeli Apartheid Week in Paris and its surrounding areas.

 

Photos and Video: New York City protest calls for freedom for imprisoned circus teacher Mohammed Abu Sakha

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Activists in New York City protested on 18 March, calling for freedom for imprisoned Palestinian circus trainer Mohammed Abu Sakha outside the offices of G4S, the security corporation that provides security equipment and control rooms to Israeli prisons, checkpoints and police training centers.

Abu Sakha, 24, was arrested in December 2015 as he traveled from his home in Jenin to the Bir Zeit-based Palestinian Circus School, where he is an accomplished circus performer and teacher, specializing in working with children with intellectual disabilities.

He and the Palestinian Circus School’s troupe have traveled widely in Europe and the United States, performing with fellow circuses and performers.

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Abu Sakha was ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial on the basis of so-called “secret evidence.” People around the world have joined the campaign for his freedom, with Amnesty International campaigning for his release and protests in Brussels, London, Toulouse, Copenhagen, Madrid, Heidelberg and a number of other cities. Circuses, performers and musicians have joined the call for Abu Sakha’s freedom.

Abu Sakha will appeal his administrative detention before the Israeli military court on 21 March; a protest outside Ofer Prison will support Abu Sakha’s appeal and call for his release.

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network protests weekly outside the offices of G4S, which recently announced that it would be selling off its subsidiary in occupied Palestine after a sustained international campaign, that led to significant contract losses for the corporation. In the same announcement, G4S indicated that it would be getting out of the UK and US private juvenile prison business; however, activists, including the Palestinian Boycott National Committee have emphasized the importance of continued pressure on G4S to ensure that it is held to its commitments.

Photos by Joe Catron

Video:

Protest in London demands UNICEF end its contracts with G4S

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Activists in London protested outside the UK offices of UNICEF on Friday, 18 March, demanding the organization – and all UN institutions – drop their contracts with G4S, the security conglomerate that provides security services and equipment to Israeli prisons, checkpoints and police training centers.

Inminds organized the action, which demanded that UNICEF cut its $1 million in G4S contracts. Over 200 international and Palestinian organizations are demanding that United Nations institutions drop their contracts with the corporation; recently, UNICEF in Jordan ended its G4S contracts.

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G4S recently announced that it would be selling off its subsidiary in occupied Palestine after a sustained international campaign, that led to significant contract losses for the corporation. In the same announcement, G4S indicated that it would be getting out of the UK and US private juvenile prison business; however, activists, including the Palestinian Boycott National Committee have emphasized the importance of continued pressure on G4S to ensure that it is held to its commitments. Every day, Palestinian prisoners continue to have their freedom denied inside G4S-secured prisons. “At a time when Israel is stepping up its campaign of mass incarceration as a way of repressing Palestinian society, G4S should immediately end its role in the notorious Israeli prison system, as well as its involvement in securing Israeli checkpoints and illegal settlements,” said Sahar Francis of Addameer.

Inminds has been involved in a years-long campaign against G4S in Britain, organizing nearly weekly protests and actions against the corporation’s involvement in the imprisonment of Palestinians.

All photos by Inminds.

Call to Action: Protests for Justice for Omar Nayef Zayed, 8-9 April

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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.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network joins in the call of the Committee to Commemorate Omar Nayef Zayed to organize actions, events and demonstrations around the world, at Israeli, Bulgarian and Palestinian consulates and embassies and in other public squares and spaces, to demand justice and accountability in the case of Omar Nayef Zayed and freedom for Palestinian prisoners and all of Palestine.

Please email us at samidoun@samidoun.net with your actions and events on 8-9 April in solidarity for Omar Nayef Zayed; we will post all events on our website.

League of Filipino Students: Filipino youth support the Palestinian Struggle for Freedom

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The League of Filipino Students led a protest at the University of the Philippines Dilman, against the speech by a representative of the Israeli Embassy on campus, along with the International League of Peoples Struggle (ILPS), of which Samidoun is a member organization. The students’ statement – drawing particular attention to the role of Palestinian prisoners in the liberation movement – is below:

Filipino Youth Supports the Palestinian Struggle for Freedom
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Solidarity Statement of the League of Filipino Students (LFS)
March 17, 2016
University of the Philippines Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines

The League of Filipino Students (LFS), an anti-imperialist mass organization of the Filipino youth, stands in solidarity with the Palestinian youth and people in their struggle for freedom against Zionist occupation backed by United States (US) imperialism.

This afternoon, youth and students led by LFS and the International League of Peoples’ Struggle (ILPS) held a protest at the University of the Philippines (UP) during a forum where Israeli Ambassador to the Philippines Ephraim Ben Matityau was invited as guest speaker. Our message is clear: the US-backed Israeli government—a symbol and a reality of racism, colonialism and imperialism—is not welcome in the University and in our country!

Today, there are over seven million Palestinian refugees outside Palestine, who have been denied of their right to return to their beloved homeland for over decades. Zionist forces in 1948 occupied 78% of Palestinian lands, expelled the vast majority of the Palestinian people and forced them into refugee camps. In 1967, the Israeli government occupied the remaining 22% of Palestine, including Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

The Palestinian people are currently facing demolitions of their homes, confiscation of their lands, a killer siege on the Gaza Strip, brutal racism, denial of their rights, siege and the plunder of their homeland. Both the Palestinian people and leaders of their revolutionary movement are facing mass imprisonment. As of late last year, at least 6,000 leaders of the Palestinian revolutionary movement have been languishing in Israeli jails.

But these would not have been possible without US imperialism’s wholesale support and deep alliance with the Israeli government. US imperialism is a strategic partner and a full participant in all the attacks on the Palestinian people. Without it and its other imperialist allies, the Zionist state would cease to exist on occupied Palestinian land.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, during the 5th International Assembly of the ILPS in Manila, Philippines last year, said that a new uprising, a new intifada, has erupted in Palestine. The Palestinian youth are in the forefront of the upsurge and resistance of their people. Together, they are fighting and struggling through all forms of resistance, unarmed and armed, against Israeli occupation soldiers and forces.

Now, more than ever, the Filipino youth and people are inspired by their Palestinian counterparts. We are ever more determined to win the national democratic revolution and defeat US imperialism and all reaction in our country. We stand in solidarity with the exploited and oppressed peoples of the world struggling against imperialism and fighting for liberation, justice and socialism. Our victory is yours in as much as your victory is also ours!

Freedom for Palestine!
Stop the Zionist occupation of Palestine!
Down with imperialism!
Long live international solidarity!