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Take Action: Stand with the Anti-War Committee

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands with the Anti-War Committee and encourages all supporters and friends of Palestinian political prisoners and the Palestinian struggle for liberation to support this call to action. Activists with the Anti-War Committee are being criminalized and attacked by University of Minnesota officials – and were arrested – following a protest against Israeli professor and author of the Israeli military’s “code of ethics” Moshe Halbertal on 3 November in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in the United States.

Rather than rejecting a war crimes apologist and architect of the systematic oppression of the Palestinian people, the University of Minnesota Law School paid Halbertal a $5,000 speaking fee, treating him as an honored guest, while meeting human rights activists, concerned students, and Palestinian and solidarity organizers with police force and arrest. Among the three activists arrested was a National Lawyers Guild observer filming the police aggression against protesters.

We salute the strength, commitment and integrity of the protest organizers, including longtime justice advocates, students of color, and Palestinian and Arab students and community members. As the Anti-War Committee writes, “Actions like the protest at the UMN Law School are critical to advancing this work. We call on people of conscience to seize every opportunity to challenge the normalization of the Israeli occupation, including directly confronting Zionist voices on our campuses, in our communities and in the government! It’s time we stop giving racist, Zionist, war apologists a free pass to speak on any public platform. Their words are hate speech and distortions, while their politics promote apartheid, occupation, and the denial of Palestinian liberation, including the fundamental right of return.”

We also note here that this is far from the first time the Anti-War Committee is targeted for repression; it has been targeted for FBI spying, government infiltration, and its offices were raided as part of the “Anti-War 23” raids and grand jury that have been attempting for over five years to target Palestine solidarity, anti-imperialist and anti-war organizers in the United States.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands with the Anti-War Committee and their commitment to full Palestinian liberation in a framework of anti-imperialist struggle for justice around the world. The AWC has always supported the struggle of Palestinians at all levels – including the struggle of Palestinian political prisoners. We demand that all criminal or disciplinary charges be dropped against all arrestees and that the University of Minnesota Law School stand with students and community activists defending human rights and justice, reject and take action to put an end to police use of force against students of color and community members, and end its hosting and honoraria of architects of the U.S. and Zionist war machine.

Please take action and stand with the Anti-War Committee by contacting Dean of the University Law School, David Wippman (612-625-4841, dwippman@umn.edu). Urge him to put an end to the policy of hosting  Zionist pro-war speakers; call on him to drop the charges against the three arrested, and end the public call for disciplining students who attended the protest; and challenge him on his praise of the police conduct, which included the shameful use of physical force, particularly against students of color.

You can also support the Anti-War Committee by writing to Minnesota media about the event: “We have published our responses to the Washington Post and Star Tribune respectively on our own website, here and here. Please amplify our efforts by submitting your own letters to the editor at the Star Tribune and the Minnesota Daily.”

Stand with the Anti-War Committee

One week ago, on Tuesday, November 3rd, the Anti-War Committee led a protest against a war crimes apologist, Moshe Halbertal, who was the featured speaker at the U of M Law School for a talk entitled “Protecting Civilians: Moral Challenges of Asymmetric Warfare.”

In response to our protest, the UMN Law School launched a campaign of public condemnation.  Their professors have used their prestigious positions at the University to denounce us in the media. Coverage in Fight Back News, the UpTake, Palestine in America, and even the Minnesota Daily, gave voice to our perspective; on the other hand, Haaretz, the Washington Post, and the Star Tribune all published one-sided reports that criticized the protest, failing to explain what motivated us.

Palestinian voices are routinely silenced, especially on university campuses across the country, by an epidemic of repression. Palestine Legal and the Center for Constitutional Rights have documented some 300 cases of repression of Palestinian rights advocates in 2014-2015; 85% were on college campuses. The response to our protest exemplifies this reality.  The Law School chose to answer our protest with police force. Students of color, especially those perceived as Arab or Muslim, were targeted with particular force by police, even when they were not disruptive. Now we have public calls by tenured faculty to discipline any students involved – students at the U and members of Students for Justice in Palestine on campus face disciplinary action and possible expulsion. For what? For challenging a representative of the Israeli occupation on their campus.

Please stand with us and with student members of our activist community by contacting the Dean of the University Law School, David Wippman (612-625-4841, dwippman@umn.edu).

Urge him to put an end to the policy of hosting  Zionist pro-war speakers; call on him to drop the charges against the three arrested, and end the public call for disciplining students who attended the protest; and challenge him on his praise of the police conduct, which included the shameful use of physical force, particularly against students of color.

Also, we need your help challenging one-sided media that has only given space to official Law School voices, and so far, failed to publish our rebuttals. Civil disobedience is an important tactic for breaking into mainstream media with anti-war and pro-Palestinian perspectives.

We have published our responses to the Washington Post and Star Tribune respectively on our own website, here and here. Please amplify our efforts by submitting your own letters to the editor at the Star Tribune and the Minnesota Daily.

Below is the Anti-War Committee’s statement regarding the protest and our actions.  Please use it not only to defend us, but also to help bring Palestinian voices into the center of community discussions about their own liberation.

Sincerely,

The Anti-War Committee

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Anti-War Committee Statement on the November 3rd Protest Against War Crimes Apologist, Moshe Halbertal

This fall, the Anti-War Committee learned that the University of Minnesota Law School would host Moshe Halbertal, a co-author of the the Israeli Defense Forces Code of Ethics.  Halbertal has a long public record of standing behind many of Israel’s atrocities, and is a professional war crimes apologist.

The University of Minnesota is wrong to spend $5000 in public funds for any speaker who gives cover to war crimes. In particular, there is an international movement to boycott Israel. That movement calls on academic institutions to NOT sponsor or participate in projects that whitewash Israel’s human rights abuses. We could not ignore the University’s decision to provide a platform that legitimizes apartheid and occupation.

Students for Justice in Palestine-UMN, Students for a Democratic Society-UMN, Women Against Military Madness, and Jewish Voices for Peace joined us to speak out against the use of “ethics” to justify Israel’s ongoing violations of human rights and international law.

Moshe Halbertal has put his views on the public record, clearly acting as a spokesperson for Israeli occupation, and an apologist for the crimes of its military.  Halbertal distorts the language of international law to justify the apartheid wall and the military occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and to trivialize the horrific conduct of the Israeli military in repeated massacres of Palestinians living in Gaza.

Halbertal praised the Netanyahu government for “showing restraint” in Gaza. This is unbelievable, given the real facts of the 2014 war on Gaza. The Israeli military used on Gaza the equivalent explosive force of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and the effects were devastating.

UN reports document the losses in Gaza during summer 2014 (also here, here and here): Israel killed some 2,250 Palestinians, including at least 551 children. 140 families in Gaza were partially or completely obliterated in Israeli attacks. Some 18,000 housing units were destroyed, leaving over 100,000 people homeless. IDF targeted civilian infrastructure, with flagrant disregard for international law prohibiting such acts. The sole power plant was bombed, the largest sewage plant was destroyed, and 7 UN schools being used as emergency shelters were bombed. 22 Gaza schools were blown apart and 118 more were severely damaged. 24 medical facilities were damaged. As we said directly to Halbertal: That’s not restraint, that’s criminal!

Halbertal has attempted to justify and explain away such atrocities with statements such as ‘war is messy,’ admitting mistakes were made, but only ‘sporadically,’ that the IDF maintained ‘a serious effort to minimize collateral harm and to target only combatants,’ and that so-called “standards of proportionality” were maintained. Halbertal dismisses the harsh truth — that Israel indiscriminately, callously, carelessly and indifferently killed civilians — as ‘nonsense.’

Aware of his record, we set out to challenge Halbertal, and his University hosts. As the introductions were just beginning, one protester stood and asked, “Why is the Law School spending $5000 for a war crimes apologist to defend Israel, while University students can’t afford tuition rates that have doubled in ten years? Why is the university flagrantly violating its commitment to human rights by refusing to honor the academic boycott of Israel, hosting a speaker that gives legal cover to apartheid?” She was pressed to leave by the U of M police, but the crowd joined in chants of “Free, free Palestine!” as she exited.

Over half of the audience was with us, many of them from the Arab and Muslim community. Community members rose from their seats, one after another, making it impossible for Halbertal’s talk to proceed. Some 20 people intervened in the event, challenging Halbertal on Israeli war crimes in Gaza last summer, and the current violations of international law and human rights in the West Bank. Most ended their remarks with chants, such as “These are massacres, not mistakes! These are war crimes! Free, free Palestine!” and “Occupation is a crime, free, free Palestine!” While many joined the chanting, some people were removed by police simply for wearing keffiyehs (Palestinian scarves) and pro-Palestine t-shirts. We were troubled to see police use disproportionate force in removing Palestinian and other Black and brown protesters. This is especially troubling in light of Law School praise for the actions of police, who they called in to shut down protesters.

Palestine supporters delayed Halbertal’s speech with interruptions for more than a half an hour.  After we were ejected from the lecture hall, we continued in the hallway for another 30 minutes, with chants that could not be ignored. Ultimately, we were forced to leave the Law School under threat of arrest. In fact, three people were arrested.

The first arrest was of a man acting as an informal legal observer, arrested for taking video of the police. A second arrest took place when one activist, who had been removed for disrupting the speech once, re-enterred the room chanting, “Free free Palestine!” The last arrest was of an activist who spent most of her time outside the lecture hall, covered in mock blood, holding a baby doll, visually representing Palestine’s civilian dead. Each of them acted on their conscience, with the full support of the Anti-War Committee and other protesters present.

Responding to our actions, Dale Carpenter wrote in the Washington Post, “There are legitimate criticisms of Israeli policies and innumerable legitimate ways those criticisms can be aired. But preventing others from hearing Israeli speakers who aren’t even defending Israeli policy cannot be one of them.” Halbertal is, in fact, a professional defender of of Israeli policies. Given that Israel has never let itself be bound by the legitimate constraints of international law, or UN resolutions calling for change, it’s disingenuous to hold Palestinians and their supporters to arbitrary standards of “legitimacy.”

Indeed, we are compelled to challenge Israel’s policies of apartheid and occupation, and its defenders, at every turn. Carpenter views this debate from the ivory tower, while we understand that this is a matter of life and death for Palestinians and their families.  Halbertal’s Code of Ethics for the IDF is not some academic discussion of ethics. Rather, it gives legal cover and practical guidance, for Israel to justify their killing of thousands of Palestinians during the war on Gaza, and the daily crimes of a 67-year military occupation.

In a commentary in the StarTribune, UMN Law School Professor Oren Gross claimed our protest was anti-Semitic, which is a misleading effort to silence criticism. Conflating Zionism and Judaism is inaccurate, offensive, and dangerous. Anti-Zionist Jews are among the most outspoken critics of Israel, including Noam Chomsky and Norm Finkelstein.  Zionism is a racist ideology, rooted in settler colonialism that seeks to ethnically cleanse Palestine, just as Minnesota historically sought to erase Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples, peoples which suffer from that on-going racism and colonialism to this day. Palestinian resistance is not fueled by anti-Semitism, but by opposition to an occupying military force. Since 1948, Israel has robbed Palestinians of their rights to self-determination, land, and the right of return. And since then, Palestinians have remained determined to win their own liberation. We stand with them.

Since 2000, the Anti-War Committee has been organizing in solidarity with the Palestinian liberation struggle, against U.S. military and diplomatic support for Israeli apartheid and occupation. We are committed to challenging U.S. aid to Israel and to shining a light on the atrocities fueled by U.S. tax dollars. Our work is part of the BDS movement, a global campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it complies with international law and Palestinian rights.

Actions like the protest at the UMN Law School are critical to advancing this work. We call on people of conscience to seize every opportunity to challenge the normalization of the Israeli occupation, including directly confronting Zionist voices on our campuses, in our communities and in the government!  It’s time we stop giving racist, Zionist, war apologists a free pass to speak on any public platform. Their words are hate speech and distortions, while their politics promote apartheid, occupation, and the denial of Palestinian liberation, including the fundamental right of return.

One day, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!!!

Samidoun participating in International League of People’s Struggles Assembly in Manila

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is participating in the Fifth International Assembly of the International League of People’s Struggles in Manila, the Philippines. ILPS is an international anti-imperialist alliance of mass organizations and progressive and revolutionary social movements around the world. Samidoun is a member of ILPS; Mohammed Khatib of Samidoun in Europe is representing the network as a resource person for the Assembly on the struggle of Palestinian political prisoners, and Aiyanas Ormond of Samidoun in Canada will also be representing ILPS Canada and several mass organizations in Vancouver.

The Assembly will include meetings, workshops and voting sessions on struggles and movements of peoples around the world.  Hundreds of organizations are participating in the assembly, which also comes as part of an international protest against APEC, the Association of Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, which has played a major role in undermining the sovereignty of formerly colonized nations and developing countries for the benefit of multinational corporations and promoting international mining interests which have been devastating to agricultural and working class communities and the environment in the Philippines and internationally.

Mohammed Khatib of Samidoun will also participate in an event at the University of the Philippines in Manila, speaking about the struggle of Palestinian political prisoners and joining in the launch of the Philippines-Palestine Solidarity Association.

Samidoun is joining fellow Palestinian and Palestine solidarity leaders, activists and organizations participating in the ILPS conference, including Leila Khaled, Palestinian resistance leader and Political Bureau Member of leftist Palestinian political party, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Khaled spoke at the International Women’s Assembly on 11 November, focusing on the struggle of Palestinian women as well as the case of imprisoned Palestinian leftist parliamentarian and political leader Khalida Jarrar. Khaled also participated in an international event denouncing the APEC conference on 12 November, in support of an international popular movement against imperialism, capitalism and exploitation.

Imprisoned Colombian guerillas on hunger strike

 

Many imprisoned guerrillas are suffering from open wounds, fractured bones, and lack access to medication for serious illnesses, according to strikers.

Members of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrillas imprisoned across the country have started a hunger strike to demand that injured jailed comrades be released and given medical treatment.

According to the guerrillas, several of their comrades have been suffering health problems or were injured in the middle of conflict upon being detained and have not been able to recover due to the lack of medical attention.

“Basically, we have comrades who are seriously ill, disabled and wounded in war in which the past two years there has been no concrete action by the State, nor the Ministry of Justice, or Inpec (National Penitentiary and Prison Institute) to improve their situation,” one inmate at La Picota prison told RCN Radio.

The prisoners listed several examples of injured colleagues who have still not received medical attention, including: one man with a fractured femur, another with an open wound in his leg as a result of being detained in combat, one man who has lost 90 percent of his vision and has no access to eye care, and others who are suffering past ailments such as cancer with no access to medications.

At least 300 guerrillas in 13 prisons across the country will participate in the hunger strike. Reports of the hunger strike first surfaced Tuesday, while protesters say it will continue indefinitely until the demands are met.

However, according to prisoner testimony at La Picota prison in Bogota, there are some 1,500 FARC members currently imprisoned across the country, so the number of strikers may grow.

“In three years of talks the insurgency has shown various proofs of peace through different gestures and there would be nothing better than the Government also showing a humanitarian act to these boys,” said Rene Nariño, a prisoner at La Picota.

Nariño is referring to the three years in which the government of Colombia and the FARC have been undergoing peace negotiations in Havana, Cuba, in an attempt to bring an end to the over 50 years of armed conflict in the country.

The strikers are asking that the government show will for peace and allow the release of the insurgents, adding that their release would not be a threat to the state since they are not fit to join combat.

This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address: “http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Imprisoned-FARC-Guerrillas-on-Hunger-Strike-Across-Colombia—20151113-0011.html”. If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. www.teleSURtv.net/english

17 November, Phoenix: ICE Demo – Release Hisham and Mounis

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Tuesday, November 17
11:00 am
ICE Phoenix Field Office – 2035 North Central Avenue / Phoenix AZ 85004
Facebook Event:  https://www.facebook.com/events/558709634279156

Gather outside Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)’s Phoenix Field Office on Tuesday 17 November at 11AM to demand an end to the year-long indefinite detention of two Palestinian refugees from Gaza.

CO-SPONSORS:
Students for Justice in Palestine – University of Arizona chapter
Puente Human Rights Movement
No More Deaths/No Mas Muertes – Tucson
Sun Devils Are Better Together

BACKGROUND:
Hisham (aged 32) and Mounis (aged 29) are both undocumented Palestinian asylum seekers who have been granted “credible fear,” the first step in claiming humanitarian protection, and so should be released from ICE detention immediately.

Hisham and Mounis fled Gaza four years ago due to very real fear for their lives resulting from continued violence and poverty under US-sponsored Israeli military occupation. Both young men are considered low-priority for deportation according to ICE’s own standards. As asylum seekers already granted credible fear, we are demanding that ICE release them immediately.

A humanitarian aid-based community in Tucson, Arizona welcomes Hisham and Mounis to support their ongoing needs.

Take Action: Escalating attacks on Palestinian children

The Israeli occupation is escalating its attacks on Palestinian children and youth amid the growing intifada, including the Justice Ministry’s new draft law, seeking to imprison Palestinian children from the age of 12.

This proposed law comes amid a raft of repressive laws promulgated by the Israeli occupation against the Palestinian population living under colonization and occupation, including the planned imposition of new minimum sentences of three years imprisonment for stone-throwing at occupation settlers and soldiers. Sentences of up to twenty years have been discussed.

All of these charges and convictions would of course, take place in Israeli military courts, which convict 99.74% of the Palestinians brought before them. While the law’s proponents have stated that its provisions apply only for “murder, attempted murder or manslaughter,” it should be noted that the use of such charges, in particular “attempted murder,” in Israeli military courts is quite broad. One such example is the case of the Hares Boys, five Palestinians – minors when arrested and charged – accused of “attempted murder” on the basis of a settler car accident that occurred near their village. (The Hares Boys were, after a series of mass arrests in their village, accused of throwing stones at the settler road, despite a complete lack of evidence, and then charged with 25 counts of “attempted murder.”)

A child of twelve convicted in Israeli military court would be imprisoned in a “closed treatment facility” administered by the occupation authorities and then be turned to a regular prison to serve their sentence. Ayelet Shaked, the far-right extremist Justice Minister of the Netanyahu government, has referred to Palestinian children as “little snakes,” stating that the “entire Palestinian people is the enemy,” and said:

“They are all enemy combatants, and their blood shall be on all their heads. Now this also includes the mothers of the martyrs, who send them to hell with flowers and kisses. They should follow their sons, nothing would be more just. They should go, as should the physical homes in which they raised the snakes.”

Well over 320 Palestinian children under 18 are imprisoned in Israeli jails, many of whom are accused of “stone-throwing.” 122 children have been arrested so far in November, following the arrest of 177 in October; there are also now 12 children held in administrative detention without charge or trial. Administrative detention is often used when there is no evidence at all to support even the most general charges of stone-throwing or posting so-called “incitement” on social media.

The Palestinian minors held under administrative detention are: Fadi Abbasi, Mohammed Gheith, and Kazem Sbeih – all from Jerusalem, which Eyad Abu Eqtaish of Defence for Children International Palestine noted was “unprecedented” – and now nine more from the West Bank: Huzaifa Jabarin, Mahmoud Abu Ali, Ashraf Zaid, Mahmoud Shweiki, Jamal Daray, Nasim Huwarin, Abdelghani Hamad, Majed Al-Saadi and Adnan Al-Azayzeh. Riyad Al-Ashqar of the Prisoners’ Center for Studies noted that Palestinian minors had not been held under administrative detention in the past eight years, noting that this is an escalation in the intensity of Israeli attacks on Palestinian children.

In this context, the video of the screaming, abusive interrogation of 13-year-old Palestinian prisoner Ahmad Manasra, without parents or a lawyer, by Israeli occupation forces, was leaked:

Manasra’s 15-year-old cousin was shot dead and he was severely wounded by Israeli occupation soldiers; following his shooting he was surrounded by settlers who denied him access to medical care and shouted profanity and abuse at him, after he and his cousin were accused of participating in a stabbing. The shooting and abuse was also captured on video.

17 Palestinian minors have been killed by Israeli occupation forces since 1 October, including a baby killed by tear gas.

Families and fellow prisoners in Ofer prison have reported that the children’s area in the prison is overcrowded due to the ongoing arrests in the past two months and that 49 of the prisoners newly arrived were severely ill, injured with live bullets, or had been severely beaten by Israeli forces prior to coming to the prison. The child prisoners also have no access to blankets or other needs inside the prison.

Take action!

Palestinian children are under attack.

1. Contact your government officials and demand an end to international silence and complicity with the attacks on Palestinian children. In Canada, Call the office of the new Foreign Minister, Stéphane Dion, at 613-996-5789 and demand an end to Canadian support for Israel and justice for Palestinian children, or email: stephane.dion@parl.gc.ca. In the US, call the White House (202-456-1111) and the US State Department (202-647-9572); raise your concern about the treatment of Palestinian children and demand an end to US aid to Israel. In the EU, contact your MEP – you can find your MEP here, or use the tool at http://freepalestine.eu/ to both call for an end to the EU-Israel Association Agreement and highlight the abuse of Palestinian children.

2. Protest at the Israeli consulate or embassy in your area.  This is a time of uprising and intifada – protests are happening around the world and are more urgent than ever. see our list of actions here: https://samidoun.net/2015/10/take-action-rise-up-with-palestine-global-protest-actions/ Hold a community event or discussion, or include this issue in your next event about Palestine and social justice. Please email us at samidoun@samidoun.net to inform us of your action – we will publicize and share news with the prisoners.

3. 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.

 

Take Action: Free Palestinian Refugees Held in US Migrant Detention Center

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Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network strongly condemns the detention of Hisham Ghalia and Mounis Hammouda in U.S. migrant detention and urges all to participate in the below action. Click here to take action.

Of course, the issue of migrant detention is not confined to the cases of Palestinian refugees; we join in the call for an immediate end to migrant detention – often indefinite – by U.S., Canada, Australia and other states. The detention of migrants and refugees is a violent act of criminalization that traumatizes traumatized people, tears apart families and subjects people to massive rights violations, in a context of racism and oppression. We also note the settler colonial nature of all of these states, built on the theft of Indigenous and Native land and genocide of Indigenous and Native people, while constructing detention centers to exclude migrants and refugees from this stolen land. We also note the racist migrant detention, attacks and criminalization by the Israeli state and institutions targeting African migrants and refugees, a vicious and anti-Black policy carried out by a settler colonial state based entirely on the dispossession of the Palestinian people, the theft of Palestinian land, and ongoing genocide.

These states are also responsible for creating the conditions that force people to migrate, through economic exploitation and plunder, neo-colonialism, and imperialist war, aggression and militarization, and then criminalize the victims of their actions.

We also stand in solidarity with the hunger striking women held in Hutto Detention Center in migrant detention in Texas and join the demand for their immediate release; we also demand the immediate release of all people held in migrant detention and uphold the right of all to move, to stay and to return.

PALESTINIAN REFUGEES INDEFINITELY HELD IN ARIZONA (U.S.) DETENTION CENTER

Click here to take action.

Two Palestinian refugees who have been determined to have “credible fear” if deported face indefinite detention. One of them could be deported at any time, the other remains in limbo.In 2010 and 2011, Hisham Shaban Ghalia and Mounis Hammouda fled continued violence and poverty in Gaza–part of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories in the Southeastern Mediterranean. Over that time, both men migrated undocumented through at least eight countries between the Middle East, Europe, as well as South and Central America before arriving at the US-Mexico border to request humanitarian asylum in November 2014. An October 2015 article in UK Guardian has documented their part of a large wave of Middle East and African refugees/migrants moving through Mexico since 2011.

Since Hisham and Mounis’s arrival at the US-Mexico border one year ago, they have been detained in Florence, Arizona.  Even though both men were determined to have “credible fear,” the first step in claiming humanitarian protection from persecution, they are still being held in indefinite detention.

Immigration authorities have denied Hisham’s asylum claim and have issued a final order of removal, but are unable to deport him due to restrictions that prevent US immigration authorities from dealing directly with the Palestinian authorities. Therefore, although both men meet “low priority” criteria under the Department of Homeland Security’s own standards, they remain in limbo, and subject to indefinite detention.

Both men potentially face further imprisonment or death if deported to Israel or Saudi Arabia, where Hisham was born to a Palestinian refugee family but lacks citizenship or residency, Currently an anti-occupation uprising is searing the West Bank and Gaza, where between Oct. 1-Nov. 8 alone Israeli police and military have killed at least 79 Palestinians and injured more than 3000.

CLICK HERE TO TAKE ACTION AND CALL FOR THE RELEASE OF HISHAM AND MOUNIS: http://www.notonemoredeportation.com/portfolio/hisham-mounis/

28 November, Brussels: 40 Years of Solidarity with Palestine, with Sahar Francis

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Saturday, November 28
2:30 pm
LaVallée
39 rue A. LaVallée, Molenbeek
Brussels, Belgium

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1499017590399349/

The Association Belgo-Palestinienne marks 40 years of solidarity with the Palestinian people. Event featuring Sahar Francis, executive director of Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association:

2:30 pm, doors open

3:00 pm, activist speeches including Pierre Galand, Jack Houssa, Marianne Blume, Renee Mousset, Nathalie Janne d’Othee and others

5:00 pm, Life under occupation with:
* Sahar Francis, lawyer and executive director of Addameer on Palestinian political prisoners
* Samah Jabr, psychiatrist, director of community center for mental health, on psychologicl consequences of life under occupation
* Sireen Khudairi, coordinator of the Jordan Valley Solidarity Campaign, life and struggle in the Jordan valley

7:00 pm, the new Palestinian ambassador
Meeting with Mr. Abdelrahim Alfarra

9:00 pm, concert featuring Aehem El-Ahmad, the pianist of Yarmouk

Exhibition of the work of Gaza photographer Mahmoud Al-Kurd

Drink, eat, celebrate, with associated stands
Free entry and parking
info : info@abp-wb.be – 02 223 07 56 – www.association-belgo-palestinienne.be

L’association belgo-palestinienne
40 ans de SOLIDARITÉ
avec le PEUPLE PALESTINIEN

14h30 ACCUEIL

15h PAROLES DE MILITANTS
Pierre Galand, Jack Houssa, Marianne Blume, Renée Mousset, Nathalie Janne d’Othée, …

17h: VIVRE SOUS OCCUPATION
ø Sahar Francis
Avocate, directrice de l’ONG Addameer
Les prisonniers politiques palestiniens
ø Samah Jabr,
Psychiatre, directrice du centre communautaire de santé mentale
Conséquences psychologiques de la vie sous occupation
ø Sireen Khudairi,
coordinatrice de la Jordan Valley Solidarity Campaign
Naitre, grandir, vivre, militer dans la vallée du Jourdain

19h UN NOUVEL AMBASSADEUR DE PALESTINE
Rencontre avec Monsieur Abdalrahim Alfarra

21h: CONCERT : AEHEM EL AHMAD, le pianiste de Yarmouk

Exposition du talentueux photographe de Gaza Mahmoud Al-kurd
& ABP, 40 ans aux côtés du peuple palestinien

Boire, manger, festoyer, … et stands associatifs
entrée gratuite – parking

info : info@abp-wb.be – 02 223 07 56 – www.association-belgo-palestinienne.be

12 November, Minneapolis: Caging the Oppressed – Mass incarceration from the US to Palestine

Thursday, 12 November
4:30 pm
Room 123, Science Hall, Augsburg College
2211 Riverside Avenue, Minneapolis, MN
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/882390481876724/

Join us for a panel discussion on how the struggles for a free Palestine and against mass incarceration in the US are connected, to talk about strategies for resistance, and to determine actions steps together. Free pizza provided.

Both the United States and Israel use legal systems, and especially prisons, for racist and colonial oppression. The United States subjects over 7.3 million people, 70 percent of whom are people of color, to “correctional” supervision, probation, or control. While locking Black people up is central to fueling this system of oppression, Native people, Brown folks, and poor/working class people on the whole are also targeted. Similarly, since the creation of the apartheid state of Israel in 1948, over 40 percent of Palestinian men have been imprisoned and Israel regularly uses mass arrests to repress protests. These systems of oppression are interconnected; Israel and the US share racist ideologies, exchange repressive policing technologies and training, and create the conditions necessary for private corporations like G4S to profit from caging people, as they make profits themselves.

Organized by Save The Kids Augsburg College, Students for Racial Justice Ausburg College – SRJ, Anti-War Committee, and Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP UMN). This event is part of SJP-UMN’s Palestine Awareness Week running from November 9th-13th.

For further information about the location, please see this map of Augsburg College at http://www.augsburg.edu/about/map/.

Khalida Jarrar military trial delayed further; military prosecutors threaten renewed administrative detention

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Khalida Jarrar, imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarian feminist, leftist and advocate for the freedom of Palestinian political prisoners, faced an Israeli military trial yet again on Sunday, 8 November after multiple postponements.

Arrested since 2 April, Jarrar’s military trial has dragged on for months as Israeli military prosecutors delay in bringing witnesses and repeatedly postponed her trial. Jarrar was only accused of 12 entirely political charges related to her public speeches, advocacy and event attendance as a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council and a member of the board of directors of Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association after her original order for administrative detention without charge or trial sparked an international outcry.

The charges against Jarrar, which accuse her of “support” and “membership” in a prohibited organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – like all major Palestinian political parties, banned by Israel – by attending events, calling for freedom of political prisoners, going to protest tents in solidarity with striking prisoners, and speaking to the media.

In Sunday’s hearing, a police investigator was brought to testify only that he translated a statement into Arabic and then into Hebrew following a Shin Bet interrogation of a third party. Avi Blecherman reported on the hearing for 972mag:

“You spoke previously about your many years of experience as an investigator and about the professional methods you use in interrogations,” defense attorney Mahmoud Hassan posed to the police investigator. “What I am hearing here is something entirely different. An entirely technical process of Arabic transcription, not an interrogation. This is simply a copy/paste of a Shin Bet interrogation, without any investigatory activity by you. It’s identical.”

Further, Hassan revealed, a “lineup” was presented to the witness under interrogation, from which he was asked to identify Jarrar: a group of photos of six men and one woman. “The defense attorney presented to the court seven photographs, which, sure enough, wereof six men and the seventh photo was of Khalida Jarrar. That’s what passes for a photo lineup according to Israel’s finest,” wrote Blecherman.

Even the military judge, who represents a military court system that convicts 99.74% of the Palestinians who appear before it, censured the prosecution twice for draggin out the legal process and refusing to produce witnesses, saying “at this pace we will be forced to release” Jarrar.

In response, the military prosecution stated that if this occurred, they would once again return Jarrar to administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or without trial. Blecherman reported:

“She also worked to promote a boycott of Israeli goods in Europe,” [her lawyer Mahmoud Hassan] added, arguing that Israel is using its military prosecution to take revenge against Jarrar for her use of legitimate political tools. According to Hassan, the foot-dragging is an attempt to force Jarrar into a plea deal because they cannot get a conviction on the merits of evidence.

Palestine solidarity organizer Thomas van Beersum from the Netherlands attended the military hearing, saying:

“The whole trial is just ridiculous. There were no direct witnesses, only Israeli police functioning as ‘witnesses of the witnesses’. The judge, police and the prosecutor (who looked like he was about 14 years old) are all on the same side. Everything is already coordinated before the actual hearings. They are just performing in a badly acted play. Khalida has been a political prisoner for over 7 months now, and it’s quite obvious that they plan to keep her in prison for as long as possible…The psychological terror pushed on political prisoners and their families is just crazy.”

Take Action to support Khalida Jarrar:

1. Click here: Send a message to the Israeli Occupation Forces and demand the immediate release of Khalida Jarrar.It is important that the occupation learns that Khalida has supporters around the world who will not be silent in the face of this injustice.

2. Sign the petition! Sign and share this petition, demanding freedom for Khalida Jarrar immediately.

3. Contact your Member of Parliament, Representative, or Member of European Parliament. The attack on Khalida is an attack on Palestinian parliamentary legitimacy and political expression. Parliamentarians have a responsibility to pressure Israel to cancel this order.

4. Send a letter to Khalida Jarrar – help support her and show her jailers that the world is with her!

5. Use the Campaign Resources to inform your community, parliamentarians and others about Khalida’s case.

6. Protest at the Israeli consulate or embassy for Khalida Jarrar. Bring posters and flyers about Khalida’s case and hold a protest, or join a protest with this important information. Hold a community event or discussion, or include Khalida’s case in your next event about Palestine and social justice.

7. 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. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

Undercover Israeli forces invade hospital, kill and arrest Palestinians

Undercover Israeli occupation forces attacked Al-Ahli Hospital in Al-Khalil in the early hours of Thursday, 12 November, pretending to accompany a pregnant woman needing medical assistance, before invading the hospital room of Azzam Shalaldeh, 20, recovering from being shot by an Israeli settler on October 25 and killing his cousin, Abdullah Shalaldeh, 28.

Abdullah Shalaldeh, 28, killed by Israeli occupation forces on 12 November for being in his cousin's hospital room.
Abdullah Shalaldeh, 28, killed by Israeli occupation forces on 12 November for being in his cousin’s hospital room.

Approximately 20 undercover occupation forces infiltrated the hospital, abducted Azzam Shalaldeh and killed the unarmed Abdullah Shalaldeh with five rounds fired into his head and body in his cousin’s hospital room. Abdullah, hearing the noise of the attack, emerged from the hospital bathroom into Azzam’s room only to be shot several times and killed by the occupation soldiers. Abdullah is the 80th Palestinian killed this month by Israeli occupation forces.

Azzam Shalaldeh was in the hospital, recovering from severe injuries caused by being shot by an Israeli settler in the Gush Etzion settlement, built on stolen occupied Palestinian land. The settler accused Azzam of taking part in a Palestinian resistance action, attempting to stab him with a knife. Azzam and his family were harassed by the settlers while picking olives in Sair, their home village. Despite the severe injury to Azzam, who was shot three times by the settler, the settler living on occupied Palestinian land was identified as “the victim” and occupation military forces invaded the hospital in order to arrest and imprison him.

The undercover occupation forces, labeled “Mustaribeen,” were dressed to appear as Palestinians. They have invaded hospitals in the past, including Al-Arabi hospital in Nablus on 4 October, where they arrested Karam al-Masri, 23, and disabled the surveillance cameras in the hospital. Al-Makassed hospital in Jerusalem has been invaded five times in the past month by occupation forces disguised as Palestinians, firing gas bombs, concussion grenades and rubber-coated metal bullets inside the hospital, injuring patients and health workers, and forcibly interrogating doctors and nurses.

Palestinian health workers and doctors at Al-Ahli hospital denounced the killing of Abdullah Shalaldeh, a Palestinian shot down for accompanying his wounded cousin in the hospital and the abduction of Azzam Shalaldeh, and the ongoing invasions and attack on Palestinian health workers and hospitals by occupation forces.

Video of the invasion: