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June 27, San Jose: From Palestine to the Americas: Colonization & Mass Incarceration


From Palestine to the Americas: Colonization & Mass Incarceration – A People’s Movement Assembly

US Social Forum 2015
San Jose, California

Saturday June 27th 1-4pm
St. Paul’s Sanctuary

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/384309855106613/

Core Participating groups from Portland Oregon: Migrant Collective/Colectiva de Migrantes, Students United for Palestinian Equal Rights & Oregon Jericho

Facilitator: TBA Co­Facilitator: TBA
Primary Contact: Oregon Jericho- [email protected]

Day, time and room are TBA so please look out for updates very soon!

Summary
This PMA will bring together activism around massive deportations, prison industrial complex, displaced communities, border militarization, Palestine solidarity and Political Prisoner amnesty.

From Palestine to the Americas people are experiencing the rise of police and military violence in colonized territories. Colonial occupations by the U.S. and Israel have implemented plans of counterinsurgency and counterintelligence heightened with the growing Prison Industrial Complex (PIC). As a result; millions of people are detained and imprisoned for being undocumented or political activity and Political Prisoners go unrecognized by governments. Private contractors such as GEO group, G4S, and Corrections Corporations of America manipulate the global economy and have many private investments by big banks. Non­government agencies such as ALEC and corporations write racist and imperialist legislation to widen the gap of inequity between undocumented people, the working class and colonized/gentrified people.

Goals
Attendees hope to build a regional plan that will hopefully lead to more PMA’s in the future. This group will strategize ways to build an inter

6 July, UK: Block the Factory, #StopArmingIsrael

Block the Factory!
Monday July 6
7:00 AM
Elbit Factory, Shenstone (near Birmingham)
organized by London Palestine Action
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1852279304996380/

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Last summer’s assault on Gaza, which killed over 2,200 Palestinians, was one of the most brutal effects of Israel’s ongoing occupation and colonisation of historic Palestine. The massacre was carried out using drones manufactured by Israeli arms company Elbit Systems. In response, activists occupied Elbit’s factory in Shenstone, causing its operations to grind to a halt and costing Elbit over £100,000.

On 6th July, to mark the first anniversary of the assault on Gaza, groups and campaigners from across the UK are going back to Elbit’s factory to demand that the UK stops arming Israel. Join us for a day of creative action in solidarity with Palestine!

The Boycott Israel Network, nus black students’ campaign, West Midlands PSC, Drone Campaign Network, Coventry Friends of Palestine, Smash EDO, Manchester Palestine Action, Glasgow Palestine Action, Campaign Against Arms Trade, Stop The Arms Fair coalition, War on Want, Scottish PSC, Bristol PSC, Abergavenny PSC, Sheffield Creative Action for Peace (SCRAP), Sheffield Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Bristol Against Arms Trade, Brighton Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Occupy London, Bristol Psc, Leeds Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions – BDS, Jews for Justice for Palestinians and London Palestine Action will be there taking collective action to block the factory from making these weapons.

Endorsements from Palestine:
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

International endorsers:
Jews for a Just Peace – Denmark
Justice for Palestine Matters, Australia

Other orgs – please email [email protected] to endorse!

We will be transforming the space around the arms factory, converting it from a site of destruction into a fun, creative and child-friendly environment. Let’s create a space that meets our needs and not the needs of Israeli and multinational corporations that export death for profit.

Whether you have never been on a protest before or are a seasoned activist, whether you are disabled, an older person, a younger person, whether you have five children or none, we need you to come and make this the biggest, most beautiful action yet at an arms factory in the UK!

** WHAT ELSE CAN YOU DO? **

If you are active in a Palestine action or solidarity group in the UK, and want to be involved in planning the action, or even just coming along on the day, let us know! Email [email protected].

The action is what we make it! Could you run a kids’ space there? Lead a mass lock-on? Set up a craft tent? Run a tranquil space? Coordinate a Palestinian food picnic? Make paper wind turbines – not drones? Buddy up with wheelchair users? Whatever your skills and ideas, they are needed to make the day work. Email [email protected].

** PRACTICAL INFORMATION **

We will be having breakfast at 7am, so try and get there by then if you can!

A Map of where the factory is: http://bit.ly/1FdsCNL

TRANSPORT:

Shenstone is a small village outside Birmingham, accessible by National Rail trains. If you are coming from outside Birmingham, this generally means travelling to Birmingham New Street and changing there.

If you are coming from a big city where there is an active Palestine Solidarity movement it might make more sense to book a mini-bus or coach instead – please let us know to expect you.

ACCESSIBILITY:

We want to make the day as accessible and inclusive as possible. If you have access needs or will be coming with children and would like to discuss practical arrangements, please get in in touch by emailing [email protected].

ON THE DAY:

Come rain or shine, we will be there! Please come prepared for all weathers and conditions – bring raincoats, suncream, comfortable shoes, sunglasses and plenty of food and water.

POLICE:

We will work together to make the action space as safe and accessible as possible. However, we can’t guarantee that the actions of the police towards us will always be safe. We will have experienced legal observers present on the day, and lots of people who are experienced in dealing with the police. We will have Know Your Rights cards and bust-cards. We recommend that you check out https://greenandblackcross.org/ before coming along.

** BACKGROUND **

Despite international condemnation, Israeli apartheid, occupation and oppression of the Palestinian people continues. The UK government has done nothing to hold Israel to account for its crimes. Instead, the government is placing profits from the arms trade before justice for Palestinians.

Elbit is Israel’s largest arms company. Its Hermes 450 drones have been described as “the backbone” of Israel’s aerial attacks. Elbit’s UK subsidiary, UAV Engines Ltd, manufactures engines for drones at the Shenstone factory, which are exported to Israel and countries around the world. By manufacturing parts for Elbit, UAV Engines Ltd profits from Palestinian suffering. Amnesty International has also previously suggested that engines manufactured at this factory could have been used in attacks on Gaza.

Read more about Elbit Systems: www.corporatewatch.org/company-profiles/elbit
http://www.stopthewall.org/stop-elbit-updated-factsheet

More information on the UAV Engine factory (owned by Elbit Systems):www.uavenginesltd.co.uk,
http://londonpalestineaction.tumblr.com/post/109598110614/israeli-arms-company-and-uk-government-running

More information on the UK-Israeli Arms Trade:www.caat.org.uk/resources/countries/israel

POSTS

22 June, London: Freedom for Khader Adnan

Organized by Inminds:

DATE: Monday 22nd June 2015, 2pm-4pm
LOCATION: Outside Parliament, Parliament Square, London (near tube is Westminster)
FACEBOOK EVENT: https://www.facebook.com/events/901861463188869/

Please join us in a vigil outside Parliament to demand freedom for Palestinian hunger striker Sheikh Khader Adnan on the 50th Day of his hunger strike; and to demand an end to Israel’s illegal practice of punitive Administrative Detention whereby Palestinian political prisoners are caged indefinitely (some for nearly 10 years) without a charge or trial. Sheikh Khader Adnan is in critical condition, experiencing intermittent coma, his weight has dropped to a dangerous level and he is unable to stand or move , and his heart rate has dropped. The Israel Prison Service has forcibly transferred him to Assaf Harofeh Hospital, where he is surronded by three prison guards while his hand and leg are shackled to the hospital bed.

SHEIKH KHADER ADNAN

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A former Palestinian political prisoner, Sheikh Khader Adnan is known as the father of the hunger strikers – the symbol of Palestinian resistance and steadfastness, In 2011 he was abducted and caged indefinitely without any charged or trial under Israeli illegal system of punitive administrative detention. To protest his illegal imprisonment he went on hunger strike and won his freedom. His successful 66 day hunger strike in 2012 – the longest in Palestinian history at the time, inspired over 1600 other Palestinian prisoners to hunger strike. Since his release Sheikh Khader Adnan has been the voice of the Palestinian political prisoners, ceaselessly defending their rights at every opportunity and thus is a thorn in the side of the occupation. He has been in and out of occupation prisons since his student days from 1999 due to his political stance against the occupation. He has spent more than 6 years of his life caged in occupation dungeons, yet he has never been formally charged with anything let alone stand trial for anything.
Sheikh Khader Adnan is a father of 6 children. Youngest are triplets under 2 year old – Ali, Hamza and Mohammed; his other son is aged 3 – Abd-Al-Rahman. His two daughters are Maali – the eldest just 7 years old, and Besan 5 years old. Khader Adnan has a degree in Mathematics, and runs a bakery in the town of Arrabah near Jenin in the West Bank. His wife Randa describes their marriage as a partnership: “Khader is not just my husband.. He is a partner in struggle. I’ve been with him to protests and together we support prisoners families. I never considered this a burden or an exhaustion but rather an asset. ” She stresses how loving and gentle Adnan is: “He always helped me look after the children, changing their diapers and doing stuff that some men never consider doing. During my pregnancy with triplets, Khader was the one cleaning the house and making every effort to keep me happy and comfortable.”

 

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On Tuesday 8th July 2014 he was returning home to share the Iftar meal with his family after the Ramadan fast when he was abducted at a temporary checkpoint the occupation had illegally set up near his home town. He was given a 6 month administrative detention order without charge or trial. When the occupation renewed the order in Jan 2015 with an additional 4 month administrative detention order Sheikh Khadar Adnan protested by going on a one week hunger strike, announcing beforehand the duration of the strike. And when that administrative detention finished and they again gave him another 6 month administrative detention order in May 2015, Sheikh Khadar Adnan started his open ended hunger strike on 6th May 2015. It must be noted that Khader Adnan’s hunger strike is complete – unlike many previous long term hunger strikers he is refusing vitamins and other nutritional supplements, so he cannot stay alive long. Reports suggest that on day 35 of his hunger strike he is already experiencing intermittent comas, a sharp decrease in weight and drop in his heart rate.

His mother says that “We discussed the issue before he was arrested again in July last year, I told him, please, if they arrest you again don’t go on hunger strike.’ He remained silent, but gave me a look that pierced my heart like a bullet — as if to ask me to respect his decision and not expect me to deprive him of the only weapon he would have.” Khader Adnan informed his wife and his father of his plan to go on hunger strike in case Israeli authorities were to renew his administrative detention. His father explains “Khader is not a nihilist.. He’s not doing this because he wants to die and because he wants to hurt himself. On the contrary, he’s going through this because he loves life and believes that this is the only way to achieve freedom.”
His wife is concerned with the lack of action on the ground “During the last time [hunger strike], serious protests on the ground began only after the 45th day of his hunger strike and after he was nearing [death]. We cannot wait so long this time,” She urges Palestinians and the wider solidarity movement to mobilise for the prisoners cause “Those who believe in this cause should face the authorities and take to the streets, even if it meant arrest. Freedom is not without a price.”

Adnan’s father believes that one of the factors contributing to the relative silence is fear. Not fear of Israel, however, but of the Palestinian Authority: “The Palestinian Authority regards my son as a threat because while Khader supports all forms of resistance, the Palestinian Authority supports all forms of normalization,” he said.
Similarly other Arab regimes have also ignored the plight of the hunger strikers as they did previously. During Khader Adnan’s last hunger strike Syed Hassan Nasrallah remarked on the silence of Arab regimes “If Khader Adnan was an Israeli citizen, the Arab governments would intervene at the highest level.”*

Such collaborationist stances by governments makes it all the more imperative for ordinary people to ‘take to the streets’ and demand freedom for Khader Adnan.

* http://www.english.alahednews.com.lb/essaydetails.php?eid=16748&cid=370#.VXVjvUYWmul

khaderadnan-inminds2

MESSAGE FROM SHEIKH KHADER ADNAN ON DAY 30 OF HUNGER STRIKE

This is the english translation of the message from Sheikh Khader Adnan on day 30 of his hunger strike:

In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful.

All praises be to Allah in trials and tribulations, and All praises be to Allah in times of grief and happiness,

Peace and mercy upon his messenger Muhammed who was patient and all his family and companions who struggled in the valley of Abu Taleb through hunger, under a tight siege until Allah relieved their trial.

[This is a reference to early history of Islam when the first Muslims who accepted prophet Muhammed’s message of the oneness of God were persecuted and some tortured to death by the polytheists that Abu Taleb, the Prophets uncle, took them to safety in his valley under his tribes protection. The polytheists laid siege to the valley starving the Muslims inside – some days the Muslims had so little food that they had to share one date to feed two people. After 3 hard years of patience and struggle the siege collapsed and the Muslims could return home.]

To my people, my family, and to the world’s free souls I send you my greetings, love, and gratitude. It is the strength that I drawn from Allah, and from your support and prayers that gives me the power to continue.

From by beloved al-Ramla city with its majestic minarets.. its land and al-Lod which witnessed the massacre of 1948, I send you greeting a second time,

[Khader Adnan is currently in Ramla prison hospital, described by patients as a ‘slaughter house’ due to the conditions the patients are subjected to. The prison hospital is located in the ethnically cleansed Palestinian city of al-Ramla and its nearby city of Lydda (Lod) infamous of the massacre by Zionists in 1948 which left around 450 Palestinian men, women and children dead with 70,000 forcefully expelled from their homes.]

I would like you to know that I am not engaged in a personal fight for freedom. My battle is that of all Palestinian detainees who are yearning for freedom and dignity. They are the symbols of pride, freedom and dignity in this universe.. fighting for the noblest cause the world has known for decades.. when our land and our holy places were stolen.

Administrative detention is just one of the most despicable policies our people have ever witnessed. Britain bears responsibility for initiating this criminal policy, but that does not justify the occupations use of this detention against our people whose place is not to be detained inside these jails but to be home in our homeland with our families.

From the bottom of my heart, I express my gratitude for your support and solidarity. May Allah restore our freedom so that we can rejoin our families soon. The Israeli jailers try to break us down, but we promise them with Allah’s help and support and your solidarity that we will inshAllah win. This hunger strike continues until we win our freedom, inshAllah.

Khader Adnan, 4th June 2015 – day 30 of hunger strike

FORCE-FEEDING

On day 42 of his hunger strike (14th June 2015) the Israeli cabinet approved a bill permitting the force-feeding of hunger strikers in Israeli prisons. Israel’s Internal Security Minister Gilad Erdan who led the bill, justified it by writing “Alongside attempts to boycott and delegitimize Israel, hunger strikes of terrorists in prisons have become a means to threaten Israel”. The bill now just needs approval from the Knesset before it becomes law. The World Medical Association has described force-feeding of hunger-strikers as ‘tantamount to torture’. Physicians for Human Rights says the bill will ‘legalise torture and gross violations of medical ethics and international conventions’, noting that between 1970 and 1992 (when Israel permitted such force-feeding) five Palestinian prisoners died while being force-fed.

ADMINISTRATIVE DETENTION

Administrative detention is a practice used by Israel to imprison Palestinians indefinitely without charge or trial.

Prisoners are given rolling detention orders which can be anything from 1-6 months, renewable indefinitely. This is against international law. For example administrative detainee Mazen Natsheh has been locked up cumulatively for nearly 10 years without charge or trial.

Detention orders are based on so called “secret information” which never needs to be produced, either to the detainee nor their lawyer.

Administrative detention is often used to arbitrarily jail Palestinians where there is no evidence for a trial, or for punishment as in the case of 8 Palestinian MPs.

Israel has on average issued over 2000 detention orders every year (2007-2011). Today there are 450 administrative detainees. Most of them. like Khader Adnan, having been transferred from the West Bank into Israel in contravention of Article 76 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Take Action: Demand freedom for Palestinian hunger striker Khader Adnan

Khader Adnan, Palestinian political prisoner held under detention without charge or trial, launched an open-ended hunger strike on May 6 in protest of the third extension of his administrative detention, for a four-month period. Adnan, 37, a baker from Arraba near Jenin, is a previous long-term hunger striker whose 2012 66-day hunger strike secured his release from administrative detention and helped to spark a wave of hunger strikes by Palestinian political prisoners demanding freedom and changes in conditions inside the prison. Take Action! Demand freedom for Khader Adnan!

Adnan has been arrested ten times by Israeli occupation forces; he has generally been ordered to administrative detention by the Israeli military. Administrative detention is imprisonment without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence for indefinitely renewable one to six month periods. Over 401 administrative detention orders have been issued so far this year against Palestinians.

IMEMC reported that Adnan’s wife, Randa, said Adnan’s lawyer phoned her, on Tuesday evening, informing her that Adnan started a hunger strike, and had immediately been moved into solitary confinement in Hadarim prison.

Released in April 2012, Adnan was re-arrested with a slew of fellow former political prisoners in the Israeli mass arrest raids of July 2014, following the killing of three settlers in the West Bank and shortly before the war on Gaza. He was quickly returned to administrative detention without charge or trial with a six month sentence, renewed for four months in January and now again for four months. In January, he held a one-week hunger strike for which he announced the duration in advance, protesting the renewal of his detention.

In 2012, Adnan’s hunger strike captured the support of international activists, human rights organizations and the Palestinian people. His image, in a stylized graphic designed by Palestinian artist Hafez Omar, covered walls throughout Palestine. Internationally he became a symbol of the steadfastness and continuing struggle of Palestinians behind Israeli bars and expressed solidarity with fellow political prisoner Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, held in French jails for 31 years, and the mass hunger strike of California prisoners.

Take Action! Demand freedom for Khader Adnan!

1. Send a letter/petition immediately to Israeli officials demanding the release of Khader Adnan. Make sure the international voice is heard demanding his freedom!

2. Protest at the Israeli consulate or embassy for Khader Adnan and all Palestinian prisoners. 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 case in your next event about Palestine and social justice.

3. Boycott, Divest and Sanction. Hold Israel accountable for its violations of international law. Don’t buy Israeli goods, and campaign to end investments in corporations that profit from the occupation. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

 

*Thank you for taking action! Khader Adnan is now free. Thousands of people responded to this alert and took action to support his strike.

Letter: Sign Here – Free Khader Adnan – End Administrative Detention!

To Brigadier General Dani Afroni, Military Judge Advocate General and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu;

I write today to call for an immediate end to the use of solitary confinement and isolation against Khader Adnan, and all Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

I write today to demand the immediate release of Khader Adnan as well as the end of the use of administrative detention. Adnan is being held without charge or trial and under secret evidence. It is the tenth time that Israel has imprisoned Mr. Adnan without charge or trial, where he joins 500 fellow Palestinian prisoners in administrative detention.

Khader Adnan’s life – and the lives of thousands of Palestinian prisoners- are precious to me and to people around the world. The eyes of the world are on the case of Khader Adnan, and the government of Israel is fully responsible for his health and his life.

Administrative detention violates the right to a fair trial as recognized in the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights. It is a practice that is used to silence Palestinians without ever exposing the reality of such actions to the light of day – even in the rigged military court systems.

Khader Adnan’s valiant hunger strike three years ago was heard around the world as a cry for freedom – his strike today is heard and supported as well. He must be released immediately and without condition.

Sincerely,

Sa’adat transferred from Ramon to Gilboa Prison amid widespread transfers of Palestinian prisoners

Via the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat:

Imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat was transferred from Ramon to Gilboa prison on May 5 as part of a series of transfers aimed at disrupting prison organizing. Sa’adat, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, has been repeatedly transferred during his imprisonment.

Transfers are used to disrupt the social fabric and political organizing among Palestinian prisoners and are also inhumane and abusive in and of themselves; when Palestinian prisoners are transferred, the infamous “bosta” – a metal transport vehicle in which the prisoner is shackled to a metal chair in the back – is used. The bosta is not air conditioned, does not have open windows and reaches extremely high temperatures. It is a particularly dangerous experience for older or ill prisoners.

In addition to Sa’adat, Jamal Abu el-Hija, an imprisoned Hamas leader, was transferred from Eshel to Ramon prison, as was his son Imadeddine. Abu el-Hija and Sa’adat were two of the 19 prominent Palestinians held in solitary confinement for years whose isolation sparked the September 2011 and then the April 2012 Karameh mass hunger strikes, in which Israeli prison officials acceded to the demand to end the use of long-term isolation. Despite their agreement in 2012, the use of solitary confinement and isolation against Palestinian prisoners has been escalating, particularly since 2014.

80 Palestinian prisoners were transfered from Eshel to Nafha prison, with “inspections” given as a pretext, 6 from Megiddo prison to the Negev Prison.

May 14, New York City: Resistance and Detention

Resistance and Detention: Featuring Lamis Deek, Alejandro Molina, and representatives of Rasmea Odeh
Thursday, May 14
6:00 pm
Hunter College, Hunter West 714, New York City
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/698926610229462/

posterFROM PALESTINE TO PUERTO RICO: FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS!

Join Students for Justice in Palestine at Hunter College for our last event of the year – a panel discussion on political prisoners. With an emphasis on Palestinian and Puerto Rican political prisoners, we will be joined by speakers with experience and knowledge about struggles for liberation from prison.

Our panel includes:

– Lamis Deek, Palestinian-American human rights attorney and organizer based in New York City. She is co-founder of al-Awda, the National Right to Return Coalition. In addition, Lamis Deek has defended the right to protest, religious and civil freedoms, numerous student activists, while fighting surveillance and predatory prosecutions. She continues to expose injustices at home and abroad.

– Alejandro Molina, representative from the campaign to free Oscar López. Oscar López, a Puerto Rican-independence freedom fighter, was sentenced in the 1980s to 70 years in prison. He is currently incarcerated. López was offered conditional clemency by U.S. President Bill Clinton in 1999, but rejected the offer. His sister, Zenaida López, said he refused the offer because on parole, he would be in “prison outside prison.” López refused to negotiate terms of his release because of the unfair nature of the legal system.

– Representative from the campaign to free Rasmea Odeh. Rasmea Odeh, a well known Chicago-based feminist, anti-war, immigrant, and Palestine solidarity activist and organizer, was convicted of immigration fraud in November 2014 and sentenced in March 2015 to 18 months imprisonment, with deportation to follow her release. She is currently free on bail while seeking an appeal.

Due to legal restrictions, Rasmea Odeh cannot presently travel, but she is expected to call in or record a message.

Refreshments will be served. Room to be announced.

Khalida Jarrar’s administrative detention limited; imprisonment and military charges continue

The administrative detention of Khalida Jarrar, imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarian and political leader, was officially limited on May 4 by Israeli military order, reported her lawyers with Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association on May 5. Jarrar remains imprisoned, charged before Israeli military courts with twelve purely political charges that include membership and leadership in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the left wing Palestinian party Jarrar represents through the Abu Ali Mustafa bloc in the Palestinian Legislative Council. Other of the charges include advocating for the release of Palestinian political prisoners and speaking at public events.

Israeli military officials have already stated their intention to continue to imprison Jarrar while she is tried on these political charges by an Israeli military court. Israeli military courts convict 99.74% of the Palestinians who appear before them and in no way meet international standards for a fair trial. Palestinians can be charged for violating any Israeli military order, including for membership in or “services to” “prohibited organizations,” which include all major Palestinian political parties. “Services” can include attendance at public events or calling for freedom for imprisoned Palestinians.

khalidaoferAdministrative detention is imprisonment without charge or trial on the basis of secret evidence for indefinitely renewable one to six month periods. It is in violation of international law and human rights norms. 401 Palestinians have been issued administrative detention orders by the Israeli military so far in 2015.

“Whether Khalida Jarrar is being detained under administrative detention or for Israeli military trial, she is facing one framework of repression, racism and mass incarceration targeting Palestinian political life and expression. Both systems of detention are part and parcel of maintaining military control and occupation over the Palestinian people, and both are arbitrary forms of political detention and imprisonment that target Palestinian leaders and organizers,” said Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network.

The order was issued a day before a scheduled hearing on her administrative detention on May 6. Another scheduled hearing on April 29 at Ofer Military Court on the twelve charges against her was postponed as well with no action.

Addameer’s statement follows in full:

PLC Member Khalida Jarrar‘s administrative detention order limited, trial continues

Thursday 05 May 2015 – occupied Ramallah

This morning, the defense team of Palestinian Legislative Council Member Khalida Jarrar was made aware that her administrative detention military order was limited to end on 04 May 2015. The administrative detention lasted for one month and two days.

The decision by the military commander to limit her administrative detention order indicated specifically that shortening the order does not undermine other arrest orders against Mrs. Jarrar, suggesting that the prosecution will continue to request that she is remanded until the end of her on-going trial.

The cancellation of her administrative detention order does not prevent the military prosecution to use secret information against Mrs. Jarrar to justify her remaining in detention until the end of trial.

Mrs. Khalida Jarrar was arrested on Thursday, 2 April 2015 after a raid on her home in Ramallah and received a 6-month administrative detention order on Sunday, 5 April 2015. A list of charges was also issued against her on 15 April 2015. The twelve charges against her revolve around her role as a PLC member and political leader and for her campaigning for prisoners. Addameer considers the arrest of Mrs. Jarrar to be a political one, and calls for her immediate release.

Addameer also raises concerns about the health of Mrs. Jarrar in her continued detention. Medical tests have indicated that Mrs. Jarrar has multiple ischemic infarctions and hypercholesterolemia. Based on medical records from the Palestine Medical Complex, she has been admitted to hospitalization due to epistaxis where she was treated to stop continuous bleeding. She has also been previously treated for deep vein thrombosis numerous times.

Mrs. Jarrar has had a travel ban imposed on her movement since 1998, and she has only been permitted to travel on one occasion for medical treatment in 2010, following legal proceedings and diplomatic pressure.

Addameer’s position is that the prosecution’s recent actions confirm the political nature of Mrs. Jarrar’s arrest. The prosecution appears to be exhausting all legal procedures within its power to keep Mrs. Jarrar in detention. Addameer also affirms that this is a politically motivated arrest which contravenes international law, specifically the Fourth Geneva Convention, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, with regards to rights to political opinions and inherent civil rights.

Currently, Mrs. Jarrar is one of 12 PLC members held in detention, 6 of whom are held under administrative detention.

Khalida Jarrar is 52-years old and has been a Palestinian Legislative Council member since 2006. She also heads the subject of prisoner’s issues in the Palestinian Legislative Council, and is also deputy chairperson of the Board of Directors of Addameer.

Take Action to support Khalida Jarrar:

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

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

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

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

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

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

7. Boycott, Divest and Sanction. Hold Israel accountable for its violations of international law. Don’t buy Israeli goods, and campaign to end investments in corporations that profit from the occupation. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

Palestinian women prisoners denied family visits, isolated for raising Palestinian flag

linakhattabbSix Palestinian women prisoners were prohibited family visits for one month for raising the Palestinian flag in HaSharon Prison on “Israeli Independence Day,” commemorating the dispossession of the Palestinian people and the establishment of the Israeli state on the land of Palestine, including Palestinian student and political prisoner Lina Khattab, imprisoned lawyer Shireen Issawi, Nahil Abu Aisha, Ihsan Dababseh, Haniyyeh Nassar, and Yasmin Shaaban.

Issawi, Abu Aisha, Dababseh, Nassar and Shaaban were then isolated in solitary confinement after they confronted prison administration about the prohibition of family visits. Denial of family visits and solitary confinement are two of the major forms of repression and targeting used by Israeli prison officials against Palestinian prisoners. The denial of family visits is a form of collective punishment, preventing mothers, fathers, spouses and children from accessing their loved ones and family members.

Solitary confinement is also frequently used as a means of control and repression inside Israeli prisons; the demand to end long-term isolation sparked the April 2012 Karameh mass hunger strike of thousands of Palestinian prisoners, which ended with an agreement to end the use of solitary confinement. Despite this agreement, Israeli prison officials continue to regularly use solitary confinement and isolation against Palestinian prisoners.

Brussels flashmob, Ha’aretz editorial join calls for freedom of Khalida Jarrar

Activists in Brussels, Belgium organized a flashmob on Sunday, April 26, calling for freedom for imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarian, feminist, leftist leader and human rights defender Khalida Jarrar. Gathering at the Plaza Communale Molenbeek, activists with Intal, the Progressive Palestinian Youth, and the Palestinian community called for freedom for Jarrar and her fellow Palestinian political prisoners. Belgian lawyer Joke Callewaert, who observed Jarrar’s military court hearing April 15, spoke to the gathering about her observations of the injustice. Photos:

The action in Belgium came as Ha’aretz, the Israeli newspaper, featured a staff editorial calling for Jarrar’s release:

Jarrar’s parliamentary activities have focused on obtaining the release of Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian application to join theInternational Criminal Court in The Hague. She was charged in an Israeli military court with 12 security offenses, including membership in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and incitement to abduct an Israeli soldier as a bargaining chip.

Even after the filing of the charges, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that Jarrar’s arrest was political in nature, meant as payback for her public activities regarding the ICC. The fact that she was charged with crimes only after the international protest reinforces this suspicion. Judging by all the evidence, including the indictment, Jarrar is not a terrorist. She is a nonviolent and determined activist who is working to liberate her people from the occupation. Israel has no right to punish her for that.

The Ha’aretz editorial followed a lengthy interview with Ghassan Jarrar, Khalida’s husband, by Gideon Levy and Alex Levac, on April 24:

Ghassan Jarrar didn’t remember whether Khalida took her medications with her. When dozens of Israel Defense Forces soldiers came in the middle of the night to arrest her on April 2, and he was agitated by the thought that his wife, a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, would be taken from him – he forgot to check if she had taken her medicines. Now he has been told she is receiving them at the prison.

The Jarrars have been together for 35 years, ever since they met as students at Bir Zeit University, and his love for her is evident to this day. He even named his new factory for children’s furniture after her and their two daughters: “Sky” is an acronym for Suha, Khalida and Yifaa.

The two daughters, incidentally, are currently in Ottawa, Canada, where they are pursuing their doctorates, Yifaa in law and Suha in environmental studies. They are also devoting their time to the international campaign for their mother’s release from an Israeli prison.

Also on April 24, a new site focusing specifically on the campaign to free Khalida Jarrar was launched, at http://freekhalidajarrar.org. The Samidoun site, https://samidoun.net/khalidajarrar, will also continue to be regularly updated with breaking news and updates.

46 more Palestinians ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial

Israeli military occupation authorities issued administrative detention orders for imprisonment without charge or trial against 41 Palestinian prisoners, including 26 Palestinians from Hebron district on Tuesday, April 21, according to the Palestine Prisoners’ Society. These followed on 5 prisoners sent to administrative detention on Sunday, April 19.

The detainees were sentenced for a period ranging between two months and six months, with twelve of the detainees receiving detention orders without charge or trial for the first time, whereas the remaining 29 detainees had their administrative detention sentence renewed for the second or third time.

Administrative detention is the imprisonment of Palestinians without charge or trial and on the basis of secret evidence for up to six month periods, indefinitely renewable by Israeli military courts.

The use of administrative detention dates from the “emergency laws” of the British colonial era in Palestine. Israel’s use of administrative detention violates international law; such detention is allowed only in individual circumstances that are exceptionally compelling for “imperative reasons of security.”

There are around 500 detainees serving administrative detention in several Israeli jails, including Palestinian Legislative Council member Khalida Jarrar who has been recently sentenced to 6 months of administrative detention, and 8 other PLC members.

WAFA Palestinian News & Info Agency has provided the names of the 41 detainees who received administrative detention orders:

1. Mahmoud Fasfous, of Hebron, 4 months
2. Abdullah Sha’aban, of Jenin, 4 months
3. Amir Shammas, of Hebron, 4 months.
4. Nour Dudin, of Hebron, 4 months
5. Bajes Swaiti, of Hebron, 4 months
6. Raed al-Amla, of Hebron, 6 months
7. Murad Shqaiqat, of Jenin, 4 months
8. Mustafa Braija, of Bethlehem, 6 months
9. Muhammad al-Habal, of Tubas, 4 months
10. Ahmad al-Qiq, of Hebron, 3 monhts
11. Hasan Shihada, of Abu Dis, 4 months
12. Tareq Hamed, of Ramallah, 4 months
13. Suhaib Jidan, of Ramallah, 4 months
14. Ayman Za’aqiq, of Hebron, 6 months
15. Nour Jaffal, of Abu Dis, 4 months
16. Nedal al-Boum, of Nablus, 6 months
17. Muhammad Abu Ras, of Hebron, 6 months
18. Said al-Asafra, of Hebron, 5 months
19. Sufian al-Wahaddin, of Hebron, 4 months
20. Fawzi Talahma, of Hebron, 6 months
21. Issa Awawda, of Hebron, 4 months
22. Bashar Da’na, of Hebron, 6 months
23. Anas Dweik, of Hebron, 6 months
24. Ismail Slaibi, of Hebron, 6 months
25. Ala’a Za’aqiq, of Hebron, 6 months
26. Abdul-Qader Sharawna, of Hebron, 4 months
27. Nedal Jaber, of Qalqilya, 6 months
28. Munther Abu Atwan, of Hebron, 4 months
29. Firas Masalama, of Hebron, 4 months
30. Abdullah Bani Odeh, of Nablus, 4 months
31. Arqam Ahmaro, of Hebron, 3 months
32. Muhammad al-Khatib, of Hebron, 4 months
33. Imad Isma’il, of Ramallah, 4 months
34. Shaher Abu Ghalyoun, of Hebron, 4 months
35. Ahmad Huraimi, of Bethlehem, 4 months
36. Mustafa Shawer, of Hebron, 2 months
37. Mahmoud Ayyash, of Ramallah, 4 months
38. As’ad Imam, of Hebron, 4 months
39. Raed Sharbati, of Hebron, 4 months
40. Muhammad Abu Ghalya, of Jerusalem, 5 months
41. Tamer Qawasmah, of Hebron, 4 months

These 41 orders followed 5 more issued on Sunday, April 19 from the military court at Ofer:

1. Abd al-Rahman Hammad, of Qalandia refugee camp, 6 monhts
2. Osama Ida’is, of Hebron, 6 months
3. Joma’a al-Jojo, of Bethlehem, 4 months
4. Ahmad al-Hrimi, of Bethlehem, 4 months
5. Ahmad al-Rai, of Qalqilia, 2 months