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Activists occupy Franco-American institute demanding release of Abdallah, will protest Valls 18 December

Thirty activists occupied the Franco-American Institute of Rennes, the cultural center of the United States Consulate in Bretagne (Brittany), on Wednesday, 17 December, in solidarity with Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Arab political prisoner for Palestine in French jails. The activists also urged all to join a demonstration on 18 December against the visit of Manuel Valls to Rennes.

See original French text: http://www.bretagne-info.org/2014/12/17/occupation-de-linstitut-franco-americain-de-rennes/

Valls, the Prime Minister of France, was formerly the Interior Minister who refused to sign the deportation order to allow Abdallah to be paroled to Lebanon, after his parole was approved by the courts. He has been eligible for parole since 1999 and yet has remained in French jails.

The activists distributed the leaflet below at the event (translation from French):

“In 1982, Israel invaded Lebanon. The organization of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Faction (FARL), decided to lead the fight against the aggressor and its supporters in Europe: the assistant military attaché at the Embassy of the United States of America in Paris and the head of Mossad in France were executed. Accused of these acts, Georges Ibrahim Abdallah was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1987 after many politico-judicial manipulations and with the approval of the US government of Reagan.

While Georges Ibrahim Abdallah has been releasable for years and was approved for parole first in 2007, he has remained detained solely because he has not repented his loyalty to his communist views or his commitment to resisting the Zionist occupation and Palestine, and because, according to the prosecutor, his release would be seen as a victory by the anti-imperialist resistance in this region. On November 6, a new request for parole was deemed “inadmissible”. The appeal hearing on his request for parole was to be held tomorrow in Paris, and has just been postponed to a later date.

When we stand with Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, it is not only that it is “high time to release him,” but that we can not claim to support the Palestinian people without denouncing the endless vengeance to which they are subjected by those who support the Israeli state, namely Hollande, Valls and PS.

Represented by its ambassador, the United States stood as a plaintiff at Abdallah’s trial and continues today to pressure against the release of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah. We see clearly the solidarity of the U.S. in oppression. When at this time, and sometimes in very different contexts, the struggles against various forms of repression are strengthening in Palestine, the United States, and France, we recall that the Israeli, American, and French governments have a common desire to neutralize those considered “enemies within.”

The fact that Ferguson police department that killed Michael Brown was trained by the Israeli army is one of the signs of the continuity of these policing structures, and the Palestinians who used twitter to support protesters in different cities in the United States, advising on how to protect themselves from tear gas recognize this connection.

We demand that Georges Ibrahim Abdallah’s application for parole be granted, and that his release is effectuated without delay. In support of the Palestinian resistance, we also demand the release of the 7000 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

Tomorrow, Thursday, 18 December, the demonstration against the arrival of Manuel Valls in Rennes, starting at 18:30 in the Town Hall Square will be an opportunity for us to oppose police and judicial repression by the French state. We call on all people of Rennes to attend and participate in the demonstration, as well as other initiatives against the visit of Valls to Rennes.”

Samidoun congratulates the Cuban people: The Five are Free!

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network sends its hearty congratulations to the people of Cuba, and to Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labanino, and Antonio Guerrero and their families on the occasion of the release of the final three of the five Cuban political prisoners held in U.S. jails for sixteen years.

The Cuban political prisoners were freed today in a prisoner exchange with the Cuban government for USAID agent Alan Gross. Two other Cuban political prisoners – who together with Gerardo, Ramon and Antonio together made up the Cuban Five – Fernando González and René González, were earlier released from U.S. jails.

The Cuban Five came to the United States in order to protect Cubans from violent attacks by private right-wing militant groups based in the United States and supported by U.S. imperialism. Their case, of five people imprisoned in the heart of U.S. imperialist jails for seeking to defend their country from attacks from U.S. soil, inspired fighters for justice around the world, including many activists, advocates and lawyers within the United States, who took the streets, protested, struggled in the courtrooms, marched, rallied and built a movement to demand freedom for the five Cuban political prisoners in U.S. jails.

Today, and the release of the Five, is a true victory for the Cuban people and all who struggled for justice in the case of the Five. Just as we celebrate when every Palestinian political prisoner is freed, we celebrate today with the Cuban people that their own prisoners of freedom today will join their compatriots in their homeland as free people.

We celebrate and welcome today Antonio, Gerardo and Ramon! We also join in the call to free all of the political prisoners held in US jails, including Mumia Abu Jamal, Leonard Peltier, Oscar Lopez Rivera, Norberto Gonzalez Claudio, Ricardo Palmera, the political prisoners of the Black Liberation Movement, and the Palestinian political prisoners in US jails, including the Holy Land 5 – and to free the prisoners around the world who are held in the interests of U.S. imperialism, domination and hegemony and those of its allies, including every Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails.

Social Bombing Campaign: Free Shireen Issawi and Bushra Tawil

Libera Palestina has launched the following online action campaign in support of Shireen Issawi and Bushra Tawil:

“Shireen Issawi has been declared the 2014 Human Rights Defender. Sister of Samer, himself again in an Israeli prison, she has been jailed for the second time by the Israeli Governor of the Occupied Palestinian Territories through Article 10 of the Miltary Order 1651 for the same no-crime: being a lawyer, advocate for the rights of Palestinian political prisoners. This human rights defender, among others, “is being targeted by the Israeli authorities, with arbitrary arrests and detention, for peacefully and lawfully exercising their fundamental right to freedom of expression on significant human rights and the conditions of Palestinian prisoners.”.
Now she is from march in segregation, declared in punishment, locked in a cold unhealthy infested cell.
In response to the joint complaints (also concerning the similar case of Bushra Taweel) made to the United Nations by Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights and Addameer in the case of Palestinian human rights defenders, Libera Palestina Italy launched a “social bombing” campaign to build attention, support and awareness of the case.
“Socialbombing” organizes participants to send messages on Twitter, Facebook and Google+ highlighting the issue and raising awareness and communication to key recipients, in this case, Michael Forst, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights Defenders.
Professor John Dugart has declared: “I am so pleased that you are conducting this campaign for Shireen. It is essential. She must not be forgotten. The Israelis will treat her better if there is international attention. So please keep it up”.
To join the campaign, please see: http://socialbombing.org/FreeShireenBushra

Complaints concerning detention of two female Palestinian human rights defenders
http://samidoun.net/2014/09/complaints-submitted-to-the-united-nations-concerning-the-israeli-detention-of-two-female-palestinian-human-rights-defenders-ms-shireen-issawi-and-ms-bushra-al-taweel/

Take Action: Free Lina Khattab, imprisoned student and folkloric dancer

UPDATE (16 February): Lina was sentenced to six months imprisonment, a 6000 NIS ($1500 USD) fine, and three years probation by the occupation military court today. Please continue to take action and demand Lina’s release!

UPDATE (14 February): Electronic Intifada report on Lina’s case: http://electronicintifada.net/content/young-dancer-jailed-israel-taking-part-protest/14269

UPDATE (6 February): Lina’s next hearing will be on 16 February. Please take action and escalate the pressure!

UPDATE (12 January): See this important report on Lina’s postponed court hearing by Palestinian activist and writer, Mariam Barghouti: http://ramallahbantustan.wordpress.com/2015/01/12/lina-khattab-and-5-court-dates-later/

UPDATE (29 December): Lina’s hearing on 22 December was postponed to 29 December. She is expected  to be brought before Ofer military court  today.

UPDATE (18 December): 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. Her next hearing will be on Monday, 22 December, in the military court. Click here to take action and demand Lina’s freedom! 

Lina Khattab, 18-year-old first-year media student at Bir Zeit University and dancer in the El-Funoun Palestinian cultural dance troupe, was arrested on 13 December during a march by Bir Zeit University students to Ofer military prison. Click here to take action now and demand freedom for Lina Khattab! 

She is active in Palestinian national and political activities at the university, and is one of a number of active Palestinian students who have been arrested and imprisoned in an Israeli attempt to clamp down on Palestinian students’ activity and organizing through student unions and protest groups.  Lina is being held without charges, and allegedly “investigated” on the bogus suspicion of “throwing stones,” an allegation used freely by Israeli military courts against all Palestinians who demand their rights through protest.

lenaHer detention was extended until Thursday, 18 December at Ofer Military Court on suspicion of “throwing stones,” said Mahmoud Hassan, lawyer with Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, reporting on the court hearing on Tuesday, 16 December.

Lina was held outside in the cold for hours at Ofer prison before being taken to interrogation, and then transferred to HaSharon prison late at night.

The other 17 women Palestinian political prisoners are also being held at HaSharon. Palestinian women in HaSharon prison report “constant harassment and violations, including soldiers repeatedly breaking into their rooms to ransack them.” Addameer reported that “they are held in overcrowded cells, with lack of access to basic human needs such as hygiene, nutritious food and proper clothing and blankets. Furthermore, female prisoners are subjected to harsh conditions during their interrogation, including beatings, insults, threats, sexual harassment and humiliation by Israeli interrogators. Often they must undergo degrading and intrusive body searches during transfers to court hearings and sometimes during the middle of the night as a punitive measure.”

G4S, a British-Danish security company – the largest in the world – and the target of a massive international boycott campaign for its involvement in human rights violations, provides the security system at HaSharon prison.

Students at Bir Zeit University protested and marched demanding Lina’s freedom, and the freedom of all Palestinian students held as political prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons, at a demonstration organized by the Progressive Democratic Student Pole on Monday, 15 December.

The protest also addressed the case of Islam Badr, another Bir Zeit student, currently engaged in the hunger strike of Palestinian political prisoners protesting solitary confinement. He was previously on hunger strike for 45 days against the practice of administrative detention without charge or trial.

The following video by El-Funoun Popular Palestinian Dance Troupe shows Lina’s dancing and the moment of her arrest:

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network demands the immediate release of Lina Khattab and denounces the clear-cut Israeli policy of targeting Palestinian students who actively defend the rights of the Palestinian people. Student organizing has been at the heart of the Palestinian movement for decades, and such arrests are a transparent attempt to undermine and destroy the student organizations at Palestinian universities that uphold those universities as spaces for national Palestinian education and activity for liberation and freedom.

Take action – demand the release of Lina Khattab!

1. Take action to demand the immediate release of Lina Khattab. Sign the letter here and send it to Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Netanyahu.

2. Take action for Palestinian prisoners: protest at an Israeli consulate or embassy, or hold an educational event Palestinian prisoners. Demand the freedom of Lina Khattab and Palestinian political prisoners.

3. Join the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions. Isolate Israel for its mass political imprisonment of Palestinians. Boycott products like HP and SodaStream, and demand an end to security contracts with G4S, which provides the security system at HaSharon that imprisons Lina and other Palestinian women. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

 

 

 

Take Action: End Solitary Confinement and Isolation, Support Palestinian Hunger Strikers

UPDATE: As of the evening of 17 December, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society announced that the strike is suspended and that an agreement will be announced shortly. This action is suspended until further details.

Over 100 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails are now participating in a collective hunger strike, as prisoners from Eshel and Ramon prisons joined the strike demanding an end to the policy of solitary confinement and in solidarity with Nahar al-Saadi, who has been held in solitary confinement since May 2013 and has been on hunger strike since 20 November. The collective strike was launched by 70 prisoners on 9 December. The strikers are demanding al-Saadi’s release from isolation; regular family visits for al-Saadi; and an end to the use of solitary confinement and isolation against Palestinian prisoners.

Al-Saadi, in isolation for a year and seven months, has been denied family visits and medical treatment, and was denied a lawyer visit just this week. Take Action today: Demand an end to solitary confinement and isolation!

Addameer and Physicians for Human Rights issued an urgent call regarding the situation of Nahar al-Saadi, calling for an immediate end to solitary confinement. Isolation and solitary confinement are forms of torture, and Israel’s use of administrative detention is contrary to international law and human rights standards. Isolation is recognized by the UN’s Special Rapporteur on Torture as a form of torture when used for extended periods, as it is in Israeli prisons.

Nahar al-Saadi with his mother
Nahar al-Saadi with his mother

As Addameer and PHR report, “The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture details the severe psychological effects of solitary confinement, including that it causes ‘psychotic disturbances’… anxiety, depression, anger, cognitive disturbances, perceptual distortions, paranoia and psychosis and self-harm.’ Solitary confinement can also cause physiological damage. Prisoners often develop ‘gastroenterology, vascular, urinary and reproductive system illnesses as well as suffer from sleep disturbances and extreme fatigue. They also complain of tremors, recurrences of heart palpitations, recurrences of excessive perspiration.’

The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society also reported that a meeting is being held between the leadership of the strike and the prison officials in Nafha prisons, as of the evening of 16 December.

Depending on the outcome of these discussions, it is expected that more prisoners will join the strike in coming days, in the event that the prison administration continues to reject the demands of striking prisoners. The Israeli prison administration has been imposing severe repression on the hunger strikers in an attempt to break the strike, transferring them from prison to prison, isolating 30 of them, threatening them and in some cases transferring them to Israeli “criminal” prison sections, away from other Palestinian political prisoners, as well as engaging in frequent violent raids and inspections in strikers’ rooms. Hussam Abed, one of the prisoners on hunger strike, said that he was denied salt and sugar, which he had been taking with water, by occupation prison officials.

IMEMC reported that “the detainees, held in solitary confinement, are currently in the prisons of Eshil, Nafha, Majeddo, Asqalan, Ramla and Ramon, facing very harsh living conditions and constant violations.

In addition, the Palestinian Prisoners Society has reported that the Prison Administration in the Negev Detention Camp has informed 45 striking detainees it intends to transfer them to other, unspecified prisons.”

Rafat Hamdouna, director of the Prisoners Center for Studies, said that the prisoners’ movement will not allow an open hunger strike to drag on for tens of days, urging international institutions to intervene and resolve this issue, and for broad actions in solidarity to ensure the success of the strike which aims, once more, to end the policy of isolation and solitary confinement.

In May 2012, in order to end the collective hunger strike of thousands of Palestinian political prisoners, the Israeli prison administration agreed to end the use of solitary confinement and isolation, releasing the 19 then held in isolation into general population. Since that time, the use of isolation and solitary confinement by Israeli prisons has been escalating, sparking this renewed hunger strike.

 TAKE ACTION! Demand:

  • the release of Nahar al-Saadi from solitary confinement
  • restoration of family and legal visits to Nahar al-Saadi, and proper medical access and treatment
  • an end to the use of solitary confinement and isolation against Palestinian political prisoners

1. Take action and demand an end to the use of solitary confinement and isolation, and the release of Nahar al-Saadi from solitary confinement. 

2. Take action for Palestinian prisoners: protest at an Israeli consulate or embassy, or hold an educational event Palestinian prisoners. Share this alert on solitary confinement and the hunger strike.

3. Join the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions. Isolate Israel for its mass political imprisonment of Palestinians. Boycott products like HP and SodaStream, and demand an end to security contracts with G4S, which operates in Israeli prisons. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

Palestinian academics, advocates targeted for imprisonment without charge or trial

The Israeli Supreme Court rejected a petition by Palestinian political detainee Dr. Ghassan Thuqan, 57, an academic lecturer in the Faculty of Education at An-Najah University, on Tuesday, 16 December.

Thuqan was arrested on 9 July as part of a wave of mass arrests by Israeli ocupation forces throughout the West Bank; he is held in administrative detention, imprisoned without charge or trial. His administrative detention term will expire on 9 January, but his lawyer informed his family that he expects the term to be renewed, particularly following this court decision. The petition was rejected on the basis of a “secret file” on his case; he has already had his three-month administrative detention order renewed twice. Thuqan, held in the Negev desert prison, suffers from asthma, dental pains and arthritis, and is not receiving appropriate treatment from the prison medical clinics.

imadbDr. Imad Barghouthi, a Palestinian astrophysicist and professor at Al-Quds University who formerly worked at NASA in the United States, is now being held in three months administrative detention (imprisonment without charge or trial.)

Barghouthi, 52, from Beit Rima, has been ordered held without charge or trial from 9 December until 5 March 2015 under a three-month, indefinitely renewable, military court order.

He was arrested on 6 December as he attempted to cross to Jordan at the Karama border crossing in order to attend a scientific conference in the United Arab Emirates. Barghouthi’s scientific work is widely published internationally in academic journals. This is the first time he was arrested by Israeli occupation forces. It was reported that he was investigated for participating in a mass march against the assault on Gaza over the summer.

Also held in administrative detention without charge or trial is Osama Hussein Shaheen, 32, the director of the Prisoners of Palestine Studies Center in al-Khalil. He was arrested on 11 December as he traveled through the Container checkpoint and was taken to Ofer military prison. Shaheen, a prominent activist on prisoners’ issues, was released only 3 months ago from administrative detention without charge or trial. He has spent 7 years total inside Israeli prisons and suffers from several health problems. The Center denounced the arrest of Shaheen, saying that “this action aims to obstruct the center’s work exposing occupation crimes against prisoners of war and documenting them on a daily basis.”

The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society reported that 54 administrative detention orders for imprisonment without charge or trial have been issued by Israeli military courts against Palestinians since the beginning of December 2014.

December 20, Milan: Fundraiser and Launch of Italian campaign to support Palestinian political prisoners

“Historically the martyrs and the prisoners represent the seed of every revolution, of every fight for freedom. Their freedom is one of the key points on which the resistance forces unite. The duty of all must be to support them, without hesitation. Deprived of their freedom to make their bodies available to continue the fight ; we can and must exercise and advance our solidarity to support them.”

Fronte Palestina is launching a new campaign: http://www.palestinarossa.it/?q=it%2Fcampagna-prigionieri-palestinesi – to support Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. This national campaign will be working throughout Italy to fundraise for Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and the Palestinian Women’s Developmental Studies Association in Palestine, both of which work on the issues and cause of freedom of Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails.

The campaign has also launched a facebook page to share information about Palestinian political prisoners in Italian: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sostegno-alle-lotte-dei-Prigionieri-Palestinesi/734054266678507

A fundraiser and launch event for the campaign will be held, and dinner will be served:
Saturday, 20 December
8:30 PM
Panetteria Occupata
Via Conte Rosso, 20
(Lambrate) Milano
More info: coordinamento.palestina.milano@gmail.com

cena autofinanziamento fp

December 13, Amsterdam: Global Political Prisoners Day

Mark Global Political Prisoners Day of Action in Amsterdam on 13 December. Gather for a protest and information sharing about Palestinian political prisoners – and other political prisoners around the world!

The event will call for freedom for imprisoned Palestinian lawyer Shireen Issawi and all Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails, displaying banners and distributing information.

Take Action:
Saturday, 13 December
4 PM – 6 PM
De Dam (at the Christmas tree), Amsterdam
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/370651576437011/

December 12: Protest in London demands freedom for Shireen Issawi

On 12 December, as part of a global day of action for political prisoners, Inminds organized a protest at the office of the CEO of G4S, the multinational security corporation implicated in torture and political imprisonment in Israeli prisons, to which G4S provides security equipment and other services.

The protest focused on demanding freedom for Shireen Issawi, Palestinian lawyer and prisoners’ rights activist. Issawi received the Alkarama Human Rights Award in Switzerland on 11 December.

Video:

Photos:

All video and photos from Inminds.

 

Out of jail! Rasmea is with her family and returning home to Chicago

Members of the Rasmea Defense Committee from Chicago and Detroit / Dearborn just welcomed Rasmea back from 5 weeks in a Port Huron, Michigan, jail. She arrived at the U.S. Marshal’s office in Detroit for processing at approximately noon today, Dec. 11, and was greeted shortly thereafter by friends and family, who are bringing her home to Chicago now.

She looks strong, and is upbeat and excited to see more of her friends, family, and supporters soon. The defense committee wants to again thank everyone for their phone calls, letters, rallies, protests, and all the other activism that helped us get Rasmea released. She sends her love and appreciation to all, and graciously asks us to be ready for the next stage–winning the appeal and exonerating her fully.

Rasmea will be meeting with her attorneys in the next few days, and they will begin establishing strategies for the sentencing on March 10th and the appeal, respectively. We will reach out to everyone soon, and call on defense committees and supporters across the country to gear up for another intense #Justice4Rasmea campaign.

But for now, let’s celebrate knowing that Rasmea will be back home safe, and ready to get back to her work with the Arab American Action Network (AAAN) and its Arab Women’s Committee.

We will be welcoming her home publicly for the first time next Wednesday, December 17th, at the AAAN’s event showcasing the Wishah popular dance troupe directly from Ramallah in Palestine. Join us to celebrate her, and Palestinian culture and resilience, by purchasing your tickets here!

Stay updated at uspcn.org and stopfbi.net.

Rasmea Defense Committee