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6 October, NYC: Rally in solidarity with Palestine’s “Day of Rage”

Palestinian forces have called for a “Day of Rage” on Tuesday, October 6th, in response to the recent killings of Palestinian youth. We will march from:

The Israeli Consulate
800 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10017
(between E 42nd and E 43rd on 2nd Ave)

Tuesday, October 6th at 5:00 pm

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1472059443101299/

Hosted by NY4Palestine

Co-sponsored by:

Al-Awda NY: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition
American Muslims for Palestine
NYC Students for Justice in Palestine
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return
Existence Is Resistance
Labor for Palestine
MENA Solidarity Network-US
NYC Solidarity with Palestine
Direct Action Front for Palestine
Muslim American Society – MAS NY
International Action Center

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Protest in Rome demands liberation for Palestinian prisoners

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Dozens of activists and supporters of Palestine demonstrated at the Piazza di Montecitorio in Rome, Italy on 3 October in solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners, demanding their freedom. Organized by the Arab Palestinian Democratic Union (UDAP), the protest was addressed by Dalya Abu Aker, activist and the daughter of Nidal Abu Aker, imprisoned Palestinian jouranlist held without charge or trial, who recently ended a 40-day hunger strike against administrative detention.

Protesters demanded freedom for all Palestinian prisoners, carrying Palestinian flags and posters of imprisoned Palestinian leaders, including Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat and imprisoned Palestinian leftist parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar.

Salah Hamouri – French-Palestinian former prisoner – banned again from West Bank

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Salah Hamouri, former Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails and Palestinian-French dual citizen, has been prohibited from entering the West Bank for an additional 6 months by an Israeli military order. Hamouri, who was released in the 2011 Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange between the Israeli occupation and the Palestinian resistance, was summoned to the “Russian Compound” by Israeli intelligence and given the decision. A Jerusalemite, Hamouri is now banned from entering the West Bank until 22 March 2016.

This is the second such order against Hamouri; the first was issued in March 2015 by Israeli military order. The order had expired on 22 September, but Hamouri was surprised on Tuesday, 29 September by a new ban on his entry into the West Bank. The renewed order was justified on vague grounds of him posing a “threat to the security of the area;” Hamouri said that in practice, the objective of the occupation is to put ever more pressure on the Palestinians in general and Jerusalem in particular, especially at this time of growing uprising in Jerusalem.

In response to the current Israeli attacks on Jerusalem, Hamouri said that what is happening there now is a harbinger of the outbreak of a third intifada. “What is happening in Jerusalem is the resistance of the people of the city in response to a constant state of escalation of Zionist crimes. It is a natural response to years of accumulation of political, social and economic pressure exercised by the occupation forces against the people of Jerusalem. These responses or intifadas of Jerusalem will not truly develop, however, into a massive popular intifada if a revolutionary uprising does not occur in all parts of the country, and especially in the West Bank and Gaza,” said Hamouri.

Ayman Al-Tabeesh released after 30 months of detention, multiple hunger strikes

Ayman Al-Tabeesh, former administrative detainee and long-term hunger striker, was released from Israeli occupation prisons after 30 months of imprisonment without charge or trial on Thursday, 1 October. He returned to his family in Dura village near al-Khalil.

Al-Tabeesh, 35, went on hunger strike five times. He was repeatedly promised release at the end of his detention period, only to have his detention renewed again without trial on the basis of secret evidence. He has been imprisoned for a total of 11 years over multiple arrests.

He launched a hunger strike on 23 May 2013, protesting his detention without charge or trial following his arrest on 9 May. After 105 days, he suspended his strike after a promise to not renew his detention. However, after the renewal of his detention in violation of the agreement, he launched a hunger strike on 28 February 2014, which ended on 30 June 2014, with an agreement for his release on 5 January 2015. Again, the occupation reneged on the agreement, extending his detention. He has been participating in the boycott of the military courts by administrative detainees, held without chatge or trial. During a previous imprisonment in 2012, he also participated in the collective Karameh hunger strike with thousands of Palestinian prisoners, as well as solidarity strikes with Khader Adnan and Hana Shalabi.

Suleiman Skafi remains on open hunger strike: 33 days demanding end of detention

Palestinian administrative detainee held in Israeli jails without charge or trial, Suleiman Skafi, remains on hunger strike after 33 days. He rejected an offer by the Israeli state to end his strike in exchange for six more months of administrative detention with a release following that time.

Skafi was arrested by Israeli military forces on 12 November 2014 and his administrative detention has been renewed since; he has been arrested five times and spent a total of six years in Israeli prisons. Under administrative detention, Israel holds Palestinians without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence. 16 other prisoners held under administrative detention just ended their hunger strike following an agreement on their cases; however, Skafi remains striking. He has lost 23 kilos (47 lbs.) and is being held in Asqelan prison in solitary confinement.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network calls for Skafi’s immediate release and reiterates the call for the end of administrative detention, and the freedom of all 5,500+ Palestinian political prisoners in Zionist jails.

Solidarity with Palestinian prisoners in Milano

In Milano, Italy on 30 September, protesters called for freedom for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, including Ahmad Sa’adat and Khalida Jarrar. They expressed their solidarity with Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike, and also called for freedom for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, imprisoned in French prisons for 30 years, and an end to the persecution of Rasmea Odeh in the United States. Event organized by Fronte Palestina.

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Berlin protest calls for freedom for Palestinian political prisoners

The Palestinian National Action Committee (Palästinensische Nationale Arbeitskomitee) in Berlin, Germany, organized a protest in front of the headquarters of the German Foreign Office, in support of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, demanding their freedom.

Participants in the event carried posters of Palestinian prisoners, including those who had been on an open hunger strike for 40 days demanding an end to administrative detention in the “Battle of Breaking the Chains,” as well as Palestinian imprisoned leaders like Ahmad Sa’adat, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine; Marwan Barghouti and Khalida Jarrar, as well as the imprisoned internationalist in French jails, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah. They also carried posters for the “Battle of Breaking the Chains” and the imprisoned strugglers Nidal Abu Aker, Ghassan Zawahreh, Shadi Ma’ali, Badr al-Ruzza, Munir Abu Sharar, and others.

One of the participans in the protest said, “The Palestinian prisoners’ movement is a revolutionary core of the Palestinian national movement and the resistance. The Palestinian and Arab communities and institutions in the diaspora, and in Europe in particular, must unite their efforts to support the struggles of prisoners as part of the liberation struggle, in order to achieve the freedom of the Palestinian people and their national rights, and particularly to exercise their right to return and self-determination over all of Palestine.”

BDS Berlin participated in the protest, calling for economic, political and cultural boycott of the Israeli state and of security corporations that are involved in Israeli imprisonment of Palestinians.

The members of the Palestinian National Action Committee also presented a political memo to a representative of the German Foreign Office, calling on the German government to end its silence and put pressure on the Israeli occupation to end administrative detention against Palestinian prisoners, a colonialist, racist law that has been in place since the colonial British mandate in occupied Palestine, and contrary to international law and conventions.

The Committee stated that it intends to continue activities in Berlin in support of the prisoners.

Protest in Brighton demands cancellation of Labour Party G4S contracts

On 27 September, Inminds organized a protest outside the Labour Party Convention in Brighton, UK, condemning the Labour Party for hiring G4S for convention security. G4S is the British-Danish multinational security corporation subject to a global boycott campaign for its complicity and involvement in Israeli human rights abuses, especially against Palestinian prisoners. G4S provides security systems and control rooms for the Israeli prisons which imprison Palestinian political prisoners, including child prisoners. For the full report, including extensive photos and videos, please visit Inminds: http://inminds.com/article.php?id=10687

Text and photos below from Inminds:

Protest organised by Inminds outside the Labour Party Conference in Brighton at lunch time on 27th September 2015 – the opening day of the conference – demanded the Labour Party end its contracts with the British security company G4S which is complicit in Israel’s torture of Palestinian child prisoners. Activists demanded in particular that Labour stop using G4S to provide the security for the Labour conference every year and for Labour councils to stop investing tens of millions of pounds in G4S via their pension funds.

Since 2007 G4S has been contracted by the Israeli prison service to secure many of its prisons and interrogation centres where Palestinian political prisoners including women and children and caged and tortured. 61% of all Palestinian political prisoners are caged in G4S secured prisons, this includes 98% of all administrative detainees (those held indefinitely without charge or trial). All women prisoners and all the children are also caged and tortured in G4S secured Israeli prisons.

In June 2015, Palestinian lawyer Hiba Masalha visiting abducted Palestinian children from an orphanage in Tulkarem, being caged in Israel’s notorious G4S secured dungeon at Megiddo, reported that the children had been beaten and tortured in a “heinous” way by Israeli soldiers during interrogation. The children had been “terrified, threatened and blackmailed” in contravention of international law and conventions advocating children’s rights.

Schoolboy Mahir Hussein, told Masalha that Israeli soldiers had fired gunshots into the air to threaten him and two other teenagers when they were detained. Israeli soldiers threatened to kill him before two soldiers beat him “violently.”He was left bleeding for six hours with hands and feet cuffed. The boy was afterwards moved to a hospital in a military base in Petah Tiqva where doctors required “24 stitches” to seal the wound on his head. The next day he was taken to al-Jalame interrogation center for a period of 20 days during which he was beaten and mostly confined to a wooden chair with his hands and feet cuffed. G4S provides the entire security system for Al Jalame, its infamous for its torture of children and its tiny ‘hole in the ground’ children’s cells three floors below the surface.

The Labour Party has been lobbied for several years over its contracts with G4S and last September there were protests outside its conference in Manchester. Its own senior MPs including past and current leaders and shadow cabinet members, and leading trade unionists have all criticised the contracts, and yet nothing has been done and and again this year the Labour Party is giving money to G4S to secure the party conference.

With recent changes in the leadership and membership of the party we are confident that given encouragement (and a push) the party could finally end its shameful partnership with G4S.

We had half a dozen Palestinian flags flying including a couple of giant Palestinian flags hoisted up a 9m flag pole which was visible all the way along the beach. We had Palestinian music playing through the PA system, and set up a table for our leaflets on G4S and other aspects of the Palestinian struggle for justice and freedom, and a petition from our friends in BHPSC asking the Labour Party to end contracts with G4S.

Messages were read out from the parents of two children who were tortured at Israel’s G4S secured Al-Jalame interrogation centre and who are currently caged at Israel’s G4S secured Megiddo prison, and also a message from the father of a 15 years old schoolboy who was abducted and caged at Israel’s G4S secured Ofer prison on the West Bank. The messages received very warm applauses and people can up to us afterwards to give their personal condolence of what had happened to the children and their families. Some insisted on giving money even though we explained that we weren’t set up to collect donations during protests – that money we passed on to MAP (Medical Aid for Palestinians).

A 2m banner was placed at the G4S guarded entrance of the conference so that every delegate going through the G4S checkpoint to enter the Labour Conference was reminded of G4S’s complicity in Israel’s torture to death of Palestinian father Arafat Jaradat.

The primary purpose of the protest was to educate Labour delegates of the suffering of ordinary Palestinians, including children as young as 12 years old, being abducted, tortured and caged by Israeli occupation forces and the complicity of a British company – G4S in these crimes.

Martin Luther King Jr. once said ‘The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice’ – we wanted to show the delegates that it was within their grasp to help bend that arc towards justice by asking their party to end its contracts with G4S. The response from delegates was one of overwhelming support. Unionists, councillors, MEPs, MPs all stopped by to show their support and we are confident that changes will happen.

Photos:

Video:

Take Action: Update on Amer Jubran Case: Torture and Denial of Justice

Update on Amer Jubran Case: Torture and Denial of Justice–

Urgent Action for Amer Jubran Mon 10/5

Members of the Amer Jubran Defense Campaign have recently received trial documents revealing severe human rights violations at every stage in the arrest, trial, and sentencing of Amer Jubran and his co-defendants.Most importantly, the documents show that the defendants were forced to sign prefabricated confessions under torture from agents of the General Intelligence Directorate. According to testimony the defendants submitted at trial, they were not even allowed to read these statements before being forced to sign them.

Click here to send a protest letter directly online.

Methods of torture enumerated in a brief filed by defense attorneys include sleep deprivation, routine and constant humiliation, threats of violence against members of the defendants’ families, physical beatings, and prolonged stress positions. One defendant with a life-threatening illness was denied medication unless he agreed to sign.

The defendants contested these fabricated confessions at trial. In its decision, the State Security Court nevertheless stated that it was not required to consider the defendants’ testimony or any of the defense’s evidence, and used the forced confessions as the primary basis for its ruling.

The confessions that formed the basis for the court ruling  defy all credibility. In Amer’s case, we are to believe that a full confession to all the facts in the trial was made voluntarily on May 6, 2014–less than 24 hours after his arrest. (He nevertheless continued to be held for close to two months in incommunicado detention.) According to the GID officer who provided the document, the confession was made without any interrogation, as a simple answer to the question: “Tell us what occurred with you.”  A similar procedure was supposedly followed with the other defendants, all of whom confessed to the same facts in statements that frequently used identical language to describe the same events, referring in some cases to events that allegedly took place ten years earlier.

That such confessions should be submitted to the court and accepted by it without question suggests that the use of confessions obtained through torture has become so routine in Jordan–and takes place within such an atmosphere of impunity–that no serious attempt has been made to conceal the fact.

Amer’s case is now in appeal before Jordan’s Court of Cassation (i.e., its Supreme Court). A decision is likely to be issued within the next 1-2 weeks. International pressure at this moment is key, since it is the last opportunity under ordinary procedures in which the unjust decision in this case can be reversed.

Amer has also made us aware that he is concerned about the possibility of retaliatory measures being taken against him in prison–including transfer to a facility with prisoners who have been charged with membership in organizations such as Al-Qaeda, who would have a hostile relationship to a prisoner charged with affiliation with Hizballah. This is further reason to make the Jordanian government aware that people around the world are watching.

Action Call: E-mail Campaign on Monday, October 5:

We are asking Amer’s supporters and all who care about fundamental human rights, to direct e-mails calling for urgent intervention in Amer’s case on Monday, October 5, to:

Minister of Justice, Bassam Talhouni: Feedback@moj.gov.jo .

Please cc’ the following:
Prime Minister and Defense Minister, Abdullah Ensour,info@pm.gov.jo
Minister of Interior, Salamah Hammad, info@moi.gov.jo

Click here to send the letter directly online.

A sample letter, an open letter from the Amer Jubran Defense Campaign, and more details regarding the human rights violations in Amer’s case are included below.

In addition to torture, some of the other violations of elementary rights to due process and to fair trial included the following:

1) No warrant was presented at the time of his arrest.

2) Amer and other defendants were denied access to lawyers after their arrest. They were specifically threatened with torture if they requested the presence of lawyers when they were ultimately brought before the Public Prosecutor.

3) Defense attorneys at trial were not allowed to summon for questioning GID officers involved in the arrests, in the seizure of evidence, in interrogation, and in drawing up the arrest records. They were thus deprived of their ability to demonstrate that the confessions were false and to contest material evidence used in the trial.

4) Defense attorneys were not allowed to call expert witnesses concerning key issues at stake in the use of material evidence (such as computer forensics) or to request intelligence central to the charges in the trial.
**

Letter from the Amer Jubran Defense Campaign:

Dear Minister of Justice,

We urgently call your attention to the case of Amer Jubran and his horrendous treatment at the hands of the Jordanian General Intelligence Directorate. Mr. Jubran currently has a case before the Court of Cassation for severe violations of legal process in his arrest, interrogation and trial.

Mr. Jubran was violently arrested in May of 2014 and no crimes were specified at that time. He spent 50 days in a secret detention facility where he was unable to see his lawyer or family. According to the defendants’ testimony at trial, he and six other defendants were repeatedly tortured in this facility. They were forced by torture to sign identical  statements that had been prepared in advance by the interrogators–statements they were not even allowed to read before signing them. The torture, led by Colonel Habes Rizk, involved 72 hour periods of sleep deprivation, being forced under cold water, being forcibly revived after fainting, threats, beatings, face-slapping, insults, and humiliation.The intelligence officers threatened to bring Mr. Jubran’s parents, wife, and children into the interrogation. They threatened to assault Mr. Jubran’s wife in front of him  in order to force co-operation. Pressure was applied to his shoulder and neck and to his legs for prolonged periods to cause pain. Critical medication and transfer to a hospital was withheld from one defendant suffering from hepatitis and liver disease until such time as he signed his statement. Lawyers were not allowed to see their clients during the entire period of interrogation.

It’s only after this lengthy period of incommunicado detention and torture that charges of “terrorism” were ultimately brought against him.

At the end of Mr. Jubran’s trial in August 2015 the judges of the State Security Court completely ignored a thorough defense by his lawyers, declaring all evidence brought by the defense irrelevant. The Court then sentenced Mr. Jubran to  ten years in prison with hard labor.

International human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the United Nations Committee Against Torture, and the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention have been clear in condemning the atmosphere of impunity in Jordan, especially in cases before the State Security Court involving torture by agents of the General Intelligence Directorate.

The actions of the GID, the State Prosecutor and the State Security Court in Mr. Jubran’s arrest, detention and trial violate the most basic standards of international human rights, including protection from torture and the right to a fair trial before an impartial court. It is clear from his case that these agencies are confident that their activities will not be called into question, that they can get away with any and all violations of the rights of Jordanian citizens.

We ask you to demonstrate that this is not so, and to intervene on Mr.Jubran’s behalf. The current appeal is perhaps the only opportunity left for responsible officials in Jordan to reverse this gross violation of Mr. Jubran’s legal and human rights. Amer Jubran has friends and supporters from all over the world who will be watching for your response.

Sincerely,

The Amer Jubran Defense Campaign

**

Send The Sample Letter Directly Online:

Dear Minister of Justice Bassam Talhouni,

I am writing to call your attention to the severe miscarriage of justice against Amer Jubran, a Jordanian citizen who currently has a case before Jordan’s Court of Cassation.

⦁    Mr. Jubran was arrested on May 5, 2014 by agents of the General Intelligence Directorate and held in incommunicado detention for close to two months. No warrant was presented at the time of his arrest. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention sent an urgent appeal on his behalf to your government at that time: See https://spdb.ohchr.org/hrdb/28th/public_-_UA_Jordan_07.07.14_%281.2014%29_Pro.pdf

⦁    During his period in GID detention, Mr. Jubran and six other defendants in the same case were subjected to prolonged periods of torture, including sleep deprivation, beatings, stress positions, and threats of violence against their families. Under these conditions they were forced to sign false confessions to planning a series of “terrorist” actions–confessions  they were not even allowed to read before signing them.

⦁    On July 29, 2015, Mr. Jubran was sentenced by Jordan’s State Security Court to 10 years in prison with hard labor. The Court refused to consider the defense evidence in the case, and used the fabricated confessions as the basis for its decision.

Global human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the Al Karama Foundation have condemned the prevalence of torture in Jordan by the General Intelligence Directorate. The lack of independence of State Security Court from the GID and its failure to condemn torture and other fundamental human rights violations by GID agents have been specifically cited as a reason for the persistence of torture in security cases in Jordan. The United Nations Committee Against Torture, and the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention have repeatedly called for the abolition of the State Security Court.

I am writing now to urge that you take all necessary action in the case of Amer Jubran to see that his appeal before the Court of Cassation receives full and independent review. The severe violations of human rights in his case must be condemned and the unjust sentence reversed.

Sincerely,

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Reports: Battle of Breaking the Chains ends in agreement

The Battle of Breaking the Chains, the hunger strike conducted by Palestinian administrative detainees held without charge or trial, has concluded with an agreement reached between representatives of the prisoners and of Israeli military intelligence, reported the PLO Prisoners’ Affairs Committee and Handala Center for Prisoners and Released Prisoners on Tuesday, 29 September.

Under the agreement, all restrictions and repressive measures including solitary confinement, forced transfers, closing of cells, denial of family visits and confiscation of belongings will end. Nidal Abu Aker will be released on 10 December, Ghassan Zawahreh on 30 November, and the administrative detention of Munir Abu Sharar, Badr al-Ruzza, Shadi Ma’ali, Bilal al-Saifi and Suleiman Skafi will not be renewed following 3-4 months from the time of the agreement.

Israeli officials had reportedly refused to transfer any of the hunger strikers to hospital after 40 days of strike and severe health consequences, imprisoning them instead in solitary confinement and closing their fresh air vents, as well as denying them cold water.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the bravery and steadfastness of the strikers and all of the thousands of Palestinian political prisoners struggling for justice, liberation and freedom, for all of the prisoners and for Palestine itself and all of its people.