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Rasmea is coming home: Judge rules she can be released on $50,000 cash bond pending sentencing

From the Rasmea Defense Committee:

We are pleased to announce that Judge Gershwin Drain just filed his ruling grantingRasmea‘s motion for reconsideration of his November 10th order revoking her bond.RASMEA IS COMING HOME!
The defense committee is working now to secure the money for her release. Please help us raise it by donating now!

We also thank you all for your passionate work to help restore her freedom! We believe that the hundreds of letters to the judge, and the incredible response to the county jail’s punitive measure of placing Rasmea in solitary confinement, played a major role in making this happen.

In the ruling, the judge wrote: “Defendant’s dedication to her community work and the people that such work assists, as well as the presence of relatives in Chicago, demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence that she is not as significant a flight risk as originally believed.”

In addition, all your letters to Rasmea helped keep her spirits up, and strengthened her resolve to continue challenging the unjust ruling, detention, and treatment in jail.

Of course, we are going to appeal the conviction, and there is still a ton of organizing work to be done, but today we celebrate and prepare to bring Rasmea home. Thank you all for your support!

Rasmea Defense Committee

www.uspcn.org
www.stopfbi.net

Statement: From Ferguson to New York to Palestine, Solidarity with the Resistance to Racist Oppression

“Nobody in the world, nobody in history, has ever gotten their freedom by appealing to the moral sense of the people who were oppressing them…Prisons are a profitable business. They are a way of legally perpetuating slavery. In every state more and more prisons are being built and even more are on the drawing board. Who are they for? They certainly aren’t planning to put white people in them. Prisons are part of this government’s genocidal war against Black and Third World people.”

– Assata Shakur

“I speak as a victim of America’s so-called democracy. You and I have never seen democracy – all we’ve seen is hypocrisy. When we open our eyes today and look around America, we see America not through the eyes of someone who has enjoyed the fruits of Americanism. We see America through the eyes of someone who has been the victim of Americanism. We don’t see any American dream. We’ve experienced only the American nightmare.”
– Malcolm X

“This trial cannot be separated from the process of the historical struggle in Palestine that continues today between the Zionist Movement and the Palestinian people, a struggle that centers on Palestinian land, history, civilization, culture and identity…As for your judicial apparatus, which is where this court comes from: it is one of the instruments of the occupation whose function is to give the cover of legal legitimacy to the crimes of the occupation, in addition to consecrating its systems and allowing the imposition of these systems on our people through force.”
– Ahmad Sa’adat

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the resistance led by the Black movement that has taken the streets of every major city and town in the United States in defense of Black lives and in resistance to state-sponsored police killing, targeting and profiling of Black people and of other oppressed communities. These protests, led by strong and militant Black youth and their comrades, have occupied highways, roads and bridges, disrupted “business as usual,” and are true sparks of Intifada against a racist system of exploitation and oppression.

protest“I can’t breathe.” “Hands up, don’t shoot.” “Black Lives Matter.” The slogans, in their clarity, are an assertion of existence and resistance in the face of a racist system that has been built for centuries on the devaluing, dismissal and suppression of Black rights, existence and struggle.

The grand jury verdicts declining to bring murder charges against the police who killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri; Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York; John Crawford in Cleveland, Illinois; and the acquittal or refusal to bring charges against countless other police who have acted with the full authority of the state to terrorize Black communities are not mere flaws in the system. Rather, they reflect the racist and oppressive nature of the legal system of the United States.

The United States, the world’s leading imperialist power, is responsible for occupation, exploitation and oppression around the world. The U.S. government was created through the dispossession and genocide of indigenous people and the country built upon the backs of Black people forced into slavery. Today, the United States government is the strategic partner and strongest ally of the occupation of Palestine, while the Israeli state trains U.S. police in repressive counter-insurgency tactics tested on Palestinians under occupation.

protestfpThe U.S. courts, police and prisons constitute a regime of mass incarceration that targets Black communities with systematic violence, disrupting and destroying communities. As documented by the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, every 28 hours, a Black person is killed in the U.S. by state-sponsored or state-protected murderers, including police and vigilantes. The police – and their violent repression and impunity – and the prisons – and their mass incarceration – function alongside the courts, who give this racist structure the appearance of “legitimacy.” This legitimacy is exposed, as the killers of Mike Brown, Eric Garner, John Crawford, and countless others walk free while entire communities are terrorized by arrests and constant police surveillance and oppression.

The grand jury system that protects the impunity of police murderers is the very same grand jury system that has been used to carry out widespread investigations, political repression and institutionalized harassment and suppression of the Black liberation movement, the American Indian Movement, Puerto Rican independentistas, anti-imperialist organizers and continues today to be used to investigate, surveil and harass Palestinian community organizers and movements and anti-war and international solidarity activists, as in the cases of Sami al-Arian, Mohammed Salah, Abdelhaleem Ashqar and the “Anti-War 23” in Chicago and Minneapolis.

protestfp2When Palestinian prisoners are brought before Israeli courts, whether military or civil, there is no justice to be found – the Israeli legal system is built on the dispossession of Palestinian land and the negation of Palestinian lives and existence. When occupation soldiers and settlers are acquitted or not charged with the killing of Palestinians, this is once again not unusual, but part of the system itself. The Israeli legal system is an apartheid system, part and parcel of the occupation, of the very system which the Palestinian movement struggles to overturn in order to liberate land and people.

There is no surprise to be found in the alliance between the settler colonial states of the U.S. and Israel, based fundamentally on racism and oppression. It is U.S. imperialism that enables and arms the occupation and colonization of Palestine, and the Palestinian movement struggles to confront both Zionist occupation and U.S. imperialism. There is, however, true inspiration and hope to be found in the powerful movements taking to the streets, and in the long legacy of the Black liberation movement.

Today, U.S. prisons – with the highest incarceration rate in the world- hold over 2.2 million people and over 900,000 Black people, including the political prisoners of the Black Liberation Movement and Mumia Abu-Jamal, as well as Puerto Rican political prisoners Oscar Lopez Rivera and Norberto Gonzalez Claudio, Leonard Peltier of the American Indian Movement, and Palestinian political prisoners – Rasmea Odeh, community leader, torture survivor from occupation interrogation and imprisonment, held in solitary confinement; and the Holy Land 5, serving terms of up to 65 years for fundraising for Palestinian charity organizations.

protest2Palestinians and friends of Palestine, from Students for Justice in Palestine, the US Palestinian Community Network, and numerous collectives and organizations have been joining the protests on the streets of New York, DC, Chicago, Oakland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Miami, Boston, Cleveland, Ferguson, St. Louis and around the country. This is a promising step forward that recognizes the long-standing ties between Palestinian and Black communities and also moves to strengthen, solidify and build those ties in the struggle.

It is borne out of an imperative of justice that supports the Black movement’s struggle for liberation and recognizes its centrality, and it is also a recognition through common experience that “From Ferguson to Palestine, Occupation is a Crime.” These demonstrations contain within them the seeds of intifada and revolution, challenging the very nature of the racist imperialist system that is at the heart of repression from Ferguson and Black communities across the US to every Palestinian refugee camp, and building for the movement and action necessary to achieve Black Liberation and a liberated Palestine from the river to the sea.

Free All Political Prisoners, End Mass Incarceration, Abolish the Racist Prison System!

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Abdel-Alim Da’na, 12 more, ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial

Abdel-Alim Da'na, for the Electronic Intifada
Abdel-Alim Da’na, for the Electronic Intifada

Abdel-Alim Da’na, Palestinian political leader and professor, has joined his son in administrative detention, held without charge or trial on secret evidence. Da’na was among 13 prisoners issued administrative detention orders in the first week of December and one of 6 from Hebron. Click here to take action to demand Da’na’s release.

Bashar Da’na has been held in administrative detention without charge or trial. Abdel-Alim Da’na, 65, suffers from several diseases, including high blood pressure and diabetes.

Palestinian journalist Mohammed Mona‘s detention without charge or trial was also renewed for the fourth time in this group of administrative detention orders. He has been held without charge or trial since 7 August 2013 and previously spent over 5 years in occupation prisons. Mona reports for Al-Quds Press.

Administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable for periods of up to six months at one time. The 13 Palestinian political prisoners ordered to administrative detention in the first week of December are:

1. Abdel-Alim Da’na – Hebron – 3 months
2. Mohammed Aslan Harb – Qalandia refugee camp – 4 months
3. Qassem Hijazi Salem – Hebron – 4 months
4. Nimer Bassam Damaj – Jenin – 3 months
5. Omar Ibrahim Khatib – Hebron – 3 months
6. Bassam AbdulRahim Hammad – Ramallah – 4 months
7. Bashir Khaled Rajabi – Hebron – 6 months
8. Shadi Mahmoud Kufaisheh – Hebron – 3 months
9. Sajid Hassan al-Luqta – Hebron – 4 months
10. Mohammed Anwar Mona – Nablus – 4 months
11. Falah Tahir Nada – el-Bireh – 2 months
12. Raed Ali Shehadeh – Ramallah – 4 months
13. Khalil Musa Zawahra – Bethlehem – 4 months

Palestinian journalist and former prisoner Ahmad al-Rai arrested in Qalqilya

ahmadraiAhmad al-Rai, journalist and former prisoner, was arrested in a flying checkpoint by occupation forces outside Qalqilya on Sunday evening, 7 December. The hastily erected checkpoint was reportedly disassembled immediately after the seizure of al-Rai by occupation soldiers.

Al-Rai, 54, is a well-known community leader and former prisoner who has spent almost 10 years in Israeli jails.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network notes that the arrest of al-Rai is part of an ongoing policy by occupation forces of targeting former prisoners and respected community leaders for arrest, incarceration and long-term detention as a means of demoralizing the Palestinian people and attempting to silence voices that insist on the rights of the Palestinian people. However, this policy has not achieved its objectives over decades of use by the occupation and will not achieve its goal today.

Palestinian prisoners’ resistance escalates as occupation increases use of solitary confinement

Nahar al-Saadi, 33, has been on hunger strike for 16 consecutive days in protest of denial of family visits and solitary confinement; al-Saadi has been held in solitary confinement since May of 2013, despite an earlier agreement with Palestinian prisoners to abolish solitary confinement in order to end the mass hunger strike of April 2012.

Al-Saadi is serving four life sentences plus 20 years. The leadership of the prisoners of the Islamic Jihad movement stated that it has given its demands to the prison authorities on 7 December, stating that the prisoners will join Saadi’s strike in solidarity in successively larger groups if their demands are ignored. They are calling for the abolition of isolation and the release into general population of al-Saadi and all other isolated Palestinian prisoners.

Rafat Hamdouna of the Palestinian Prisoners Research Center said that the Israeli security and government agencies involved in the administration of the prison service have been engaged in unprecedented attacks on prisoners in all prisons, and that violations are escalating, particularly regarding the transport of prisoners, sudden transfers between prisons, denial of family visits, medical neglect and the imposition of collective and individual sanctions since June 2014, in addition to violent and provocative raids under the pretexts of inspections. Hamdouna noted that Palestinian prisoners have repeatedly demanded that these policies come to an end and that the prisoners’ movement will not stand by in the face of these violations. Hamdouna urged Palestinian, Arab and international human rights and justice advocates to pressure the occupation to end these attacks on the prisoners and their rights.

Palestinian prisoners of all factions had previously announced an escalating series of protests against the use of isolation and the escalating violations, but on December 2, announced a 10-day postponement of their action, requiring a response from the prison administration within 10 days. The prisoners’ demands include an end to the policy of solitary confinement, introduction of blankets and winter clothing, an end to price increases in the canteen (prison commissary), provision of proper health care and an end to medical neglect, an end to the denial of family visits, and a restoration of the status of prisoners to the situation prior to June 2014. Following the prison administration’s response, Palestinian prisoners will conduct a mass campaign of hunger strikes and civil disobedience should the prison authority reject their demands.

Riyad al-Ashqar of the Palestinian Prisoners Center for Studies said that the use of isolation and solitary confinement in occupation prisons has been escalating of late to the highest level since the end of the April 2012 hunger strike and the release from isolation of the 19 prisoners then held in solitary confinement. Ashqar noted that the occupation has gradually re-introduced the policy for short terms and then longer terms. He said that there are 10 isolated prisoners in Nafha prison; 9 in Megiddo; 4 in Eshel; as well and 54 prisoners from Ashkelon prison suddenly transferred to isolation sections in other prisons following a strip-search, allegedly on a “temporary” basis, under the pretext of conducting room inspections. He noted that isolated prisoners are allowed family visits only once every 2 months, are given exercise only individually for one hour each day while handcuffed, and their cells are closed from natural light, noting that they are inspected three times daily, including once after midnight. They are also denied access to books and other media on a regular basis.

Re-arrested Jerusalemite prisoners reject deportation from Jerusalem, insist on their release

The Jerusalemite prisoners in Gilboa prison, former prisoners released in the Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange in 2011 and re-arrested in June 2014 and after, released a statement through lawyer Jawad Boulos on Sunday, 7 December, stating their rejection of expulsion from Jerusalem or any other deal that sacrifices their rights to Jerusalem.

The prisoners stated that they are hostages held by the occupying power and they will accept no agreement but their release and return to Jerusalem. Boulos met with three of the prisoners, Hossam Shahin, Aref Fakhoury, and Samer Issawi, the latter of which was previously released after a 267 day hunger strike when previously re-arrested which drew widespread international support. Samer’s brother, Medhat, and sister Shireen are both currently held in occupation prisons.

In related news, the prisoners from Jerusalem formed a coordinating committee to address matters related to prisoners from Jerusalem in Israeli jails; this action is being taken because of the special conditions in which they live and following the mass arrest campaigns by occupation forces in Jerusalem, which has led to a sudden rise in their numbers in occupation prisons. The committee will include prisoners Hussam Shaheen, Bashar al-Khatib, Mohammed Abad, Dargham al-Araj and Hossam Shehadeh and will coordinate with all other prisoners’ committees. In addition, Boulos reported that Gilboa prison is currently isolating 8 prisoners after claiming to have discovered a mobile phone in one room.

Palestinian human rights defender Shtaiwi sentenced to 9.5 months, 10,000 shekel fine for protests

Palestinian human rights defender Murad Shtaiwi was sentenced to 9 1/2 months in prison and a 10,000 NIS fine on 4 December, as well as a 5-year prohibition from participating in demonstrations against the Israeli military. Shtaiwi is a prominent member of the Kufr Qaddoum Popular Committee, which organizes weekly demonstrations against the Israeli occupation since 2011. He was arrested and accused of organizing “unauthorized demonstrations.”

Addameer and Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights filed a complaint with the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders in August regarding Shtaiwi’s detention. Previously, occupation forces attempted to arrest his 2-year-old son, Mo’men.

The following report was written by the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee:

Salem military court has sentenced activist Murad Shtaiwi, from Kufr Qaddum village, to 9 and a half months of prison, with an additional 10,000 shekel fine. Israeli forces arrested Shtaiwi on April 29th, 2014 in the middle of the night accusing him of participating in and arranging Kufr Qaddum demonstrations.

The unjust decision of the military court states the following:

  • 9 and a half months of actual prison time.
  • 10,000 shekel non-refundable fine.
  •  A 5-year probation period after his prison term, where he cannot participate in any Kufr Qaddum peaceful demonstrations, or he will face a sentence of no less than 12 months in prison.
  • A 3 year probation period after his prison term, where he cannot participate in any peaceful demonstrations against the Israeli military anywhere else, otherwise he will face a sentence of no less than 6 months in prison.

Murad has been detained in Megiddo Military Prison since his arrest in April, and has been suffered from many health problems during this time. His lawyer, Adel Samara, states that Murad has lost over 9 kilos in weight due to harsh and unsuitable holding cells.

In a letter from Murad, he stated the following:

“The accusations that I am charged with is unfair because it is our legal right to protest and participate in demonstrations against the occupation and to struggle for our self-determination as Palestinians.” He added that the peaceful marches in Kufr Qaddum will continue even if the occupation suppresses them over and over again.

Since the arrest of Murad, the Israeli army has raised its level of brutality in dealing with Kufr Qaddum demonstrations. 15 protestors have been shot by live bullets, last week alone recorded two live bullet injuries, a local youth and an Italian supporter, shot in cold blood just for participating in peaceful protests.

Murad calls on the international community and the United Nations to support Kufr Qaddum, to open the road closed by Israeli forces, to support the fair quest of a free Palestine, and to end the occupation and its settlers.

“They fine us so they can pay for more guns and weapons to kill us with,” Murad added.

Finally, Murad calls on the people of Kufr Qaddum to keep on struggling against occupation and to never give up.

21 Palestinians arrested on Thursday by occupation forces

Clashes in East Jerusalem and northern Israel as tensions worsenThe following news is reprinted from the International Middle East Media Center (IMEMC):

Israeli forces took into their custody, early Thursday, 4 December, 21 Palestinians, including six minors, from the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, according to security sources and a human rights center. Further abuse of Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons has been documented.

According to Wadi Hilweh Information Center, police detained Mahmoud Abu Ghazaleh, 72, and his son, ‘Ali, 29, for several hours after breaking into their house in the as-Suwani neighborhood in order to force his second son, Majdi, to turn himself in. Both Mahmoud and ‘Ali were released after Majdi turned himself in to police and was taken into custody.

Police also abducted minors Mu‘ath and Muhammad As-Salayma, Ashraf and Fares ‘Uwaisat, Saber ‘Ubaid, Muhammad Saleh, Majed Abu Nijma, ‘Omar Shwaiki and Ibrahim Abu Mayyala, after raiding the ath-Thawri neighborhood in the city, WAFA further reports.

Meanwhile, forces raided Tuqu‘ town, southeast of Bethlehem city, where they kidnapped seven Palestinians; Akram, 18, Muhammad Habes, 18, Muhammad ‘Adel, 18, and ‘Abed al-‘Amur, 20, as well as Ahmad, 18, and Muhammad Abu Mifreh, 19, after breaking into and ransacking their families’ houses.

Israeli forces also raided Beit Fajjar town, to the south of the city, where they took 24-year-old Hasan Thawabta, after breaking into and ransacking his house.

In the Jenin district, forces raided Zabda village to the southwest of the city, where they arrested Yousef ‘Amarna, 38, after breaking into and ransacking his family’s house. Forces raided the refugee camp while firing acoustic bombs and abducting Fathi al-Sa‘di, 20, after breaking into and ransacking his family’s house.

Forces also arrested two Palestinian youth in the Ramallah town of Dura al-Qar’ after raiding their families’ homes in the early dawn hours, according to the head of the town’s council Jabir Bajis.

They were identified as Nasim Mokhtar and Hassan Yasin.

Meanwhile, in the Hebron district, forces raided Tarqumiya town, taking Tamer and Rouhi Qabaja with them after breaking into and wreaking havoc on their store.

Several Palestinians Thursday suffocated by Israeli tear gas and three others were arrested as Israeli forces raided a town in Hebron, while a youth from Jenin was also arrested , said witnesses and security sources.

Forces raided Idhna town, to the west of Hebron, where they broke into a mobile store belonging to Fadi Farajallah, seizing several mobile devices worth INS 20,000 ($ 5,000) and arresting two of his relatives; Ahmad Abu Jheisha and Baker Farajallah.

Roadblocks were set up at the northern entrance of Halhul, the entrance of Idhna, and Zif-Yatta junction, where forces stopped vehicles with Palestinian-registered plates and inspected passengers’ ID cards.

Forces also broke into a computer repair and maintenance store belonging to Husni Bashir, ransacking it and seizing several computers. They arrested Husni’s brother, Khaled, 25, triggering clashes with local Palestinians.

Forces fired tear gas canisters, and several locals suffered from excessive gas inhalation.

— —

In related news, at least 10 Palestinian political prisoners incarcerated in the Israeli Nafha prison have been put in solitary confinement since last June, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club (PPC) said, Thursday.

An attorney with the PPC said that he visited the prison to find that the 10 Palestinian political prisoners are isolated in foul-smelling, strictly sealed cells with no windows.

The cells are also aligned to others housing criminal inmates who frequently maltreat their political fellow inmates and verbally assault them.

PPC also reported on a severe shortage of sufficient warm winter clothes and blankets for the prisoners. Prison administration prohibits prisoners from bringing blankets and warm winter clothes from outside, but allows them to buy blankets from the prison’s canteen.

The blankets sold there are very expensive, very bad in quality and do not provide adequate warmth.

Israeli Prison Service (IPS) also restricts access to books and forces prisoners to remain handcuffed at the daily break time, PPC reported.

According to UN Special Rapporteur on torture, Juan E. Méndez, solitary confinement “causes mental and physical suffering amounting to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

“Prison isolation fits the definition of torture as stated in several international human rights treaties, and thus constitutes a violation of human rights law. For example, the U.N. Convention Against Torture defines torture as any state-sanctioned act ‘by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person’ for information, punishment, intimidation, or for a reason based on discrimination,” said American friends Service Committee.

According to the Committee for Prisoners’ Affairs, illegal, immoral and degrading practices are committed by the Israeli Prison Service against Palestinian inmates in Etzion detention facility in the southern West Bank, as well.

Hussein Sheikh, an attorney with the committee, said that around 50 Palestinian inmates currently incarcerated in Etzion, near Bethlehem, are frequently subjected to immoral and humiliating practice, including being forced to strip off clothes in front of other inmates, which constitutes a blatant violation of international law.

Mr. Sheikh added that prisoners are also forced to completely strip before and after trial.

The attorney also reported on other forms of maltreatment against prisoners by IPS, including the use of foil language against them during the count time in the morning and the evening.

Cases of physical abuse, solitary confinement, stripping off clothes in chilly night air, deprivation of food and water for hours, and denial of breaks were also reported.

Sheikh said that prisoners live under bad conditions in their cells, including poor sanitation, infestation of insects, in addition to the severe shortage of sufficient warm winter blankets, further aggravating their health conditions.

He called upon all human rights organizations for immediate intervention in stopping such crimes, as well as upholding their responsibility in this regard.

These statement came two weeks after a special report by the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club (PPC) revealed that hundreds of Palestinian minor inmates were subjected to sexual abuse by Israeli Prison Service.

The report stated that at least 600 Palestinian children were arrested in Jerusalem since last June, of whom nearly 40% were exposed to sexual abuse during arrest or investigation by the Israeli authorities.

Take Action: Three young Palestinian community leaders deported from Jerusalem

UPDATE: On 9 December, Daoud al-Ghoul was issued a second deportation order, this time from a military court in the West Bank – prohibiting him from entering the West Bank for five months, from 30 October 2014through to the beginning of April 2015. This was issued despite the existence of the order below which purports to deport him to the West Bank. Updates to follow about this extremely disturbing development of the repeated expulsion of a Palestinian from major areas of his homeland.

French translation link: http://www.agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2014/12/08/passez-a-laction-trois-jeunes-dirigeants-de-la-communaute-palestinienne-sont-expulses-de-jerusalem/

Daoud al-Ghoul, Majd Darwish, and Saleh Dirbas, three young Palestinian Jerusalemites, have been deported by the Israeli occupation from their home city of Jerusalem for five months, beginning on 30 November 2014 and ending 30 April 2015. Ghoul, 31, Darwish, 24, and Dirbas, 23, are all former political prisoners, and face imprisonment if any of them violate the order against visiting the city of their birth and their homes. No reason has been given for this arbitrary and unjust order.

The three young men are prominent social activists and community workers. Al-Ghoul, the coordinator of youth programs for the Health Work Committees in Jerusalem and of the Kanaan Network of Palestinian civil society organizations, recently presented at the European Parliament in Brussels on 17 November on the increasingly repressive situation in occupied Jerusalem. He also spoke before an audience at Intal in Brussels on 18 November on the crisis in Jerusalem. Take action to call on the European Union to pressure Israel to cancel this order and to end the EU-Israel Association Agreement.

Daoud al-Ghoul speaks in Brussels at Intal, 18 November
Daoud al-Ghoul speaks in Brussels at Intal, 18 November

Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association noted that this action “is part of the collective political, ethnic and spatial cleansing policy being implemented against the Palestinian citizens of Jerusalem, and a link in the chain of racist decisions, laws and procedures, particularly the policy of home demolitions and large-scale administrative detention against Jerusalemites, and the adoption of deportation orders that violate the Fourth Geneva Convention and multiple international agreements and its obligations under the United Nations charter.”

The Fourth Geneva Convention prohibits individual or collective transfer of persons under occupation from one area of occupied territory to another. This forced expulsion comes following the stripping of Jerusalem ID’s of elected Palestinian Legislative Council members Mohammad Abu Tir, Ahmad Atoun, Mohammed Totah and Khaled Abu Arafah; as well as the stripping of the Jerusalem residency of Nadia Abu Jamal, the widow of Ghassan Abu Jamal. This comes also shortly following the statement of occupation prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu that it plans to seek powers to strip Palestinians who hold Israeli citizenship and Palestinians with Jerusalem ID of their citizenship and residency rights if they or their relatives participate in resistance to the occupation.

It is clearly part of the ongoing Nakba directed against the Palestinian people from 1947 until today, and the systematic expulsion and dispossession of Palestinians at the hands of the occupying power. In particular, Palestinians in Jerusalem are being targeted for ethnic cleansing, expulsion and removal through home demolitions, settler violence and invasions, stripping of residency rights, mass arrests and imprisonment, and land confiscation in a clear bid to erase and negate the Palestinian character of the city and its place as the capital of the Palestinian people.

The expulsion of Daoud al-Ghoul, Majd Darwish, and Saleh Dirbas must be stopped! Take action to defend the rights of these three young community leaders, and the rights of Palestinians in Jerusalem:

TAKE ACTION

1. Citoyens Solidaires in Belgium has launched a petition in French to EU officials, demanding they take action to pressure Israel to cancel the expulsion order. Click here to sign on: https://www.change.org/p/federica-mogherini-faites-pression-sur-isra%C3%ABl-afin-que-soit-lev%C3%A9-l-ordre-d-expulsion-de-trois-palestiniens-de-j%C3%A9rusalem

2. Sign the Canadian petition to demand the Canadian government act on this case: https://www.change.org/p/prime-minister-stephen-harper-hon-john-baird-put-pressure-on-israel-to-lift-deportation-of-three-palestinian-community-activists-from-jerusalem?just_created=true

3. Demand an end to the EU-Israel Association Agreement. Join over 300 civil society organizations and trade unions to demand “No Association with Occupation!”: http://freepalestine.eu/

4. Send the letter below to EU officials and call upon them to take action to ensure the revocation of the deportation order and impose sanctions on Israel, including the cancellation of the EU-Israel Association Agreement:

February 26-March 2, Beirut: International Symposium Against Isolation

ipaiThe 12th International Symposium against Isolation will be held from February 26th – March 2nd, 2015. Discussing The Middle East and The World’s Biggest Problems and our capabilities (what we can do ) in a City at The Center of The Attacks on The People of The Middle East: BEIRUT..

CALL AND INVITATION TO ALL PROGRESSIVE PEOPLE AND MOVEMENTS IN THE WORLD:

LET’S UNITE AND STRENGTHEN OUR SOLIDARITY! 

For 12 years now, the International Platform against Isolation is organizing international symposiums in different countries of Europe, in order to bring together movements, solidarity campaign groups, NGO’s, intellectuals and people of all nationalities on the base of struggle against Isolation.

This project was brought to life in the long period of resistance against prison isolation, which had been continued by the political prisoners in Turkey over 7 years in total, defending their human rights with long term hunger strikes (death fasts).

Also hear an amazing song produced by Irish protest singer Pol Mac Adaim, dedicated to the resistance in F-type jails in Turkey:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2QB-7TF8HU

It was very obvious that isolation was not only a policy used behind the prison walls, but also as a means in the world outside to silence system critical voices.

Our symposiums therefore dealt with isolation in a larger context, from the prisons to the struggle of social and political movements, from media censorship to the occupations, blockades and war crimes in many parts of the world.

Our first aim is to create and coordinate the solidarity and unity among the peoples and organizations, to promote the efforts or common actions on international level and to built up thematically groups, as for instance exchange between progressive lawyers, the relatives of prisoners in different countries and also between political prisoners themselves.

We have organized already 11 symposiums, being joined by wonderful people from all continents, building a bridge between intellectuals, artists and political activists for a common goal: Struggle for human dignity, freedom and justice!

Please feel free to contact us , if you are interested to join our next symposium. Further details such as the program will be published soon.

Looking forward to your response.

Best regards,

International Platform against Isolation

Email: isolation@post.comanadolunewsblog@gmail.com

Facebook: Anadolu Newsblog

Homepage: www.ipai-isolation.info

***

OFFICIAL CALL TO THE

12th International Symposium Against Isolation,

Beirut (Lebanon) February 26 – March 2, 2015   –  UNESCO Palace

Discussing The Middle East and The World’s Biggest Problems and our capabilities (what we can do ) in a City at The Center of The Attacks on The People of The Middle East: BEIRUT

As International Platform against Isolation, after the previous International Symposiums Against Isolation were held in Noordwijk, Florence, Paris, Vienna, Brussels, London, Athens, Berlin and Amsterdam, we decided to held the symposiums in a city at the core of the problems.

Hence, 12th International Symposium Against Isolation will be held in the Middle East, at Beirut. Again The Middle East was turned into Blood Bath. A war, which aims at destroying the Arab countries. Palestine, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon.. we are witnessing the massacre of the peoples there.

On one occasion you see beasts named ISIS are beheading, setting up slave markets.. On another you see a beast named Israel, that destroys, burn down, and slaughters the people in a country called Palestine, surrounded on all four sides, by stating “we have to ensure the safety of our citizens”.

Palestine, the target of lethal assaults under the isolation. While all these happen, what is the role and responsibility of imperialism, and how much it contributes? How effective are the puppet of imperialism on those?

Primarily the US imperialism and its most loyal ally is The Turkish Government denotes the torture, murder, exploitation, degeneration, and the collaboration.

In this year’s symposium, as in the earlier, we would like to reveal the world’s most pressing problems in all its nakedness. We invite the organizations from all over the world, to introduce those with the resistance groups in the region where the most bloodiest conflicts of classes of the world happen, to stop those attacks and break the isolation they are under, all together.

-In Syria, Iraq and their several neighboring countries, the civilians, ethnic and religious minorities, are under the attack and threat of imperialist mercenary soldiers, exploiters of belief and collaborators. While these attacks continue at one side, on the other side the facts are being censored and distorted by the West, through the imperialist press, to block every kind of solidarity. Argumentative voices are being suppressed and divested.

– The imperialist media propaganda and incitement to war, in the same way, shows itself in the disinformation campaign in Ukraine conflict. There, the fascist, nationalist gangs and oligarch rulers representing the United States and Western Europe, took power. They, along with anti-fascist and democratic forces, exert extreme violence against civilians in the eastern Ukraine.

– Inner we: Lets be the voice of Political Prisoners tried to be cornered.

It is a fact, that the Middle Eeast counts the highest number of political prisoners. An important issue to discuss might be also Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, who is the oldest Lebanese prisoner in Europe, still held illegally in French prison for exactly 30 years.

Lets be the voice of Political prisoners and of the bleeding wounds of isolation prisons: Ill Prisoners…

We must break the isolation carried out against the people under the name and the threat of war. Let’s all unite in an anti-imperialist front.

Because who resists will win, who doesn’t will perish!

Where: Lebanon – Beirut, UNESCO Palace

When: February 26 – March 2, 2015

Organizer: International Platform against Isolation, in cooperation with the Khiam Rehabilitation Center for Victims of Torture