Home Blog Page 631

Palestinian prisoners in occupation prisons: current reality and national tasks by Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh

Samidoun is publishing the following article, received from inside the occupation prisons. This article, addressing the current situation and national tasks regarding Palestinian prisoners and their struggle for freedom, was written by Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, a prominent Palestinian leader who has been held in occupation prisons since 2006. He was kidnapped from the Palestinian Authority’s Jericho Prison in 2006 along with Ahmed Sa’adat and several other imprisoned Palestinians. There will be a Week of Action on October 17-24, demanding freedom for Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners. (Click here to download Arabic PDF).

Palestinian prisoners in occupation prisons: current reality and national tasks

By Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, imprisoned Palestinian leader (Download Arabic PDF)

ahed-smallLet us begin with the words of the great poet, Mahmoud Darwish: “Imprisonment is intensity. No one has spent a night in it, who did not train their throat in what may sound like songs. This is the method available to tame the isolation and maintain the dignity of pain.”

Thus, it is now and it will always be that Palestinian prisoners seek freedom and will sing for freedom, and work by all means to attain it. In order to achieve this goal, they work to preserve their dignity and their natural rights, despite the brutal organized Zionist campaign carried out constantly against the prisoners.  There is no road but the road of freedom.

There is no greater pain than living as a human under oppression and torture, denied the right to determine one’s own destiny.  This causes a feeling of helplessness and loss of human dignity. And when this oppression overwhelms your certainties, it seems that the world has abandoned you, even your language has abandoned you, and you are helpless and alone, facing the constant feeling of being unable to break through the thick, dense media and political fog and raise one’s voice into the world. Yet, the hope remains that the cause of the prisoner maintains its place on the Palestinian national agenda.

At times we resort to simplifying the complexities of our pain for media necessity. It may seem then that the torture is manageable, a small matter, and does not deserve attention; or you exaggerate, making it  easier for the enemy to attack your claims and prove you wrong, maintaining your isolation from the world and intensifying the siege upon you.

Wafa' Abu Ghoulmeh carrying Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh's poster in a demonstration
Wafa’ Abu Ghoulmeh carrying Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh’s poster in a demonstration

We are left with two options to choose between: Either you abandon being yourself and transform completely into the object of your imprisonment; or you become the subject and seek to re-define torture, its reasons and its objectives. It is not easy to be a researcher and the research subject at the same time, to be tortured and study torture, to be the witness at the scene and the analyst of abstract details simultaneously.

Repression and torture have become a complex catastrophe in order to meet the current discourse of human rights. It is the masked, modernized, hidden oppression. It does not have a clear visual representation. It is very hard to identify through one element or one measure. There are hundreds of small measures and thousands of details that are used as tools of daily oppression against prisoners. They are not visible except through examination of the comprehensive logics that stand behind this integrated system of oppression.

Torture and repression is different today from what we read about in the classic prisoner narratives like Julius Fukic’s Notes from the Gallows and novels of prison life like Tahar Ben Jalloun’s This Blinding Absence of Light, and what has been written historically in the literature of Palestinian prisoners.  Now, we face the torture of a different kind, much more severe than the previous in some ways. The enemy, with its  “civilization,” uses your  senses and your mind as tools of torture against you. It comes quietly and smoothly, it does not use a baton, scream, nor provoke an uproar, but all that is needed is to isolate you – and the torture lives with you inside the cell, inside your siege. Whatever you may have in terms of material things, whatever money you may have in the canteen, or material possessions theoretically available to you, can be removed from you in a moment’s time in isolation and raids.

What the enemy seeks to achieve by using this form of torture and arbitrary repression against prisoners is to reshape us again as human beings according to an “Israeli” vision, seeking to destroy our national awareness and consciousness, and in particular, the awareness of the vanguard of the resistance inside the prisons. This is done through the maintenance of control over the movement of prisoners as part of a whole package of repressive actions, including:

  • Separating or deepening the separation between prisoners inside a prison, isolating prisoners from one another, and maintaining a separation between imprisoned leaders and young activists;
  • Undermining the higher committee for prisoners and the committees of prisoners composed of representatives of the factions, and insisting on dealing only with individual prisoners as a tactic to demobilize prisoners;
  • Collective punishment against the prisoners when they take any step of struggle, even if it is symbolic. This includes preventing any collective action, such as the mourning of a death, a farewell to a prisoner, or a ceremony commemorating the anniversaries of the Palestinian factions or national days;
  • Transfer policies and frequent movements of prisoners have a serious impact on national organizing within the prisons. These movements aim to confuse the prisoners, undermine their stability and that of the organizational work inside prisons. The torment of trips called “Bosta”, which transfer prisoners between prisons and courts, is a severe form of torture;
  • Strengthening the relationship of the prison authority with the individual prisoner rather than the body of the prisoners’ movement, turning each prisoner into an individual case and refusing to address collective concerns of the prisoners’ movement.   Thus, for example, we see the results today in the individual focus of struggles, reflecting personal or individual demands and concerns and not the rights and status of prisoners as a collective;
  • Installation of glass barriers in the visiting rooms in order to separate prisoners and their families, even preventing them from touching and embracing;
  • The policy of strip searches and nighttime raids and inspections;
  • Isolating a number of prisoners in solitary confinement or collective isolation cells for many years; and
  • Controlling the quality of books, magazines and newspapers that enter the prisons, as well as restricting television stations; preventing secondary and post-secondary education, prohibiting therapies and other procedures that are too numerous to mention here.

As we can see, the body is no longer the target. The captive is not primarily physically punished, deprived or starved, but the soul, mind and consciousness are systematically targeted. This is the other means of torture that is difficult to explain in words. Associated with it are changes that have occurred in the reality and the role of the prisoners’ movement, from past to present, and the nature of the new challenges we face.

There are different tools, ideas and thoughts on how to confront this within the prisons. The unity of our vision as a prisoners’ movement is vital but, also, prisoners need to obtain the tools of knowledge and access the history of their movement and its sacrifices in order to elevate their steadfastness in confronting all of these measures.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh's daughter Rita
Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh’s daughter Rita

In many cases, prisoners today do not know the substantial history of the prisoners’ movement in the Palestinian national struggle, the central role it has played and how it has been looked to by liberation movements around the world. The prisoners today need access to and knowledge of their history, of which the repressive measures of the occupation are intended to deprive them.

What we see today is the inability of the Palestinian leadership to take a position at the right time. This is not meant as defamation or admonishment, but rather to affirm the weakness of our tools in confronting the process of the liquidation of national knowledge. We must examine our tools to modernize, revive and make our national knowledge and history accessible in order to confront the policy of repression. We must fight to maintain our movement’s organizational stability and not be subject to the whims of the occupier.

The reality of the prisoners’ movement, in all of its complexity, cannot be confronted only by prisoners alone. The task of exiting from this reality will also need, in addition to the steadfastness of the prisoners, a political role by all Palestinian forces , committees , bodies and organizations defending human rights, civil society, and unions, as well as the solidarity movement, on Arab and international, official and popular levels, and most importantly, an influential, active and strong mass movement in the streets, in the homeland of the Palestinian people and in the Diaspora.

We follow with great interest the political, media, popular, and official activities which have emerged in recent years around the issue of “the prisoners’ cause and their situation” and attempts to “internationalize their cause.” Therefore, it is important to distinguish between, on the one hand, the philosophy of ending “the file of the prisoners” as part of a process of political settlement and negotiations at the expense of our people, and, on the other, efforts to internationalize the prisoners’ struggle as a beacon of the Palestinian national liberation movement – and the road for the latter is through uprisings, demonstrations and popular revolution that will not end until all of our Palestinian rights are attained.

The continuation of the conflict and the struggle to regain our rights means that there will necessarily be prisons that will imprison activists and fighters. The most important reason for our existence within these prisons is the existence of our national cause, and that our liberation movement is still alive.

The struggle of the prisoners, and the struggle of the refugees of our people to achieve their rights must be in the forefront of the cause and the entire national liberation movement.

As we salute the diversity of the Palestinian, Arab, international and humanitarian efforts to highlight our suffering, we affirm the important historical fact that the Palestinian national struggle has always been an example and an inspiration for people and movements all over the world who seek freedom, and a source of impact for their struggles, which have assured the continued existence of the solidarity movement with our people.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh's mother marching in Abu Ali Mustafa commemoration in Palestine
Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh’s mother marching in Abu Ali Mustafa commemoration in Palestine

Accordingly, it is critical that the prisoners’ movement must be at the centre of attention of political movements and international human rights bodies. It must be on the agenda of the solidarity movement as a whole, with events and actions furthering a clear vision.

The media must address the struggle of prisoners from multiple angles. The tremendous role of the media in this regard is known to all, and goes without saying. We recommend working on the production of presentations and programs on the lives of prisoners. There are hundreds of issues, stories and rich themes that define the experience of struggle of Palestinian prisoners and their families. It is also important to connect with Palestinian, Arab and international universities which study the Palestinian history, cause and national movement on an academic level, and ensure that the history and struggles of the prisoners are reflected within these courses and programs as a crucial element of the Palestinian liberation movement.

This work, in order to be comprehensive, must also include addressing prisoners of the Palestinian cause held in prisons outside occupied Palestine, in Arab and foreign prisons. These prisoners include Carlos and Georges Ibrahim Abdallah in France, and many other activists and strugglers in prisons around the world. We also salute the Cuban prisoners held in US jails for seeking to defend their revolution, and have common cause with the prisoners of liberation movements around the world.

The issue of Palestinian prisoners must be visible on the international stage, and it should be a goal of struggle by Arab and international solidarity forces to put pressure on their countries’ governments, official institutions and popular organizations to take a stand in support of Palestinian prisoners, as prisoners of war, prisoners of conscience and prisoners of freedom.

Finally, we call for the continuation and expansion of popular participation in the Diaspora, organizing mass rallies in front of “Israeli” embassies around the world, with the participation of human rights organizations and concerned international organizations, demanding that the occupation authorities to free Palestinian prisoners. This is based on the recognition of Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war, prisoners of conscience, and prisoners of freedom, which is critically important due to its political importance for our struggle, to regain the path of our struggle as a national liberation movement, and to reassert the true nature and image of the Palestinian people’s struggle, sacrifices and national goals.

Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh is a member of the Central Committee of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the PFLP’s representative on the higher coordinating committee of the prisoners’ movement. He was kidnapped from Jericho prison in 2006 along with Ahmed Sa’adat and his comrades in an Israeli invasion after four years of imprisonment in Palestinian Authority prisons, and is serving a life sentence plus five years in occupation prisons. There will be a Week of Action on October 17-24, demanding freedom for Sa’adat and all Palestinian prisoners.

Re-arrested Palestinian prisoner Ibrahim Abu Hijleh sentenced to 28 months

ibrahimahOfer military court sentenced Ibrahim Abu Hijleh to a 28 month sentence on October 13. Abu Hijleh is one of the former prisoners who was released in the October 2011 prisoner exchange, and was soon re-arrested. The Israeli military prosecutors originally sought to re-impose his original sentence and imprison him for an additional 16 years.

Abu Hijleh’s circumstances were similar to those of Ayman Sharawneh and Samer Issawi, who conducted lengthy hunger strikes demanding their release after re-arrest on dubious grounds. In Abu Hijleh’s case, Palestinian lawyer Jawad Boulos announced that the 28-month agreement had been struck prior to Abu Hijleh launching a similar hunger strike.

Boulos said that the occupation did not produce any substantive charges or evidence against Abu Hijleh, claiming instead that he was “violating terms of the exchange deal” and noting that he is a member of the Political Bureau of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Prior to his release in 2011, Abu Hijleh served 8 years in occupation prisons. He will be released on October 13, 2014 and will serve his sentence from the date of June 15, 2012 when he was re-arrested.

Fathiyeh Khanfar released from house arrest after 9 months

fathiyehFathiyeh Khanfar, 58, a Palestinian mother from Jenin who had been held under house arrest in Rahat (inside Palestine ’48) since February, was finally released from house arrest on October 13, after a commitment to pay a 25,000 NIS bail (approximately $7,000 USD). She has already paid a 30,000 NIS fine (approximately $9,000 USD) at the time of her release to house arrest.

Her release from house arrest has been delayed repeatedly, with no reasons given. Fathiyeh was arrested while visiting her imprisoned son Rami, who is serving a 15 year sentence, and accused of attempting to smuggle him a mobile phone. She was held in Israeli detention for 18 days before paying the fine and being subject to house arrest. She will face a trial on October 20. Ragheb Abu Diak of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society noted that this release requires her to have a “sponsor” from within Palestine ’48 and to report in on Sundays and Wednesdays; he thanked the people who had hosted her during house arrest and who had agreed to serve as her sponsor.

Mona Qa’adan’s military trial postponed for ninth time

monaOn Tuesday, October 8, the occupation courts postponed the trial of Mona Qa’adan, Palestinian prisoner from Arraba, Jenin.

This is the ninth time that Qa’adan’s trial was postponed without a reason, said Fuad Khuffash of Ahrar Centre. He noted that Qa’adan, 43, suffers from difficult health and is denied family visits as the occupation has issued a banning order against any of the Qa’adan family visiting her.

She is the sister of former prisoner Tareq Qa’adan, who served three and a half years in occupation prison and engaged in a 92-day hunger strike. He was freed in May 2013.

Mona Qa’adan is a former prisoner who was released with other women prisoners in the October 2011 prisoner exchange. She was rearrested on November 12, 2012 from her home in Arraba. This is the fifth time Mona has been arrested; she has been held under administrative detention twice before in the past. She was charged with accusations from her previous arrest, namely working with the Baraa Society for Young Muslim Women.

Enaam Qanembou sentenced to 7 1/2 months for participating in demonstration

Enaam Qanembou, Palestinian activist from Jerusalem, was sentenced to 7 1/2 months in Israeli prison on October 9.

Qanembou, who is 44 and a member of the African community in Jerusalem, was arrested as she participated in a march on April 2, 2013 in Jerusalem following the death of Maysara Abuhamdieh, Palestinian prisoner, due to Israel medcal neglect. She was assaulted and beaten when detained and her hijab forcibly removed from her head.

She was charged with participating in an unlawful demonstration and obstructing the work of the Israeli police.

Ahmed Qatamesh administrative detention order confirmed by court; allegedly final detention order

qatameshThe Ofer military court upheld Palestinian academic and political detainee Ahmed Qatamesh’s administrative detention order on October 8, 2013. The order is in place for four months and Qatamesh is scheduled to be released in January 2014. He has been held in administrative detention since April 2011.

According to Jawad Boulos, legal director of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, the judge’s order affirmed that Qatamesh’s detention should end at the close of the present order, nd he should be transfered to a prison closer to his family, especially since he is suffering from medical problems.

The administrative detention order is supposed to be the final one against Qatamesh; however an earlier court decision affirmed that his detention order can be extended upon its expiration by the director of the Shin Bet (General Intelligence.)

Boulos noted that the military judge made critical comments on administrative detention in the ruling, stating that the British Mandate used administrative detention against Jews. Boulos said that the ruling, confirming Qatamesh’s extended detention, will be appealed.

Qatamesh, a Palestinian political writer and university lecturer, was taken from his home by Israeli forces on April 21, 2011. Prior to his current administrative detention, he spent a previous six years, from 1992 until 1998, in administrative detention.

Amnesty International, among many others, has called for his release.

Article by Ahmad’s daughter Haneen about his arrest: http://electronicintifada.net/content/when-israeli-soldiers-came-arrest-my-father/9901

Addameer profile of Ahmad Qatamesh:
http://www.addameer.org/etemplate.php?id=156

1998 interview with Ahmad Qatamesh:
http://www.freearabvoice.org/interviewSeniorAdministrativeDetaineeQatamesh.htm

In 1999, Ahmad Qatamesh was detained by the Palestinian Authority for joining a protest against corruption: http://www.phrmg.org/pressrelease/1999/04dec1999.htm

Dirar Abu Sisi no longer in isolation

dirar-abusisiAhrar Centre for Prisoners’ Studies said on October 10 that Dirar Abu Sisi, Palestinian prisoner kidnapped from the Ukraine, is no longer in solitary confinement in Eshel prison. Fuad Khuffash, director of Ahrar centre, said that Islam Wishahi of Jenin and Noor Hamdan of Bethlehem are now being held in the same cell with Abu Sisi.

This comes following Abu Sisi’s hunger strike demanding to be removed from solitary confinement and end his isolation.

U.S. National Lawyers Guild calls for freedom for Palestinian lawyer Anas Barghouti

anasb National Lawyers Guild President Azadeh Shahshahani sent letters calling for freedom for imprisoned Palestinian lawyer and human rights defender Anas Barghouti to Israeli and U.S. State Department officials on October 8, 2013.

The letters urge immediate release for Barghouti, 30, a Palestinian lawyer known for his representation of Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli and Palestinian Authority prisons.

Barghouti, who has been recognized as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, is a former employee of Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association. Addameer, a leading prisoner human rights NGO in Palestine, has been targeted for its work: several employees (Ayman Nasser and Samer Arbid) have been arrested and director Abdellatif Ghaith has been issued a travel ban.

The letters were sent in advance of Barghouti’s hearing in Ofer military court on October 9. Barghouti’s charges relate to his peaceful political activity and protest of occupation practices and policies. Barghouti’s next hearing will take place on October 22.

The National Lawyers Guild, founded in 1937, is the oldest and largest public interest/human rights bar organization in the United States. Its headquarters are in New York and it has chapters in every state.

Download Letters

NLG Letter to Acting Assistant Secretary of State A. Elizabeth Jones

NLG Letter to Brigadier General Dani Afroni

October 11: London Protest in solidarity with Hunger Striker Alaa Hammad + Jordanians in Israeli prisons

alaa-hammad.600pxInminds has issued the following call for protest:

Friday 11th October 4:00-6:00pm – Jordan International Bank
112-120 Brompton Road, London SW3 1JJ
Closest tube station : Knightsbridge
https://www.facebook.com/events/164484023751199/

After 100 days on hunger strike 4 of the 5 Jordanian hunger strikers suspended their strike after the Israeli prison service agreed to allow family visits for the first time. Some of them have not been allowed to see their families for 13 years.

Two months later however, Israels have reneged on the deal with not a single prisoner being allowed to their family. The father of Jordanian prisoner Abdullah Al-Barghouti is in critical condition in hospital with only one wish – to see his son before he dies. The Jordanian government for its part have been complicit with Israel in not pursuing the rights of its citizens. So the families have been left in limbo, their hope now rests with the sole remaining Jordanian hunger striker Alaa Hammad.

With Israel restricting information on Alaa Hammad. most of what we know is two months old. At the time Alaa Hammad had already lost around 30kg in weight whilst others had lost their ability to walk and were confined to wheelchairs. It was a torturous 100 days with the Israeli prison service putting immense pressure on the men to stop their strikes.

Mohammad Al-Rimawi, who suffers from a heart disorder where sometimes his heart beat is 125 and sometimes it drops to 50 beats per minute, was denied his medicine by the Israeli Prison Service until he agreed to stop his hunger strike. The day before he stopped – on his 99th day without food – on the eve of Eid, 5 soldiers shackled his hands and legs and threw him from his hospital bed to the ground and began savagely beating him with not a single Israeli doctor or nurse coming to his defense. The officers told Mohammad Al-Rimawi that they can treat him with violence and force with impunity because of lack of international attention on him and in particular Jordan who will not lift a finger to help him.

Two weeks before on 26th June 2013 the Israeli guards had brutally attacked Abdullah Al-Barghouti, again whilst he was in hospital – they dragged him from his hospital bed to the concrete floor and kicked him in the face leaving him bleeding. When a lawyer visited him on 7th August his condition remained critical, with problems with his liver, low blood pressure and constant migraines. Unable to walk, he is left shackled to his bed with threats of force feeding should he fall into a coma.

Under these conditions it was a miracle that the other prisoners managed 100 days of hunger strike. That in itself was their victory. The defeat was ours – the prisoners gave activists around the world 100 days to mobilize and pressure the Jordanian government in to action.. but we failed them. The hunger strikers confirmed this saying that lack of international attention was the primary reason why the hunger strikes ended.

Now the only Jordanian prisoner still on hunger strike is Ala’ Hammad and his condition is very precarious. On 5 August Hammad fainted and remained unconscious for five hours, ignored by the Israeli doctors. After finally receiving treatment Hammad regained consciousness.

Currently there are 26 Jordanian citizens that Israel has confirmed are in its prisons and another 21 missing which Israel has not accounted for. There are also unmarked ‘numbered graves’ of Jordanians who have died in prison..

One of the 26 is the child prisoner Mohammad Mahdi Saleh Suleiman. Now 17 years old he was been caged for over 6 months all ready, he is the youngest Jordanian in an Israeli prison. He has been severely tortured at Al Jalame – the notorious Israeli children’s dungeon. One of the missing 21 Jordanians is Laith Al-Kinani, he has been missing for 6 years. Mohammed Mahdi’s father and Laith’s parents have protested everyday for the last three months in front of the Jordanian Parliament and Royal Palace with no response from the government.

There have been over 90 demonstrations in Jordan by the families of the prisoners – elderly mothers standing in the burning sun, at several protests each day! Even a 22km solidarity march from one city to another.. All of this falling on deaf ears with the Jordanian government shamefully abandoning the prisoners and according to some accounts even pressuring the prisoners to give up their hunger strike.

Terrified by the iron will of the families and friends of the hunger strikers to relentlessly carry on protesting everyday and the support and respect they garner in wider society and the resulting momentum building up to end the states total submission to every whim of the Zionist enemy, the Jordanian security services have come down very hard on the protesting families. Family members have been threatened with arrest if they persist to champion their loved ones in Israeli dungeons. They dragged away a 16 year old boy, a nephew of one of the hunger strikes, to prison and locked him up for 3 days – his crime was to hand out a leaflet about his uncles’ imprisonment in an Israeli prison. On another occasion, wearing military camouflage uniforms that have never seen service on the enemy front line, the security forces with batons drawn, attacked a peaceful protest with plain cloths security service personnel cowardly targeting hunger striker Muneer Meree’s brother, assaulting him before disappearing back behind the uniform lines.

Its with this backdrop of intimidation, that we made contact with activists in Jordan. The families and campaigners in Jordan courageously, at great personal risk to themselves, asked us to help internationalise the campaign by protesting in solidarity with them in London. This will be the fifth London protest for the Jordanian prisoners in Israeli prisons. On 11th October we will protest outside the Jordan International Bank in Knightsbridge, which is partly owned by the Jordanian government.

We will protest in solidarity with Ala’ Hammad’s continued hunger strike, and for the child prisoner Mohammad Mehdi Saleh Suleiman and for the missing son Laith Al-Kinani and for the release of all the Palestinian prisoners. Lets not fail them, please join us.

Live updates during protest

We will, inshAllah, be tweeting live (hash tag #ShameOnJordan ) 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.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Inmindscom-Boycott-Israel/365007213584914

https://twitter.com/InmindsCom

Anas Barghouthi’s Trial Postponed until October 22

According to the head of the legal unit at Addameer, Mahmoud Hassan, the trial for the imprisoned Palestinian lawyer Anas Barghouthi was postponed until 22 October 2013 in Ofer Military Court. The October 8 hearing was attended by representatives from the European Union and Human Rights Watch, his family, lawyers and colleagues from Addameer.

Barghouthi was held for the entire day at Ofer Military Court, and he was not presented to the judge until after 4:30 PM, when the decision to postpone his trial was made.

Anas Barghouti has been recognized as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International. Send a letter to support Anas Barghouti below: