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Campaign in Solidarity with Omar Nayef Zayed: No to official pressure, no to silence

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The following statement (in English and Arabic, below) was issued by the Campaign in Solidarity with the struggler Omar Nayef Zayed:

Official Palestinian pressure is continuing on the struggling former prisoner Omar Nayef Zayed, who has been forced to take sanctuary in the Palestinian embassy in Bulgaria. Zayed is threatened with extradition to the occupation state and being unjustly reimprisoned, despite the obsolescence of the sentence against him and the illegitimacy of the military courts of the occupation.

Despite the urgency of the situation, the Palestinian Ambassador in Bulgaria, Ahmad al-Madbuh, continues to disregard the requests of Zayed and his family, including denying a request to arrange a meeting between an international lawyer coming from Brussels and Zayed.

These actions and behaviors are arbitrarily confiscating the rights of Omar Nayef Zayed to legal advice and consultation, and a violation of the Palestinian national and human duties of the embassy.

The campaign in solidarity with Omar Nayef Zayed, with Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network in Brussels, made a request to Ambassador al-Madbuh for a delegation from Palestinian communities across Europe to meet with Zayed, but this was rejected as was a previous visit by a representative of Samidoun, planned to consult with him on his legal case and solidarity campaign. This official behavior from the embassy is contrary to the norms of the Palestinian cause and raises suspicion and uncertainty about the intentions and commitment of the Palestinian Authority and its ambassador in Sofia; especially following the exclusion of the Nayef Zayed family in occupied Palestine from consultations of the “crisis team” formed by the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah. These actions come in the same exclusionary and oppressive context.

The campaign in solidarity with Omar Nayef Zayed emphasizes again that the refuge of a Palestinian struggler in the Embassy of the State of Palestine in Bulgaria is a natural right and the right of every Palestinian subjected to persecution because of their participation in the struggle against the occupation. The embassies of the State of Palestine are the property of the Palestinian people and must not be treated as detention centers or places of isolation for Palestinian strugglers.

Accordingly, the campaign of solidarity with Omar Nayef Zayed appeals directly to the Palestinian people, and calls on all Palestinian political forces and civil society institutions to exercise political and media pressure on the leadership of the PLO, the PA, its ambassador Ahmad al-Madbuh in Bulgaria, Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to take up their full responsibility for the safety, security and life of the struggler and former prisoner Omar Nayef Zayed.

لا للضغط الرّسمي على المناضل عمر النايف … لا للصمت.

بيان هام صادر عن الحملة الدولية للتضامن مع المناضل عمر زايد النايف

يتواصل مسلسل الضغط الرّسمي الفلسطيني على المناضل والأسير المحرر المناضل عمر زايد النايف الذي لجأ مضطراً إلى السفارة الفلسطينية في بلغاريا بسبب ملاحقته بهدف تسليمه لدولة الاحتلال، وإعادة محاكمته دون وجه حق، خاصة بعد أن سقطت وتقادمت كافة الأحكام الصادرة بحقه من قبل الاحتلال، ومحاكمة اللاشرعية.

ويواصل السفير الفلسطيني السيد أحمد المذبوح في بلغاريا تجاهله التام لكل مطلب تتقدم به حملة التضامن مع المناضل النايف وعائلته بما في ذلك رفض السفير المذبوح استقبال أو لقاء أو ترتيب مقابلة بين المحامي الدولي الموفد من بروكسل وبين المناضل الفلسطيني عمر النايف.

إن هذه التصرفات والسلوكيات اللامسؤولة، وغيرها، هي مصادرة تعسفية على حق المناضل عمر النايف في التشاور مع محاميه، فضلاً عن كونها سلوكيات منافية للأخلاق الانسانية والوطنية.

تؤكد حملة التضامن مع عمر النايف، مُجددًا، على أن لجوء المناضل الفلسطيني إلى سفارة دولة فلسطين في بلغاريا إنما هو حق طبيعي له، وحق لكل فلسطيني وفلسطينية يتعرضوا للملاحقة بسبب مشاركتهم في المقاومة ضد الاحتلال. إن سفارات دولة فلسطين ملكاً وحقاً للشعب الفلسطيني، يجب ألا تتحول إلى مراكز للاعتقال وحصار المناضلين والمناضلات.

وعليه، فإن حملة التضامن الدولية مع عمر النايف لا تملك إلا التوجه المباشر للرأي العام الفلسطيني، وتطالب كل القوى السياسية الفلسطينية ومؤسسات المجتمع الأهلي، ممارسة الضغط السياسي والاعلامي على قيادة منظمة التحرير والسلطة الفلسطينية وسفيرها أحمد المذبوح في بلغاريا، كما وتُحمّل رأس السلطة، السيد محمود عباس، ووزارة الخارجية الفلسطينية والسفارة الفلسطينية في بلغاريا، كامل المسؤولية عن سلامة وأمن وحياة المناضل والأسير المُحرر عمر زايد النايف. 

 الحملة الدولية للتضامن

مع المناضل عمر زايد النايف

17/1/2016

 

New Resources: Toolkit and Leaflets on the case of Omar Nayef Zayed

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New resources are now available to help supporters around the world advocate for freedom and justice for Omar Nayef Zayed, the Palestinian former political prisoner living in Bulgaria for 22 years who is now facing extradition to Israel.

Zayed, 52, has taken refuge in the Palestinian embassy in Bulgaria’s capital of Sofia. Having escaped from Israeli captivity in 1990 after four years of imprisonment in Israeli jails and a 40-day hunger strike, he is married to a Bulgarian woman and has three Bulgarian children. Israel is calling on Bulgaria to extradite Zayed for reimprisonment under the European Convention on Extradition.

Bulgarian police raided Zayed’s home on 17 December 2015; since then, he has taken refuge in the Palestinian embassy. His case is not an individual case, but one with international significance for the safety of Palestinian former prisoners everywhere around the world. Protests in solidarity with Zayed have taken place in Ramallah, Gaza, Berlin, Brussels, New York, London and elsewhere around the world – and more are being organized.

In order to build the broadest possible campaign in support of Zayed, it is important to reach out to Bulgarian, European and other organizations, institutions and political figures and officials. The Israeli occupation is attempting to use Bulgarian and European police and courts as the long arm of the occupation military, imprisoning Palestinians and enforcing the occupation.

The following resources, prepared by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, can be used by individuals, groups and organizations advocating for justice for Omar Nayef Zayed:

Activist Toolkit – for activist groups interested in campaigning for justice for Omar

Omar Nayef Zayed Case - Toolkit_Page_01Toolkit for Activists: Information Packet, Action Guide (Download PDF)

Flyer/Leaflet – for public distribution at protests and events

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Download Leaflet/Flyer (Download PDF)

Information Packet – for distribution to officials, institutions and others who want to learn more

Omar Nayef Zayed Case - Information Packet_Page_2

Information Packet on the Omar Nayef Zayed Case (Download PDF)

Factsheet – Quick points on the Omar Nayef Zayed case

Omar Nayef Zayed Case - Factsheet_Page_2

Factsheet on Omar Nayef Zayed (Download PDF)

 

 

Arrested Adolescence: On the Interrupted Development of Palestinian Minors in Prison by Dr. Samah Jabr

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is pleased to republish the following important article on the very serious and traumatic impact of arrest, detention, interrogation and imprisonment by the Israeli occupation on Palestinian children and youth.

By Dr. Samah Jabr 

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The Israeli parliament has recently approved a law that allows the sentencing of up to 20 years in prison for Palestinians who throw stones, individuals who are usually minors. This development was followed by a law that would allow for the imprisonment of Palestinian children as young as 12, if they are found guilty of “nationalistically-motivated” violent offences.

As a clinician, I am often confronted with adolescents whose social and psychological growth has been suspended by experiences of political detention. I observe that many such youths have become anxious and depressed following this experience, whereas others manifest stoicism and fail to express any emotion.

“Majed” (all names have been changed) is a boy of 14; he has been arrested 14 times and often beaten brutally in detention. On one occasion, the Israeli forces broke his teeth and inflicted a number of head injuries. Majed was brought to my clinic by an older sister who had just finished medical school. She explained that he did not listen to anyone at home, no longer respected his teachers and frequently missed school. Instead, he befriended men of 30 or 40 and accompanied them to spend time in coffee shops. I found in Majed an adolescent experiencing a hypertrophic growth of his status as a hero, at the expense of compromising other areas of personality development. This profile of adolescent ex-detainees is typical. Less commonly, we see reactions such as that of Mufeed, in whom the experience of detention brought a deeper destruction, at least with regard to his image of his father. Mufeed claimed that “the prison guard was better than my father; he gave me cigarettes to smoke.”

Majed and Mufeed are just two among the 700 Palestinian youths arrested each year. The average age of arrest is 15 and the average duration of their detention in prison is 147 days. Ninety per cent of these minors have been documented as having been exposed to traumatic experiences and sixty-five of them have developed diagnosable psychiatric disorders. For these minors and adolescents, the experience of arrest is superimposed upon a childhood already rendered difficult due to the Israeli occupation, in which social services and educational support systems are poor, nutrition and health care are inadequate and political violence is rampant.

Adolescence everywhere is characterised by an accelerated movement towards social independence and identity formation, as well as by emotional liability and impulsive behaviour. However, the context of the occupation makes the risks greater and the consequences heavier for Palestinian adolescents. Some youngsters find the dangers inherent to resistance to be more exciting than a passive surrender to oppression. Such young people empathise and identify with the suffering of the community as a group and seek to establish a special status for themselves by acting on its behalf. While adolescents elsewhere may romanticise and model themselves on media stars, some Palestinian adolescents romanticise freedom fighters, like the figure of Muhannad Elhalaby, who countered his sense of helplessness by grabbing the gun of an Israeli settler and killing two settlers in the midst of attacks on the mosque.

The reality of detention is a story of horror, helplessness and humiliation for minors. It is usual for dozens of armed soldiers and their dogs to invade the family home in the middle of the night, interrupting the sleep of the whole neighbourhood and demonstrating through their excessive aggression that resistance is meaningless. The child’s father is intimidated through threats to hand over his boy to the soldiers, and often does so despite the tearful pleas of the mother and siblings. Snatched in this way from his warm bed, the boy is exposed to unnecessary disorientation and physical violence as he is transferred to an unknown destination, often for an unknown reason as well. Typically he is handcuffed painfully and blindfolded, unable meanwhile to communicate with or to understand people who are shouting at him in Hebrew. He is slapped, kicked, punched and shoved as he is tied up and rendered completely powerless. Then, alone without a lawyer or a parent present, he is interrogated for a period of time extending from hours to weeks, with deprivation of relief for physiological needs such as the availability of food, drink, toilet facilities and sleep. He is exposed to excessive heat or cold, forced into the horror of witnessing others being tortured, and stripped naked before being subject to the same procedures himself.

Interrogators inflict guilt by threats made to his family members: “We will bring your mother and sisters here” and “We will demolish your home.” Leaving the horror to the child’s imagination, the interrogator might play with a rubber glove while telling the minor, “If you don’t tell us the names of your friends who throw stones, something really bad will happen to you.” Interrogators often threaten, “I’ll take you to room Number Four, where people enter on two legs and come out on all fours.” Detained youngsters are often told that their friends or neighbours have already informed on them and many break down in response to this lie; they end up signing their names to Hebrew documents that they are not able to read. Many such children and adolescents recall these moments especially with unbearable feelings of shame. These youngsters are then relegated to isolation and uncertainty within the hostile prison environment, where the passage of time and life processes are frozen. Here their human attachments are destroyed, as few families succeed in gaining permission to visit their children.

In March 2013, during a period of relative political calm, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) described the ill-treatment of Palestinian minors held in Israeli military detention centres as “widespread, systematic and institutionalised.” UNICEF examined the Israeli military court system and found evidence of “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment.” There are reports of circumstances in which dogs were utilised to attack children; where children and adolescents were sexually violated; and where youngsters were forced to witness or to perform acts that degraded their religious symbols.

The process of arresting minors targets the future of the Palestinian nation. It is an attack on the body, the personality, the belief system, the hopes and the dreams of young Palestinians, rendering their families dysfunctional and breaking the bonds of their connection with their community.

Many of these minors emerge from prison unable to learn in school or to pursue a profession. In their eyes, their parents and teachers are damaged as authority figures. Their trust in their friends and neighbours is destroyed. Their own community may not trust them either, because other children would have been told that they had implicated them to their interrogators. They live with the ongoing and realistic fear of further detention. And the family often experiences the arrest of the minor as extremely traumatic; they feel guilty for failing to protect him and thereby may indeed grow incapable of guiding the minor in a safe journey from childhood to adulthood. Unable to develop, left without education or family guidance, many adolescents thus fail to develop a mature and multifaceted adult identity. The ex-detainee clings to his identity as a prisoner. Such youngsters are stuck in perpetual limbo, unable to return to the innocence of childhood or to move forward as functional adults.

A feeling of ineffectiveness often seeps into clinicians who treat these youngsters. The psychological consequences of minors’ arrest do not lend themselves to diagnostic labelling, pathologising and medicalising. These youngsters require us to act as witnesses, to join them in solidarity and to accompany them and their families in the exploration of the meaning of experience. It is our goal to help them reprocess this meaning, and to integrate it into their current life and in their plans for the future.

Hippocrates told doctors 25 centuries ago that we are not often able to cure; that we are sometimes able to treat; but that we are always able to offer comfort. We, clinicians, cannot liberate these children from Israeli prisons, but we may succeed in liberating them from the prison within as they come back to our community.

(Get involved in the creation of feature documentary, Behind the Fronts, about the psychological consequences of Israeli occupation.) 

– Samah Jabr is a Jerusalemite psychiatrist and psychotherapist who cares about the wellbeing of her community – beyond issues of mental illness. 

14th anniversary of Palestinian Authority arrest of Ahmad Sa’adat: Freedom for all prisoners

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The Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat issued the following statement on 15 January, marking the 14th anniversary of Sa’adat’s imprisonment by the Palestinian Authority (later kidnapped by Israeli occupation forces in an attack on Jericho prison on 14 March 2006; the Palestinian political leader, General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, is now sentenced to 30 years in Israeli prison)

Arabic campaign statement | French statement (translation via Coup Pour Coup 31)

Today, January 15, 2016, marks the 14th anniversary of the abduction of Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat by a treacherous act of the Palestinian security services against not only Ahmad Sa’adat, but against the Palestinian people, their resistance and their struggle.

The Palestinian Authority’s intelligence service, supported by other security agencies, arrested Sa’adat along with his comrades, and detained them at the presidential headquarters of the PA. This act came in submission to the terms of the United States and the Zionist state, and in the framework of security coordination between the Palestinian Authority and the occupation – a framework that continues, despite the massive harm it has caused the Palestinian people for the past 23 years, to the present day.

This targeted attack on the leaders and cadres of the resistance paved the way for their imprisonment in Jericho prison in a notorious agreement with the occupation, under U.S. and British guards – and also paved the way for the March 14, 2006 attack on the prison and kidnapping of Sa’adat and his comrades by occupation soldiers.

The Palestinian Authority’s security apparatus is a burden upon the Palestinian people, rather than a force that provides them security against the relentless attacks and invasion of occupation soldiers and settlers. The Palestinian people have given and continue to give immense sacrifices in order to obtain their freedom, but are met time and again with authoritarian and repressive measures against their organizing, and continued security coordination with the occupation. The Palestinian Authority leadership is perhaps more than ever subservient to the demands of the occupation, while Palestinian institutions and embassies fail to serve or represent the Palestinian people, their cause and their concerns.

We reaffirm that the impact of this crime 14 years ago has not lessened, and that the Palestinian Authority and its security services must be accountable for the kidnapping of Sa’adat and his comrades, and all of the crimes of security coordination and repression against the Palestinian people, their resistance and their national leaders.

Today, we also note the urgent case of the Palestinian struggler and liberated prisoner Omar Nayef Zayed in Bulgaria. As we saw in the involvement of the U.S. and British security services in the imprisonment of Sa’adat, today, Zayed is facing extradition to the hands of the occupier by the Bulgarian state, where he has lived for the past 22 years, after escaping unjust imprisonment in occupation prisons.

Zayed has taken refuge inside the Palestinian embassy in Sofia. Today, as we remember this devastating crime against Sa’adat and against the Palestinian people, we demand that this crime not be repeated and that Zayed be fully protected by the Palestinian embassy and all Palestinian institutions. We also urge all supporters of the struggle of Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian liberation struggle to demand that Omar Nayef Zayed is not turned over to the occupation state and that Bulgaria’s courts and police are not used as extensions of the Israeli occupation forces.

The rising Palestinian people have exposed more than ever the bankruptcy of the path of negotiations, coordination and submission to the occupation and to U.S. imperialism. At the same time, the rising of the Palestinian people also inspires true hope for revolutionary change and liberation. The compass of the Palestinian people has always remained pointed toward freedom, and they confront, with firm resolve and determination all attempts to diminish their resistance and their just cause. Without rest, despite repression, imprisonment and invasions, they resist, revolt and struggle to free all of the prisoners, all of the people and all of the land of Palestine.

Freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat and all Palestinian Prisoners!

Justice and Freedom for Omar Nayef Zayed!

January 15, 2016

Palestinian hunger striker’s appeal rejected; journalist on 53rd day of strike

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Two Palestinian prisoners held in administrative detention without charge or trial are continuing their hunger strikes despite serious threats to their health: Mohammed al-Qeeq, 33, is now on his 53rd day of hunger strike and Hassan Shokah, 27, is now on his 35th day of strike.

Journalist Al-Qeeq, a correspondent for Al-Majd channel, has entered in and out of consciousness in the past several days.

On 16 January, the Ofer military court rejected an appeal by Al-Qeeq against his imprisonment without charge. Issa Qaraqe, chair of the Palestinian Detainees’ Affairs Committee, said that this underlines the military courts’ responsibility for Al-Qeeq’s dangerous health situation and that the court was acting out of “revenge” against Al-Qeeq for his hunger strike, noting that the military courts serve only to present a legal facade for Israeli intelligence and military repression.

He is held in Afula hospital, where he is shackled to his hospital bed and is facing increasing physical danger after 53 days of strike. On Friday, Palestinian citizens of Israel organized a protest outside Afula hospital calling for Al-Qeeq’s release.

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Doctors at Afula hospital delivered intravenous nutrients against Al-Qeeq’s objection; when he regained consciousness he removed the intravenous tube, rejecting any form of nutrients or forced treatment. He has previously been arrested three times and served over two years in Israeli occupation prisons.

Shokah, 27, has also been held multiple times in administrative detention without charge or trial. He is being held in isolation in Jalameh prison, imprisoned arbitrarily via military order since 16 September 2015. He was denied winter clothing when transferred in a cold metal van to Jalameh and then was denied winter blankets within the prison.

Information contributed by Reham Alhelsi of A Voice from Palestine.

Take Action to support the Hunger Strikers:

1. Protest at the Israeli consulate or embassy in your area.  Bring posters and flyers about administrative detention and Palestinian hunger strikers and hold a protest, or join a protest with this important information. Hold a community event or discussion, or include this issue in your next event about Palestine and social justice. Please email us atsamidoun@samidoun.net to inform us of your action – we will publicize and share news with the prisoners. Join our protest in New York City on January 22.

2. Contact political officials in your country – members of Parliament or Congress, or the Ministry/Department of Foreign Affairs or State – and demand that they cut aid and relations with Israel on the basis of its apartheid practices, its practice of colonialism, and its numerous violations of Palestinian rights including the systematic practice of administrative detention. Demand they pressure Israel to free the hunger strikers and end administrative detention.

2. Boycott, Divest and Sanction. Hold Israel accountable for its violations of international law. Don’t buy Israeli goods, and campaign to end investments in corporations that profit from the occupation. G4S, a global security corporation, is heavily involved in providing services to Israeli prisons that jail Palestinian political prisoners – there is a global call to boycott itPalestinian political prisoners have issued a specific call urging action on G4S. Learn more about BDS at bdsmovement.net.

Dheisheh camp invaded: Palestinian woman arrested, freed prisoners summoned for interrogation

strikerssIsraeli occupation forces today invaded Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem, where they arrested Hanadi Mousa al-Moghrabi, 37, the wife of imprisoned Palestinian Ahmad al-Moghrabi, who has been held in Israeli jails since 2002.

Moghrabi joins over 50 Palestinian women held in Israeli jails, including Palestinian leftist parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar, long-time prisoner Lena Jarbouni, lawyer Shireen Issawi and activist Ihsan Dababseh, who was just sentenced to 20 months imprisonment for membership in a prohibited organization.

The invading occupation soldiers also handed over summons for interrogation to former prisoners Nidal Abu Aker, Ghassan Zawahreh and Adnan al-Afandi, demanding their appearance at the Etzion military base. Abu Aker and Zawahreh were just freed last month – on 10 December and 30 November, respectively – after a 40-day hunger strike against their administrative detention without charge or trial. Zawahreh is also the brother of Moataz, who was killed by Israeli occupation soldiers on 13 October, shot dead as he participated in a demonstration in Bethlehem.

Zawahreh has been held under administrative detention without charge or trial on multiple occasions, as has Abu Aker, who has spent over 10 years in Israeli prisons over multiple arrests. He is a Palestinian journalist who hosts a program on political prisoners for Sawt al-Wihda radio, broadcasting from Dheisheh refugee camp.

Their release had been negotiated as part of the end of the hunger strike, which took place in August-September 2015. One of their fellow hunger strikers, also from Dheisheh refugee camp, Shadi Ma’ali, was just subject to an additional four months renewal of administrative detention without charge or trial. Ma’ali’s detention has been renewed four additional times since his arrest on 28 June 2014; he has been imprisoned this entire time with no charge or trial. He has spent over 12 years in Israeli prisons over various arrests and is very active in organizing in the Dheisheh camp.

The administrative detention without charge or trial of Kayed Abu Rish, from Al-Ain refugee camp in Nablue, was also renewed on 12 January; he has been imprisoned arbitrarily since 13 January 2015 and participated in the collective hunger strike against administrative detention in August-September of last year. Abu Rish, 44, has spent over 16 years in Israeli jails over multiple arrests.

Over 660 Palestinians are currently held in administrative detention without charge or trial in Israeli prisons.

London protest demands #FreeAhmadManasrah, all imprisoned Palestinian children

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Inminds’ Palestinian Prisoners Campaign organized a protest outside the London offices of G4S, the global security corporation that provides security systems and control rooms to Israeli prisons, checkpoints and police training centers, denouncing G4S’ role in the imprisonment of Palestinians. The protest focused in particular on Palestinian children and the call to free Ahmad Manasrah, the 13-year-old Palestinian boy whose ramming and abusive interrogation were captured on video.

The protest is part of ongoing actions against G4S; hundreds of Palestinian and international organizations have called upon the United Nations to stop doing business with the corporation, implicated in human rights violations in Palestine and elsewhere.

There is an international campaign to free Ahmad Manasrah and all Palestinian child prisoners, including protests and events around the world highlighting Manasrah’s case and calling for international action on Palestinian children’s imprisonment.

Inminds regularly organizes protests outside the London headquarters of G4S against its role in Palestine. There are over 470 Palestinian children imprisoned in Israeli jails.

“Most of these children are caged in G4S secured prisons. This week the British documentary programme Panorama revealed the British security contractor G4S’s abuse of children at a young offenders centre in the UK which has now lead to 5 arrests. As shocking as the revelations are, we want to say that Palestinian children’s lives also matter, and G4S’s complicity in the brutal on-going torture of Palestinian children must stop,” said the organizers.

Video:

10 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike against repressive guards as tension escalates in Megiddo, Gilboa and Eshel prisons

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10 Palestinian prisoners are on hunger strike inside the Israeli Megiddo prison, escalating their protest against overcrowding, denial of personal belongings, electricity cuts, and raids within the prison.

The 10 prisoners were transferred to isolation after they refused their meals, forcibly taken by guards who invaded their cells, beating some of the prisoners. Palestinian prisoners’ clothes and blankets have been confiscated, their rooms repeatedly ransacked by guards engaging in “inspections,” and electricity was cut to an entire section of the prison.

There are 97 child prisoners in section 3 of Megiddo prison, all under 16 years of age.

A state of high tension also prevails in Gilboa prison, reported the Handala Center for Prisoners and Freed Prisonersh, where there are daily raids and inspections of prisoners’ cells and increased restrictions imposed on Palestinian prisoners’ belongings and recreation.

The Handala Center also reported an increasing state of tension in Eshel prison, where prisoners have repeatedly been subject to violent and repressive inspection raids by prison guards, particularly the “Matsada” special units. Family members visiting prisoners in Eshel have undergone humiliating and extensive personal searches, and 15 prisoners were transferred from Eshel to isolation at Ohli Kedar prison. Handala Center reported that prisoners have declared that they will rise up to confront further violent and repressive raids on their cells.

Palestinian prisoner denied replacement pacemaker after 5-years expiration

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Riad Amour, a Palestinian prisoner held in Eshel prison, is facing a serious health crisis as Israeli prison doctors are refusing to change the pacemaker installed in his chest five years ago; the device he has should be replaced every five years.

Palestinian prisoners have repeatedly reported medical neglect and mistreatment in Israeli jails, including the use of painkillers for all medical complaints, denial of tests in order to provide diagnoses, and denial of treatment for serious disease like cancer.

Amour suffers from numerous health problems; he was shot in the back and shrapnel remains in his body, and has lost a portion of his intestines and liver. His heart is functional only with the implanted pacemaker that now needs replacement; he had open heart surgery two years ago. He has been a spokesperson on many occasions for the severely ill prisoners in Ramle prison clinic.

15 Palestinian prisoners held in solitary confinement, denied family visits

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International Middle East Media Center – The Palestinian Detainees’ Committee has reported that at least 15 political prisoners, held by Israel, have been held in solitary confinement for several years, denied the right to family visits, and held under very difficult, inhumane conditions.

The Committee said that the Israeli “justification” for holding them indefinitely in isolated, small cells, is the allegation that they “pose a threat to Israel’s security.”

“The cells are like tombs; they are small, dirty and lack proper ventilation; they lack basic requirements for human use,” it stated, “The detainees are not allowed to have any of their personal belongings, including books, and whenever they are allowed out of the cells to the prison yards (usually an hour a day), they always remain handcuffed.”

Some of the detainees have been held in solitary confinement for more than three years; each receives a six-month solitary confinement order that is automatically renewed under direct orders from Israeli security officers.

“The orders are a nightmare, constant and illegal violations to the detainees and their families,” the committee added, “Such types of punishments target the detainee’s minds and bodies; they are meant to crush their spirits and steadfastness.”

The Committee also stated that all isolated detainees are denied the rights to family visits, not allowed access to books, newspapers, electric equipment, and are repeatedly transferred between different cells and prisons, in an attempt to keep them disoriented and to deny them the basic feeling of stability.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces the use of isolation and solitary confinement, a form of inhumane and degrading treatment amounting to severe psychological torture. The use of long-term isolation has deeply damaging effects and has been widely condemned, including by the UN Special Rapporteur Juan Mendez.

In 2012, thousands of Palestinian prisoners engaged in the Karameh hunger strike; chief among their demands was the end of the use of long-term solitary confinement and isolation. 19 Palestinian prisoners, including prominent leaders such as Ahmad Sa’adat and Jamil Abu al-Hija were returned to the general population following the agreement to end the strike. Since that time, however, the Israeli prison administration has repeatedly escalated its violation of the agreement to end the use of long-term solitary confinement.

Another isolated Palestinian prisoner, Shadi Mutawa, was just released from solitary confinement in Megiddo prison to the general population in Eshel prison after a 28-day hunger strike demanding an end to his isolation.

The Detainees’ Committee identified the detainees who have been in extended solitary confinement as;

1. Shokri al-Khawaja, from Ramallah.
2. Majed Ragheb Ja’ba, from Jerusalem.
3. Mohammad Nayfa Abu Rabea’a, from Tulkarem.
4. Hassan Omar, from Tulkarem.
5. Fares Sa’ada, from Hebron.
6. Hasan Kheizaran, from Lebanon.
7. Alex Mans from Belgium. (Iranian-born Belgian accused of spying for Iran).
8. Abdul-Rahman Othman, from Nablus.
9. Nour ‘Amar, from Qalqilia.
10. Abdul-Atheem Abdul-Haq, from Nablus.
11. Mousa Sofan, from Tulkarem.
12. Nahar Sa’adi, from Jenin.
13. Issam Zeineddin, from Nablus.
14. Mohammad al-Bal, from Gaza.
15. Majed al-Ja’bari, from Hebron