Home Blog Page 523

Sheffield activists for boycott of Israel, freedom for al-Qeeq and all Palestinian prisoners

sheffield4

Members of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign – Sheffield protested in Sheffield, UK, in front of the Co-Operative Bank on Saturday, 20 February, demanding freedom for imprisoned Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq and an end to the bank’s repeated closures of the accounts of Palestine solidarity organizations. Protesters also called for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel.

Al-Qeeq, 33, has been on hunger strike for three months and is in severely critical condition in HaEmek Hospital in Afula, denied both visits with his wife and children and transfer to a Palestinian hospital in Ramallah. He is protesting his imprisonment without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention, as well as his torture and abuse under interrogation. Protests have been mounting in Palestine and internationally to free him and end the policy of administrative detention as his health situation grows more dire.

Co-Operative Bank has made the news on multiple occasions in recent months for closing the accounts of Palestinian and pro-Palestine organizations in Britain. Over 20 accounts have been closed with little to no explanation, and groups throughout the UK have protested the closures.

Photos by Musheir al-Farra.

Free Mohammed al-Qeeq and all Palestinian prisoners, call protesters in Cologne

koln5

Palestinians and solidarity activists gathered on the Domplatte in Cologne, Germany on 20 February, in support of all Palestinian prisoners and highlighting the call for freedom of Mohammed al-Qeeq, the imprisoned Palestinian journalist on hunger strike for nearly three months in protest of his torture under interrogation and his administrative detention without charge or trial by the Israeli military.

Organized by the European Alliance in Defence of European Detainees, the protesters gathered to demand freedom for al-Qeeq and his fellow 7000 Palestinian prisoners, 690 of whom are, like him, held in administrative detention without charge or trial. Al-Qeeq is in an increasingly desperate medical situation, and continues to be denied transfer to a Palestinian hospital or visits from his wife and two small children.

Video:

Belfast demonstrates for freedom for Palestinian hunger striker Mohammed al-Qeeq

belfast4

Protesters in Belfast, Ireland gathered on 20 February to demand freedom for Mohammed al-Qeeq as he lay in HaEmek hospital in Afula on his 88th day of hunger strike. Organized by the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign, activists gathered outside Belfast’s City Hall to highlight the case of al-Qeeq, the imprisoned Palestinian journalist held without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention, and demand his freedom.

Al-Qeeq’s strike, in which he refuses vitamins, salts and any medication, has been referred to as an “Irish-style” strike, in reference to the lengthy hunger strikes of Irish political prisoners in British jails protesting British colonialism.

Milan protest demands freedom for imprisoned Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq

milanq6

Protesters in Milan took to the streets on Saturday, 20 February for a protest demanding freedom for imprisoned Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq. Al-Qeeq, 33, is now on his 90th day of hunger strike demanding his freedom from administrative detention without charge or trial. A journalist with Al-Majd TV, al-Qeeq has been on hunger strike since 25 November 2015; he is one of over 690 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention. He is in a very critical health condition at HaEmek hospital in Afula, where despite being in danger of death, he continues to be denied visits from his wife and son.

The demonstration was organized by the Association of Palestinians in Italy, and joined by activists and organizers from a number of Palestinian and solidarity groups. Activists in Milan will organize another demonstration on 27 February, reiterating their call for the freedom of al-Qeeq and all 7000 Palestinian prisoners.

Photos:

Videos:

9 March, NYC: Repression & Resistance: Palestinians in Political Detention

13912278314_ddcde726fa_o

Wednesday, 9 March
5:30 pm
John Jay College – 899 10th Ave, NYC
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1669116183348793/
Organized by Students for Justice in Palestine at John Jay College, John Jay College Youth Justice Club and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

As part of the 12th annual Israeli Apartheid Week in New York City, join Students for Justice in Palestine at John Jay College (John Jay SJP), John Jay College Youth Justice Club and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network for an in-depth conversation on Palestinian political prisoners, the prisoners’ movement, its role within the broader Palestinian struggle, and international solidarity campaigns, as well as United States repression of Palestinian activists.

Our panelists will discuss Israel’s political imprisonment of Palestinians in its historical and political contexts, its practical effects on Palestinian families and communities, decades of resistance by both prisoners and the Palestinian people as a whole, and the matrix of repressive tactics shared by Israel and its allies like the US.

Sabiha Azad (Moderator)

An immigration paralegal and graduate of John Jay College of Criminal Justice with a BA in political science and a minor in law. She is a current member of both John Jay SJP (alumni) and NYC Students for Justice in Palestine (NYC SJP) and an organizer of Israeli Apartheid Week NYC 2016.

Joe Catron:

A solidarity activist and freelance reporter, lived in Gaza, Palestine for three and a half years, including the 2012 and 2014 Israeli offensives. While there, he wrote for Electronic Intifada, Middle East Eye and other media on prisoners’ affairs and other aspects of Palestinian life under Israeli occupation and co-edited The Prisoners’ Diaries: Palestinian Voices from the Israeli Gulag, an anthology of accounts by detainees freed in the 2011 prisoner exchange. He organizes with Samidoun: Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and is writing a book on the Battle of Shuja’iyya.

Suzanne Adely

A global labor and human rights lawyer based in New York and co-convener of Labor for Palestine. Formerly a community organizer with the Arab American Action Network in Chicago, she is co-chair of the National Lawyers Guild International Committee and a long-time member of Al-Awda New York: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition.

“Detaining Dreams”

An intimate new documentary featuring the stories of four Palestinian children and their families undergoing the ordeal of Israeli military detention.

Brad Parker

A staff attorney and international advocacy officer at Defense for Children International Palestine. He specializes in issues of juvenile justice and grave violations against children during armed conflict, and leads DCIP’s legal advocacy efforts on Palestinian children’s rights. Parker regularly writes and speaks on the situation of Palestinian children in the occupied Palestinian territory, particularly issues involving detention, ill-treatment and torture of child detainees within the Israeli military detention system and violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law. He leads DCIP’s US Program, is a graduate of the University of Vermont, and received his J.D. from the City University of New York School of Law.

Lamis Deek

A Palestinian organizer born in Nablus, Palestine and raised in New York. She is a member of Al-Awda New York: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition. In her practice as a lawyer, she focuses primarily on criminal defense and FBI investigations. She has handled a number of political prisoner cases domestically and witnessed the trial of Ahmad Sa’adat in Palestine.

Q&A Session

***YOU ARE REQUIRED TO RSVP FOR THIS EVENT AND PRESENT VALID PHOTO IDENTIFICATION TO CAMPUS PUBLIC SAFETY UPON ENTRANCE. PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK BELOW TO RSVP:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/repression-resistance-palestinians-in-political-detention-tickets-22082141279

Pizza will be served!

26 February, NYC: Protest to free Mohammed al-Qeeq and defend Palestinian journalists

Image3

Friday, 26 February
4:00 pm
G4S Offices, NYC – 17 W 44th St, NYC
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1548875395405667/
Organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

This Friday, Mohammed al-Qeeq will enter the 94th day of an open hunger strike against his indefinite imprisonment without charge or trial.

He is one of 18 Palestinian journalists held by Israel, as well as one of 650 “administrative detainees” and 6,900 overall political prisoners.

Mohammed Kana’aneh, former Palestinian prisoner and leader in the Abnaa el-Balad movement in occupied Palestine ’48, reported that al-Qeeq was experiencing severe respiratory problems, severe chest pains and difficulty breathing, and had requested to see his wife and children on the morning of Friday, 19 February.

Protests continued throughout Palestine demanding freedom for al-Qeeq, and a group of Birzeit University students launched a hunger strike in support of his struggle. Al-Qeeq is a Birzeit graduate. He was a student leader during his time at the university.

On Thursday, Fayha Shalash, al-Qeeq’s wife, posted a brief English language video appealing for international support for the imprisoned journalist, who has been on hunger strike since 25 November, initially in protest of his torture under interrogation and then in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial.

Shalash called on people around the world to support al-Qeeq’s struggle for freedom.

G4S, the world’s largest firm company and second-biggest private employer, equips Israeli prisons and detention centers where 6,800 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 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 al-Qeeq, other administrative detainees and all Palestinian political prisoners.

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

90 Days Too Long – Take Action for Mohammed al-Qeeq

fayha

NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION FOR MOHAMMED AL-QEEQ

#90DaysTooLong

Today marks the 90th day of Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq’s hunger strike and he is perilously close to death, according to media reports. The father of two began his hunger strike on 25 November, four days after Israeli occupation forces arrested him from his home in the middle of the night. Al-Qeeq is protesting the illegal and inhumane conditions under which he is detained. He spent several weeks in solitary confinement before he was transferred to a military hospital on Dec. 30, 2015, because of his deteriorating health. Now, he lapses in and out of consciousness and is severely emaciated.

Currently, Israeli prison authorities are holding 6,800 Palestinians as political prisoners. Nearly 10 percent – 660 – are being held without charge or trial, a tactic called administrative detention, which violates the 78th Article of the Fourth Geneva Conventions of 1949. At least 470 Palestinian children also are in Israeli detention, according to Palestinian prisoner rights group Addameer.

We must take action immediately!

Call the White House and State Department and ask them to pressure Israel to release al-Qeeq and allow him to be treated in a Palestinian hospital in Ramallah.

TAKE ACTION

MONDAY, FEB. 22, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. EST (10 a.m. – 2 p.m. CST)
CALL the Israel-Palestine bureau at the US State Department at 202.647.3930
CALL the White House at 202.456.1111

TALKING POINTS

  • Please pressure Israel to release Mohammed al-Qeeq from administrative detention immediately and allow him to seek medical treatment in a Palestinian hospital.
  • Al-Qeeq is a journalist and as such should enjoy special protections.
  • A free press is vital to democracy and detaining journalists is not the sign of a democratic society.
  • Israel currently is holding 6,800 Palestinians, mostly as political prisoners, and 660 of them are being held in administrative detention.
  • Israel’s use of administrative detention violates the Fourth Geneva Conventions and the US Foreign Assistance Act of 1961.
  • The United States has a moral obligation to ensure recipients of our aid uphold human rights and to turn a blind eye to Israel’s imprisonment of nearly 7,000 Palestinians and its use of administrative detention weakens our moral stance throughout the world.
  • The US must demand Israel release all Palestinian political prisoners immediately and end its use of administrative detention.
  • The United States must demand al-Qeeq’s immediate release and end all support for Israel’s political imprisonment and other crimes against Palestinians.
  • US aid to Israel breaks the Leahy Law, which bars assistance to military units known to violate human rights with impunity.
  • The billions of dollars sent to Israel by the US could be better spent on pressing needs within the country. (Mention any domestic priorities, like health care, job creation or schools, that are particularly important to you.)

TWEET

Please Tweet at US Secretary of State John Kerry, the State Department, President Barack Obama and the White House with the hashtag #90DaysTooLong

@ John Kerry
@ StateDept
@ POTUS
@ WhiteHouse

Please post to this page after you’ve placed your call so we can follow up.

27 February, Milan: Protest to free Mohammed al-Qeeq

Saturday, 27 February
3:00 pm
Presidio alla RAI
Corso Sempione 27, Milano

Liberate Palestinian Journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq!

Break the wall of silence! Denounce the racist and repressive Zionist system. Demand the liberation of all Palestinian prisoners and an end to the inhuman practice of administrative detention. Denounce the silence of media and official institutions in the face of ongoing Israeli state terror.

milan-27

No deal: Al-Qeeq is on hunger strike for his 89th day

1758136455

Despite rumors and Israeli media reports since yesterday, no agreement or deal has yet been reached in the case of Mohammed al-Qeeq, Palestinian journalist on hunger strike for the 89th day. He remains held in HaEmek hospital in Afula, and the Israeli military continues to prohibit him from receiving family visits from his wife and children, claiming “security” reasons. The prohibition on family visits is scheduled to be reviewed on Sunday by Israeli courts.

Reports from Israel’s Channel 10 and elsewhere indicated that “a deal” would be reached some time Saturday or Sunday, but Fayha Shalash, Al-Qeeq’s wife, warned in a press conference on Saturday evening, 20 February, that no deal has yet been reached and that Al-Qeeq’s situation is medically desperate and worsening, needing attention now more than ever. She demanded the Palestinian Authority take stronger action to free her husband and secure his liberation from administrative detention without charge or trial. She warned that rumors and unconfirmed reports of agreements to release al-Qeeq may distract from his urgent situation.

Also on Saturday evening, police with sniffer dogs stormed HaEmek hospital where a large group of Palestinians have gathered in solidarity with al-Qeeq, several on hunger strike, raising greater fears for al-Qeeq’s life. Earlier in the day, Mohammed Kana’aneh reported from inside the hospital that al-Qeeq was experiencing severe chest pains but rejecting treatment even after doctors rushed to his room on multople occasions.

Al-Qeeq has been on hunger strike since 25 November 2015; he was held under administrative detention without charge or trial. His administrative detention was allegedly “suspended,” but he has been forbidden transfer to a Palestinian hospital and even family visits from his wife and children. Palestinian sources have reported that there are ongoing negotiations regarding his situation. Samidoun will provide updates upon confirmation, and urges all to continue and intensify efforts to free al-Qeeq and all Palestinian prisoners.

Samidoun salutes Albert Woodfox on his liberation: Free all US political prisoners!

woodfox-free

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Albert Woodfox on the occasion of his release from prison after 45 years, including 43 years of torturous solitary confinement, in Angola Prison in Louisiana.

Woodfox was the last remaining imprisoned member of the Angola 3, along with Herman Wallace and Robert King, who organized a section of the Black Panther Party in the Angola Prison challenging horrific racism, segregation and systematic corruption and abuse in the prison, built on an 18,000-acre former slave plantation.

They organized hunger strikes and work stoppages within the prison. The three were thrown in solitary confinement in 1972, accused of involvement in the 1972 killing of a prison guard, despite no physical evidence and only one discredited, bribed witness. After years of struggle, King was freed in 2001 and Wallace in 2013 – who died just four days after being released from prison.

Woodfox’s conviction was overturned three times, and a federal judge ordered his immediate release – yet the state of Louisiana attempted again and again to deny his freedom. It refused to release him from solitary confinement, with Warden Burl Cain quoted as saying that “I still know that he is still trying to practice Black Pantherism, and I still would not want him walking around my prison because he would organize the young new inmates.”

woodfox-free2

On 19 February, his 69th birthday, Woodfox finally walked free from Angola prison. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes his victory, steadfastness and constant struggle through 45 years of racist torture. We demand the immediate release of all political prisoners in US prisons, including all of Woodfox’s fellow Black Panther and Black Liberation political prisoners including Mumia Abu-Jamal, Russell Maroon Shoatz, Mutulu Shakur and nearly 20 fellow prisoners, Oscar Lopez Rivera, Leonard Peltier, and the Holy Land Five.

Photos via Andy Stepanian.

We reproduce below the statement of the International Campaign to Free the Angola 3:

Just moments ago, Albert Woodfox, the last remaining member of the Angola 3 still behind bars, was released from prison 43 years and 10 months after he was first put in a 6×9 foot solitary cell for a crime he did not commit. After decades of costly litigation, Louisiana State officials have at last acted in the interest of justice and reached an agreement that brings a long overdue end to this nightmare. Albert has maintained his innocence at every step, and today, on his 69th birthday, he will finally begin a new phase of his life as a free man.

In anticipation of his release this morning, Albert thanked his many supporters and added: “Although I was looking forward to proving my innocence at a new trial, concerns about my health and my age have caused me to resolve this case now and obtain my release with this no-contest plea to lesser charges.  I hope the events of today will bring closure to many.”

Over the course of the past four decades, Albert’s conviction was overturned three separate times for a host of constitutional violations including prosecutorial misconduct, inadequate defense, racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson, and suppression of exculpatory evidence. On June 8th, 2015, Federal Judge James Brady ordered Albert’s immediate release and barred the State from retrying Albert, an extraordinary ruling that he called “the only just remedy.” A divided panel of the 5th Circuit Court of appealsreversed that order in November with the dissenting Judge arguing that “If ever a case justifiably could be considered to present ‘exceptional circumstances’ barring re-prosecution, this is that case.” That ruling was on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court when news of his release broke.

On behalf of the Angola 3 – Albert Woodfox, Robert King, and in memory of Herman Wallace – we would like to sincerely thank all the organizations, activists, artists, legal experts, and other individuals who have so graciously given their time and talent to the Angola 3’s extraordinary struggle for justice. This victory belongs to all of us and should motivate us to stand up and demand even more fervently that long-term solitary confinement be abolished, and all the innocent and wrongfully incarcerated be freed.