Home Blog Page 555

20 Palestinians detained in past two days by Israeli occupation forces

Mahmoud Bregheeth, 23, of Beit Ummar
Mahmoud Bregheeth, 23, of Beit Ummar

Mass arrests by Israeli occupation forces have continued on a daily basis, with dozens of Palestinians – particularly youth and former prisoners – detained in the past weeks. In the month of August, 16 people have been detained from the village of Beit Ummar in northern al-Khalil, reported Ma’an News.

On Sunday, 23 August, Yousef Riad Bregheeth, 21, and Mahmoud Yasir Bregheeth, 23, both of whom are former prisoners, were detained by Israeli occupation forces who invaded the city, among 12 Palestinians arrested overnight by the occupation army.

Ahmad Sheikh, 23, of Anata
Ahmad Sheikh, 23, of Anata

60 residents of Beit Ummar were detained between January and March of this year; Falah Abu Maria, 53, was killed by occupation forces in June in an nighttime raid on their home. Israeli forces shot his son, Mohammed, 22, with two live bullets and killed Falah when he went to his son’s aid.

Among eight Palestinians arrested in nighttime raids early Monday morning, 24 August, is Ahmad Sheikh of Anata, who has been arrested several times before by occupation forces.

Re-arrested Palestinian former prisoners plan protest steps, hunger strike

The six Palestinians whose sentences were re-imposed. Via Wattan TV
The six Palestinians whose sentences were re-imposed. Via Wattan TV

Palestinian prisoners released in the Wafa al-Ahrar agreement and then rearrested are considering taking steps toward an open hunger strike, said Palestinian lawyer Jawad Boulos on Sunday, 23 August.

Boulos visited the re-arrested prisoners from Jerusalem – who were rounded up in mass arrests in summer 2014 and then had their original sentence reimposed by a secret Israeli military commission without charges and on the basis of secret evidence.

Adnan Maragha, Nasser Abed Rabbo, Jamal Abu Saleh, Alaa Bazian and Aref Fakhouri – as well as former long-term hunger striker Samer Issawi – are awaiting the decision of the Israeli occupation Supreme Court in their case against the reimposition of their sentences. They urged actions on the legal, political and popular levels to support their freedom.

63 former prisoners have been rearrested by the Israeli occupation army after their freedom in the 2011 exchange agreement with the Palestinian resistance which saw 1000 Palestinian prisoners released in exchange for the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

Samer Issawi reported that he ended his solidarity hunger strike on Thursday with Muhammad Allan after several days, at the news of Allan’s own strike ending.

Protest in Sweden urges support for Palestinian prisoners

Palestinian and Swedish activists organized a rally in Vaxjo, Sweden to support the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons on Sunday, 23 August.

A number of Palestinians in Sweden, along with Swedish activists and members of the Communist Party participated in the protest, in support of Palestinian prisoners, calling for their freedom and exposing the occupation’s violation of their rights.

swedenprot1

Muhammad Allan prohibited from leaving hospital by Israeli military

Israeli military prosecutors ordered Barzilai Hospital to not allow Muhammad Allan to exit the hospital on 23 August, despite the freezing of his administrative detention and the end of his hunger strike.

Allan’s health status has improved significantly in the last two days, reported Palestinian lawyer Karim Ajwa, though he will likely need a week to 10 days before consuming solid food. He is consuming liquids and medicine, and issued a video thanking God and all of his supporters, and in particular Palestinians in occupied Palestine ’48, for standing with him during the strike.

An Israeli guard is now located at the entrance to the hospital to prevent Allan from leaving and his family was informed that the security services must approve his transfer to another hospital.

Allan, 31, a Palestinian lawyer held without charge or trial since November 2014 under administrative detention, ended his 65-day hunger strike on 19 August after an Israeli Supreme Court decision that lifted his administrative detention order (but permits its reimposition). As noted by Addameer, the court decision reaffirms and accepts the practice of administrative detention – now being challenged by hunger strikers in Negev prison in the Naqab. Allan suffered severe damage to his health, including brain damage, several days in a coma, and damage to various organs as well as vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition during his strike, in which he consumed only water, rejecting vitamins and other supplements. He remains in intensive care at Barzilai Hospital in Asqelan.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates that the Israeli state is fully responsible for the life and health of Muhammad Allan, and demands that it fully respect and implement his right to life and to freedom immediately.

Free Amer Jubran! London protest calls for liberation of Palestinian prisoners

Inminds’ Palestinian Prisoner Campaign held a protest on 21 August in London, marching from the Jordanian embassy to the Israeli embassy, to support Palestinian political prisoners. In particular, this protest focused on the case of Amer Jubran, longtime Palestinian activist who faced persecution and deportation from the United States and who is now facing 10 years of imprisonment in Jordan, accused of undermining Jordan’s relationship with Israel and the United States.  Jubran stated that he refused to betray or inform on the Lebanese resistance – and then faced persecution in Jordan’s “State Security Courts.”

The Free Amer Jubran Campaign is organizing to build support and demand Jubran’s freedom as a Palestinian political prisoner in Jordanian prison. Click here to take action for Jubran’s release, and for more information on his case:

The protesters then marched to the Israeli Embassy, denouncing any attempts to re-imprison Muhammad Allan, the Palestinian lawyer now recovering from his 65-day hunger strike, and demanding freedom for all Palestinian prisoners. Photos of the protest (see more at Inminds’ facebook):

Video:

Palestinian prisoners on fifth day of hunger strike to end administrative detention

Munir Abu Sharar
Munir Abu Sharar

Click here for Italian translation.

The first six Palestinian administrative detainees to launch the collective hunger strike in Negev prison in the Naqab desert – who will be joined by new batches of detainees in the coming weeks and days – are now entering their fifth day of hunger strike. 250 Palestinians held without charge or trial in Israeli prisons have announced their intention to join the collective hunger strike against the policy of administrative detention.

The first six Palestinians to launch the strike are: Nidal Abu Aker, Ghassan Zawahreh, Shadi Ma’ali, Munir Abu Sharar, Bader El-Razzah and Thabet Nassar. On Sunday, 23 August, they rejected a request from the Israeli prison administration to postpone their strike for a week, in which the prison administration would study their individual cases with the intelligence service and provide individual answers. They responded with their rejection of this offer, stressing that their goal is to end the policy of administrative detention and demand their immediate release, while on the other hand the prison administration has isolated the strikers in an attempt to pressure them and isolate them from the Palestinian people.

Nidal Abu Aker (top), Ghassan Zawahreh (right), Shadi Ma'ali (left) 
Nidal Abu Aker (top), Ghassan Zawahreh (right), Shadi Ma’ali (left)
Protest tent in solidarity with the strikers being set up at the entrance to Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem
Protest tent in solidarity with the strikers being set up at the entrance to Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem

The prisoners stated that this confirms that the occupation and its intelligence service are recognizing at an early stage the seriousness of this battle and the support the prisoners will receive.

Former prisoner Adnan Hamarsheh issued a call for unified action to support the detainees, urging the construction of a permanent sit-in tent in each area raising the Palestinian flag to support the prisoners, weekly marches and press conferences updating on the prisoners’ situation, monthly workshops on the prisoners, and the involvement of schools and univiersities at all levels in the campaign to end administrative detention.

The striking prisoners issued a statement on their struggle:

Battle of Breaking the Chains

We enter the open hunger strike strongly and collectively with our aim to bring down administrative detention. This goal is at the forefront of our demands and is a priority to raise our collective struggle as a strategic challenge to the racist, fascist law which allows our people to be detained for long periods of time – for ten years and more over multiple arrests without charges, with no right to defend themselves in a fair trial, while the “process” is a sham intended to beautify the image of the occupation and its intelligence.

We believe that our demands must focus on the basis of the problem and not just its ramifications, in that we are aiming to bring down administrative detention as a law and as a policy which at this moment is depriving 480 administrative detainees and thousands of our imprisoned people of their freedom for many years throughout the occupation of our land.

Although we have clearly identified our goals, we in no way believe that this fight is easy, indeed it is even more difficult. Enough is enough, and we know that the occupier will tighten its grip over our main demand and will use all kinds of fascist tactics in order to thwart us from achieving our goal, but we know that the masses of our people and their organizations and institutions will be the first engine to build local, Arab and international pressure to build a broader case against the occupation and the policy of administrative detention and force the occupier to give in to our demands. Although we are convinced with ourselves to fight this battle and determined to win, despite our awareness of the difficulty and the severity to come, we aim to achieve our goals and should focus all efforts in order to involve more administrative detainees in this action as well as building the Palestinian popular movement support, the Arab masses’ support, and international support, all for the purpose of achieving victory and the best results in this battle.

The liberation of each of us is a right and a requirement, but as a target by itself it does not achieve our general interests: the occupation is easily able to turn around and re-arrest any of us after a brief period of freedom under the same policy of administrative detention.

We are not individual heroes and do not claim that we alone can achieve the strategic victory to bring down this policy, but we are determined to go into this fight until the last, and we are aware that the battle is open to all possibilities, our victory or our martyrdom for the sake of a strategically important achievement. Perhaps we may achieve part of our demands; in this case we will have fought our battle with honor and dignity. We are fighting a difficult and tiring battle to destabilize the whole system of arbitrary administrative detention. This battle aims to achieve the freedom of hundreds of administrative detainees held each year under the pretext of the “secret file” and the prosecution of the Zionist security forces.

This step comes in the context of the progressive and escalating struggle since the beginning of July, with the boycott of the occupation courts, we have continued this boycott and the occupation is attempting to pressure us by renewing our administrative detention for longer periods, and we know that the occupation recognizes the importance of this action in eroding and exposing its policy. We also emphasize the importance of breaking the force-feeding law, which is a decision for execution and forces us to escalate the pace of our struggle to bring down administrative detention. Our action now is “banging on the walls of the tank” [in reference to Ghassan Kanafani’s “Men in the Sun”] and opening the path for greater participation by administrative detainees and engaging all of the energies of our people at popular and official levels, and all of our international and regional friends and supporters to achieve victory in this battle, and in the long battle to remove the occupation from our land, our sea and our people forever.

Photos: Samidoun graffiti mural in Gaza, Palestine

Palestinian graffiti artists and activists painted a graffiti mural across from the Palestinian Legislative Council by Unknown Soldier Square in Gaza City, in support of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network and international solidarity to free Palestinian prisoners on 23 August 2015.

Thanks to Palestinian graffiti artist Basil Abu Sarah and photographer Khalid Hashem!

 

“Human Rights” in the Arab World: the Instruments of War, a Test Case for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights by Lana Habash

Take Syria.

John McCain laid it all out in his interview on CNN’s Situation Room in 2013:

“Look, the Middle East is about to erupt. This is turning into a regional conflict: Lebanon is destabilized, Jordan can’t — the king of Jordan can’t last, the conflict is spreading throughout the region, Hezbollah is all in. This is becoming a Sunni-Shia conflict . . . and it’s an unfair fight!” While arguing for more US military intervention in Syria, he goes on to say, “It’s a great blow to Iran — the greatest in twenty-five years, and they’re cut off from Hezbollah, which would mean that Hezbollah would die on the vine.”

It is strange to hear American politicians wring their hands about the instability of the Jordanian monarchy and its regime while pontificating about US intentions to “bring democracy to the Middle East.”

Over the past two decades, we have witnessed the increasing use of the human rights discourse by the United States as justification for US military aggression. In some cases, these human rights abuses (as in the case of Iraq) proved nothing more than Department of Defense propaganda that was later proved false. More recently, the Assad regime in Syria has been accused of such violations as torture and arbitrary arrest and detention, though the US hasn’t been above using these  alleged services themselves. (US former CIA agent Robert Baer once said of US held prisoners, “If you want them to be tortured, you send them to Syria.”)  The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has echoed these allegations about the Syrian regime. These alleged human rights abuses, the same ones that Jordan continues to perpetrate against its own citizens with impunity,  have been used as justification for US military intervention in Syria, including the arming and training of rebel forces in Jordan by US troops, which has resulted in the deaths of at least 220, 000 people and over 3 million refugees. These interventions have done nothing to advance the human rights of the Syrian people, but have achieved some strategic goals for the US and Israel: Hezbollah, the only player that poses a serious threat to American and Israeli strategic interests regionally, is now embroiled in a Syrian civil war, and as McCain stated, a “great blow” has been served to both Iran and Hezbollah.

Last year, at his confirmation as the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights by the General Assembly, Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein spoke of his commitment to push forward human rights on the Asian continent. It has been hard to take seriously this pronouncement when the High Commissioner has used his office to support concrete measures that, not coincidentally, mesh with US strategic interests, while he remains silent about the human rights abuses in his own country, the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. Jordan is a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, yet has one of the most abysmal human rights records in the world. The recent case of Amer Jubran reveals the entire spectrum of repression to which Jordanians are subjected.

Amer Jubran is an internationally known Palestinian activist, speaker and writer on the rights of Palestinians and against US and Israeli policies in the Arab world. He has also distributed information about US involvement in destabilizing Syria.

Jubran was arrested in Jordan on May 5, 2014, when 20 men in black military uniforms broke into his home in the middle of the night. He was held incommunicado by Jordan’s secret police, the General Intelligence Directorate (GID) for 2 months at an undisclosed location, in violation of Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. A petition against arbitrary detention was filed on his behalf with the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. Nothing came of this.

Jubran was finally charged in August, 2014 under a new law that makes “harming the relationship with a foreign government” a crime of “terrorism.” The wording of this law is so vague that it criminalizes a broad range of political activities including journalism, in violation of Article 19 of the ICCPR, guaranteeing freedom of opinion and expression.

This same law was enacted one month after Amer Jubran’s arrest, also constituting a violation of Article 15 of the ICCPR, which stipulates, “No one shall be held guilty of any criminal offense … which did not constitute a criminal offense…at the time when it was committed.”

Jubran was tried before Jordan’s State Security Court (SSC), a military tribunal that fails to meet even minimum standards of judicial independence, violating Article 14 of the ICCPR, which guarantees the right to a fair trial by a  “competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law.” Jubran’s defense team effectively proved the “terrorism” charges against him false, but the verdict of the SSC was reached without regard for evidence. The only evidence presented in Jubran’s trial was the coerced testimony of other defendants, also arrested in May, 2014, subjected to interrogation, and all of whom received reduced sentences of two to three years.  Robert Baer also said: “If you want a serious interrogation, you send a prisoner to Jordan.” While Jubran was being detained incommunicado and “interrogated” he was threatened not only with imprisonment, but with being disappeared when he refused to infiltrate Hezbollah and act as an informant for the GID. He was recently sentenced to ten years of hard labor by Jordan’s State Security Court (see statement byAmer Jubran on his sentencing.)

The human rights abuses perpetrated against Amer Jubran are the rule in Jordan, rather than the exception. Jordan’s long history of the use of arbitrary detention and torture have been well documented by the UN. In 2013, the UN Human Rights Council Working Group on Arbitrary Detention issued a report on Jordan, detailing a series of cases like that of Jubran in which basic political freedoms had been trampled. The report had a special section on the State Security Court:

“The Committee against Torture and the Human Rights Committee have repeatedly recommended that Jordan abolish special courts such as the State Security Court…The Committee reiterates its 1994 recommendation that the State party consider abolishing the State Security Court.” (Human Rights Council Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, November 2013).

What has the UN High Commissioner done thus far to respond to these recommendations and push forward the issue of human rights in his own country? When asked during a press conference as to whether it was illegal to criticize the king in the press  in Jordan, the Human Rights Chief replied, “Essentially, we believe we are still a family,”  while plugging the king’s new book (USA Today August 13, 2014). The UN High Commissioner failed to mention Jordan’s long history of criminalizing speech and imprisoning journalists like Jamal Ayyoub.

Interestingly, Jubran has written nothing about the Jordanian regime. His writing has consistently concerned itself with the policies of the US and Israel in the region. This speaks to the new law of “harming relationships with foreign governments.” Mr. Jubran has stated that he was told directly by his GID interrogators that any decision made about him would involve “our American and Israeli friends.”

Recent revelations about NSA cooperation with Jordanian intelligence agencies underline the central role Jordan plays in the US and Israeli “security” regime for the region. Spying on Palestinians and providing intelligence about “high security targets” is perhaps the least of the services Jordan provides. The abuses of fundamental freedoms in Jordan are consistently carried out, as in Amer Jubran’s case, in the interests of protecting US and Israeli power.

Institutions like the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights are supposed to exist to guarantee the protection of human and political rights globally. The real test of the UN High Commissioner’s commitment to push forward the issue of human rights in Asia must begin in his home country of Jordan and will involve a confrontation not only with that regime, but with the nation states calling the shots. Will the UN High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein use the powers of his office to advocate for human rights, when those powers come in conflict with the US, Israel, and their regional allies? If not,  then the term “human rights” has become nothing more than Orwellian doublespeak, and  the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights is just one more weapon in the military arsenal of US regional dominance.

More details about the case of Amer Jubran can be found at freeamer.wordpress.com.

Lana Habash is a Palestinian physician living in Boston, MA. She can be reached at [email protected].

Free Palestinian prisoners, say protesters in Rome and Philadelphia

On 21 August, protesters with the International Action Center, Students for Justice in Palestine at Community College of Philadelphia and the Revolutionary Student Coordinating Committee held their monthly demonstration outside the Israeli consulate in Philadelphia, demanding freedom for all Palestinian prisoners. The protest particularly highlighted the struggle of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike as well as imprisoned Palestinian leaders like Ahmad Sa’adat, General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, demanding their freedom. Photos:

On 18 August, Rete Romana di Solidarietà con il Popolo Palestinese organized a protest in Rome, endorsed by the Palestinian Community of Rome and Lazio, calling for the freedom of Muhammad Allan and all Palestinian prisoners, focusing on the illegality of and condemnation of Israel’s use of administrative detention and of force feeding in the case of hunger strikers. Dozens of supporters gathered outside the Palestinian embassy in Rome. Photos and video (in Farsi by local Iranian journalist):

 

Video: Ziad Allan speaks at NYC demonstration for Palestinian prisoners

On 18 August, NYC Students for Justice in Palestine organized a protest at the United Nations in New York City, demanding freedom for hunger striker Muhammad Allan and all Palestinian prisoners. Allan, 31, a Palestinian lawyer, undertook a 65-day hunger strike against his administrative detention by the Israeli occupation military without charge or trial. He ended his hunger strike on the evening of 19 August after an Israeli Supreme Court decision and is currently recovering in the hospital; his administrative detention order has been suspended, but he remains at risk of imprisonment and the structure of administrative detention was not impacted by the decision.

Along with speakers from a number of community activist groups, student organizers, and movements of oppressed communities, Muhammad Allan’s uncle and cousin spoke at the rally. The video below features Ziad Allan, Muhammad’s uncle: