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10 September, Tampa: Dabke and Dessert – Fundraiser for Rasmea

Thursday, 10 September
7:00 pm
8052 N. 56th Street, Tampa, FL
Organized by the Committee to Stop FBI Repression-Tampa
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/events/744638055659169/

The Committee to Stop FBI Repression – Tampa is hosting a fundraising event for Rasmea Odeh, a Palestinian activist from Chicago recently convicted of bogus immigration charges. Rasmea is a crucial leader in the Arab- and Muslim-American community in Chicago, working with women and children as part of the Arab American Action Network.

This fundraiser will raise money for the Rasmea Defense Committee. The event will include a workshop from local dabke groups, speeches about our work, and a raffle to win a t-shirt featuring Rasmea and other women liberation fighters, as well as other prizes. We are asking for a donation of $5-$10 for entry to the event.

For more information about Rasmea’s case, please visit Committee to Stop FBI Repression and stopfbi.net

 

Rasmea Odeh says: Stop Police Crimes!

The following speech was delivered by Rasmea Odeh, Palestinian community activist in the US, former political prisoner and torture survivor, facing political persecution and imprisonment at the hands of the US government, at the August 29 Chicago march, “Stop Police Crimes!” demanding community control over the police. Rasmea’s appeal will be heard in Cincinnati on October 14. For more information, see justice4rasmea.org.

Stop police crimes

It is incredibly powerful to see all these thousands gathered here to raise our voices to stop police crimes, to demand a Civilian Police Accountability Council, and to continue to fight for justice, because we all have the same hopes and dreams, and believe in the same principles of freedom, justice and equality.

We Palestinians have been struggling for close to 70 years under Israel’s illegal colonial military occupation and its oppressive and racist practices. They continue to terrorize our people and commit brutal crimes. So we know the anger, the outrage and the motivation to rise up against racist law enforcement policies that push our communities to the margins of humanity.

The police crimes against Black people in the U.S. are almost identical to what we experience in Palestine from the Israelis. This is why we talk about joint struggle, why our responsibility is to support the struggles of those oppressed in this country, in Palestine, and all over the world. We Palestinians and Arabs stand in unqualified solidarity with brave Black community members like all of you, who are rising up against every instance of vicious police violence in this country.

In addition, we demand police accountability and an end to racial profiling. That is why we are here as endorsers of the campaign to establish a Civilian Police Accountability Council, why we are supporting We Charge Genocide’s challenge to the ‘Stop and Frisk’ policies of the Chicago Police Department, and why my organization, the Arab American Action Network, has launched a youth-led campaign to stop repression and racial profiling against Arabs and Muslims as well.

I believe our challenges are tough. Deconstructing racism and national oppression is not easy. Stopping police crimes will not be a simple task. But we should not be frightened by the challenges, and as long as we believe in our rights and the principles that we stand for, and rise up together, we become stronger and more effective. Then we can achieve our goals and beyond.

We stand for social justice and liberation in this country, the same way my people have dedicated their lives to the liberation of Palestine. The struggle of the Black Liberation movement in this country, and anti-colonial struggles in Africa, Latin America, and Asia have always been an inspiration to us. We continue to find inspiration and strength from those struggles and today’s, and we recognize that Black Liberation in this country will lead to liberation for all.

Lastly, I want to say that I’m very proud to see that most of this crowd is young people. You are leading and providing fresh air that our communities need to breathe. Combine your resources with the wisdom of the older generation; with the experiences of your allies; and with other communities to ensure that you achieve the dreams and goals that belong to you and to all of us. Keep organizing today and every day until we achieve a Civilian Police Accountability Council. I know we will achieve this goal together!

Thank you all.

اوقفوا جرائم الشرطة / ترجمة لكلمة المناضلة الفلسطينية رسمية عودة

شيكاغو – الولايات المتحدة الامريكية . 29 أغسطس

إنه لمن دواعي القوة المدهشة  أن نرى الاف يتجمعوا لرفع الصوت عاليًا لوقف جرائم الشرطة ، و للمطالبة بتأسيس  المجلس المدني لمحاسبة الشرطة ، للاستمرار بالنضال من أجل العدالة لأن لدينا آمال و آحلام واحدة ، و نؤمن بالقيم ذاتها في الحرية و العدالة و المساواة .

نحن الفلسطينيون نُناضل منذ ما يقرب من  70عامًا تحت الاحتلال الكولونيالي العسكري الاسرائيلي اللاشرعي ،  و ممارساته العنصرية القمعية . انهم مستمرون في إرهاب شعبنا و ارتكاب المجازر البشعة . لذلك ، نحن نعلم الغضب و التمرد، و دوافع النهوض لمواجهة فرض القوانين العنصرية التي تدفع بدورها شعوبنا الى هامش الانسانية .

جرائم الشرطة ضد السود في الولايات المتحدة هي تقريبا مُتطابقة  لما نخبره في فلسطين تحت الاحتلال ،  لهذا نحن نتحدث عن النضال المشترك ، و لهذا فإن مهمتنا هي دعم نضال المضطهدين في هذا البلد ، في فلسطين، و في كل العالم .  نحن الفلسطينيون و العرب نقف بشكل حاسم في التضامن مع شجاعتكم ، انتم افراد مجتمعات السود ، الذين تنهضون ضد كل حادثة بشعة بسبب عنف الشرطة في هذا البلد.

بالاضافة الى ذلك ، نحن نطالب بمحاسبة الشرطة و وقف سياسة التمييز العنصري . لذلك نحن هنا ، داعمين للحملة من أجل تأسيس المجلس المدني لمحاسبة الشرطة ، و لهذا نؤيد حملة ” نتحدى ونتهمكم بالابادة ”  ولوقف ما يسمى سياسة ” الوقف و التفتيش”  التي تنتهجها دائرة  شرطة شيكاغو . وعليه،  فإن منظمتي ،  شبكة العمل العربية الاميركية، أطلقت حملة بقيادة الشبيبة لوقف الاضطهاد و التمييز العنصري ضد العرب و المسلمين على حد سواء.

انا مؤمنة أن التحديات صعبة . إن تفكيك العنصرية و الإضطهاد ليست مهمة سهلة ، و وقف جرائم الشرطة لن تكون مهمة سهلة أيضا  ولكن يجب ان لا نخاف من التحديات طالما اننا نؤمن بحقوقنا و بالقيم التي نناضل من اجلها ، و النهوض معا يجعلنا أقوى و أكثر تاثيرًا . حينها فقط ، نستطلع تحقيق أهدافنا ، وأبعد .

نحن نقف من أجل العدالة الإجتماعية و التحرر في هذا البلد ،  تمامًا كما يناضل شعبي ويبذل حياته من أجل تحرير فلسطين . إن النضال من اجل حركة تحرر السود في هذا البلد  و النضال ضد الاستعمار في إفريقيا،  أميركا اللاتينية  و آسيا  ، كان مُلهمًا بالنسبة لنا ، دائمًا . وما زلنا نستمد الإلهام و القوة من تلك النضالات . و اليوم ندرك أن تحرر السود في هذا البلد يعني تحررنا  كلنا .

و أخيرًا , أريد ان اقول : انني فخورة جدًا بأن غالبية الحشود هنا من الشباب ، أنتم تقودون و توفرون لجالياتنا الهواء النظيف حتى نتنفس ، إمزجوا قوتكم مع حكمة الأجيال السابقة ، مع تجربتكم و تجربة حلفائكم و الشعوب الاخرى ، كي تضمنوا انكم حققتم أحلامكم وأهدافكم التي هي ُملككم و هي مُلكنا جميعًا . إستمروا في التنظيم ، اليوم ، و كل يوم ، حتى نُحقق المجلس المدني لمحاسبة الشرطة .

انا أعلم أننا سنحقق هذا الهدف معًا.

أشكركم جميعًا.

 

Take Action – Join hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners to say: End Administrative Detention

UPDATE, 5 September: Kayed Abu Rish has suspended his hunger strike. All of the original five strikers in the “Battle of Breaking the Chains,” (Nidal Abu Aker, Ghassan Zawahreh, Shadi Ma’ali, Badr al-Ruzza, Munir Abu Sharar) as well as several more administrative detainees who have since joined the strike remain on strike and need your support!

Five Palestinian prisoners held in administrative detention without charge or trial in Israeli jails are about to enter their second week on hunger strike, demanding an end to administrative detention. Take Action to support the hunger strikers and call for freedom for administrative detainees!

Nidal Abu Aker, Ghassan Zawahreh, Shadi Ma’ali, Badr al-Ruzza, and Munir Abu Sharar launched their hunger strike on 20 August 2015, protesting their administrative detention without charge or trial. All have had their arbitrary detention orders renewed multiple times. On Monday, 31 August, they were removed from their prison cells and thrown into isolation – Abu Aker in Asqelan, Zawahreh and Ma’ali in Ella prison, and Ruzzah and Abu Sharar in the Naqab prison.

Khader Adnan supports the hunger strikers.
Khader Adnan supports the hunger strikers.

Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association reported that the five have consumed only liquids since 20 August and are boycotting the occupation military courts along with 50 other administrative detainees, exposing the sham nature of these hearings relying on secret information that neither Palestinian prisoners or their lawyer can review. “Addameer calls upon solidarity organizations, human rights organizations and individuals all around the world to join the campaign to end administrative detention while emphasizing the necessity of popular support for Palestinian prisoners and detainees,” the organization urged.

In addition, Kayed Fawzi Abu Rish, 42, from Nablus, has been on hunger strike for 26 days. Held in administrative detention since December 2014, the order against him was renewed in June 2015 for an additional six months. He was transferred to hospital yesterday after being held in isolation in Megiddo prison.

Prisoner support tent at the entrance to Dheisheh refugee camp.
Prisoner support tent at the entrance to Dheisheh refugee camp.

There are approximately 480 Palestinians held without charge or trial in administrative detention in Israeli prisons. Israeli military commanders issue orders for up to one to six months of detention, which are indefinitely renewable. Introduced in Palestine by the British colonial authority, administrative detention is used in a routine and frequent manner. According to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies, 85% of administrative detention orders are renewed at least once. Israel’s widespread and systematic use of administrative detention violates the Geneva Conventions and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The five detainees have been on hunger strike for thirteen days and are about to enter their third week on strike, while Abu Rish is nearing a month on strike. They are demanding an end to administrative detention in this “Battle of Breaking the Chains.” They are threatened not only by the risks to their health and lives by hunger striking, but also threatened with the new Israeli force-feeding law that legitimizes force-feeding torture against hunger striking prisoners, which led to the death of four Palestinian hunger strikers in the 1970s and 1980s.

Video (Press TV News report):

Layla (Um Samer) Issawi and Malika (Um Nidal) Abu Aker, mothers of Palestinian prisoners
Layla (Um Samer) Issawi and Malika (Um Nidal) Abu Aker, mothers of Palestinian prisoners

In Dheisheh refugee camp, the home of three of the strikers, a permanent solidarity tent has been set up. Khader Adnan, former administrative detainee who won his freedom twice through long-term hunger strikes, visited the solidarity tent and met with members of the prisoners’ families; Layla (Um Samer) Issawi also met with the strikers’ families, urging support and solidarity with the strike. She is the mother of Samer, Shireen and Medhat Issawi, all imprisoned in Israeli jails; Samer was previously freed in a long-term hunger strike.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses its strongest solidarity with the striking prisoners, and calls for international actions, mobilizations and events to demand their freedom. We cannot wait until these brave strugglers are facing death to act and demand not only their freedom as individuals, but the abolition of administrative detention – on the road to freeing every Palestinian prisoner held in Israeli occupation jails. It is not the case that Israeli military courts are any more legitimate, fair or acceptable than administrative detention – they are just as arbitrary, racist and illegitimate. But administrative detention is a weapon of mass terror used against the Palestinian people, and it is critical to bring this practice to an end. These Palestinian prisoners have put their bodies on the line in order to end administrative detention – and it is imperative that we act to support them. These prisoners’ struggle is not only about their individual freedom – it is part of their struggle for return and liberation for Palestine.

Take Action!

1. Sign on to this statement in support of the prisoners’ demand to End Administrative Detention. Organizational and individual endorsements are welcome – and organizational endorsements particularly critical – in support of the prisoners’ demands and their actions. Click here to sign or sign below: http://bit.ly/EndAdministrativeDetention

2. Send a solidarity statement. The support of people around the world helps to inform people about the struggle of Palestinian prisoners. It is a morale booster and helps to build political solidarity. Please send your solidarity statements to [email protected]. They will be published and sent directly to the prisoners.

3. Hold a solidarity one-day hunger strike in your area. Gather in a tent or central area, bring materials about Palestinian prisoners and hold a one-day solidarity strike to raise awareness and provide support for the struggle of the prisoners and the Palestinian cause. Please email us at [email protected] to inform us of your action – we will publicize and share news with the prisoners.

4. 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 at [email protected] to inform us of your action – we will publicize and share news with the prisoners.

5. 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.

6. 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.

All out for Cincinnati: Rasmea’s appeal October 14

All out for Cincinnati to support Rasmea at her appeal Wednesday, October 14, 2015!

Tell us that you’re coming to Cincinnati!

Stand with Rasmea and fill the appeals courthouse in Cincinnati!

We will organize a support rally in front of the courthouse at 8 AM EST onWednesday, October 14, 2015, and then fill the courtroom immediately thereafter, as Rasmea’s defense and the prosecution each present their oral arguments to a three judge panel.

WHEN:
Wednesday, October 14, 2015, at 8 AM EST (oral argument for the appeal starts at 9 AM EST)
WHERE:
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit
540 Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse
100 E. 5th Street
Cincinnati, OH 45202

Bus and carpool info from Chicago coming soon!

Register here to join us in Cincinnati on October 14, participate in a week of action for Rasmea between September 8 and September 14, visit www.justice4rasmea.org for more information, and / or email [email protected] with any questions.

The Rasmea Defense Committee contends that Judge Gershwin Drain did not allow for a full and fair trial, and believes that is why Rasmea was convicted and sentenced to 18 months in prison and deportation.  We are confident that she has solid arguments on appeal, and wrote in late July that the “defense argues conclusively that the government ‘never really addresses the basic constitutional deprivations asserted in Ms. Odeh’s opening appellate brief,’ and that Rasmea is ‘entitled to present her complete defense to the jury,’ which can only happen in a new trial.”

After the oral arguments are heard by three appellate judges on October 14, a decision will be made between two and six months later.  If the court agrees with the defense and overturns the conviction and the sentencing, the case gets sent back to the prosecution to possibly refile charges, whereupon the entire trial process begins anew.  But this time, evidence of torture, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), etc., would be allowed into the courtroom.

If the court upholds the conviction but disagrees with the sentence, the appellate judges send new sentencing guidelines back to Drain for re-sentencing.  In the worst possible scenario, her conviction and sentencing would be upheld, meaning that she would have to serve 18 months in prison and then be deported.  If this happens, the defense could ask that all of the 6th Circuit appellate court judges, not just the three panelists, review the case as a last ditch effort to win the appeal.

We have been doing non-stop fundraising, organizing public events, and pitchingRasmea’s story to media across the country and the world.

There is still much more organizing to be done!

Register here to join us in Cincinnati on October 14, participate in a week of action for Rasmea between September 8 and September 14, visit www.justice4rasmea.org for more information, and / or email [email protected] with any questions.

The national Rasmea Defense Committee is led by United States Palestinian Community Network (USPCN), Committee to Stop FBI Repression (CSFR), and Coalition to Protect People’s Rights (CPPR); and includes 8th Day Center for Justice, Al-Awda NY: the Palestine Right to Return Coalition, American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)-Chicago, ADC National, American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), ANSWER Coalition, Anti-War Committee (AWC)-Chicago, AWC-Minneapolis, Arab Jewish Partnership for Peace and Justice in the Middle East, Arab Resource and Organizing Center, Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, Chicago Light Brigade, Committee Against Political Repression, Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)-Chicago, CAIR-Michigan, Friends of Sabeel-North America, International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, International League of Peoples’ Struggle-U.S., Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), Korean American Resource and Cultural Center (KRCC), Latino Organization of the Southwest (LOS), Lifta Society, Michigan Emergency Committee Against War and Injustice (MECAWI), Middle East Crisis Committee (CT), Milwaukee Palestine Solidarity Coalition, National Boricua Human Rights Network, National Lawyers Guild (NLG), National Students for Justice in Palestine, Palestine Solidarity Group-Chicago, Palestine Solidarity Legal Support, Palestinian Youth Movement-USA Branch, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, St. Louis Palestine Solidarity Committee, United African Organization, United National Antiwar Coalition, US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, Voces de la Frontera, Women Against Military Madness (WAMM), and ZCollective.

London protest demands freedom for Palestinian women prisoners, denounces G4S complicity

Inminds’ Palestinian Prisoners Campaign held a protest in London on Friday, 28 August, outside the headquarters of global security corporation G4S, focusing on the struggles of Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli jails. G4S is the target of a global boycott campaign for its complicity in Israeli violations of Palestinian rights; it provides security equipment and services to Israeli prisons holding Palestinian political prisoners. Palestinian political prisoners have urged the boycott of G4S, and the Palestinian Boycott National Committee has emphasized the importance of this call.

G4S was also specifically mentioned as a point of joint struggle in the new statement of over 1,000 Black activists – Black For Palestine; the corporation is involved in abuses and oppression in the United States, Canada, Australia, South Africa and the UK, particularly against refugees or people migrating, Indigenous people and people of color.

The protest on 28 August specifically focused on the cases of Fathia Khanfar and Lena Jarboni; Khanfar is a Palestinian grandmother who has been imprisoned in filthy conditions and receiving inadequate health care, while Jarboni is the longest-serving Palestinian women prison and has suffered many years of medical neglect and mistreatment.

All videos and photos from Inminds: https://www.facebook.com/inmindscom

Videos:

5 September, Toulouse: Rally to Free All Palestinian Prisoners

Rally: Free all Palestinian prisoners! Rassemblement : Libération de tous les prisonniers palestiniens !
Saturday, 5 September
3:00 pm
Square Charles-de-Gaulle, Toulouse, France

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1614653048795690/

Today, there are approximately 6000 Palestinian prisoners in the occupation prisons, including 400 held in “administrative detention,” an arbitrary practice of incarceration (no charge or trial, for periods of 6 months, renewable.) In addition, there is a lack of medical care and the conditions of detention are inhumane.

toulouse

For several weeks now, there are mobilizations happening inside the Israeli prisons.

In administrative detention since 4 November 2015, Mohammed Allan, a 31-year-old Palesitnian lawyer, started a hunger strike in order to protest his imprisonment. The Israeli government proposed to free him in exchange for deporting him abroad. Mohammed Allan, through his lawyer, refused this proposal. He ended his hunger strike on 20 August after obtaining a promise of freedom. However, there is some information relayed in the media that is misleading. Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association points out that the order declares his detention to be suspended, rather than fully ended. The Israeli government is studying the status of his case and has not transferred Allan to a hospital of his choice.

At the same time, many more prisoners have begun hunger strikes in solidarity with Allan, to protest their detention and to demand an end to administrative detention. Nafha prison, situated in the Naqab desert, saw a massive upsurge on 27 July 2015 after special forces of the Israeli prion services (Mitzada) raided rooms in the prison, injuring many, including Ahmad Sa’adat, General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Only through action and mobilization will we change the situation and express our solidarity with the Palestinian people, and publicizing the situation of prisoners and the growing popular movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel.

Demonstration, Saturday 5 September at 15h
Square Charles De Gaulle (metro Capitole)

Freedom for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails!
Long live the Palestinian resistance!
Down with the Israeli apartheid regime!

Initial endorsers: BDS France – Toulouse, Collectif Palestine Libre, Coup Pour Coup 31, NPA 31, OCML Voie Proletarienne

Francais:

On compte aujourd’hui environ 6000 prisonniers palestiniens dans les prisons de l’occupation, dont 400 se trouvent en « détention administrative », une pratique arbitraire (absence d’inculpation et de jugement, période d’enfermement de 6 mois renouvelable..). A cela s’ajoute l’absence de soins et des conditions de détention inhumaine.

Depuis plusieurs semaines maintenant, des mobilisations voient le jour dans les prisons israéliennes.

En détention administrative depuis le 4 novembre 2014, Mohammed Allan, avocat palestinien de 31 ans, a commencé une grève de la faim depuis la mi­juin afin de protester contre son régime d’incarcération. Le gouvernement israélien à proposé de le libérer à condition qu’il accepted’être déporté à l’étranger. Mohammed Allan, par la voix de son avocat, a refusé ce chantage. Il a stoppé sa grève de la faim le 20 août, obtenant la promesse de sa libération. Malheureusement, cette information largement relayée par les médias était mensongère. L’association de défense des prisonniers Addameer a révélé que l’ordre de détention prononcé par l’occupant israélien n’avait pas été levé, mais seulement « suspendu en raison de son état de santé. ». Le gouvernement israélien a fait savoir qu’il devait encore « statuer sur son cas » et a refusé le transfert demandé par Mohammed Allan dans un hôpital de son choix.

Dans le même élan, plusieurs dizaines de prisonniers ont lancé des grèves de la faim en solidarité avec Mohammed Allan et pour protester contre leur détention. La prison de Nafha, située dans le désert du Néguev, a connue une émeute massive le 27 juillet 2015. Les Forces spéciales de l’administration pénitentiaire israélienne (Mitzada) ont fait irruption dans la prison, provoquant plusieurs blessés, dont Ahmad Saadat, secrétaire général du Front Populaire de Libération de la Palestine (FPLP).

Notre mobilisation, et elle seule, changera la situation, en montrant notre solidarité avec le peuple palestinien, en faisant connaître la situation des prisonniers et par la montée du mouvement citoyen de boycott, désinvestissements et sanctions contre Israël.
RASSEMBLEMENT SAMEDI 05 SEPTEMBRE à 15H

Square Charles De Gaulle (métro Capitole)

LIBERATION DES PALESTINIENS EMPRISONNE PAR ISRAEL
VIVE LA RESISTANCE PALESTINIENNE
A BAS LE REGIME D’APARTHEID ISRAELIEN

Premiers signataires : BDS France – Toulouse, Collectif Palestine Libre, Coup Pour Coup 31, NPA 31, OCML Voie Proletarienne..

28 August, London: Emergency Protest to demand freedom for Fathia Khanfar and Palestinian Women Prisoners

28th Aug 2015 – Emergency Protest To Demand Freedom For Fathia Khanfar & All Palestinian Women Political Prisoners

Date: Friday 28th August 2015 3pm-5pm
Location: G4S HQ, 105 Victoria Street (Closest public transport: Victoria Tube/Rail station)
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1663481563867922/
Webhttp://inminds.com/article.php?id=10683
27th August 2014, www.inminds.com

Assalaamu Alaikum

Last month an Israeli military court sentenced 61 years old elderly mother of 7 children, Fathia Khanfar to 11 months imprisonment after having already caged her for 18 days followed by 9 months of house arrest and a £5000 fine. She had been abducted with her two grandchildren aged 7 and 8 years old whilst on her way to see her son Rami in prison, the occupation accused her of trying to bring a sim card for her son to use to phone her from prison.

They caged her at Al-Ramla prison with Israeli prisoners convicted of drug-related crimes who taunted and abused her. She was locked up in solitary confinement in a cockroach infested tiny cell with no ventilation which she describes as  “grave-like”. She was forced to sleep on a concrete floor with just a very thin mattress. She had no access to water or a toilet in the cell. When her lawyer was finally allowed to see her last week he described her condition as very serious, she is suffering from foot and back pain and infection of the trachea. She already has a heart condition which her unbearable living conditions is exacerbating.

Israel has adopted a systematic policy of medical negligence regarding Palestinian prisoners, a study conducted in 2008 revealed that 38% of Palestinian female prisoners suffer from treatable diseases that go untreated.

Since a few days ago Fathia Khanfar has finally been moved from that hell-hole, only to be caged in another dungeon, Israel’s notorious G4S secured HaSharon prison. Her daughter Sana has stressed the need for immediate intervention for the release of her elderly mother whose health is deteriorating, she has also denounced the lack of action by the PA on behalf of her mother.

Its imperative that international pressure is applied to demand the immediate release of Fathia Khanfar. Please join us outside the headquarters of the British security firm G4S which secures many of Israel’s prisons including HaSharon where Fathia Khanfar and 24 other Palestinian women are caged, as we demand freedom for Fathia Khanfar and the other women prisoners.  We will also be demanding that G4S end their complicity in Israel’s war crimes.

HASHARON PRISON – BACKGROUND

Fathia Khanfar is currently caged at the notorious HaSharon womens prison in Israel. At HaSharon prison Palestinian women prisoners have to endure beatings, insults, threats, sexually explicit harassment and sexual violence, and humiliation at the hands of Israeli guards. They are often forced to undergo degrading strip searches during the middle of the night – forced to squat naked and subjected to intrusive internal body searches, for no reason other than as a punitive measure. Women have been beaten and left tied to their bed for a day and a half and not allowed to go to the toilet as punishment for spilling water.

The cells at HaSharon prison are overcrowded, dirty and infected with rodents and cockroaches. There is a total absence of basic hygiene, women have even been denied sanitary pads when menstruating. The heat is unbearable, The windows are closed and covered so that hardly any air or daylight can enter. The food is insufficient, and of inferior quality & dirty, often containing insects & worms, at times there are not enough portions for all the women.

The British security contractor provides and maintains the security systems at  HaSharon prison, including the central control room.

LIVE UPDATES DURING PROTEST

We will, inshAllah, be tweeting live from the protest with live photos being uploaded to our twitter and facebook page. So if you can’t join us on the day, please help us by sharing the photos as they get uploaded.

https://www.facebook.com/inmindscom

https://twitter.com/InmindsCom

 

27 August, Paris: Protest to free all Palestinian prisoners!

EuroPalestine is organizing a protest for Palestinian political prisoners, calling for their freedom and denouncing administrative detention this Thursday, 27 August.

Paris: Thursday, 27 August. 5:30 pm (17h30) – 8 pm (20h)

Ministry of Foreign Affairs, at exit of Metro Invalides

ENGLISH TEXT

Israeli regime has tried to fool us pretending Muhammad Allan would be freed. But it’s not true.

His « administrative » detention has only be « suspended » because of his critical health.

The occupier must still discuss his case and decide what they do with him, since he has recovered from a second coma and refuses to be deported abroad.

On Sunday they refused to transfer him to another hospital as he keeps asking.

We call for big protests  in many French cities this week to tell Israeli occupiers and their French collaborators that we are determined to support Palestinian resistance and expose their lies and their barbarism.

In Paris, we invite you to join us in numbers in front of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs on

Thursday 27 August from 17:30 to 20:00

Gatherings will also take place in many other French cities in the coming days (Lille, Lyon, Metz, Belfort, Tours…)

We’ll give the precise appointments on our website : http://www.europalestine.com

French text:

La duperie et la perversité des dirigeants israéliens étant infinies, ils ont essayé de faire croire à l’opinion publique internationale que Muhammad Allan, avocat palestinien de 31 ans, en prison depuis novembre dernier sans inculpation ni procès et pour une durée illimitée, allait être libéré sans condition après son héroïque grève de la faim qui a provoqué un coma.

Mais ce n’est pas le cas. L’association de défense des prisonniers Addameer a révélé que l’ordre de détention prononcé par l’occupant israélien n’avait pas été levé, mais seulement « suspendu en raison de son état de santé ».

Le gouvernement israélien a fait savoir qu’il devait encore « statuer sur son cas » et a refusé dimanche le transfert demandé par Muhammad Allan dans un hôpital de son choix.

Donc Muhammad Allan, qui se remet d’un deuxième coma après 65 jours de grève de la faim pour protester contre la détention « administrative » illégale et parfaitement injuste, n’est en fait libérable que s’il meurt ou si ses lésions cérébrales sont jugées irréversibles !

Nous signalons que 400 autres Palestiniens se trouvent également en « détention administrative », une pratique arbitraire systématique de la part de l’occupant.

Par ailleurs l’absence de soins aux prisonniers politiques palestiniens qui croupissent dans les geôles israéliennes (en contravention avec la 4ème convention de Genève qui interdit à l’occupant de les transférer sur son territoire) a des conséquences dramatiques.

Ainsi Yosri Al Masri, actuellement à l’hôpital de la prison Ramleh, est atteint d’un cancer qu’Israël l’empêche de soigner et pour lequel il ne parvient même pas à obtenir les analyses médicales indispensables.

ISRAËL COMPTE SUR NOTRE LASSITUDE FACE À CETTE ACCUMULATION D’ACTES INHUMAINS ET ILLÉGAUX

NOUS DEVONS MONTRER 

– À CE REGIME COLONIAL QUI TESTE NOTRE CAPACITÉ DE RÉACTION

– À NOS DIRIGEANTS QUI COLLABORENT AVEC LUI EN COMPTANT SUR NOTRE  PASSIVITÉ

QUE NOUS SOMMES AUX CÔTÉS DES RÉSISTANTS PALESTINIENS CONTRE L’OCCUPANT.

C’EST POURQUOI NOUS APPELONS À DES MOBILISATIONS DANS TOUTE LA FRANCE !

À PARIS :  RASSEMBLEMENT CE JEUDI 27 AOÛT 

DE 17 H 30 À 20 H  DEVANT LE MINISTÈRE DES AFFAIRES ÉTRANGÈRES

SORTIE DU MÉTRO INVALIDES (lignes 8, 13 et RER C) 

Des rendez-vous seront également annoncés cette semaine dans de nombreuses autres villes de France :

Lille, Lyon, Metz, Belfort, Tours…. et à l’étranger. 

Ils seront relayés sur notre site : http://www.europalestine.com

Pensez à nous les communiquer.

SOYONS TRÈS NOMBREUX POUR MONTRER QUE MUHAMMAD ALLAN NE MET PAS SA VIE EN DANGER POUR RIEN !

Premiers signataires : CAPJPO-EuroPalestine, Droits Devant, Enfants de Palestine, Association des Palestiniens d’Ile de France, PALMED, Alternatifs libertaires 78, Saint-Ouen Palestine, Nanterre Palestine, Les Amis d’Al-Rowwad, Collectif Palestine Libre

Merci de faire circuler le plus largement possible !

Amicalement,

CAPJPO-EuroPalestine 

***********************************

 

9 Years Later: My Journey to see my Father; 45 Minutes, a Window and a Telephone by Sumoud Sa’adat

Published originally on Sumoud Sa’adat’s Facebook:

For us Palestinians, life has a different meaning and taste. While people around the world go on journeys to embrace nature, hike its mountains, or dive in its seas, we, the families of Palestinian political prisoners, go on journeys of our own to completely different places.

We journey to the Israeli occupation’s prisons where our loved ones are held in captivity. Although these prisons were forcibly imposed on us Palestinians, yet we go there with joy and excitement in our hearts while trying to ignore the harsh and bitter reality that lies within the prison walls. The night before the visit, many are unable to sleep the night, as was my case. Others cannot sleep deeply and instead spend the night tossing and turning in their beds trying to relax their anxious bodies in the hopes of being in their best shape for the visit.

Preparations Before the Visit

Our day started at four o’clock in the morning. First, we thoroughly packed the things my dad asked for so we wouldn’t forget anything. Then we prepared some food, coffee and cold water given the hot weather in the place we were heading to.

My mother, my brother(Ghassan) and myself left the house at 6:00 am, and headed towards the buses, which were located in front of ‘Isa’ad Al-toufeleh’ Park in Al-Bireh, Ramallah. Upon arrival, all the prisoners’ families gazed at us as we were getting off the car. When we approached them they met us with smiles and morning greetings. I heard someone saying: “this is the family of Ahmad Sa’adat. They are visiting with us!” Some approached us with warm greetings and said: “finally! They are allowing you to visit!”

The interaction between us and the other families started instantly and went smoothly without any barriers. After all we knew most of them. Some, used to deliver clothing and books to my father whom we were banned from visiting while visiting their sons and loved ones. To some we were relatives, and others I knew though my work in Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association.

There, I met my seventh grade Arabic school teacher. But today she came as the mother of the prisoner Mohammed Wahbeh who was sentenced to five years in Israeli prisons. In such moments, you can only see hopeful faces full of energy, smiles, laughter and joy. At some point you realize all of us that bus stop shared the same pain, the same  purpose; visiting our loved ones in Nafha Prison.

Beit Seira Checkpoint: The Fear of Being Returned

The bus moved at 6:50am. Since it was my first visit, the families were explaining what the next stop was. Beit Seira checkpoint was our next stop. At this checkpoint you wait with the fear of not being allowed to pass through. We arrived at Beit Seira check point at 7:30 am, we got off the bus and we walked around 50 meters until we reached an open yard sheltered with metal plates. In that yard there was but one filthy toilet which the families are forced to use because of the long journey. In that yard an employee from the International Committee of the Red Cross would hand the families tickets which allow the visit. We got our tickets and headed to the inspection point.

At the inspection point,you come across a revolving metal gate (gate number one). This gate is referred to as Al-Ma’atah, a gate usually used for animals especially chicken. Then, you have to empty your pockets, and if you are a woman, you put your hand bag on the inspection machine. At this gate, you present your identity card and wait for a while before being allowed to proceed to the next gate (gate number two).Gate number two is the gate which the families hate and despise. At this gate,there is a window and behind it two armed- Israeli female soldiers to whom you hand-over your identity card, the visit permit and the Red Cross ticket. When I presented my visit permit, identity card and ticket, one of the soldiers asked me to wait after she read my name. I noticed that she handed all my documents to the other soldier who was sitting behind her on a computer. I had to wait for a while during which two families passed the checkpoint as I watched the soldier one sitting at the computer. She kept staring at me which made me wonder what sort of information was she reading on her computer.

Shortly after, she returned my documents to the soldier at the window who then gave them back tome. Without a doubt, my mother went through the same procedure. Unlike me, my mother holds a Jerusalem ID, that allows her to pass checkpoints without needing a permit. Nevertheless she decided to share this experience with me.

Eventually we passed through the checkpoint and waited on the other side for the rest of the families to gather. In total we were 72 visitors on that bus. On the bus one of the families explained that their child, who was 15 years old was banned from passing the checkpoint and visiting his brother. The soldiers claimed that he was 16 years old and thus needed a permit. His mother however insisted his 16th birthday was in four months and he didn’t need a permit. To our sorrow,however, the soldiers did not allow him to pass and continue his journey.

The bus moved again at 9:20 am. My heartbeat started to pace. I was asking myself, how will the meeting be? Will I cry? Will I laugh? Will I, by some miracle, be able to get a hug from my father? How will my dad react? Last time he saw me I was 20. Today I was 29 years old. Will he even recognize me?! What about his features? Has he grown old? Will I find in his reassuring eyes the comfort they always gave? Is he calm? Will I see that smile which grants me strength and hope?

I decided to escape all this anxiety by sitting next to the driver and asking him about the places around us and the weather in an attempt to kill some time but also because it has been a very long time that I was in south of occupied Palestine. When I was young, we used to visit my father in Al-Naqab prison, and now I was reminiscing memories long forgotten. We passed by the junction which leads to the Israeli Naqab prison. We also passed by the Israeli Eshel prison which I heard so much about.We also passed by stunning desert mountains of such a beauty that I never saw before.

Two hours later, we arrived to the Rimon and Nafha Prisons. Suddenly all the anxiety returned, but even stronger this time. All my attempts to control this anxiety failed. When the driver announced that we arrived, all of the questions which I tried to avoid were back. I was like a butterfly which wants to fly, my heart was racing,my eyes were full of tears and absurdly, I had a strong urge to smile. A strong feeling overcame me, one that I haven’t felt for 9 years. Finally I was going to see my father, but I was certain it wasn’t going to be easy, for Indeed long waiting hours and humiliation were ahead of us.

 

sumoud-prison2

We arrived at Nafha prison at 11:30 am. One shouldn’t expect to just get off the bus and proceed to visit their loved ones, for this isn’t the case here. Right at the entrance, a security vehicle approached us and we were asked to wait. The bus had to park on the side while waiting, and we were surprised when a large bus passed by.The bus was a white and had the logo of the Israeli Prison Service’s (IPS) Nahshon unit on it. It had tiny and high windows and looked like a dairy truck. This was the bus which transports prisoners. Of course we couldn’t glimpse any of the prisoners, but we saw the dozens of Nahshon personnel surrounding the bus.

For 20 minutes we waited inside the bus as we were banned from moving. Eventually a policeman who was wearing the IPS uniform came and opened a gate which led into a yard. As we entered the closed yard, the policeman was making sure everyone had entered so he can close the door behind us. In the yard were uncomfortable metal seats and only two fans in this unbelievable heat. The toilets were so filthy to the point that you rather not use them or end up using them with difficulty if it’s absolutely necessary. Inside the yard were two windows; one for smoking and the other one was the window through which the families hand-over the clothes and books to prisoners. I really wish I could have destroyed that window because of the humiliation one faces at it. The policeman at the window was dull, slow and mean. He seemed to have creative ways of making the families suffer. On the left, there was a window where one hands their visit permit and identity card after they call the prisoner’s name. I called that window, the window of luck.

One of the jailers called out the names of several prisoners, which he categorized as the first group. The divided us, the 72 visitors into four groups. Although the fourth group was only of four families, yet it was an excuse for the IPS to delay us further and cause us more suffering. My mother, Ghassan and I each separately headed to the three windows. Ghassan went to the smoking window, I went to the mean soldier window, and my mom went to the window of luck- and I wished she hadn’t.

 

At the window, the soldier told my mother that only me (Sumoud) was allowed to visit on that day,and both of Ghassan and herself weren’t. My mom started shouting at him saying that the whole family was allowed to visit, and he replied in a very cold manner saying that was decision. At that moment, I felt my mom’s deep pain and saw her tearful eyes. Ghassan’s face was full of rage. They completely disrupted our happiness and eagerness for that long awaited visit. My mom was trying to look away from me to hide the tears in her eyes. Ghassan was hugging me and telling me to greet our dad warmly, while in fact he was trying to hide his anger. It was an extremely painful and stressful moment for all three of us. My mom wasn’t allowed to visit my dad for over two years, and my brother hasn’t seen my dad since the last war on Gaza in 2014. How can I visit my dad while they can’t see him? I felt like I wanted to cry and shout as loud as I can, but I didn’t let‘them’ destroy this precious and priceless meeting for me. My mum and Ghassan left and I was alone. It was a very cruel feeling that moment, however I had to proceed with this long awaited visit.

The Mean Window

Ever since we entered the waiting hall and until the time of the visit, I and a group of no more than ten people were waiting at window with the mean policeman. We waited at the window from 11:45 until 1:00 pm all through which the mean policeman was doing anything he could to make us suffer. He would allow some clothes and reject others based on their colors and his mood. One of the mothers with us said last time black was allowed, wherea sthis time black was prohibited! Each of the family’s had at least one piece of clothing which the mean policeman decided were not permitted. Moreover, the policeman kept disappearing without giving any explanation leaving us to wait even further. Instead of having a moment of calm to plan how and what to say to our loved ones in the 45 minutes of the visit, this policeman kept us waiting,feeling bitter and humiliated.

For 9 years I dreamed of visiting my father. After 9 years of waiting, I will get to see him for 45 minutes! Around 1:15, they called the names of the prisoners in the first group. We stood by a metal gate waiting to enter. A policeman would ask which prisoner each person was visiting and then would make one wait while he checks the names. More waiting! At the moment I was wishing these doors, these mean people and faces did not exist! I just wanted to go through the gate to see my father. I wished these restrains and limits did not exist and that this suffering be over, for I couldn’t wait anymore.

I finally went through the gate. Behind it was a metal detecting machine. I was asked to take off my shoes, put them through the machine and walk through. If the machine would buzz, you will have to take off anything that could possibly make a sound. Sometimes women would be asked to takeoff their underwear if it had a metal hook. They would give the women prayer clothes, ask them to go to the bathroom to take off their underwear and then place it in the machine for further inspection!

Lucky enough, the machine did not buzz, so I was able to proceed. I then entered a second inspection room. There stood two heavily armed female soldiers who were about 22 years old. They held a portable metal detecting machine. The look in their eyes lacked any innocence, which one think they would have at their age, or humanity. I almost felt like shouting them, how does it feel for you as women to be oppressing other women? But I didn’t. After the inspection I entered a hall, and there waited again. I waited and waited. Slowly I started feeling happy. Behind the next door I will be seeing my father, at last. I will see the bright face that I love and miss.

A policeman entered the hall and said it’s time for the visit. At that moment I felt like running, or walking! I really didn’t know what to do. We finally entered the visiting hall. The first thing I noticed there was the window which separates us from the prisoners. I was trying to glimpse my dad. Where are you dad? I was eagerly trying to find him. At the first window was a young man, at the second a man. But not my father. And suddenly I saw him. Walking next to the last guy. I ran towards the empty window so quickly that I even jumped over a set of steps. Suddenly he was therein front of me. My father, Abu Ghassan. I wished the glass separating us could break so he would hug me as he did when I was young. But some dreams are never meant to come true. The glass did not break.

My father, my source of power and happiness, was finally there in front of me where our eyes can finally meet. Despite the glass that was separating us, I held up the phone and I shouted as loud as I could:(Baba Habibi!) Dad, my love! Finally! Then I sent him several kisses from behind the glass. At that moment my eyes were full of tears and my voice was shaking.My father’s eyes were full of tears as well. However, we did not want to cry at that moment because it was a time for joy, so out of nowhere I made a loud Zaghrouta (ululation: a celebratory sounds usually made in weddings and other celebrations) and we started laughing. It was here that the visit properly started.

My dad was still the same. His sight made me feel like I am at the top of the world. We laughed and talked. I sent him more kisses though the glass. I passed greetings from many people. He told me about this daily life, how he spent his days and his new and I the same. These moments felt like a dream that I can never forget.

I started at him a lot, in an attempt to satisfy my need of him, my warm loving father, and his gaze which I will not be seeing again anytime soon. These moments felt like I was a child again living my happy childhood. Although he looked the same, yet he looked older as well. This annoyed me a lot, however, his spirit does not sound any older for he had the same strength and smile to which we were used. The beautiful grey had spread to the rest of his hair. His eyes were somewhat sad, probably because my mother and Ghassan could not visit him today, but also because today was my uncle’s 13th memorial. My father was also sad for his companion in prison, Ishrak Rimawi, who’s son, Ahmad, had passed away just two days ago. We spoke about how painful and shocking Ahmad’s death was. Ahmad was only recently released from Israeli occupation prisons and he actually spent time with his own father inside the same prison.

Despite all the sadness and pain, we still managed to smile and send each other kisses every now and then. We also managed to joke and laugh loudly about some family matters. Towards the very end of the visit,my dad was about to say goodbye and tell me to take care, when suddenly the phone was cut off. I could no longer hear his voice. The 45 minutes were over.Still he continued to speak from behind the glass and he placed his hand at the window. I said very loudly, do not worry abu Ghassan, and I placed my hand at the window facing his. I glanced at him one last time and he as well. That moment was the most difficult. My dream came to an end and I did not have enough of my father. I still yearned for him and missed him.

My father stood up to walk towards the door. I walked on the other side of the glass following his footsteps and watching him.A police officer was asking me to hurry up, but I did not hear him for I was trying to listen to my father’s steps. When I got to the door and was about to leave, I shouted as loud as I could: “Baba (dad), Abu Ghassan! I will miss you a lot” and I sent him a kiss. He waved his hand goodbye, smiling and we both left.

45 minutes are not enough for a 9 year old conversation. It was not even enough to quench my thirst and yearning for my father, but it was enough to give both me and him some strength and hope. My dream was over and I did not want it to end. Nevertheless, the beauty of the situation is that one could break the shackles placed on his happiness and could be happy, although briefly, despite all the difficult circumstances. For 45 minutes we ignored the police officer surrounding us, from my side and his watching the families and their loved ones. I ignored their reactions to our interaction, or their reaction to how the glass separates us from our loved ones or the inhuman phone. We simply were looking for minutes of happiness throughout our pain to keep us going, and we found them.

After the Visit… Reflecting on the Dream

The visit was over, but the journey did not end yet. We left around 2:50 pm to a room where we would have to wait for the other families to finish their visits. I can’t but describe how sad was the situation in that waiting room. The room was very quiet. The families were waiting,eating some of the food they got with them. Sad looks were all over their faces. They all were busy thinking, remembering every detail of the short visit that went by too quickly. Everyone was tired and filled with sadness. We all had to wait for over two hours for the remaining families to finish their visits. It was 5:10 pm already when we were about to leave. As we were leaving through the prison doors and I wished I could stay a little longer. Even if I couldn’t see my father, yet I did not want to leave him there alone. These moments were very difficult for me and for the other families. To leave your loved ones behind. Yet, we will continue to dream. We will continue to hope.

Khalida Jarrar in Ofer military court: Witnesses’ confessions obtained through torture, duress

Khalida Jarrar, the Palestinian leftist parliamentarian and feminist who has been imprisoned since 2 April by the Israeli occupation army faced an Israeli military court at Ofer on Monday, 24 August. Her hearing before the military court had been postponed two times before. The hearing continued for about six hours and will continue on 20 September.

Two of the three witnesses brought by the prosecution were raided and arrested in order to be forced to testify in court and the third was brought from prison as he is now detained. Two witnesses testified, and the third will be brought back to testify on 20 September. Both witnesses denied the information attributed to their confessions and testified that they were false confessions extracted through duress and torture: sleep deprivation, isolation and threats of arresting their family members. The military prosecution then, with the approval of the judge, treated the witnesses as “hostile witnesses,” while Khalida’s defense lawyers from Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association emphasized that such confessions extracted under torture and duress are unreliable and false and must be rejected.

Jarrar was arrested on 2 April 2015 by Israeli occupation forces who invaded her Ramallah home in a nighttime raid. Jarrar is a prominent advocate for Palestinian political prisoners, chair of the Palestinian Legislative Council’s prisoners’ committee, former executive director of Addameer and current vice chair of Addameer’s board of directors. In August-September 2014, she defeated an attempt by the Israeli state to forcibly displace her to Jericho, setting up a permanent protest tent outside the PLC building and protesting until the order was cancelled. When arrested, she was immediately ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial; in light of the massive outcry over her detention, her case was then shifted to the military courts. She is being charged with 12 entirely political charges, including membership and support for a prohibited organization (which include most major Palestinian political party) and public speeches and support for Palestinian political prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Khalida Jarrar and urges her immediate freedom. The solidarity and outrage from around the world, alongside her steadfastness, forced the cancellation of her administrative detention and of the forced displacement order; now it is time to step up the struggle to win her freedom and keep protesting and organizing.

A demonstration was held today in Copenhagen to support Jarrar; please inform us at [email protected] about your actions and events.

Addameer’s statement follows below:

Yesterday, 24 August 2015, the first hearing for witness testimonies in the trial of Palestinian Legislative Council member Khalida Jarrar was held. Three of the prosecution’s witnesses attended, and two presented their testimonies due to time constraints.

The two witnesses spoke about the conditions of which their confessions were obtained, including torture and ill treatment. Subsequently, the prosecution requested the witnesses to be held as “hostile witnesses” and the court accepted the request. This enabled the prosecution to cross-examine the witnesses and to claim that the confessions obtained initially were true, whereas the witnesses were making false statements in the courtroom.

The defense however was seeking to prove the opposite- that their initial confessions were flawed as they were obtained under duress. The witnesses spoke of pressure and ill-treatment during interrogation including sleep deprivation, being tied in painful stress positions for long hours, being threatened with further torture and with the arrest of family members. Additionally, it was brought to light that witnesses were banned from lawyer visits for long periods, indicating that their confessions were made without legal counseling. The next hearing for testimonies is set to 20 September 2015.