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Factsheet and Banners: Resources on Palestinian Prisoners’ Hunger Strikes

Four Palestinian prisoners are currently on hunger strike: Samer Issawi, Jafar Ezzedine, Tareq Qa’adan and Yousef Shaaban Yassin.

Many groups and organizations are planning actions and banner drops, including those organized by the Free Samer Issawi campaign, to publicize the cases of these hunger strikes as their situations reach a further crisis point. The following resources are presented for your use:

Prisoners-Sheet

Factsheet on Palestinian prisoners (single-sided, 8.5 x 11). Download PDF

Banner on Samer Issawi case (72″ x 24″) Download PDF

Banner #2 on Samer Issawi case (72″ x 24″) Download PDF

We hope these resources are useful for your campaign work! For more information about these cases, please see the following links:

Ezzedine and Qa’adan call for action at 54 days of hunger strike

Addameer: Concern Mounts for Palestinian Hunger strikers

“I will not withdraw from the battle for freedom”: The Story of Samer Issawi by Malaka Mohammed

Jerusalemite faces decades in prison after visiting nearby village (Samer Issawi) by Maath Musleh, the Electronic Intifada

Ezzedine and Qa’adan call for action at 54 days of hunger strike

ezzedine-qaadanJafar Ezzedine and Tareq Qa’adan, two of the three prisoners in administrative detention who have now been on hunger strike for 54 days (the third is fellow administrative detainee Yousef Shaaban Yassin), all of whom were arrested following the ceasefire in Gaza, on November 22, 2012, issued a statement today reaffirming their dedication to continue their strike until they achieve their goals: their freedom, the end of administrative detention, and the release of all hunger striking prisoners. They stated that they are boycotting medicines and medical tests, calling for broad support for their struggle.

They said that they are determined to drink only water and boycott all kinds of medicines and supplements, even medical tests, and not deal with doctors and nurses, struggling to affirm and build upon the noble goals and historic national achievements of the prisoners’ movement.

They called for an end to Arab and international silence toward the issue of prisoners and their suffering, appealing to international institutions and Palestinian institutions that work on human rights and the prisoners’ case, imploring them to take the needed action to stand with the prisoners whose lives were on the line.

Tareq Qa’adan stated that he was unsurprised by the decision of the High Court to refuse to hear his appeal on Wednesday, January 16. He had told the court, “I dedicate this hunger strike to my sick child, and to my freedom. I have been detained arbitrarily several months after I was released, so I will not end hunger strike unless I secure my freedom.” He said “I expected this result, objectively and realistically, we did not rely on those who are known to be treacherous for fairness or justice. They specialize in humiliation and assault on the freedoms of our people.”

Jafar Ezzedine, 41, launched his last hunger strike on March 21, 2012, when he was previously arrested and held without charge or trial under administrative detention. He participated in the mass hunger strike of April-May 2012, and was released in July 2012, only to be re-arrested on November 22 in the mass arrest raid. He is once again in administrative detention, imprisoned without charge or trial. He, like Qa’adan, is from Arraba, near Jenin.

Tareq Qa’adan, 40, also joined the mass hunger strike in April-May 2012, during his last arrest. He served 15 months in prison for participating in an event at the Arab American University in Jenin, released also in July 2012, and re-arrested in the mass roundup of November 22. He has been held in administrative detention since that time, without charge or trial.

Yousef Shaaban Yassin, 29, from Aneen, also near Jenin, was last arrested in February 2012 and served eight months in prison. He was also rounded up once again – shortly after his release – on November 22 and has been held in administrative detention without charge or trial since that time.

Addameer reports that Yousef Yassin is are being held in isolation in a cell at Ramleh prison clinic, with a guard placed outside their door 24 hours a day, and is subject to daily inspections. All three are also being denied family visits. They have also had most of the belongings, such as clothes, cigarettes and electronics confiscated. As a result of their continued detention and treatment by the IPS all three have refused any medical treatment or tests since 21 December 2012.

The Electronic Intifada reported:

The prisoners — Jafar Azzadine, Tarek Qa’adan and Yousef Yassin — stated:

Our open hunger strike is to protest the Intelligence and their policies, our goal is not just to gain our individual freedom but to end the practice of administrative detention, the pointed sword on the neck of the Palestinians.This is a battle in the fight for freedom and dignity despite all the continuing pain and torments that impair us, and despite all the pressure that we endure and is practiced against us by the Israeli Prison Service and Shabak to break our will from our steadfastness. However, the cowardly enemy will never undermine our steadfastness and our determination to achieve justice and freedom for all our imprisoned and hunger striking brothers, and the oppressed and those who were tortured by the fiery tormentors for decades. We call on the sons of our people to stand by us and to show responsibility for our fellow prisoners, especially Samer Issawi and Ayman Sharawna who are nearing death. We also call on all local and international institutions and those that are specifically for human rights to intensify their efforts and to raise our voices high in international forums to expose the barbaric occupation and its practices.

Prisoners struggle against medical neglect in occupation jails

prison-chainsThe Palestinian Prisoners’ Society reported on several cases of medical neglect by Israeli prison authorities on Sunday, January 20.

Abdel Nasser Shawish of Tubas, serving a life sentence in Shatta prison, lost his ability to walk as a result of medical negligence, the Prisoners’ society reported. Shawish suffered a sharp pain in one of his feet years ago and relied heavily on the other foot. A few days ago, he fell into the bath, which caused the loss of movement in his other leg. Despite several requests from the prisoners’ representatives, the prison administration refuses to transfer him to Afula hospital. The prisoners sharing a cell with him serve him and provide assistance with his daily needs. They reported that despite their requests for help they have received no response, speaking to a lawyer from the Prisoners’ Society who visited the prison. He has received only painkillers since his injury.

Ahmed Shinawi of Nablus has been suffering from severe pain since he fell from his upper bunk on December 20, 2012. Despite numerous visits by the prison physician, he was told he was only bruised and given painkillers. Finally, on January 16, 2013, he was transferred to the prison clinic after suffering severe pain in the rainy weather. There, he was told he had a broken hand and was moved to the hospital, where he was told his hand had already developed complications from the untreated fracture. He suffered for this time because he did not receive the necessary treatment. He is also sentenced to life impriisonment in Shatta. He is filing a complaint for damages against the prison doctor.

Mohammed Jaber Youssef from Gaza has also filed a lawsuit against the prison administration for medical neglect. He suffered from heart disease for years, and was identified as needing surgery in early 2011. He was arrested in 1990 and serving a 25 year sentence on chargest of resisting occupation. The prison administration has refused to move him from Eshel prison to the Ramle prison clinic to conduct tests and set a date for the operation, with the prison doctor claiming that he is in good health with no need for the operation. In October 2011, he was finally examined, and asked why he had not received the surgical procedure. The doctor informed him that the Eshel prison doctor was wrong when he told him that he was stable and did not need the operation. He was transferred finally on January 7 to Assaf Harofeh hospital to follow up on the treatment, only to find that his condition has worsened severely and now open-heart surgery is mandatory following the lengthy delay. He is still awaiting a new date for surgery. He is suing for the medical negligence, seeking damages and his release in order to obtain his operation abroad, having already served nearly 23 years of his 25 year sentence.

More information:

http://www.maannews.net/arb/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=557386
http://www.maannews.net/arb/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=557631
http://www.maannews.net/arb/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=557618

Samer Issawi transferred to Assaf Harofeh hospital with slow heart rate

samerissawiSamer Issawi, Palestinian prisoner who has been engaged in a hunger strike for 179 days, was transferred to Assaf Harofeh hospital from Ramleh prison on Saturday, January 19, 2013, reported Shirin Issawi, Samer’s sister.

Shirin Issawi said that her brother had been transferred because of a sharp fall in his heart rate, and reported that her brother is suffering from severe pain throughout his body, especially in his abdomen and kidneys. She noted that this has increased since he was assaulted by occupation forces while in the Magistrate’s Court, when he suffered a broken rib.

Samer Issawi has been on an open and partial hunger strike for 179 days. He is 33 years old, from Issawiya village near Jerusalem. Freed from his 30-year sentence in the prisoner exchange agreement of October 2011 after serving nearly 10 years, he was re-arrested on July 7, 2012, in an area within the Jerusalem municipal boundaries, and accused of violating the terms of his release by leaving Jerusalem. <a href=”http://electronicintifada.net/content/jerusalemite-faces-decades-prison-after-visiting-nearby-village/11596″>This article by Ma’ath Musleh for Electronic Intifada</a> provides a full overview of Issawi’s case.

On January 16, the Magistrate’s Court in Jerusalem declined to hear Issawi’s case, postponing a ruling on his case until February 5, 2013, when he will face the Ofer military court.

Former El-Bireh mayor held in administrative detention

jamal-tawilMa’an reported that a former Palestinian mayor detained by Israeli forces this week will be held in administrative detention for six months, a prisoners group said Sunday, January 20, 2013.

Sheikh Jamal Tawil, who had held the mayoral post in al-Bireh, a neighborhood of Ramallah in the central West Bank, was detained on Tuesday.

The Solidarity Foundation for Human Rights said Ofer military court gave the former mayor six months in detention without charge.

Bushra Tawil, his daughter, told the Radio Bethlehem 2000 that a large number of Israeli soldiers broke into the home and detained the family in the living room; the soldiers then asked for the ID card of Jamal, reported IMEMC.

She added that one security officer asked her father about “how he is doing”, and that her father responded; “how can anything good happen while you are breaking into our home this violent way, and dozens of your soldiers are ripping through our property like savages”.

The officer said that Jamal is being kidnapped for “incitement against the state”. The army also confiscated Jamal’s mobile phone and his personal computer.

Bushra said that the army prevented her father from taking any extra clothes with him amidst the current extremely cold weather conditions especially following the recent snow storm that impacted the Palestinian territories.

Jamal Tawil was repeatedly kidnapped and imprisoned by Israel, and spent more than ten years in Israeli prisons, detention and interrogation centers. His wife, Montaha, and his daughter, Bushra, are also former political prisoners.As of December, 178 Palestinians were being held without charge in Israeli jails, including seven elected members of the Palestinian parliament, according to prisoners rights group Addameer.

Palestinian mother and child arrested while entering their land in Hebron Hills

reema-qamarOn Saturday January 19, Israeli soldiers kidnapped a Palestinian woman and her 18-month old baby as well as 17 others in a 24 hour period in the Um Al Arayes area, east of Yatta, in the south Hebron Hills, as they attempted to reach the Palestinians’ land, protesting its confiscation by the Metzpeh Yair settlement outpost.

The Popular Struggle Coordination Committee reported that Israeli border police arrested today 10 Palestinians and five Israelis, including three women and a child in Um Al Arayes, after dozens of Palestinian residents, accompanied by Israeli activists, arrived at their lands.

Israeli soldiers immediately declared the area a closed military zone and pushed the activists off the land. The nineteen arrestees included four Palestinian women, as well as a mother, Reema Oleyyan Awad and her 18 months old daughter Qamar, three minors and an elderly man in his 80s.

The last few months have seen an escalation in the Israeli military’s policy to expel Palestinians and control access to their private lands in the South Hebron Hills. This is contrary to the Israeli High Court and Military Legal Advisor’s claim that they will facilitate easy access by Palestinian landowners to their lands, said the PSCC.

A video of the arrest was published on YouTube showing the army violently attacking and kidnapping a Palestinian father while his children gathered around him trying to prevent the army from kidnapping their father.

The video shows the soldiers forcing the man onto the ground, on his back, before two soldiers pinned him and placed the cuff on his hands.

IMEMC reported that the scared children tried to reach their father, crying “my father, my father”, but the soldiers kept pushing them away, in an attempt to force them to leave the scene.

A female soldier then shouted at Reema, yelling at her “come over here”, soldiers then tried to push Reema away while she was still carrying her child.

The panicking mother then started shouting “move away from me”, “my boy, move away from my boy”.

The soldiers took Reema and Qamar to their jeep before moving them to the Israeli Police station in Keryat Arba’ illegal settlement in Hebron, Hafeth Al-Hreimy, a local peace activist told the Radio Bethlehem 2000.

Nine of the other arrested Palestinians were identified as Ismail Awad, 32, his wife and brother Saed, sisters Bushra, 22, and Shurouq Jabareen, 25, as well as Jameel Awad, 54, Bassam Jabareen 45, Khalil Awad Zein 65, Yousef Awad, in his 50s.

Palestinian prisoners announce plans to escalate solidarity with hunger strikers

Prisoners declare steps of solidarity with the strikers start Tuesday
20/01/2013

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pal-prisPalestinian prisoners in Israeli jails declared on January 20, 2013 that they will escalate solidarity actions in support of their fellow prisoners on hunger strike beginning on Tuesday.

The prisoners called on human rights organizations, Palestinian organizations, and international solidarity groups to elevate the solidarity movement with the strikers, noting the declining health of hunger striker Samer Issawi.

The prisoners said that they will begin to return meals as a warning to the prison administration and demand action to meet the strikers’ demands, denouncing the ongoing delays in addressing the strikers’ demands at all levels of the occupation system, from the Prison Services to the courts to the security services. The prisoners noted that any harm that befalls the prisoners will have major and dangerous consequences and that the prisoners’ movement will not allow prisoners to be killed by disregard for their health and their demands.

The prisoners demanded an end to unjust military laws, and in particular the use of administrative detention and the re-arrest of former prisoners, including the reimposition of their former sentences.

Four hunger strikers remain at the present time: Tareq Qaadan, Jafar Ezzedine, and Yousef Shaaban Yassin, all held under administrative detention, arrested on November 22, 2012 in a mass arrest following the ceasefire in Gaza; they have been on hunger strike since November 27, 2012 – and Samer Issawi, a re-arrested former prisoner, on hunger strike since August 1, 2012.

Palestinian freedom fighter Jihad Obeidi leaves occupation prison after 25 years

jihad-obeidiPalestinian freedom fighter and prisoner Jihad al-Obeidi was released after serving his full sentence of 25 years in Israeli prisons on January 20, 2013; his sentence was spent shuffled between various occupation prisons, including the Moskobiya, Bir Saba, Hasharon, Eshel and Ramla. His family, originally displaced from Lifta in 1948, is preparing to welcome him in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of Jerusalem.

Waed Ayyash, his niece, said that the family’s joy at his return cannot be expressed after 25 years of absence, and that the family is planning to welcome him with flags, banners and a large reception tent. She recalled her own, and her family’s, experience traveling to visit her uncle in many Israeli prisons, saying they witnessed only a small portion of his suffering and that of his fellow prisoners.

Jihad Obeidi is the uncle of the martyr Milad Said Ayyash, who was 17 when he was killed on May 14, 2011 by a settler’s gun as settlers and the occupationa army attacked a Palestinian youth protest in Silwan commemorating the 63rd anniversary of the Nakba and calling for the right of return.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network extends its warmest congratulations to Jihad Obeidi and his family and awaits the day when all Palestinian prisoners – and the Palestinian people – will be free of the occupation and its jails.

Video of his release celebration:

Call for Action for Samer Issawi

samerissawiStatement and Call to Action

Al-Awda, The Palestine Right To Return Coalition and
The Free Samer Issawi Campaign

For Immediate Release

FREE SAMER ISSAWI

Al-Awda, The Palestine Right To Return Coalition and the Free Samer Issawi Campaign calls on all people of conscience across the globe to stand with Palestinian political prisoner and hunger striker Samer Issawi in his fight for freedom and justice. He has been on hunger strike for over 178 days now protesting the injustice of his detention and that of all the other Palestinian political prisoners!

Like other Palestinian political prisoners Samer Issawi’s indefinite detention without charges or trial is inhumane and an Israeli facade to continue to persecute the Palestinian people and those who dare to stand against Israel’s brutal occupation of Palestine and its crimes against the Palestinian people!

The world cannot and must not continue to let the Zionist state get away with these barbaric injustices against Palestinian political prisoners and the Palestinian people at large. We demand the release of Samer Issawi from prison immediately. He is currently dying before us and before the eyes of the world!

CALL TO ACTION

We call on all justice seeking people around the world to stand with Samer Issawi. His life is literally on the line while the mass media is neglecting his freedom call. We are calling on people all over to plan to drop banners at all public locations this Monday January 21, 2013, which happens to be Dr. Martin Luther King Day, and on subsequent days until his release! We call on protests to be organized everywhere. We need to save Samer’s life and bring his human struggle to the mainstream above the media blackout!

“My detention is unjust and illegal, just like the Palestinian occupation. My demands are legitimate and just thus I will not withdraw from the battle for freedom, waiting for either victory and freedom-or martyrdom.”

Samer always sends his gratitude for those supporting him around the world!

Addameer: Concern Mounts for Palestinian Hunger strikers

addameerlogoAddameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association issued the following statement on January 15, highlighting the urgent situations of Palestinian hunger strikers:

Ramallah, 15 January 2012 – Addameer is deeply concerned for the lives of four Palestinian hunger strikers as their health continues to deteriorate.

Addameer lawyer Fares Ziad recently visited three hunger strikers Jafar Azzidine, Yousef Yassin and Tarek Qa’adan, who are all on their 49th day of hunger strike. All three were arrested on 22 November 2012 and were placed in 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. All three began their hunger strike on 28 November 2012 and are only drinking water.
Fares reported that Yousef Yassin is are being held in isolation in a cell at Ramleh prison clinic, with a guard placed outside their door 24 hours a day, and is subject to daily inspections. All three are also being denied family visits. They have also had most of the belongings, such as clothes, cigarettes and electronics confiscated. As a result of their continued detention and treatment by the IPS all three have refused any medical treatment or tests since 21 December 2012.
As they are only drinking water their health has deteriorated rapidly. Jafar, Yousef and Tarek all have difficulty seeing well, are dizzy and constantly have headaches. They also have pain in their joints and are suffering from general fatigue.
Samer al-Issawi has been on partial hunger strike for 167 days.
Ayman Sharawna suspended his hunger strike on 3 January 2013 after 180 days.
Addameer calls on the international community to pressure the Israeli Prison Service for the immediate release of the hunger striking prisoners and ensure that Israel upholds international human rights and humanitarian law.
ACT NOW!
*Write to the Israeli government, military and legal authorities and demand the release of the prisoners on hunger strike.
  • 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
  • Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Ehud Barak
    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