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12 February, USA: Call in and social media day to free Simon Trinidad

trinidadFriday, February 12: Call in day to free Colombian political prisoner Simon Trinidad from US jails

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1009925899071968/

Change your profile pic to Free Simon Trinidad!

Tweet this event! Tweet the photo!

Share on Instagram! and…don’t forget to CALL-IN!!!

The peace process between the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the Colombian government is moving forward and taking place in Havana, Cuba. Recently, President Obama thanked Havana for hosting the peace talks and declared that the US supports the “ implementation of the Colombian accord on the victims of the conflict, justice, and restitution of the lands” This means that the US supports the points where the FARC-EP and the Colombian government came to an agreement. FARC-EP representative Marc Leon called the agreement “nearly irreversible.” Yet President Obama refuses to acknowledge or act on the FARC-EP’s request to have Simon Trinidad, political prisoner & FARC-EP negotiator, present at the bargaining table. We need to demand his release so that the peace process may move forward. This Valentine’s Day we need to express our passion for peace and love for Simon Trinidad and all progressive Colombians by calling for the immediate release of Simon Trinidad so that he may fulfill his role in the negotiations.

Call President Obama at (202) 456-1111

Say: “I want Peace for Colombia and to ask President Obama to free Simon Trinidad for Valentine’s Day! Trinidad belongs at the peace talks, not in solitary confinement at the Florence Colorado Supermax prison. Peace and love for all progressive people in Colombia!”

NYC: #Justice4Rasmea emergency response plan

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5:00 pm
Immigration Court – 26 Federal Plaza, NYC
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/756215261177274/
Organized by NYC Students for Justice in Palestine

Rasmea Odeh has dedicated her life to the cause of a #FreePalestine and to Arab communities across the world, including the past 12 years in Chicago, so we must continue to organize to win #Justice4Rasmea – while she is appealing her unjust conviction for Unlawful Procurement of Naturalization, as well as the cruel sentence of imprisonment AND deportation.

If this worst-case scenario decision comes down BEFORE 12 NOON, and Rasmea is ordered to prison, we are calling for protests the VERY SAME DAY at 5 PM at Federal Plaza – Ny Immigration Court.

If the decision comes down AFTER 12 NOON, we are calling for protests the NEXT DAY at 5 PM. Allies and supporters across the world will also be participating in the emergency response by protesting at U.S. consulates and embassies everywhere.

21 February, NYC: Important area antiwar meeting

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New York City-area Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network activists will join this local meeting of the United National Antiwar Coalition to discuss our recent and ongoing efforts, including campaigns to boycott Israel prison contractor G4S and support hunger-striking Palestinian journalist and administrative detainee Mohammed al-Qeeq and other Palestinian political prisoners, win justice for Palestinian-American community leader Rasmea Odeh, build local events for Israeli Apartheid Week 2016, and mobilize with other supporters of Palestine in Washington, DC on 20 March.

New York City Area UNAC Meeting
Sunday, February 21 at 2 PM
210 Furman Hall at NYU
(245 Sullivan St – near W. 4th St., Christopher St., Astor Pl and 8th St. stations)

Please join us for this important meeting.  There will be reports on local and national activity and a discussion on how best to build UNAC in the New York City area as well as developing and organizational structure for UNAC in the New York City area.  Please come with your ideas and thoughts on fighting against the wars at home and abroad.

During this election period, we are seeing candidates trying to show they are the most hawkish.  We have seen attacks on Muslims, immigrants and Black and minority communities.  It is important that during this period there is a voice for the victims of the wars at home and abroad.

For more information: UNACpeace@gmail.com or 518-281-1968

Leila Khaled urges freedom for Mohammed al-Qeeq, justice for Omar Nayef Zayed in meetings at European Parliament

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Palestinian resistance icon and political leader Leila Khaled was joined by representatives of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, the European Coordination of Committees and Associations for Palestine and the Palestinian Youth Organization Europe for a series of meetings in the European Parliament in Brussels on 8 February.

Khaled met with the offices of MEPs Martina Anderson of Ireland and Ana Gomes of Portugal, where she highlighted three key issues: the struggle of Palestinian prisoners and, in particular, the 76-day hunger strike of Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, imprisoned without charge or trial; Palestinian refugees and the right of return, and the recent cuts to UNRWA health services in Lebanon; and the case of Omar Nayef Zayed, former Palestinian prisoner now facing extradition from Bulgaria, an EU member state.

lk4Khaled highlighted the suffering of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and the escalation in the past five months, including the constantly expanding use of administrative detention without charge or trial and the situation of child prisoners. In particular, she highlighted al-Qeeq’s case: his urgent health situation as he daily faces death, his insistence on freedom from administrative detention, and the targeting of Palestinian journalists. “Their role is to show what is going on, and because of that, they are shot, wounded, imprisoned and held in administrative detention,” said Khaled.

Khaled also discussed the case of 14-year-old Ahmad Manasrah, and the imprisonment of political leaders like Khalida Jarrar and Ahmad Sa’adat, as well as the ongoing repression directed against Palestinians: home demolitions, the siege on Qabatiya, and extrajudicial executions in Palestinian streets.

She also emphasized the case of Omar Nayef Zayed, former Palestinian prisoner who escaped Israeli custody in 1990 and has lived in Bulgaria for the past 22 years with his Bulgarian family, noting that he now faces extradition to the Israeli state by the Bulgarian government under an extradition treaty for “criminal matters,” noting that Zayed’s case – like that of all Palestinian prisoners – is a political matter, not criminal, and concerns occupied Jerusalem, territory under occupation where Palestinians face military courts. She warned that this case endangers Palestinians in Europe, especially former prisoners and veterans of struggle, urging that pressure be escalated to prevent an EU member state from extraditing a Palestinian former prisoner to Israel.

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Khaled, a member of the Palestinian National Council and chair of the refugees and right of return committee of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, emphasized the centrality of the right of return for Palestinian refugees to the Palestinian cause, noting that it is frequently silenced and marginalized when it is in fact at the center of Palestinian struggle. “Palestinian refugees want to go back home, including myself. I am still a refugee,” Khaled said. She noted that any true solution for Palestine requires the implementation of Palestinian refugees’ right of return, noting that UN Resolution 194, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and well-settled international norms all support the right denied Palestinians forced from their homes for 68 years.

lk5She also noted the budget cuts facing Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, dependent on health services provided by the UN Relief Works Agency (UNRWA), which deals uniquely with Palestinian refugees; all other refugees’ cases are handled by the UN High Commissioner on Refugees (UNHCR). UNRWA’s budget is funded by donor countries and is constantly subject to political pressure in an attempt to liquidate the struggle of Palestinian refugees, Khaled noted; now, when it is facing a budget crisis, it is being resolved on the backs of those least able to handle it – Palestinian refugees in Lebanon in the camps, facing cuts to health services funding that have prompted significant protests throughout the country.

She also noted the continuing forced displacement of Palestinian refugees yet again from Syria, often to Europe, while their right of return continues to be denied.

Samidoun representatives in the meeting also discussed the issue of G4S, whose European Parliament contract was dropped in 2011, while it continues to provide security to the European Commission and other European institutions despite its atrocious human rights record, not only in Palestine where it provides control rooms and equipment to Israeli prisons, checkpoints and police training centers but around the world.

The participants in the meeting emphasized the importance of action by concerned MEPs on the case of Al-Qeeq, with particular urgency considering the daily threat to his life, and on Palestinian prisoners more broadly, as well as the case of Omar Nayef Zayed. They also called for action on Palestinian refugees’ right of return, which is consistently excluded from European discussions on Palestine and Palestinian rights, and a real boycott of settlement products in the EU.

Samidoun will be joining Khaled as she continues her meetings with parliamentarians in the coming days, and will be following up alongside ECCP with parliamentarians on the discussions and issues raised.

Hunger-striking journalist Al-Qeeq rejects agreement to free him 1 May; demands unconditional release

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Mohammed al-Qeeq, 33, Palestinian journalist now on hunger strike for 76 days in protest of his imprisonment without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention, has rejected a proposed agreement to free him by 1 May. Al-Qeeq, suffering from severe health effects related to his hunger strike, including loss of speaking ability, hearing and extreme weight loss and is “threatened with death,” has announced that he will end his strike and accept medical treatment only in a Palestinian hospital. The Palestinian Prisoners Affairs Committee and Al-Qeeq’s lawyers announced on Sunday, 7 February that he rejected any agreement that did not immediately bring to an end his imprisonment without charge or trial.

This announcement came as Palestinian leader and former hunger striker, Khader Adnan, who won his release from administrative detention twice in long-term hunger strikes, conducted a one-day solidarity strike for al-Qeeq, alongside his wife and other activists for the freedom of Palestinian prisoners. Protests throughout Palestine and internationally are demanding al-Qeeq’s immediate release, including an occupation at the International Committee of the Red Cross office in Gaza City that demanded more action to free al-Qeeq, support tents in various West Bank cities and refugee camps, and protests in occupied Palestine ’48.

Al-Qeeq, a journalist with Al-Majd television, has been on hunger strike since 25 November. He initiated the strike in protest of his torture under interrogation and continued it when ordered to six months administrative detention without charge or trial. He has pledged to continue his strike until freedom, and earlier rejected an Israeli Supreme Court decision to “suspend” his detention due to his health condition.

Cartoon: Mohammed Sabaaneh

8 February, USA: National call-in day to end Mohammed al-Qeeq’s administrative detention

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Monday, 8 February
11:00 am – 3:00 pm EST (10:00 am – 2:00 pm CST)
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1055960941127415/
Organized by American Muslims for Palestine

The American Muslims for Palestine, a national education and advocacy organization, today is calling for a national call-in day on behalf of Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, 33. Mr. al-Qeeq is in a “struggle against death,” after more than 75 days on a hunger strike to protest the inhumane conditions under which Israeli occupation authorities have detained him since his arrest on Nov. 21, 2015. He is protesting Israel’s use of administrative detention, or being held without charge or trial and has refused all nourishment, including salts and minerals since Nov. 24.

On Sunday, an Israeli doctor in the hospital where al-Qeeq is being detained told media that al-Qeeq is in critical condition and “each minute marks serious threat to his life.”  The father of two has lost his ability to speak, is nearly blind and lapses in and out of consciousness, according to a source close to the family.

Mr. al-Qeeq recently rejected an Israeli offer to release him on May 1, and instead demanded the immediate end of his administrative detention and the ability to be treated in a Palestinian hospital once he is freed, according to media reports.

Israeli occupation forces arrested Mr. al-Qeeq from his home at 2 a.m. on Nov. 21 and subjected him to 25 days of brutal interrogation. He began his hunger strike on Nov. 24 and spent several weeks in solitary confinement before he was transferred to a military hospital on Dec. 30, 2015 due to his deteriorating health.

TAKE ACTION

We must take action now! Israel’s use of administrative detention violates international and American laws.

Call Ambassador Anne W. Patterson, Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, and ask the US State Department to pressure Israel to end Mohammed Al-Qiq’s administrative detention immediately.

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.
  • Mr. 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.

CONTACT INFO

Please call Assistant Secretary of State Anne Patterson at 202. 647.3930.

TWEET

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

@John Kerry
@StateDept
@POTUS
@WhiteHouse

Once you call, please post a comment on this Facebook page.

Berlin protesters stand in solidarity with hunger-striking journalist Al-Qeeq, Palestinian prisoners

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The Palestinian National Action Commission in Berlin organized a protest on Friday, 5 February in solidarity with imprisoned hunger-striking Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, on his 73rd day of hunger strike. Protesters gathered at Potsdamer Platz, carrying signs and flags demanding the immediate release of al-Qeeq and the freedom of all Palestinian prisoners.

Al-Qeeq, 33, is a journalist for Al-Majd television. He has been on hunger strike since 25 November 2015; originally in protest of his torture under interrogation and then in protest of his imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention. Al-Qeeq announced that he was continuing his hunger strike after an Israeli supreme court decision “suspended” his detention due to his health condition, demanding his immediate freedom. He also rejected a deal that would free him on 1 May, saying that his continued imprisonment without charge or trial was unacceptable.

The protest in Berlin came alongside actions in New York, Montreal and elsewhere in Germany, as well as protests throughout Palestine.

 

On his 73rd day of hunger strike, New York protest calls for freedom for Mohammed al-Qeeq

Protest to free hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners

New Yorkers protested outside the offices of G4S on Friday, 5 February, calling for the immediate release of Palestinian hunger-striking journalist Mohameed al-Qeeq from Israeli prisons, and an end to the security corporation’s dealings with the Israeli repressive state apparatus. Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network organized its weekly protest outside the offices of G4S, where participants distributed material about the corporation’s links with Israeli apartheid and about the case of Al-Qeeq, 33, who has been on hunger strike for 74 days against his administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

G4S is the subject of a global boycott campaign for its provision of control rooms and security equipment to Israeli prisons, checkpoints and police training centers that imprison, torture and abuse Palestinians. One protester, a mental health worker from Gaza, highlighted the impact of Israeli torture and repression on Palestinian lives and health. Despite G4S’ involvement in human rights abuses, not only in Palestine, but in the United States, Canada, South Africa, the UK and elsewhere, the United Nations continues to contract with G4S; hundreds of organizations in Palestine and internationally have demanded the UN drop its G4S contracts.

Protests in solidarity with Al-Qeeq and demanding his immediate release have recently taken place in Tampa, Berlin, Montreal and elsewhere. Another protest is scheduled in New York City outside G4S’ offices for Friday, 12 February.

Photos by activist photographer Erik McGregor:

Photos by Joe Catron:

12 February, NYC: Protest to free Mohammed al-Qeeq and stop G4S

(Photo by Erik McGregor)
(Photo by Erik McGregor)

Friday, 12 February
4:00 pm
G4S Offices, NYC – 17 W 44th St, NYC
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/569809956528041/
Organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

This Friday, Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, one of 660 administrative detainees held by Israel, will enter the 80th day of an open hunger strike against his indefinite imprisonment without charge or trial.

On 4 February, al-Qeeq rejected the decision of the Israeli Supreme Court to “suspend” his administrative detention due to his health, for later reimposition. He announced that he was continuing his hunger strike and rejection of medical treatment until he is freed from administrative detention without charge or trial without conditions.

Al-Qeeq’s wife, Fayhaa Shalash, told reporters on 5 February that his health had continued to decline and he was no longer responsive to visitors.

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.

Mohammed al-Qeeq’s statement on ongoing hunger strike, call for solidarity

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Palestinian journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, now on his 73rd day of hunger strike, issued a statement from HaEmek hospital in Afula, where he is held. Yesterday, 4 February, al-Qeeq rejected the decision of the Israeli Supreme Court to “suspend” his administrative detention due to his health, for later reimposition; he announced that he was continuing his hunger strike and rejection of medical treatment until he is freed from administrative detention without charge or trial without conditions.

Palestinian lawyer Hanan al-Khatib reported Al-Qeeq’s statement as follows:

First: His rejection of the “suspension” of administrative detention, which is an attempt to undermine solidarity with the hunger strike and deceive the world. He refuses to visit with his family in the occupation hospitals; his demand is for treatment only in Palestinian hospitals after the full and unconditional termination of his detention; this decision is clear.

Second: The occupation and the Israeli prison managements bear full responsibility for his life, because this is an attempt to disclaim responsibility for any developments on his health.

Third: This does not indicate any intention by the occupation to resolve this case: he refuses treatment in occupation hospitals and confirms that his hunger strike continues and will not stop until he wins his freedom.

Fourth: He calls on all free voices in the world to intensify their solidarity with him now, in response to this decision, which is tantamount to execution under a medical and legal cover.

Al-Qeeq’s demands were reiterated by his family, who “called the suspension of his detention a murder and an execution under the pretext of medical treatment and a way to dodge responsibility for anything that may happen to him.” The family joined his refusal of visits in HaEmek hospital, noting that his demand is for treatment in a Palestinian hospital.