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Hassan Safadi scheduled for Monday release

The Palestinian Prisoners Society announced that Monday, October 29 is the scheduled release date for long term hunger striker and Palestinian political prisoner Hassan Safadi of Nablus. Safadi launched a 73-day hunger strike to demand his freedom from administrative detention. Despite the agreement in the May 15, 2012 prisoners’ agreement with the Israeli prison services that the long term hunger strikers on administrative detention would not have their sentences renewed, Safadi’s sentence was renewed – and he resumed his strike for an additional 95 days. His strike ended after an Israeli concession to release him on October 29 and not renew his administrative detention or place him under administrative detention again through re-arrest. The Prisoners’ Society invited all to welcome Hassan Safadi back to his home.

 

Hamdouna: On Eid, remember the hunger striking prisoners

Rafaat Hamdouna, liberated former prisoner and director of the Centre for Prisoners Studies called upon Palestinian national forces to mark the occasion of Eid al-Adha remembering the prisoners on hunger strike. The coming of Eid is for prisoner Ayman Sharawna the occasion of his 117th day on hunger strike, and for Samer Issawi, coincides with his 87th day of hunger strike.

He called on the National and Islamic forces, all human rights organizations, and all Palestinian political forces to dedicate themselves seriously and responsibly with this issue to find solutions and ensure the victory of these heroic prisoners in their battle of empty stomachs. Hamdouna added that the lives of these prisoners are in grave danger and this Eid marks a sensitive and critical moment in their battle and must be met with serious effort equal to their sacrifice at the popular and official level. He called upon the broadcast and print media to publicize their strugge, saying that one of the most important ways to support the prisoners in their defiance of the Israeli prison management and its arrogant policies toward them is to publicize the issue of suffering families of prisoners and the striking prisoners on the occasion of the holiday.

Hamdouna called upon Palestinian, Arab and international television and radio, newspapers, magazines and websites, and Facebook and Twitter users, to salute the holiday by saluting the prisoners struggling on this day.

London protest Oct. 28 in solidarity with imprisoned Palestinian MPs

Alert – Protest in Solidarity with imprisoned Palestinian MPs
http://www.inminds.com/article.php?id=10569

Join us on Sunday 28th October 2012 at 2pm outside Parliament to protest in solidarity with imprisoned Palestinian MPs and Ministers.

Targeting Palestinian lawmakers

Israel has always targeted Palestinian democracy understanding that the Palestinian people, unlike their installed stooges, will never capitulate to the occupation of their land and demand their right of return. So when Hamas won the elections in 2006 with 70 MPs in the 132 seat parliament, Israel reacted with mass arrests and imprisonment of Palestinian MPs. As recently as 2009 nearly a third of the Palestinian Parliament was languishing in Israeli prisons and today there are still 13 imprisoned Palestinian MPs and Israel is busy abducting more.

At dawn on 15th July 2012 Israeli soldiers smashed in to the home of Palestinian MP Ahmad Abdul-Aziz Mubarak in Ramallah and kidnapped him. They ransacked his family home, shackling and blindfolding him before taking him to an unknown destination. He is being held in an Israeli dungeon indefinitely, without any charge or trail. This is not the first time Ahmad Mubarak has been kidnapped by Israeli soldiers, the last time was in 2006 when they kept him caged for 4 years. Ahmad Mubarak is just one of the MPs who’s plight we will highlight outside the British Parliament. Come and join us to voice your support for imprisoned Palestinian parliamentarians.

* we would especially like to thank the Ahrar Center for the Study of prisoners and human rights in Palestine (www.ahrar.ps), without their assistance in research, this protest could not have been possible.

Hunger StrikersAyman Sharawna & Samer Al-Issawi

We will also be protesting in solidarity with Palestinian hunger strikers. On 28th October Ayman Sharawna will be on his 120th day without food whilst Samer Al-Issawi will be on his 89 days of hunger strike.

Latest news indicates that Ayman Sharawna has of today (24 October) stopped drinking water. A lawyer of the Palestinian Prisoner Society (PPS) managed to visit Ayman Sharawna  yesterday (23 October) at the Ramla Prison Clinic; Ayman told him that he refuses to be exiled in exchange for his release, and will continue his strike “until freedom or death”.

He added that the Prison Administration keeps moving him from one room to another, and completely isolated him from the rest of the detainees, in an attempt to prevent him from getting the needed rest, and to deprive him from communicating with other detainees.

“Officers of the Prison Administration held several meetings with me, and proposed deporting me or placing me under Administrative Detention without trial”, Sharawna stated, “I will never accept to be deported or imprisoned without charges, I will continue my strike”.

Sharawna’s health is seriously deteriorating, he repeatedly loses consciousness, and faces repeated sharp migraines, headaches, and is gradually losing his memory.

Human Rights Defender Ayman Nasser abducted to torture den

On Sunday we will also be demanding the immediate release of Ayman Nasser, a human rights defender working for Addameer the Palestinian Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association. Father of four, Ayman Nasser was abducted from his home last week when Israeli soldiers raided his home with dogs. He is currently being interrogated at the notorious Moskobiyyeh detention centre infamous for torture. He has not been charged with anything other than defending the rights of Palestinian prisoners.
Facebook – Live Feed

Inminds has finally joined social media with a simple facebook page:

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

The idea is that we will use it for ‘live feeds’ during protests and other events – quick & dirty photos taken from a mobile phone uploaded during the protest for up to date feedback. This will not replace the detailed photo reports which we usually published a week after the event. We ask people to please share the feeds – tweet, fb, etc. as they come in during the protest, thank you.

 

Mohammed Kana’aneh announces open hunger strike

Mohammed Kana’aneh (Abu Assad) of the Abnaa el-Balad Movement in Occupied Palestine ’48 launched a hunger strike in Shatta prison on Tuesday, October 23, demanding his human rights and an end to the poor treatment of prisoners by the prison administration. Kana’aneh is refusing all food and drink, except for water. He stated that the hunger strike is the only weapon Palestinian prisoners possess to struggle for their rights.

He is currently imprisoned for 15 months for organizing in the occupied Syrian Golan Heights to comemmorate the Naksah on June 5, 2011. He was held in Tzalmon Prison since April; in October he was transferred to Shata prison, where he is being housed with criminal Israeli prisoners rather than with Palestinian political prisoners. Kana’aneh said that the prison administration deals with him as a ‘security prisoner’ when denying him the rights accorded to criminal prisoners, but houses him with criminal prisoners rather than other ‘security prisoners’.

Kana’aneh has served many years in Israeli jails and sees this treatment as deliberate retaliation for his political activity. The Abna’a el-Balad Movement stated that “we recognize that the inhumane practices and restrictions against Comrade Mohammed Kana’aneh come as part of the practice of political persecution by state institutions against him and members of the Abnaa el-Balad movement in particular, and against all of the political leaders and activists of the masses of our people. We demand an end to these practices and the achievement of Kana’aneh’s just and basic demands, and we call upon the leadership of our people to take the necessary steps to struggle to achieve those demands.”

 

PIC: Detainee Anas Hashlamoun launches hunger strike in PA’s jails

Reported by the Palestine Information Centre:

AL-KHALIL, (PIC)– A political prisoner announced entering a hunger strike in the jails of PA security services, which in turn continued for the fortieth day detaining a Hamas leader in Ramallah.

Anas Hashlamoun, political prisoner held in the prisons of the General Intelligence in al-Khalil, announced launching a hunger strike in protest at the continuation of his detention, despite the release of three resolutions to free him.

For its part, the Preventive Security Service has been extending for three times respectively the detention of Hamas leader and liberated captive Faraj Rummana, his family said.

Rummana’s family added that its son who had been arrested since 40 days is still under interrogation and is being held in solitary confinement in the interrogation section.

The preventive apparatus had arrested Rummana with hundreds of others – on 18 September – during the extensive arrest campaign waged by the security services against Hamas activists and cadres in all the cities of the occupied West Bank.

Meanwhile, the Magistrate’s Court, in the city of Nablus, extended for 15 additional days the detention of seven political prisoners affiliated with the Islamic Resistance Movement, Hamas, in the occupied West Bank, and postponed ruling on the files of four detained students from Al-Najah National University.

National Lawyers Guild calls for release of Ayman Nasser

The National Lawyers Guild International Committee and Free Palestine Subcommittee sent two letters, to the US State Department and Israeli officials, calling for the immediate release of imprisoned Palestinian human rights defender Ayman Nasser.
Nasser is a staff researcher at the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association.

On October 15, Nasser was arrested and has been held in detention since that time. He has been questioned about his human rights advocacy with Addameer, and with the Handala Centre, an arts and cultural centre in his hometown of Saffa.

This is not the first incident of persecution of Addameer staff and board members; Abdullatif Ghaith, the chair of the board of Addameer, is currently subject to a travel ban, and Addameer lawyers are regularly denied visits with their clients, Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Human Rights Watch has also criticized Nasser’s detention and the harassment/persecution of Addameer (http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/10/26/israel-end-arbitrary-restrictions-rights-group-officials) , and there is an action alert for individuals to sign on against Nasser’s detention at Samidoun (http://samidoun.ca/2012/10/action-alert-free-human-rights-defender-ayman-nasser/).

Addameer has a profile of Nasser and updates at their site,http://addameer.org/etemplate.php?id=526. Addameer’s profile of Nasser was sent to the recipients with the letters.

The National Lawyers Guild is the US’ oldest and largest human rights/public interest bar association, with chapters in every state.

Letter to Israeli officials re Ayman Nasser, Palestinian human rights defender (PDF download)

Letter to US State Dept re Ayman Nasser, Palestinian Human Rights defender (PDF download)

 

Human Rights Watch tells Israel to end arbitrary restrictions on Addameer staff and board

The following statement was released by Human Rights Watch on October 26, calling upon Israel to end its harassment and persecution of Addameer staff and board, including the travel ban on Abdullatif Ghaith and the arbitrary detention of Ayman Nasser. To take action on Nasser’s case, click here:

(Jerusalem) – Israeli authorities should stop harassing members of a Palestinian prisoners’ rights group. Israeli authorities should immediately lift a travel ban on the group’s chairman and release a recently arrested researcher, or present evidence justifying the measures against them.

In August and September 2012, Israeli authorities issued orders prohibiting Abdullatif Ghaith, chairman of the board of the group, Addameer, from traveling abroad as well as from East Jerusalem, where he lives, to the rest of the West Bank, where the organization’s offices are located. On October 15, Israeli forces raided the West Bank home of Ayman Nasser, a researcher for the group, arrested him and questioned him about radio interviews he gave about prisoners and his membership in a youth organization. At military court hearings on October 18 and 24, military judges extended his detention on the basis of evidence he was not allowed to see. The Israeli military has not charged either man with wrongdoing or allowed them to see any evidence against them.

“It’s deeply ironic that Israel is arbitrarily detaining a researcher who has documented arbitrary detention, and violating the rights of the head of a human rights group,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Israel should provide valid justifications for its measures against Nasser and Ghaith or drop those measures immediately.”

Ghaith, 71, co-founded Addameer and served on its board for 20 years, the group said in a statement. On August 3, Ghaith responded to a summons to appear at the “Moskobiyya” detention facility in Jerusalem. Israeli security officials there handed him an order signed by the Interior Minister, Eli Yishai, prohibiting his travel abroad for six months because he was an unspecified “state security” threat.

On September 15, the Israeli military issued an order signed by the head of its central command, Maj. Gen. Nitzan Alon, barring Ghaith from entering the rest of the West Bank from East Jerusalem for six months for unspecified “security” reasons. The military has barred Ghaith under previous orders from entering the West Bank since October 2011. According to Addameer, Israeli authorities have repeatedly detained Ghaith without charge or trial under “administrative detention” orders, most recently from June 2004 to January 2005.

Israeli forces raided the home of Nasser, 42, in the village of Saffa, near Ramallah, at 1 a.m. on October 15, 2012, his wife, Um Ameen, told Human Rights Watch:

There were at least five military vehicles and many soldiers. They came and banged on the door and were screaming, “IDF, open up!” My husband jumped out of bed and was at the door by the third knock, still in his bedclothes. They rushed in with many dogs and told Ayman he was wanted for security reasons. I had hardly finished getting dressed when two of the soldiers entered my room and guarded me with their guns. I told them my children were sleeping, and they kept quiet; there was no violence or cursing, but I was very scared the dogs would attack the children if they woke up. They let Ayman have five minutes to say good-bye to me. He told me to call his lawyer. I have no idea why he was arrested. Our youngest son woke up in the middle of the night asking where his father was.

A spokesperson at Addameer said that Israeli forces had confiscated computers and Nasser’s mobile phone during the arrest.

Mahmoud Hassan, who also works for Addameer, met with Nasser in the Jerusalem detention facility on the afternoon of October 16. Hassan told Human Rights Watch that Nasser said Israeli security personnel had questioned him about an interview he had given earlier in 2012 to Ajyal radio, a Palestinian station, about Palestinian prisoners who had gone on hunger strike to protest administrative detention and ill-treatment. Hassan and other Addameer staff were not aware of which interview the questioning focused on, but said that Nasser participated in three 45-minute radio programs that Addameer produced for Ajyal in 2012, and that the radio station frequently called Nasser for phone interviews.

The interrogators also “said they knew he was meeting with the families of prisoners, and they questioned him about a youth center in his village, called Handala, that’s registered with the Palestinian Authority,” Hassan said. “But [the interrogators] didn’t tell him what he did that they think is a violation.”

Addameer said Nasser is the chairman of the Handala center, which holds educational activities and artistic events in Saffa. Nasser said in the military court appearance on October 18 that the center’s activities are transparent. He also told the court that he had been interrogated for several hours each day on October 15 and 16, and for 10 hours on October 17, and that at times the officials had blindfolded him and shackled his hands behind his back during questioning. He said that he was suffering pain during the interrogations due to back problems, and that the pain was exacerbated because officials at the detention facility had not allowed him to receive three of the five medicines he normally takes daily, including medication for his back pain. In a second military court hearing on October 24, a military judge renewed his detention for another nine days.

The Israeli military previously sentenced Nasser to six years in prison, from February 1991 to October 1997. Despite inquiries, Human Rights Watch was unable to obtain information about the charges from more than two decades ago.

According to international human rights standards, everyone has the basic right to leave any country. Any restrictions on such travel should be issued only in exceptional circumstances, for reasons stated clearly and publicly, and be open to legal challenge, including the evidence supporting it, in a timely and open process. Any restriction must be proportional – the least restrictive in terms of scope and time – and imposed for a legitimate reason. The refusal of the Israeli authorities to make public any evidence to substantiate the reasons for the travel ban against Ghaith means that he has been denied a meaningful opportunity to challenge the ban in court, Human Rights Watch said.

Israel’s arrest, detention, and interrogation of Nasser violate his due process rights, Human Rights Watch said. Israel’s international legal obligations require it to inform those arrested at the time of arrest of the reasons, to promptly inform them of any charges against them, and promptly to bring them before a judge. In criminal cases, authorities are required to provide a fair and public trial in which the defendant may challenge any witnesses against him or her.

Sharawna begins water strike at 115 days on hunger strike

Reported by Saed Bannoura of IMEMC http://www.imemc.org/article/64451

Palestinian detainee, Ayman Ash-Sharawna, has been on hunger strike for 115 days, and stopped drinking water on Wednesday, escalating his strike as Israel still refuses to release him, and due to pressures practiced against him by the Prison Administration.

A lawyer of the Palestinian Prisoner Society (PPS) managed to visit Ash-Sharawna on Tuesday at the Ramla Prison Clinic; the detainee told him that he refuses to be exiled in exchange for his release, and will continue his strike “until freedom or death”.

He added that the Prison Administration keeps moving him from one room to another, and completely isolated him from the rest of the detainees, in an attempt to prevent him from getting the needed rest, and to deprive him from communicating with other detainees.

“Officers of the Prison Administration held several meetings with me, and proposed deporting me or placing me under Administrative Detention without trial”, Sharawna stated, “I will never accept to be deported or imprisoned without charges, I will continue my strike”.

It is worth mentioning that Sharawna repeatedly loses consciousness, and faces repeated sharp migraines, headaches, and is gradually losing his memory.

The PPS said that the health situation of Sharawna is very serious, and is seriously deteriorating. It voiced an appeal to the International Community to intervene and secure his release.

Ayman Nasser, Addameer researcher, has detention period extended

Addameer issued the following report on October 24 on the ongoing detention of Ayman Nasser:

Ramallah, 24 October 2012 – Addameer researcher and human rights defender Ayman Nasser today has had his period of extension extended for a further nine days. Ayman, who was arrested on 15 October 2012, has so far spent 10 days in interrogation.

Earlier today Ayman was brought before the Israeli military court in Moskobiyyeh detention center, Jerusalem, where the judge ruled that based on ‘secret evidence’ Ayman’s detention will continue.

The prosecution requested that the detention period be extended for 13 days, although following the intervention of Addameer lawyer Mahmoud Hassan, this was reduced to nine days.

Addameer is extremely concerned for Ayman’s health as he continues to be denied the appropriate medication. As previously reported Ayman suffers from a number of health issues including inflammation in his colon and back pain. Until his arrest he was receiving constant medical treatment by specialized doctors.

The main focus of the interrogation continues to be his civic activities relating to his role in advocating for the rights of Palestinian political prisoners and his involvement in the Handala Center, which is an educational, artistic center in Ayman’s village Saffa and of which Ayman is the Chairperson.

The lengths of the interrogation sessions have varied from between three and ten hours and are causing Ayman serious back pain due to the denial of his medication. When not in interrogation Ayman is being held in isolation.

For more information on Ayman’s case and to view his profile please visit Addameer.

Click here to take action and send a letter to Israeli officials demanding Ayman’s release!

Samer al-Barq ends hunger strike

Addameer has reported on October 23 that Samer al-Barq has stopped his third hunger strike. He continues to demand his immediate release to Egypt, as earlier agreed. Addameer will update soon with additional news.