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Palestinian girl Malaak al-Khatib, 14, detained for additional week by Israeli forces

Palestinian girl, Malaak Ali al-Khatib, 14, was arrested on 31 December near her school in Bittin village, near Ramallah. Her detention was extended on Monday, 5 January for one week, until Sunday, 11 January, under the pretext of requiring a “conduct report” on the girl before releasing her. The 14-year-old girl is accused of “throwing stones” at Israeli occupation soldiers at the settler bypass road closed to Palestinians near her school. She is one of 23 women and girls and nearly 200 children detained by Israeli occupation forces.

Her father told Wafa News that her family was informed that they may have the possibility to pay a fine of 6000 NIS (approximately $1500 US) to release her. He noted that she was distressed and frightened in court; “after all, she is only 14.”

Around 500-700 Palestinian children are detained and arrested by the Israeli occupation forces each year. If children are charged at all, it is usually with “throwing stones.” Defence for Children International – Palestine has a large number of resources on the mass detention of Palestinian children, who suffer various forms of abuse by Israeli occupation forces.

Protest in Gaza to support Lina Khattab as Israeli military court postpones hearing until 5 January

On 29 December, Lina Khattab, first-year media studies student at Bir Zeit University and folkloric dancer with the El Funoun Popular Palestinian Dance Troupe, faced a hearing in an Israeli military court that was once again postponed to 5 January – as her hearing had been the week before. Click here to take action to demand freedom for Lina Khattab.

Lina, 18, was arrested on 13 December in Beitunia when she and other Bir Zeit students participated in a march towards Ofer military prison, protesting in solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners. She is charged with “throwing stones” and “participating in an unauthorized demonstration,” charges commonly made against Palestinians participating in demonstrations for their rights by Israeli occupation forces.

On 28 December, the Progressive Student Action Front and the Palestinian Prisoners’ Committee held a sit-in calling for the freedom of Lina Khattab and all Palestinian political prisoners at the International Committee of the Red Cross building in Gaza City, coordinated with the Progressive Democratic Student Pole of Bir Zeit University.

At the sit-in, student Lina Abu Sharkh saluted her fellow student organizers at Bir Zeit University for their constant activity in defending the Palestinian cause and particularly the rights of Palestinian prisoners. “The Palestinian prisoners are the first line of defense confronting the occupation and its racist nature in Israeli jails, despite all the difficult conditions they face,” Abu Sharkh said.

She also denounced Israeli prison authorities for extending the ban on family visits for imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat an additional three months; he has been denied family visits since September 2014. “These orders will not break the will of steadfastness and resistance, and such attempts to pressure and isolate Palestinian leaders inside Israeli jails are doomed to fail,” said Abu Sharkh.

6059 Palestinians arrested in 2014 by Israeli forces, including 1266 children

Abdel Nasser Ferwana, former Palestinian political prisoner, researcher and head of the Census Department of the Palestinian Committee of Detainees and Ex-Detainees, reported on Sunday, 28 December that 6059 Palestinians were arrested by the Israeli occupation military in 2014, an escalation from previous years.

Arrests rose by 56% over 2013, 57.5% over 2012, and 83% over 2011 numbers, said Ferwana, noting that “this clearly indicates a sharp escalation in the number of arrests over the past four years.

There are currently approximately 6,500 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails, of which 200 are children under 18. 1266 Palestinian children were arrested in 2014, including 700 children in Jerusalem, reported Ferwana, again, in escalating numbers over prior years. 3,755 Palestinian children have been detained by Israeli occupation forces in the past four years.

Ferwana said that the arrests were carried out in the following months, averaging to 17 per day:

1. January: 360 Palestinians.
2. February: 317 Palestinians.
3. March: 377 Palestinians.
4. April: 355 Palestinians.
5. May: 390 Palestinians.
6. June: 800 Palestinians.
7. July: 750 Palestinians.
8. August: 620 Palestinians.
9. September: 580 Palestinians.
10. October 390 Palestinians.
11. November: 600 Palestinians.
12.December 520 Palestinians.

He urged international action to stop the ongoing mass arrests and incarceration of Palestinians, particularly the targeting and abuse of Palestinian children and youth.

Report: Palestinian prisoner Amal Taqatqa assaulted in hospital by settler

amal-taqatqaAmal Taqatqa, a Palestinian woman from Beit Fajjar being held in Hadassah Ein Karem hospital under armed guard, was assaulted in her hospital room by an Israeli settler, reported Yousef Matya, a lawyer with the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society.

Taqatqa, 23, was arrested on 1 December and accused of attempting to stab a settler near Gush Etzion settlement, which is located partially on the lands of Beit Fajjar. The settler was uninjured; Taqatqa was shot five times and is still suffering significant health problems.

She was assaulted by another settler who pulled her hair and slapped her, wakening her from sleep, Matya said. He also said in the statement reported by Ma’an News that he was only able to visit her after making several inquiries, while she has been entirely denied family visits. She has been interrogated on multiple occasions while in the hospital.

Also on 30 December, Ma’an reported that two Palestinian women, Sabah Abu Hadwan, 38, and her daughter Alaa Ayyoub Abu Hadwan, 21, were detained at the entrance to Al-Aqsa Mosque by Israeli occupation forces and taken to the Beit Elyahu police station for interrogation.

Family visit for Palestinian prisoners from Gaza cancelled by Israeli prison officials

Israeli prison officials cancelled a scheduled family visit for prisoners from the Gaza Strip scheduled for 29 December, reported Palestine Today news channel.

The International Committee of the Red Cross confirmed to the news channel that approximately 75 people, parents of 46 Palestinian political prisoners, were scheduled to visit Eshel prison to visit their children on Monday, but the visit was cancelled due to an order from Israeli prison authorities.

Visits to Palestinian prisoners from the Gaza Strip were denied for nearly six years, from 2006-2012, and were resumed only following the mass hunger strike of April-May 2012 as a demand of the striking prisoners. The visits have been interrupted and cancelled by Israeli officials on numerous occasions since that time.

The denial of family visits to Palestinian prisoners has been a repeated method of isolation of Palestinian prisoners from their families and communities. While some prisoners, particularly leaders, as in the case of Ahmad Sa’adat, have been issued bans forbidding family visits, other Palestinians have had all of their family members denied permits to visit under “security” pretexts.

Click here to take action and demand an end to the collective punishment of Palestinian families and the denial of family visits.

Israeli military court denies early release to severely ill Palestinian prisoner

jaafarThe Ofer military court today (30 December) rejected a request for early release of Palestinian prisoner Jaafar Awad, 22, of Beit Ummar village near Hebron, who is experiencing a severe health crisis due to acute pneumonia.

He was moved today from Assaf Harofeh hospital to Ramle prison clinic despite his medical situation, which remains dire. Amjad al-Najjar, the director of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society in Hebron, said that this “indicates complete disregards for his life. The clinic is not suitable for a person in Awad’s condition, who needs special medical care.”

Awad was rushed to the hospital on 22 December in a severe medical crisis, shackled hand and foot. His severe pneumonia came in addition to other health problems, including diabetes, thyroid problems, and vision loss in one eye.

On Friday, 27 December, a large march in Beit Ummar near Hebron called for intensified action for Awad and the sick and ill Palestinian political prisoners, emphasizing the responsibility of the Israeli occupation and its prison system for Awad’s life. Palestinian political prisoners have repeatedly reported medical mistreatment and neglect, lack of health care services, denial of treatment, and the use of painkillers rather than appropriate medicines.

Awad has been imprisoned since 1 November 2013; to this day, there is no court verdict against him as his trial has been repeatedly postponed.

Call to Action: 13th anniversary of PA imprisonment by Ahmad Sa’adat: Free Palestinian prisoners, end security coordination

The Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat issued the following statement calling for international actions to demand freedom for imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat (who was just subject to an Israeli military order banning him from family visits for three more months) and all Palestinian prisoners, and to demand an end to Palestinian Authority security coordination with Israel, on January 15. Actions are already planned in Italy:

January 15, 2015 marks the 13th anniversary of the capture and imprisonment through deception of Palestinian political leader Ahmad Sa’adat at the hands of Palestinian Authority security forces. On January 15-25, 2015, please join the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat in demanding freedom for Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners and an end to PA security coordination with Israel! (Events are already scheduled in Italy – more to come soon!)

On January 15, 2002, Ahmad Sa’adat, Palestinian leader and General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, was abducted by Palestinian Authority security services in Ramallah, joining several of his comrades already seized by the Palestinian Authority, following a fraudulent invitation to a meeting by then-PA security official Tawfiq Tirawi. Captured at the behest of Israeli occupying forces, Sa’adat and his comrades wereheld for over four years in the Palestinian Authority’s prison in Jericho, under U.S. and British guards. During that time, Sa’adat was never charged and even the PA’s high court ordered his release: but the demands of Israel, the U.S. and Britain kept him and his comrades behind bars in a Palestinian Authority prison until the prison itself was attacked and the Palestinians held there seized by Israeli military forces on March 14, 2006.

The political imprisonment of Ahmad Sa’adat is perhaps the highest-profile case of what security coordination between Israel and the Palestinian Authority means for Palestinians. Palestinian political activists are detained, questioned and imprisoned by the hundreds by PA security services – based on complaints from Israeli occupation forces – or for “insulting” PA officials on facebook or other social media. In addition, the United States, Canada and theEuropean Union have poured millions of dollars into funding this “security coordination” at the expense of the Palestinian people.

For too many Palestinian political prisoners, Palestinian Authority detention and interrogation has become a “revolving door” with Israeli jails, political imprisonment, and administrative detention without charge or trial. Political prisoners are interrogated upon their release from Israeli jails by PA security forces, while Palestinian activists released from PA custody are frequently once again arrested by Israeli occupation military forces. The military assault and abduction of Sa’adat and his comrades from the PA prison in Jericho, where he was held under US and British guard, to an Israeli prison, is perhaps the most visible example – coming, as it did, after reports that incoming PA officials elected in 2006 might refuse to continue to illegally detain Sa’adat and his comrades.

PA security coordination is part and parcel of the Oslo process, which has been disastrous for the Palestinian people. Rather than leading to any form of real rights, self-determination or independence, the Oslo process and repeated negotiations have created a Palestinian security service that works not to protect the Palestinian people from Israeli military attacks, colonial settler assaults and violence against land and people, but instead to protect the occupier from the legitimate resistance of a colonized people under occupation.

Meanwhile, that occupation force has only escalated its mass imprisonment against the Palestinian people and their leaders. Ahmad Sa’adat has been denied family visits for the past three months – and prohibited from family visits for three months more to come. The denial of family visits is being used as a weapon against Palestinian political prisoners and as a method of collective punishment against Palestinian families; it is a new form of isolation being imposed upon Sa’adat and other Palestinian leaders in an attempt to break their will and the will of the Palestinian people. Over 1,000 Palestinians have been sent to administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, in 2014, and there are over 6,500 Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli occupation prisons.

We demand freedom for all Palestinian political prisoners! End PA Security Coordination with Israel! Stop the denial of family visits!

Use the form to let the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat know about your local action or email us at campaign@freeahmadsaadat.org. We will list your events on the Campaign website and publicize them. (Italy day of action scheduled now)

Suggested actions:

  1. Protest at your local Israeli consulate or embassy demanding freedom for Palestinian political prisoners.
  2. Protest at official Palestinian embassies and missions demanding an end to security coordination.
  3. Phone Palestinian officials at the embassy in your country and call for an end to security coordination with Israel.
  4. Distribute flyers or handbills about Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian prisoners, and security cooperation
  5. Post or drop a banner calling for freedom for Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian prisoners in your city.
  6. Hold a forum or educational event on Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian prisoners’ struggle.

For assistance and support in your activities, please contact the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat at campaign@freeahmadsaadat.org.

Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat
http://freeahmadsaadat.org
info@freeahmadsaadat.org
Twitter: @FreeAhmadSaadat

 

Detained Palestinian student and dancer expected before Israeli military court today

Lina Khattab, 18, Palestinian first-year student in media studies at Bir Zeit University and folkloric dancer with the world-renowned El Funoun Popular Palestinian Dance Troupe, is expected to be brought back before an Israeli military court today, 29 December.

On 13 December, she was arrested by Israeli occupation military forces in Beitunia during a march of Bir Zeit students to Ofer military prison. She is active in Palestinian national and political activities at the university.

Lina Khattab was charged with “throwing stones” and “participating in an unauthorized demonstration” on 18 December by military prosecutors at Ofer Military Court, reported Mahmoud Hassan, director of Addameer’s Legal Unit. Such charges are frequently used to criminalize Palestinians participating in popular demonstrations advocating for their rights.

On 22 December, she was scheduled for a hearing at the military court, which was postponed for one week until 29 December.

Click here to take action and demand Lina’s freedom!

January 15, Italy: Day of Mobilization to Free Ahmad Sa’adat, Demand End to Security Coordination

The following call for mobilization (below, in English and Italian), was issued by Fronte Palestina:

Italy: Appeal for a Day of National Mobilization for Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian Political Prisoners
Thursday, January 15, 2015

On January 15, 2002, Ahmad Sa’adat, Palestinian leader and Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and several of his comrades were captured by the security services of the Palestinian National Authority at the behest of the Israeli occupation forces. Sa’adat and his comrades were held for more than four years in a Palestinian Authority prison in Jericho under the control of US and British guards. During this period Sa’adat was never charged and the Palestinian High Court of Justice ordered his release, but he and his comrades remained imprisoned on the orders of Israel, the US and Britain until, on March 14, 2006, the prison was attacked and the prisoners were seized by Zionist military forces.

The kidnapping and detention of Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades is just one part of the dangerous consequences of the security cooperation between the Occupation and the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. The PNA and intelligence services of the “preventive security” interrogate and imprison hundreds of Palestinians in the interest of the “security” of the occupation state, targeting the Resistance and contrary to the rights and interests of the Palestinian people. All this continues due to the direct involvement of the United States, Canada and the European Union that provide training and millions of dollars for security coordination.

When imprisonment, torture and isolation, administrative detention (without either charge or conviction) and the “revolving door” between the forces of the Zionist occupation and the PNA (detainees issued by each are arrested again by the other) are insufficient to stop the movement, the Occupation attempts to exclude the prisoners from their role in civil society.

Historically prisoners represent the seed of every liberation struggle, their freedom is one of the pivotal points around which to unite the forces of the Resistance. The duty of all people must therefore be to support them, without hesitation. 13 years after the kidnapping of Ahmad Sa’adat say:

  • FREEDOM FOR AHMAD SA’ADAT AND ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS!
  • END SECURITY COORDINATION BETWEEN THE PNA AND ZIONIST OCCUPATION!

We will organize and call for many events to denounce the situation of Palestinian prisoners, demand their immediate release, call for an end to the collaboration between PNA and the Occupation and to promote a boycott of the repressive models that Zionist corporations are exporting all over the world (see Expo 2015 in Milan, www.frontepalestina.it/?q=campagna-no-expo-no-israele ).

Fronte Palestina
info@frontepalestina.it

APPELLO PER UNA GIORNATA DI MOBILITAZIONE NAZIONALE
PER AHMAD SA’ADAT E I PRIGIONIERI POLITICI PALESTINESI

GIOVEDÌ 15 GENNAIO 2015

Il 15 gennaio del 2002 Ahmad Sa’adat, leader palestinese e Segretario Generale del Fronte Popolare per la Liberazione della Palestina, e molti dei sui compagni vennero catturati dai servizi di sicurezza dell’Autorità Nazionale Palestinese per volere delle forze di occupazione israeliane. Sa’adat ed i suoi compagni sono stati trattenuti per oltre quattro anni in una prigione dell’Autorità Palestinese a Jerico sotto il controllo delle guardie statunitensi e britanniche. Durante questo periodo Sa’adat non è mai stato accusato e l’Alta corte di giustizia palestinese ordinò il suo rilascio ma lui e i compagni restarono imprigionati su ordine di Israele, USA e Gran Bretagna fino a quando, il 14 marzo 2006, la prigione fu attaccata e i detenuti furono sequestrati dalle forze militari sioniste.

Il rapimento e la detenzione di Ahmad Sa’adat e dei suoi compagni sono solo alcune delle conseguenze della cooperazione per la sicurezza tra l’Occupazione e l’Autorità Palestinese in Cisgiordania. L’intelligence dell’ANP e i servizi di “sicurezza preventiva” interrogano ed incarcerano centinaia di Palestinesi nell’interesse della “sicurezza” dello Stato di occupazione, mirando alla Resistenza e contro i diritti e gli interessi del popolo palestinese. Tutto ciò può continuare grazie anche al diretto coinvolgimento di Stati Uniti, Canada e Unione Europea che forniscono formazione e milioni di dollari.

Laddove non siano sufficienti la reclusione in sé, la tortura e l’isolamento, con il “gioco” della detenzione amministrativa (senza né accusa né condanna) e della “porta girevole” tra le forze di occupazione sioniste e l’ANP (i detenuti rilasciati dagli uni vengono arrestati nuovamente dagli altri) si tenta di escludere il prigioniero dal suo ruolo all’interno della società civile.

Storicamente i prigionieri rappresentano il seme di ogni lotta di liberazione, la loro libertà rappresenta uno dei punti cardine intorno a cui si uniscono le forze della Resistenza. Il dovere di tutte e tutti deve essere quindi quello di sostenerli, senza esitazioni. 13 anni dopo il rapimento di Ahmad Sa’adat diciamo:

  • LIBERTÀ PER AHMAD SA’ADAT E PER TUTTI I PRIGIONIERI POLITICI!
  • FINE DELLA COLLABORAZIONE SULLA SICUREZZA TRA L’ANP E L’OCCUPAZIONE SIONISTA!

Organizziamo quante più iniziative possibili per condannare le condizioni dei prigionieri palestinesi, per chiederne l’immediato rilascio, per dire basta alla collaborazione tra ANP e Occupazione e per promuovere il boicottaggio dei modelli repressivi sionisti esportati in tutto il mondo (vedi Expo 2015 a Milano,www.frontepalestina.it/?q=campagna-no-expo-no-israele).

Fronte Palestina
info@frontepalestina.it


Campagna in sostegno alle lotte dei prigionieri palestinesi:
www.frontepalestina.it/?q=sostegno-alle-lotte-dei-prigionieri-palestinesi

Campagna internazionale per la liberazione di Ahmad Sa’adat:
www.freeahmadsaadat.org

“Voice of Palestine” interviews Nahla Abdo on new book on imprisoned Palestinian women’s resistance

Voice of Palestine, an online radio program that has been broadcasting over the air and online for over 25 years from Vancouver, interviewed Nahla Abdo about the launch of her new book “Captive Revolution: Palestinian Women’s Anti-Colonial Struggle Within the Israeli Prison System” in its most recent episode, released 23 December.

Nahla is an Arab feminist activist and Professor of Sociology at Carleton University in Ottawa. She has published extensively on women, racism, nationalism, and the State in the Middle East, with a special focus on Palestinian women. VoP co-host Hanna Kawas talked with Nahla about her book, Palestinian women political prisoners (as well as Palestinian prisoners in general) and the impact of the BDS movement.

Nahla Abdo will be speaking in Vancouver on 9 January: (Vancouver Book Launch -January 9, 2015, 6:30 PM
Room 7000, Simon Fraser University Harbour Center, 515 West Hastings, Vancouver)

Download an audio file of the show, or listen online: