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3 detainees in Ofer continue hunger strike as Al-Fassisi suspends his strike

083C963F7 Mohammed Badr, Islam Badr, and Thaer Abdu, three Palestinian administrative detainees, are continuing their hunger strikes, reported Palestinian lawyers. They are demanding an end to the use of administrative detention and in particular, their detention without charge or trial.

Mohammed and Islam are brothers; all three have been striking since November 16. All three are held in one room, room 14 at Ofer military prison; their personal belongings have all been confiscated and they have only bedding and a blanket for each of them.

Administrative detainees have been stepping up their protests and are now returning meals twice a week until December 30, in protest of the use of detention without charge or trial, as well as boycotting court hearings for administrative detainees.

Palestinian administrative detainee Akram al-Fassisi, held without charge or trial, suspended his hunger strike after over 50 days of striking on November 26, 2013. He had been on hunger strike since September 29, protesting his imprisonment without charge or trial. He suspended his strike in Assaf Harofe hospital after serious deterioration in his health status.

His administrative detention order was renewed for three months on November 16, 2013, after two six-month renewals. He was detained on November 16, 2012. Administrative detainees are held without charge or trial for ongoing renewable periods of up to six months.

 

4-year-old Palestinian boy issued Israeli arrest warrant

muhammad-almajidThe Electronic Intifada reported that Israeli occupation authorities issued an arrest warrant for a 4-year-old child, Muhammad al-Majid, a Palestinian Jerusalemite, on November 28.

EI reported that the Wadi Hilweh Information Center reported in Arabic:

Amid their frenzied campaign of arresting children in Jerusalem, Israeli forces raided the home of Zine al-Majid in the Saadia area of the Old City last week in order to arrest his son Muhammad, who is four years old.

The boy’s father told Wadi Hilweh Information Center:

“A big force raided our house at dawn on Thursday, and demanded to know the names of my children. So I told them and they said, ‘we have an arrest order for Muhammad.’ I was shocked and asked one of them if he was sure. Muhammad is only four years old! But the officer was not convinced and asked me to wake him up, and after he saw him he backed down from carrying out the arrest.

The father added: “I told the officer, ‘you want to arrest him; should I send milk and diapers with him?’”

He said that the officer questioned him about his son and his son’s friends and if he was in the neighborhood, under the pretext that an Israeli settler had been injured. He threatened to summon and interrogate the child if the accusations were established

“For children like four-year-old Muhammad al-Majid, there is no safety even inside their houses, as Israeli occupation forces can invade any time of day or night.

As of 30 September, 179 Palestinian children were imprisoned and prosecuted in the Israeli military court system, according to DCI,” EI reported.

Mansour Mowqada and other sick prisoners struggling for freedom

mansour-muqtadaA solidarity evening with Palestinian political prisoner Mansour Mowqada was held in Salfit on November 29, calling for his release and that of his fellow sick prisoners. The mayor of Salfit, Said Shukour, said that the call of sick prisoners was an urgent humanitarian issue requiring international action.

Mowqada uses a wheelchair, has tumors, and must use “plastic stomach” and colostomy bags for digestion and excretion. He receives mostly painkillers at Ramle prison clinic, which has been described as a “tomb for the living” for the 20 prisoners with the most severe health conditions. He lost the use of his legs when he was shot by Israeli occupation forces in 2002 and has spent the entire time since his arrest in the Ramle prison clinic. He is 42 years old and is serving a 30-year sentence.

maqada-300x212Palestinian sick prisoners continue to protest and call for freedom. Some additional particular cases of sick Palestinian political prisoners whose health status is deteriorating and are not receiving sufficient treatment include:

Nabil Natsheh, who has been held in administrative detention since March 27, 2013, has cancer of the lymph nodes. He was diagnosed in 2010 before his arrest and was receiving chemotherapy in Beit Jala.

Natsheh has been suffering from high blood pressure and severe shoulder pain.

Yousef Nadjeh suffers from epilepsy and memory problems. He has kidney problems, swelling in his legs and extremities and has lost balance due to head pain. He requires crutches to walk and fell in Ofer military court due to his ill health.

Fuad Shoubaki is 84 years old. He was arrested in 2006 and is serving a 20 year sentence. He has an enlarged prostate and was recently admitted to Hadassah hospital for treatment. He needs eye surgery, which has a 95% success rate, but needs a private doctor to enter to complete the surgery. He is planning to petition the Supreme Court to be allowed a private doctor.

Yahya Salameh has an enlarged tumor in his right shoulder and has not received surgery to remove it, despite numerous promises from the Ramon prison clinic.

Imad Shoukeir has bullet fragments in his body from when he was shot in 2002 by Israeli forces and continues to suffer severe pain from the presence of the bullet fragments.

Click here to take action to support sick Palestinian prisoners.

Over 70 Palestinian prisoners moved as repression inside prisons escalates

negev-prisonOver 70 Palestinian political prisoners were moved between Eshel, Beer Sheva, Nafha and Ramon Prisons on November 30, reported the Palestinian Prisoners Studies Centre.

The purpose of these transfers is to create instability and uncertainty among the prisoners and to dispel protests and organizing among the prisoners confronting the policies of the prison administration. Prisoners reported in a telephone conversation with the centre that there are increasing restrictions being imposed upon the prisoners and that prisoners have been meeting to protest the administration, particularly to highlight the cases of the sick prisoners and administrative detainees held without charge or trial.

On November 19, sick prisoners in Nafha began boycotting the prison clinic and refusing medication in order to highlight the particular urgent needs of sick prisoners and protest medical neglect.

The political prisoners reported to the centre that this campaign of transfers is, in their eyes, designed to undermine planned protests and may be only the first step in a series of mass transfers to undermine organizing within the prisons. It should be noted that transfers take place via “Bosta” in which prisoners are transported shackled to iron chairs in poorly ventilated transport vehicles. The experience of the “Bosta” has been protested repeatedly by Palestinian political prisoners and many have been injured in rough and aggressive transfers.

Particular tension has developed in the Negev prison, reported the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, around the same two issues: administrative detainees held without charge or trial and medical neglect and health deterioration of sick prisoners. The same “Bosta” transport is used to move sick prisoners to hospitals or the Ramle prison clinic and takes several hours, increasing their suffering.

Murad Saad is one sick prisoner held in Negev; he has tumors in several parts of his body and was denied treatment through over two years of health complaints and continues to wait for any real treatment. Political prisoners held in the Negev have reported abusive and violent inspections and raids of cells under the pretext of searching for mobile phones as well as insect infestations inside the prisons.

In addition, the administration of the Israeli Hawara detention center forced a number of Palestinian prisoners, under the guard of the Israeli soldiers, to clean up the prison while their feet are shackled for three hours, the Palestine Information Center reported on November 30.

Khader Adnan detained during Palestinian Authority political arrest raid

khaderadnanOn November 27, Palestinian Authority security services detained former prisoner and hunger striking hero Khader Adnan, as he defended his cousin Farouk Moussa from political arrest from PA security forces in Arraba.

Khader Adnan was later released, but Farouk Moussa remains detained. The political detention of Palestinian activists is part of the practice of security coordination between PA security forces and the Israeli occupation forces, which has frequently led to arrests and detention of Palestinian resistance activists or people pinpointed by Israel or the PA by Palestinian Authority forces.

Khader Adnan engaged in a historic hunger strike in 2012 in protest of his administrative detention without charge or trial. His 66-day strike secured an agreement for his release and played a major role in sparking a series of hunger strikes that has followed in the year and a half since Adnan’s strike.

Mi’kmaq Warriors held as political prisoners for defending their land

Image via Warrior Publications https://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/
Image via Warrior Publications https://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/

Indigenous peoples in New Brunswick, Canada have been engaged in an extensive struggle to defend their land and resources from large corporations and extractive industries. In particular, SWN, a US based corporation, is looking to engage in exploration and testing for potential hydraulic fracturing (fracking) on Mi’kmaq and Elsipogtog territories. These practices have been shown to be highly devastating to the environment, and enrich the corporations involved while further impoverishing Indigenous people while poisoning the land and water.

In response, the Mi’kmaq Warrior Society alongside their people and allies have set up a blockade to prevent the SWN trucks from entering their land. They have been attacked on multiple occasions by the RCMP. As BASICS News describes, “Jim Pictou is a member of the Mi’kmaq Warrior Society, “the homeland security of the Mi’kmaq nation.”  Today, the Mi’kmaq, whose ancestral lands span much of the Atlantic region of Canada, are at the center of a developing resistance to hydraulic fracturing – or ‘fracking’ in New Brunswick, the process by which high-pressure water and chemicals are injected into the ground to remove natural gas from shale rock.  The resistance to fracking in New Brunswick has seen the development of a broad united front of native and non-native people.”

In the course of defending the land, several Warriors continue to be held as Political Prisoners by the Canadian state. They have been held in solitary confinement (now released from solitary due to mass support), taken from their cells, beaten, and abused for defending their land. They are asking for letters of support! Please write to: Coady Stevens, Aaron Francis, Germain Junior Breau, and James Sylvester Pictou at: 

SRCC 435 Lino Road Shediac, NB Canada E4P-0H6

Further resources: BASICS News Interview with James Pictou: http://basicsnews.ca/2013/09/mikmaq-warrior-societys-jim-pictou-interview-mp3-streaming/

Warrior Publications, ongoing updates: https://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/

BASICS News on the struggle on Mi’kmaq territory: http://basicsnews.ca/2013/09/mikmaq-warriors-arrested-in-ongoing-against-fracking-in-new-brunswick/

The following statement is supported by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network. Add your name online: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1A30etYTp9c7aplDQe4CmNP50Ift3izLPi3rQNwcSRvw/viewform

Palestinian Youth & Student Solidarity with Mi’kmaq Blockade

A statement of solidarity initiated by the Progressive Student Action Front – Palestine and the Palestinian Progressive Youth Union. Endorsements welcome:From one stolen land to another, we express our highest solidarity with the Mi’kmaq and Elsipogtog people, the Mi’kmaq Warriors Society and the members of their blockade, defending their lands and confronting colonial resource extraction and profiteering. The blockade, which began September 30, closed Highway 134 in New Brunswick, in the Canadian state, in order to prevent devastating resource extraction (hydraulic fracturing or “fracking”) by SWN Resources, a large U.S. corporation.This blockade is a powerful action of Indigenous people exerting their right to their land, to protect it and prevent its exploitation and destruction taking place, and demanding justice, dignity and decolonization. SWN Resources claims the blockade has cost it $60,000 daily as it attempts to carry out natural gas exploration in the area for hydraulic fracturing. Hydraulic fracturing (fracking) is a destructive process to extract shale gas that is devastating to the environment and water.

The Mi’kmaq Warriors Society and their allies at the blockade were attacked on October 17 by approximately 200 armed Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), who besieged the blockaders, releasing tear gas, tasering protesters, using police dogs and firing rubber bullets. At least 40 land defenders, including Elsipogtog Chief Arren Sock, Mi’kmaq Warriors, and reporters, have been arrested.

Indigenous people in Canada have faced genocide and crimes against humanity, including cultural genocide in residential schools, forced displacement, containment on reservations, controls on movement, and massive land theft and expropriation. They have been resisting for hundreds of years on their land, continually confronting settler colonialism and occupation.

As Palestinians, we also face a settler colonial occupier. We also face occupation, apartheid, resource exploitation, the destruction of our olive trees and the theft of our land and labour for a colonial settler project based on the dispossession, expulsion and oppression of our people. We are struggling to bring settler colonial rule to an end, along with the occupation and apartheid that it creates, and for the right of return of Palestinian refugees, expelled from their homeland for over 65 years.

The Canadian settler colonial state has been one of the foremost international supporters of our settler colonial occupier, Israel. Canada supported the partition of our land, and is now constantly heard in international arenas supporting Israeli wars against Palestinians and Arabs, attacking Palestinian rights, and labelling itself Israel’s best friend. Canadian state officials denounce Palestinian efforts to hold Israel accountable under international law for its crimes against Palestinians, the indigenous people of Palestine – at the same time that Canada attempts to quash and suppress international efforts by Indigenous people to seek justice, accountability and decolonization.

From Palestine to Turtle Island, we have one struggle, and we affirm our solidarity and common resistance!

Progressive Student Action Front (Palestine)
Palestinian Progressive Youth Union
Students for Justice in Palestine – National, ad hoc steering committee
Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights-UBC
Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights – Calgary Chapter
Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights at Western University
General Union of Palestinian Students – San Francisco
Students Against Israeli Apartheid at York University (SAIA York)
Students for Justice in Palestine at Brooklyn College
Students for Justice in Palestine at Rutgers University – Newark
Toronto Students for Justice in Palestine
Oberlin Students for a Free Palestine
Students for Justice in Palestine – Cornell University
Students for Justice in Palestine – Columbia University
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Boycott Israeli Apartheid Campaign Vancouver
Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign

To sign on please use the form or email: palestineindigenoussolidarity@gmail.com

Dec. 7, Manchester: Speak out for Palestinian prisoners – end British support for Israel

piccadillySaturday, December 7
12:00 noon
Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/677226168988463

Join us on the streets of Manchester to demand the release of Palestinian political prisoners, held captive by a racist, apartheid state. Bring pictures, flags, kuffiehs and voices! We will have an open mic for all who want to speak out.

Israel holds over 5,000 Palestinian prisoners, including around 200 children. More than a third of males from the West Bank have been incarcerated at some point in their lives, as Israel invades, shoots and snatches anyone they think may be a ‘resistance activist.’ The prisoners and their communities frequently protest against their treatment, which has included physical and psychological. They are political prisoners who should be released. As hunger striker Samer Issawi writes from jail,

‘Israel could not continue its oppression without the support of western governments. These governments, particularly the British, which has a historic responsibility for the tragedy of my people, should impose sanctions on the Israeli regime until it ends the occupation, recognises Palestinian rights, and frees all Palestinian political prisoners.’

During 24 hours in October, Israeli forces bombed targets in Syria and Gaza, with no condemnation from Britain. Palestinian suffering increases as apartheid Israel launches murderous invasions into the West Bank and strangles Gaza. As it talks about ‘peace’, Israel builds thousands of settlement blocks in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. A movement in Britain to isolate Israel would put more pressure on the apartheid state and aid the struggle for a free and independent Palestine.

 

Sick Palestinian political prisoners at Ramle prison clinic threaten strike

Palestinian-prisoners-in-the-Israeli-Ayalon-prisonSick Palestinian prisoners at Ramle hospital threatened on Monday to go on an open hunger strike in protest of their health situation, and what they termed an Israeli policy of medical negligence, Ma’an reported.

Hanan al-Khatib, a lawyer for the Palestinian Authority’s prisoners ministry, quoted prisoner Riyad al-Amour as saying that prisoners with serious conditions were fed up with their treatment.

Al-Amour highlighted that starting in December, prisoners will announce an open hunger strike and will not take any medications in a protest against the “Israeli medical negligence policy.”

Iyad Radwan, a prisoner, said that “You do not recognize what is happening in the hospital. … There are people who suffer from chronic diseases. Enough is enough. We are sick of waiting and of the slogan”.

He added: “It’s better to die with dignity.”

Take action to call for release of sick prisoners:

Dublin, November 29: Protest to Free Ahmad Sa’adat and Palestinian Prisoners

saadat-2To mark this year’s International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, éirígí will hold‘Free Ahmad Sa’adat – End the Occupation of Palestine’ protest outside the Israeli embassy in Ballsbridge, Dublin on Friday November 29, at 6pm.

The similarities of the struggle for national liberation in Ireland and Palestine will be highlighted by the protest which will also demand the release of éirígí’s Stephen Murney.

Ahmad Sa’adat, the imprisoned General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, is being held in solitary confinement by the zionist state. He is also being denied all visits by family and friends.

Murney, who turns 30 years of age on Friday November 29, is the imprisoned éirígí spokesperson for the Newry area. On his birthday, he will have been held captive without trial by the British state for one year.

Both men find themselves in prison because of their political activities and because they became a thorn in the side of the forces of occupation in their respective countries.

Speaking from Dublin, Cathaoirleach éirígí Brian Leeson said, “There is a proud history of solidarity between the Irish and Palestinian peoples, and our long struggles for national liberation. Despite the fact that both nations face enemies with overwhelming military superiority, the struggle for self-determination in both countries has never been abandoned.

“Unfortunately there are also many similarities in the counter-insurgency strategies that the British and Israeli states have deployed against the Palestinian and Irish people. State sanctioned executions, imprisonment without trial and political show-trials are all too common in Ireland and Palestine.”

Leeson continued, “Our demonstration on Friday gives the people of Dublin and the surrounding counties the opportunity to express their solidarity with the people of Palestine generally and Palestinian political prisoners in particular.

“I would encourage all those outraged at zionist war crimes in Palestine to make their way to the Israeli embassy on Friday and join with us in offering solidarity with the Palestinian people.”

– See more at: http://eirigi.org/latest/latest251113.html#sthash.IXXAMKLn.dpuf

Zara Alvarez: Philippines Political Prisoner Struggling for Justice

zara-alvarezFilipina human rights defender Zara Alvarez has been imprisoned for over one year in Philippine prisons. There is a growing Filipino and international movement for her freedom.

Alvarez, 32 years old, is a teacher by profession and a human rights and political activist. She was arrested on October 30, 2012 in her hometown, Cadiz City. To date she is still detained on trumped-up charges of murder and robbery in band in an attempt to silence her and dozens of other human rights advocates in the Philippines.

Alvarez was the chair and national council member of ANAK BAYAN-Negros, a progressive youth organization, and a deputy general secretary of the umbrella organization BAYAN-Negros. She also was the campaign and education director for the human rights organization KARAPATAN-Negros.

A campaign for Alvarez’ release has been developed and has a Change.org petition (click here to sign) and a Facebook page. Activists report that this arrest is part of a campaign of arrests targeting leftist and progressive activists in the Philippines, many of whom are arrested on “John or Jane Doe” warrants – like Alvarez – and their names added later to the charges. Alvarez is being supported by defenders of human rights in the Philippines around the world, who report that this arrest campaign is part of the counter-insurgency plan of the Philippines government, being conducted in cooperation with the U.S.

Download Zara Alvarez’ letter to Philippines President | Article on the Alvarez case by Hannah Wolf and Maike Grabowski

Alvarez issued the following letter from prison in January 2013:

Dear friends,

Greetings of Peace and Solidarity! I was once declared as a persona non grata, and now as murderer by the same perpetrators and agents of the state through the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). And I am incarcerated with the objective to silence me, to cripple me in espousing Human Rights.

Thirteen years ago, I was just an ordinary College student who was confined at the four walled classroom, listening dutifully to what my professors were explaining, aiming high grades. But things changed when I began to asks questions, when I became restless.

It was in 2000 when a church worker invited me to a fact-finding mission in a seaside community. I started to ask the five W’s and one H (what, when, where, why, who and how) directly to the people in the said community. I wondered why, despite the rich natural resources, the majority of the Filipinos remained poor. And a lot of questions followed.

I became discontented to the learning I gained from the books and from the four walls of our university. I started to look around, seeking for the answers to some of my questions. Despite being a college student, I gave time to live with the farmers, to stay in the picket line with the workers, join the rallies and fact finding missions. I organized my fellow youth and students in order to collectively voice out and bring our demands to the authorities. We shouted for a scientific, mass oriented and free education and not for a commercialized, repressive and colonial system of education. And in doing so, I found the answers from the different sectors in our society.

I am very grateful to our university for being open to the issues that affected our daily lives. We were allowed to conduct forums and symposiums especially during the time when the campaign for Estrada’s ouster was in its peak. I devoted myself to Anakbayan, the comprehensive youth organization, after graduating from college and passing the Licensure Examination for Teacher. I was elected as the Secretary General of the said organization, served as the voice of the said youth group and later became the Chairperson in the whole Negros Island. I was also a member of the National Council of the said group.

I also tried to reach out to the student writers through the College Editors Guild of the Philippines (CEGP) wherein I served as the coordinator in Negros. I believed in the cause of the Progressive Partylists like the KABATAAN party, GABRIELA Women’s party, Act Teachers Partylist, ANAKPAWIS, Bayan Muna. That’s why during campaign periods, I am one of their machineries.

Later, I was appointed as the Deputy Secretary General of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN)-Negros and at the same time as Campaign and Education Officer of KARAPATAN-Negros. I helped in the facilitation of Fact Finding Missions, in documenting cases of Human Rights Violations and in bringing the voices of the victims through dialogs, negotiations and even in tri-media; in radio, print and television.

It was then that I became a target of their vilification campaign of the state through the Oplan Bantay Laya of the now defunct regime of GMA. In this campaign, I was demonized, tagged and openly linked to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and the New People’s Army (NPA) along with some leaders of the progressive and militant organizations, through their radio programs, forums and symposiums. Even the AFP assigned in one community in the countryside where human right violations were alarming instigated the Barangay officials to file a resolution declaring me, along with Felipe Levy Gelle Jr., former Sec. Gen. of BAYAN-Negros and Fred Caña of KARAPATAN-Negros, as persona non grata.

These actions permitted the agent of the state to make us their legitimate target even up to this present administration. But these systematic campaigns of the State strengthened me more in advocating the interest of the people and letting their voices be heard. I still continued facilitating fact finding missions, in documenting cases of human rights violations here in Northern Negros Occidental where cases of human rights violations are rampant and alarming. I am currently a staff in Northern Negros Alliance of Human Rights Advocates (NNAHRA) a human rights organization here in Northern Negros Occidental and an affiliate of KARAPATAN.

I believe that this is the reason why I am being incarcerated, being put behind bars. I was implicated to the death of Lt. Archie Polenzo last March 07, 2010 at Sitio Aluyan, Cadiz City. My name was only added last July 31, 2012 after the AFP resurrected a witness under their care. The warrant of arrest served to me by more than 30 fully armed men, a composite of 62nd IB and Special Action Forces (SAF) under the command of Lt. Col. Efren Morados, last October 30, 2012 when I was about to load a tricycle in our terminal in Cadiz City Public Market.

The latter action of the AFP here in Negros is a clear manifestation of its desperation to meet the deadline of the last year of Phase 1 implementation of Aquino’s counter insurgency campaign Oplan Bayanihan. Already under the Oplan Bantay Laya days of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo civilians, and especially members and leaders of progressive organizations became the AFP’s main target and faced trumped-up charges to harass and intimidate them. Under the Aquino administration many of us activists here in Negros, have likewise been targeted in the course of an alarming resurgence of John Does arrests warrants.

But still I am fortunate enough even though I am currently languishing in jail, because my families and friends are not among those families who are still searching every corner for their missing loved ones who became a victim of enforced disappearance. And that my families and friends can still create new and wonderful memories with me for I don’t belong to thousands of victims of extra judicial killings. But I will be one with the families and friends of the victims of human rights violations in seeking for justice. My fellow inmate told me, you are helping others when you were outside the prison, but now you can’t help yourself because you are confined here. Yes it’s true, everything here is limited, controlled and you are bound to their policies. What happened to me and the many other newly incarcerated political activists is a warning for everybody, that if you will stand for your rights, talk about the plight of the farmers and workers, about human rights and human rights violations, you will face the same fate we are having now.

Still, one voice is a noise, but more voices is a voice of freedom, soon we realize, everybody are singing the song of the people, taking a stand to end political persecution and demanding justice to all victims of human rights violations. Time will come that no amount of fear can stop us in cultivating everybody’s freedom.

Sincerely,

Zara Alvarez