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Al-Qeeq enters 80th day of hunger strike, faces permanent injury as calls grow for release

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Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, 33, has entered his 80th day of hunger strike, protesting his administrative detention by the Israeli state – imprisonment without charge or trial. Al-Qeeq, a journalist with Al-Majd TV, launched his hunger strike on 25 November while being subject to torture under Israeli interrogation, then continued the strike in protest of the order for his imprisonment without charge or trial.

Al-Qeeq’s medical situation is dire – he is currently under constant medical supervision in HaEmek hospital in Afula. Doctors have stated that he has suffered medical damage that may be impossible to fully recover from and will continue to impact his life following his detention.

He has refused all treatment by the Israeli hospital and rejected a Supreme Court decision that “suspended” rather than ended his administrative detention and forbade him from leaving the hospital. He requested a transfer to a Palestinian hospital in Ramallah, which was denied. Al-Qeeq is demanding an immediate end to his administrative detention; he refused a proposal for his release on 1 May, which would mark the normal end of the six-month administrative detention order. Because his detention has been “suspended,” al-Qeeq can receive visitors despite his inability to speak – recent visitors have included Archbishop Attallah Hanna.

Despite this, the Israeli state has not proposed any meaningful agreements or substantial proposals to end the suffering of al-Qeeq. Solidarity actions are continuing inside and outside Palestine with al-Qeeq as he reaches his 80th day of hunger strike; protests have taken place in Ramallah, Bir Zeit University, refugee camps throughout Palestine including Aida and Dheisheh, Nablus and Gaza in support of al-Qeeq in recent days, in addition to protests in Berlin, other German cities, New York and elsewhere. The Palestinians in Europe Conference also agitated for al-Qeeq’s release.

Amnesty International has issued a new urgent public statement on Al-Qeeq, while questions in the European Parliament and an appeal from the Ambassadorial Group of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation have urged al-Qeeq’s release. In Samidoun’s meetings with European parliamentarians accompanying Leila Khaled, the issue of al-Qeeq was raised constantly and elicited strong verbal support.

Samidoun is urging people around the world to call the U.S. White House to urge action on Al-Qeeq today, his 80th day of hunger strike, and to join the New York City protest for his freedom.

Photos from demonstrations to free Al-Qeeq:

Samidoun continues European Parliament meetings with Leila Khaled, advocating for Palestinian prisoners and refugees

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Samidoun continued its meetings at the European Parliament and events with Leila Khaled, Palestinian historic resistance figure and political leader, visiting Brussels following a speech in Utrecht at the New World Summit.

Representatives of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and the European Coordination of Committees and Associations for Palestine joined Khaled for meetings with Cypriot MEP Neoklis Sylikiotis, vice-chair of the Green United Left/Nordic Green Left (GUE/NGL) bloc in the Parliament, and Greek MEP Dimitrios Papadimoulis, vice-president of the European Parliament on 9 and 10 February.

The meetings focused on several issues, in particular the struggle of Palestinian prisoners. Khaled and Samidoun representatives also spoke specifically about the case of Mohammed al-Qeeq, the Palestinian journalist on hunger strike for nearly 80 days in protest of his imprisonment without charge or trial. Sylikiotis noted that he had submitted a parliamentary question to the European Commission on al-Qeeq’s case and would follow up further, as did Papadimoulis, noting that this issue was of concern to the European parliamentary delegation currently visiting Palestine.

neoklisKhaled and the Samidoun representatives also urged action on the case of Omar Nayef Zayed, the Palestinian former prisoner in Bulgaria currently in refuge in the Palestinian embassy, sought for extradition to the Israeli state after 22 years in Bulgaria. As Bulgaria is an EU member state, its involvement in the extradition and imprisonment of Palestinians is important to all European parties; in addition, this action threatens Palestinians throughout Europe, as the delegation noted.

Further, Khaled emphasized the importance of Palestinian refugees’ right of return, often systematically excluded from European discussions of Palestine, while being the central issue for Palestinians themselves. She noted that Palestinian refugees – including herself – have been denied the right to return for 68 years. She also denounced the situation of UNRWA, calling for European action, noting that Palestinian refugees had been excluded from UNHCR with the creation of an agency dependent on donor dollars and thus political pressure, which today means that Palestinian refugees in Lebanon are facing cuts to medical services after years of denial of their most fundamental right to return.

The delegates also raised with great concern reports of new gas and security deals between Greece, Cyprus and Israel, as well as reports of increased cooperation between the Greek government and Israel, noting that the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement is growing and no government that identifies as left or progressive should be strengthening – rather than cutting – relations with Israel.

Samidoun was also involved in organizing a large meeting for Khaled on 10 February with Brussels activists and organizers, following on a mass event in Amsterdam on 6 February organized by Revolutionary Unity (Revolutionaire Eenheid), co-sponsored by Samidoun.

Clowns in Gaza protest to free imprisoned Palestinian circus teacher

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Palestinian clowns in Gaza protested outside the offices of the International Committee of the Red Cross on 8 February, urging the immediate release of Mohammed Abu Sakha, 24, Palestinian circus teacher and performer being imprisoned in administrative detention without charge or trial by the Israeli occupation.

Abu Sakha was arrested by Israeli occupation forces in December 2015 as he traveled from his home in Jenin to the Palestinian Circus School in Bir Zeit, where he teaches children with disabilities circus performance. He has performed throughout Palestine and internationally with the Circus School. There is an international campaign for his release.

Photos by Isabel Perez and Montasser Mohammed:

Protest in Jenin to defend Omar Nayef Zayed against extradition to Bulgaria

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Palestinians in Jenin protested on 11 February outside the headquarters of the International Committee of the Red Cross, calling on Bulgaria to reject the extradition of former Palestinian prisoner Omar Nayef Zayed to the Israeli state.

Zayed, 52, has lived in Bulgaria for 22 years; his wife and three children are Bulgarian citizens. He escaped from Israeli imprisonment in 1990 following a 40-day hunger strike; he was serving a life sentence at the time. Having escaped Palestine, he traveled to Bulgaria, where he has lived ever since. In December 2015, the Israeli embassy in Sofia demanded Bulgaria arrest and turn over Zayed. While Bulgarian police raided his home, he was not present; he has taken sanctuary in the Palestinian Embassy in Bulgaria.

Participants in the protest included representatives of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, former Palestinian prisoners and friends and relatives of Zayed.

Speakers noted that this case is that of a Palestinian prisoner, being sought by the Bulgarian authorities on the basis of his struggle in Palestine and the demands of the Israeli occupation, saying that it is critical to mobilize around this issue and prevent Zayed from being extradited.

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27 February, Girona: Festiclown Palestina and #FreeAbuSakha

Saturday, 27 February
2:30 pm
Ateneu Popular Salvadora Cata
Placa Josep Pla
Girona

Events and actions throughout the day to free Mohammed Abu Sakha, Palestinian clown and circus teacher being held under administrative detention without charge or trial.

Organized by Pallasos en Rebeldia (Clowns in Rebellion), BDS Girona and Ateneu Popular Salvadora Cata

2:30 pm – Popular dinner (5 eur per person, with vegetarian option)
5:30 pm – Performance of Clown Magic, Pablo Munoz
7:00 pm – Screening of a film on Festiclown Palestina 2011
8:00 pm – Talk on Festiclown Palestina 2015 with Txarango and Ivan Prado
9:00 pm – Party with bar service

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5 March, San Francisco: Rasmea Fights Back – The Struggle of Women, Immigrants and Political Prisoners

In honor of International Women’s Day
Rasmea Fights Back:
The struggle of Women, Immigrants & Political Prisoners

Featuring:
Nadine Naber, University of Illinois at Chicago & Rasmea Odeh Defense Committee

Saturday, March 5, 2016
6:30pm
518 Valencia Street,
San Francisco, CA

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/964191720354093/
info@araborganizing.org
415-861-7444

#Justice4Rasmea

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Hosted by:
The Arab Resource and Organizing Center (AROC)

Rasmea Odeh is a 67 year old Palestinian American community leader who was tortured by the Israeli government in 1969. In 2014 Rasmea was unjustly convicted of one count of Unlawful Procurement of Naturalization and sentenced to 18 months in prison and deportation. The appeals court heard oral arguments on October 14th and we are currently awaiting the decision. Learn about her struggle against systemic targeting of Arabs and Muslims, and ways to support her defense.

12 February, Paris: Protest in support of Elsa Lefort and Salah Hamouri, separated by Israeli apartheid

Friday, 12 February
6:30 pm
Metro Invalides
Paris, France
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/570680929750565/

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Protest on Friday, 12 February in Paris in solidarity with Elsa Lefort and Salah Hamouri, kept apart by Israeli apartheid and impunity!

French-Palestinian former prisoner in Israeli jails, Salah Hamouri, was finally freed in 2011 after lengthy campaigns in France and Palestine calling for his freedom. Since his release from prison, Hamouri has been repeatedly targeted by the Israeli occupation, including being banned from the West Bank as he completed law studies in Ramallah.  Now, his pregnant wife – and their soon-to-be-born child – are facing expulsion from Palestine and denial of Jerusalem residency.

Since 2014, Salah Hamouri has been married to Elsa Lefort, a French woman who works at the French consulate in Jerusalem, where they have made their home. Lefort has a valid visa for entry to Palestine until October 2016, as an employee of the French consulate. Nevertheless, after visiting Lefort’s family in France for Christmas and New Year’s Day, when returning with Hamouri, Lefort was denied entry by Israeli border guards at Ben Gurion Airport. Lefort, six and a half months pregnant with her and Hamouri’s first child, was held in detention for two days and two nights before being deported to France. No explanation other than vague “security reasons” were presented for Lefort’s deportation.

Salah Hamouri is a Jerusalemite Palestinian, carrying a Jerusalem ID. Jerusalemite Palestinians have been subject to ongoing attempts to strip them collectively and individually of their Jerusalem residency and ID cards; thousands of Palestinians have been stripped of their Jerusalem IDs since the year 2000. If Salah and Elsa’s child is born in Paris rather than in Jerusalem, the child is at severe risk of being denied a Jerusalem ID and the entire family is at risk of separation.

11 -13 June, Washington, DC: Convergence in support of eco-prisoners & against toxic prisons

June 11 – 13, 2016 in Washington D.C. 

International Days of Action Everywhere

ftp-imageFOR OVER A DECADE, June 11th has been a day of action in solidarity with environmentalists and anarchists imprisoned for their actions in defense of the Earth. The day has its origins in an international outcry over the extreme and unprecedented sentencing of Jeffrey Luers to 22 years in prison for damaging several SUV’s at a car dealership. Since its inception in 2004, the June 11th day of action and other acts of solidarity have been instrumental in winning shorter sentences or early release for eco-prisoners, including Luers himself as well as Eric McDavid, who was entrapped by an informant. Yet committed earth defenders such as Marius Mason, targeted in the FBI’s “Green Scare,” are still serving harsh sentences in maximum security prisons for taking direct action against earth destroying industries.

MEANWHILE IN APPALACHIA, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) plans to build a massive maximum security prison, on top of a former mountaintop removal coal mine in Letcher County, Eastern Kentucky, surrounded by sludge ponds and coal processing and transport operations. This amounts to an environmental justice nightmare, where prisoners who are disproportionately low-income and people of color face toxic conditions behind bars.

It also happens that this prison site is about a mile as the crow flies from a rare and very biodiverse pocket of Eastern old-growth called the Lilley Cornett Woods. Learn more in the December 2105 issue of the Earth First! Journal.

As of December 2015, the BOP got over $400 million approved for the prison’s construction. The newly-formed Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons (FTP) is organizing to stop it, and looking to grow a coalition of opposition.

STOPPING ONE PRISON IS NOT A MAGIC BULLET to ending the U.S. police state, the one that gave way to world’s largest prison nation and in turn serves as the apparatus of repression that keeps the planet shackled to industrial capitalism…

But it’s a pretty good place to build from. In particular, it is a powerful place that the environmental movement can express solidarity with the growing rage over the racist criminal justice system.

The goal of gathering in D.C. is to converge for a series of actions that can put dual pressure on both the BOP and the EPA regarding this proposed prison, and environmental justice issues related to prisoners in general, while continuing to fight for the release of eco-prisoners in the spirit of June 11th. We also hope to see this effort build stronger bonds between the eco-defense movement and the movements against police and mass incarceration.

We envision a gathering June 11th to 12th for  networking, strategizing and organizing, culminating with a mass action on Monday the 13th.

FOR THOSE WHO LIKE THE IDEA, but can’t make it to D.C., there are other options. For example, the BOP has regional offices in 5 other locations.

Additionally, the PR company that is contracted to produce the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the BOP’s Letcher prison is called Cardno, and has offices in most every U.S. city, and other cities all over the world. This is the same firm that was contracted by the U.S. State Department to produce an EIS for the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.

In many ways, the prison experiences of activists like Luers, Mason, McDavid, and others such as Daniel McGowan, Rebecca Rubin and Tim DeChristopher, have provided courage and inspiration rather than the desired effect of intimidation. They also gave the environmental movement an inside look at the prison epidemic in the U.S. With the steady stream of urban uprisings against the police state, there has never been a better time to organize at this intersection of ecology and incarceration. We hope you’ll join us.

Get in touch if you are interested in helping to organize this J11/FTP convergence or if you are part of a group who wants to co-sponsor it. More details are forthcoming. Contact: FightToxicPrisons@gmail.com

Co-sponsoring groups include Earth First! Prisoner Support, Rising Tide North America, Appalachia Resist!, Jericho D.C., Prison Ecology Project and others TBA.

12 February, Global: Call the White House to demand freedom for Mohammed al-Qeeq

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Friday, 12 February
9:00 am – 5:00 pm EST (8:00 am – 4:00 pm CST)
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/523700587807403/
Organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Call the White House on Mohammed al-Qeeq’s 80th day of hunger strike to demand his immediate release: 001-202-456-1111

After calling, post here about the White House operator’s response.

Israeli forces captured al-Qeeq, a 33-year-old Palestinian journalist and father of two, in a 21 November nighttime raid on his Ramallah home.

On 25 November, al-Qeeq launched a hunger strike to protest torture by his Israeli interrogators. He continued after being placed in administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial – on 17 December.

Al-Qeeq has rejected an Israeli Supreme Court decision to “suspend” his administrative detention – until he recovers enough to leave the hospital – and a conditional offer for his release on 1 May, instead demanding immediate freedom and treatment in a Palestinian hospital.

His family, attorneys and an independent physician who visited al-Qeeq in HaEmek hospital have said he appears close to death.

Al-Qeeq is one of 6,800 Palestinian political prisoners held by Israel, including 660 administrative detainees and 18 journalists. Nearly all are tortured during interrogations by Israeli forces.

As Israel’s biggest economic and political supporter, the Obama administration shares responsibility for its crimes against Palestinians, including its administrative detention and torture of al-Qeeq.

Tell the White House:

  • Mohammed al-Qeeq, a Palestinian journalist, is on his 80th day of a hunger strike protesting his torture and administrative detention without charge or trial by Israel.
  • The United States must demand al-Qeeq’s immediate release and end all support for Israel’s political imprisonment and other crimes against Palestinians.
  • Israel’s use of administrative detention and torture, and its attacks on Palestinian journalists and other civilians, are universally-recognized violations of human rights and international law.
  • 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.)

13 February, NYC: Palestine: A History of Revolution

Saturday, 13 February
3:45 pm
Solidarity Center NYC
147 W 24th St, Fl 2nd
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1084200174979193/

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Nick Maniace, of FIST – Fight Imperialism, Stand Together and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, will give a class and lead a discussion on the history of Palestine.

It will include the following topics:

-The creation of the state of Israel (called an-Nakba – “the catastrophe” – by Palestinians).

-The role of the United Sates as the key supporter of the Zionist state.

-The historical stages of the Palestinian resistance struggle: the first Arab-Zionist war, Black September, the October War, the Lebanese Civil War, etc.

-The various Palestinian resistance organizations and their connection to the global anti-imperialist movement and the socialist camp.