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Israeli Occupying Forces Target Palestinian Human Rights Organization in Coordinated Night Raids

139336699725 February 2014, Occupied Ramallah – Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association condemns the continued targeting of Palestinian civil society by Israeli Occupying Forces (IOF). In the early hours of this morning the offices and the homes of a number of employees of the Solidarity Foundation for Human Rights, based in Nablus, were targeted in a number of coordinated raids. In total five current employees and one former employee of the organization were detained by IOF and are currently being held in a number of Israeli detention centres.

At 1 am this morning approximately 35 IOF soldiers and attack dogs raided the home of Fares Abu Hasan, the director of the organization, by blowing open the door of his house with explosives. His family, including his wife and six children, the youngest of which is just three months old, were at home at the time. The IOF subsequently ransacked his house destroying personal property and stealing the families’ mobiles phone, laptop computers, iPad’s and personal papers. The raid lasted for two hours during which time Fares was separated from his family and interrogated. He was subsequently taken to Petah Tikva interrogation centre where he remains.
At the same time this morning the house of Osama Maqboul, a lawyer with the organization, was raided by IOF. A large number of IOF soldiers surrounded his house and approximately 15 soldiers entered his home. The IOF also ransacked his home, destroying much of his personal properly and stealing money, his mobile phone and computer. Osama was subsequently taken to an unknown location.
The secretary of the organization, Narim Salem, was also arrested from her home in the early hours of this morning and was subsequently taken to Petah Tikva interrogation centre. Narim’s computer was also stolen from her house by IOF.
Mohammed Abed, a lawyer and Ahmed Bitawi, a journalist, both working with the organization were also arrested this morning. A former employee and lawyer with the organization, Ahmed Sharif was also arrested.
In protest of today’s arrests Palestinian lawyers demanded the immediate release of their colleagues and all lawyers are boycotting the Israeli military courts of Ofer and Salem today and tomorrow.
In another development Abdel Razek Farraj, an employee with the Agricultural Workers Committee was arrested from his home in Ramallah at 2 am. Abdel has previously spent 11 years in Israeli jails, including five years under administrative detention, which is a procedure that allows the Israeli military to hold detainees indefinitely on “secret information” without charging them or allowing them to stand trial. Abdel was released from his last period of administrative detention in July 2012. His whereabouts are currently unknown.
Today’s arrests are clearly a continuation of the Israeli policy of targeting of Palestinian civil society organizations in an attempt to suppress their important work in exposing the brutalities of the occupation and defending Palestinian rights.
Addameer calls on the International Committee of the Red Cross and the United Nations to hold Israel to account and protect civilians living under occupation according to Articles 4, 13, 27 and 47 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Addameer also stresses the importance of the immediate intervention of international human rights organizations to help bring about the release of all those arrested today and condemn the continued policy of targeting Palestinian civil society.
ACT NOW!
*Write to the Israeli government, military and legal authorities and demand the release of all those arrested today.
  • Brigadier General Danny Efroni
    Military Judge Advocate General
    6 David Elazar Street
    Harkiya, Tel Aviv
    Israel
    Fax: +972 3 608 0366; +972 3 569 4526
    Email: arbel@mail.idf.il; avimn@idf.gov.il
  • Maj. Gen. Nitzan Alon
    OC Central Command Nehemia Base, Central Command
    Neveh Yaacov, Jerusalam
    Fax: +972 2 530 5741
  • Minister of Defense Moshe Smilansky
    Ministry of Defense
    37 Kaplan Street, Hakirya
    Tel Aviv 61909, Israel
    Fax: +972 3 691 6940 / 696 2757
  • Col. Eli Bar On
    Legal Advisor of Judea and Samaria PO Box 5
    Beth El 90631
    Fax: +972 2 9977326

 

Feb. 14, London: Protest G4S complicity in torture: Free Lena al-Jarboni and the Hares Boys

Friday 14th Feb – PROTEST G4S COMPLICITY IN TORTURE – FREE LENA AL-JARBONI – FREE HARES BOYS 

Date: Friday 14th February 2014, 2pm – 4pm
Location: G4S HQ, 105 Victoria Street (Closest public transport: Victoria Tube/Rail station)
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/699294506788733/

haresg4s

PALESTINIAN WOMEN POLITICAL PRISONERS – FREE LENA JARBONI

We will highlight the plight of Palestinian women in Israeli prisons and in particular Lena Jarboni, and specifically G4S complicity in their torture and suffering.

Currently there are 17 Palestinian women political prisoners in Israeli prisons. All but one is in HaSharon prison in Israel. The British private security contractor G4S provides the full security system at HaSharon including the central command room for the entire prison. The transfer of Palestinian prisoners from the occupied West Bank and Gaza to into Israel (to HaSharon Prison) is illegal under international law and constitutes a war crime, G4S is complicit in this by the services it provides to HaSharon Prison.

Before being brought to prison the women have to endure weeks, sometimes months, of torture at one of Israel’s interrogation centres to extract confessions from them – usually the infamous ‘Russian Compound’ in Jerusalem or the notorious Al-Jalame torture den – both these facilities are also secured by G4S.

The longest serving Palestinian women prisoner is Lena Al-Jarboni who has endured nearly 12 years in HaSharon. The campaign centres around her as an example of what Palestinian women have to endure and their resilience and steadfastness in the face of the occupation prisons.

Please note that the information about Lena Jarboni below has been updated after receiving new information from her family about her interrogation and the torture and threats against her family that lead to her forced confession.

LENA Al-JARBONI

Lena was born in 1974 to a Palestinian family near Acre in 1948 Palestine. Due to financial difficulty she could not complete her studies and worked in sewing workshops to help her family. In 2002 she was picked up by Israeli security on suspicion of “collaborating with the enemy” – she unlike her Palestinian friends has Israeli citizenship. They tortured her for 30 days at Israels notorious G4S secured Al-Jalame torture den. Interrogation sessions lasted up to 20 hours at a time. Deprived of sleep, she was made to stand stationary in stress positions for that time – her joints have never recovered. Between interrogation sessions she was caged in a tiny 1m x 2m hole in the ground cell. They brought her younger brother in and brutally tortured him, beating him mercilessly in front of her to pressure her to confess. When she didn’t break they released him and abducted her younger sister and tortured her, and then they dragged her elderly mother to the interrogation room and threatened to torture her. Her frail mother suffers from heart disease, high blood pressure and diabetes. To save her family Lena confessed to the fabricated charges and she was sentenced to 17 years in HaSharon women’s prison.

At HaSharon prison Palestinian women prisoners have to endure beatings, insults, threats, sexually explicit harassment and sexual violence, and humiliation at the hands of Israeli guards. They are often forced to undergo degrading strip searches during the middle of the night – forced to squat naked and subjected to intrusive internal body searches, for no reason other than as a punitive measure. Women have been beaten and left tied to their bed for a day and a half and not allowed to go to the toilet as punishment for spilling water. The cells at HaSharon prison are overcrowded, dirty and infected with rodents and cockroaches. There is a total absence of basic hygiene, women have even been denied sanitary pads when menstruating. The heat is unbearable, The windows are closed and covered so that hardly any air or daylight can enter. The food is insufficient, and of inferior quality & dirty, often containing insects & worms, at times there are not enough portions for all the women. At HaSharon Lena became the spokeswoman for the other prisoners and converted the squalid rat infested cellars in to an area for prayer and education. She taught sewing classes and Quran.

Israel has adopted a systematic policy of medical negligence regarding Palestinian prisoners, a study conducted in 2008 revealed that 38% of Palestinian female prisoners suffer from treatable diseases that go untreated. Due to medical negligence Lena can no longer walk and suffers from extreme pain in her stomach and constant migraines. The prison refused to transfer her to hospital for an essential cholecystectomy operation in time. It was only when all the women prisoners threatened to go on hunger strike that they finally allowed her the operation. She has never recovered and her condition is deteriorating. Having endured nearly 12 years in HaSharon prison she is the longest serving Palestinian woman prisoner. She has over 5 more years left of her sentence, in her condition it is very unlikely she can survive that. We are demanding her immediate release.

Photo from the last protest outside G4S HQ in London  (31st Jan 2014)
Photo from the last protest outside G4S HQ in London (31st Jan 2014)

PALESTINIAN CHILD PRISONERS – FREE HARES BOYS

Solidarity with 5 Palestinian children tortured and caged by Israel for a crime that never happened.

On 14th March 2013 a simple car accident, when a illegal Israeli settler car speeding along a road built illegally on stolen Palestinian land, crashed in to the back of an Israeli truck which had stopped to change a flat tire resulting in four people being hurt, was later at the behest of angry settlers presented as an attack by Palestinian stone throwing youth. The truck drivers earlier testimony that he stopped due to a flat tire was replaced with the new reason being that he had seen stones by the road, and an accident that nobody saw suddenly became a terror attack with 61 witnesses including the police!

Over the next few days over 50 masked Israeli soldiers with attack dogs stormed the local village of Hares in the early hours of the morning and in waves of violent arrests kidnapped the children of the village. In total 19 children were taken to the infamous G4S secured children’s dungeon at Al Jalame and locked up in solitary confinement for up to 2 weeks in filthy windowless 1m by 2m hole in the ground cells with no mattress. The Israeli prime minister Benyamin Natanyahu announced to the settlers that he had “caught the terrorists”. The children were violently tortured and sexual threats were made against the female members of their families in order to coerce confessions from the boys.

With the confessions and the new “eye-witness” statements, five of the Hares boys were charged with 25 counts of attempted murder each, even though there were only four people in the car and all are now safe at home. Apparently the military court had decided that 25 stones were thrown, each with an “intent to kill”. The five boys – Ali Shamlawi, Mohammed Kleib, Mohammed Mehdi Suleiman, Tamer Souf, and Ammar Souf are currently locked up in another G4S secured facility – Megiddo prison where G4S provides the entire central command room.

In violation of international law Israel has turned prisons in to money making enterprises with the boys essentially forced to pay for their own imprisonment. Israel deliberately fails to provide Palestinian prisoners the basic essentials – edible food, cloths (underwear, shoes..) and hygiene products (soap, toothbrush..). The boys are forced to buy these at the extortionately priced prison shop costing the families over € 125/month to provide for one child’s basic needs in prison.

With no evidence of a crime the military court keeps on postponing the hearing dates from one month to the next, meanwhile the boys remain caged indefinitely and their families facing financial ruin in the process. The occupation in its cruelty doesn’t inform the families of cancellations. The families spend most of their day queuing and enduring the humiliation at the checkpoints, then waiting at the court in anticipation of catching a glimpse of their son.. only to be disappointed at the end. Not that evidence, or lack of it, has any bearing in an Israeli military court – a study conducted by the Israeli NGO ‘No Legal Frontiers’ over a 12 month period concluded that 100% of Palestinian children brought before the military court are convicted. If the five boys are convicted they will be locked up for over 25 years – five young lives ruined with no evidence of a crime let alone their guilt.

We are demanding the immediate and unconditional release of all the children and hold G4S complicit in Israel’s crimes, particularly in the torture of Palestinian women and children.

LIVE UPDATES DURING PROTEST

We will, inshAllah, be tweeting live (hash tags #FreeHaresBoys #G4S #FreeLenaJarboni) from the protest with live photos being uploaded to our twitter and facebook page. So if you can’t join us on the day, please help us by sharing the photos as they get uploaded.

https://www.facebook.com/inmindscom

https://twitter.com/InmindsCom

JazakAllah

Abbas Ali

Palestinian Prisoners Campaign
www.inminds.com/caged

The Palestinian Prisoners Campaign aims to raise awareness for the plight of Palestinian prisoners and build solidarity for their struggle and work towards their freedom. The campaign was launched by Innovative Minds (inminds.com) and the Islamic Human Rights Commission (ihrc.org) on the occasion of Al Quds Day 2012 (on 17th August 2012), since then we have held actions every fortnight in support of Palestinian prisoners, if you can spare two hours twice a month then please join the campaign by coming to the next action.

11 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike protesting prison abuses

palestinian-hunger-strikeAdditional Palestinian political prisoners have taken up hunger strikes in protest of prison authorities’ practices.

Ameer al-Shammas declared hunger strike on January 11, 2014, protesting his administrative detention and isolation. He was arrested on September 3, 2013 and held in Ashkelon interrogation centre for over a month and a half, then sentenced to administrative detention. He was held in solitary confinement and then moved to Ramle prison hospital due to his recent health deterioration.

Saber Suleiman launched an open-ended hunger strike on January 25 demanding his release from Moskobiya interrogation centre, where he was tortured.

On January 15, 2014, Osama Shweiki and Mohammad Al-Batran launched hunger strikes, reported the Palestinian Prisoners Society after Azzam Shweiki, Osama’s brother, visited him. They launched an open hunger strike to protest their transfer to solitary confinement in Megiddo.

The Palestine Centre for Prisoners Studies reported that Iyad Astete has been on hunger strike since February 1, 2014. Astete, from Jenin, has been detained since June 2006 and is serving a prison sentence of 16 years.

He has started a hunger strike protesting against the Israeli authorities’ refusal to transfer him from Ashkelon prison to the northern jails which are close to his residence area. Astete said that the conditions in Ashkelon’s solitary confinement cells are very bad, and that he has been deprived of buying from the canteen and of receiving family visits for two months and a half.

These hunger strikers join fellow Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike:

  • Akram al-Fassisi, held in administrative detention without charge or trial since November 2012, who has engaged in previous hunger strikes that he was forced to end due to ill health, began a new open-ended hunger strike on January 9, 2014. (Profile from Addameer)
  • Waheed Abu Maria, also held in administrative detention without charge or trial since November 2012, launched an open-ended hunger strike against administrative detention on January 9, 2014.
  • Muammar Banat, also in administrative detention without charge or trial, joined in this open-ended hunger strike on January 9, 2014.
  • Abdul Majeed Khudairat, who has engaged in hunger strikes in the past, launched his open-ended hunger strike in protest of his re-arrest after his release in the prisoner exchange agreement of October 2011. He began his strike on January 15.
  • Musa Soufan of Tulkarem, sentenced to life imprisonment plus five years, launched a hunger strike on January 25, 2014, protesting against medical neglect and delay in treatment; he has a tumor under his left ear and needs an operation to remove the tumor but has received only painkillers and has been isolated rather than moved to the hospital.
  • Hossam Yousef Omar also launched a hunger strike on January 25, 2014; he is being held in isolation in Megiddo prison and is demanding an end to his solitary confinement.

Severely ill Ibrahim Bitar suddenly transferred to Soroka Hospital

ibrahim-bitaPalestinian political prisoneer, Ibrahim Bitar, who is severely ill yet not officially diagnosed, was suddenly transferred on early Sunday morning from Nafha prison to Soroka hospital.

Bitar, 33, is suffering from an undignosed disease of blood and digestion; he has had surgery to remove a tumor and has ben diagnosed with numerous diseases including anemia, Crohn’s disease, rheumatism. He was treated for leukemia but then informed that this was a misdiagnosis.

Ibrahim Bitar's mother at a vigil for his freedom. Photo: Joe Catron
Ibrahim Bitar’s mother at a vigil for his freedom. Photo: Joe Catron

His family has been campaigning for his release and for proper medical treatment, building a campaign and organizing rallies in Gaza, his home, as reported by the Electronic Intifada.

Mamdouh al-Bitar, Ibrahim’s brother, said “The aim is for Ibrahim to be released because of his health condition…The second is for a health committee to have access, to find out his condition and give him the proper medication. Finally, we want the release of all the sick prisoners.”

Palestinian journalist Mohammad Mona’s administrative detention extended

mohammad-monaThe occupation authorities renewed the administrative detention of journalist Mohammad Mona days before his detention was to expire, reported the Palestine Centre for Prisoners’ Studies.

He was sentenced to six months administrative detention, without charges or trial. The Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate has been advocating around his case. He was seized from his home in Nablus in August 2013 and has been held without charge or trial ever since.

Former hunger striker Imad Batran released after detention in Ashkelon

imad-batranOccupation authorities released former long-term hunger striker Imad Batran on February 4 after 22 days in detention in Ashkelon prison, reported the Mohja al-Quds Foundation.

He was arrested on January 13, 2014 and detained in Ashkelon without charge during that time. Batran, it should be noted, has been arrested twice before – during his last detention, he engaged in a long-term hunger strike for 105 days until the occupation agreed to not renew his administrative detention. He was released on November 14, 2013.

Feb. 7, Chicago: Town Hall Meeting on Rasmea Odeh’s case with Rashid Khalidi

Community Town Hall with special guest Dr. Rashid Khalidi: Drop the Charges Against Rasmea Now! Support her Defense Fund
Friday, February 7, 2014
Aqsa School: 7361 W 92nd St, Bridgeview, IL 60455
Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/592829454120967/

rasmeaIn the early morning of Tuesday, October 22nd, 2013, sixty-five year old Associate Director of the Arab American Action Network (AAAN), Rasmea Yousef Odeh, was arrested at her home by agents from the Department of Homeland Security. She was indicted in federal court that same morning, and charged with Unlawful Procurement of Naturalization, an allegation based on answers she gave on a 20-year-old immigration application.

Rasmea, who has made it her life’s work to serve and help empower Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim families, is the victim of another politically-motivated witch-hunt by our federal law enforcement agencies, which continue to violate the civil rights of Arabs and Muslims with impunity, particularly those who are critical of U.S. support for Israel’s crimes against the Palestinian people.

Please join The Coalition to Protect People’s Rights (CPPR) as we present a community town hall on Rasmea’s case.

Join us at Aqsa School on February 7th at 8:15pm, immediately following Isha prayers for presentations that include:

-Legal update from Jim Fennerty, one of Rasmea’s lawyers
-Know Your Rights presentation by Dima Khalidi of the Palestine Solidarity Legal Support
-An update on the community organizing that has been done around the case
With special guest speaker Dr. Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Chair, Columbia University.

Come learn about the case and what you can do to help!

CPPR is comprised of American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), Arab American Action Network (AAAN), Arab Jewish Partnership for Peace and Justice in the Middle East (AJP), Lifta Association, U.S. Palestinian Community Network (USPCN), and many others

Feb. 7, Tunisia: Protest for Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, against Hollande visit

The Tunisian Solidarity Committee to Free Georges Ibrahim Abdallah will protest outside the French embassy in Tunis on February 7 at noon, to coincide with the visit of the President of France, Francois Hollande, to Tunisia.

The protest will call for the freedom of Lebanese activist George Ibrahim Abdallah, held in French prisons for 30 years now as a political prisoner.

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/593753637371345/?ref=22

abdallah

 

Six Palestinian political prisoners on hunger strike

Akram al-Fassisi
Akram al-Fassisi

Six Palestinian prisoners are currently engaging in open-ended hunger strikes in protest of actions by the occupation prison authorities:

  • Akram al-Fassisi, held in administrative detention without charge or trial since November 2012, who has engaged in previous hunger strikes that he was forced to end due to ill health, began a new open-ended hunger strike on January 9, 2014. (Profile from Addameer)
  • Waheed Abu Maria, also held in administrative detention without charge or trial since November 2012, launched an open-ended hunger strike against administrative detention on January 9, 2014.
  • Muammar Banat, also in administrative detention without charge or trial, joined in this open-ended hunger strike on January 9, 2014.
  • Abdul Majeed Khudairat, who has engaged in hunger strikes in the past, launched his open-ended hunger strike in protest of his re-arrest after his release in the prisoner exchange agreement of October 2011. He began his strike on January 15.
  • Waheed Abu Maria
    Waheed Abu Maria

    Musa Soufan of Tulkarem, sentenced to life imprisonment plus five years, launched a hunger strike on January 25, 2014, protesting against medical neglect and delay in treatment; he has a tumor under his left ear and needs an operation to remove the tumor but has received only painkillers and has been isolated rather than moved to the hospital.

  • Hossam Yousef Omar also launched a hunger strike on January 25, 2014; he is being held in isolation in Megiddo prison and is demanding an end to his solitary confinement.

 

Palestinian child prisoner Ubaida Asaid suspends hunger strike

Photo via Inminds (https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=583336565085310&set=a.365131370239165.86577.365007213584914&type=1&theater)
Photo via Inminds (https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=583336565085310&set=a.365131370239165.86577.365007213584914&type=1&theater)

Palestinian child prisoner Ubaida Asaid ended his hunger strike on February 1, after occupation authorities agreed to transfer him from the Ofek criminal youth Israeli prison to HaSharon prison with Palestinian political prisoners.

Asaid, 15, was abducted by ocupation forces on November 13, 2013, and then abducted again with his 13-year-old brother Osman two weeks later. Osman was released after paying a $3000 fine and is now under house arrest and prohibited from even going to school.

Ubaida was transferred to Ofek where he was in danger and was denied family visits. He began a hunger strike on January 27. Inminds reported that the transfer to HaSharon will take place within 10 days. They protested in London at infamous prison contractor G4S headquarters raising awareness about Ubaida’s case on January 31.