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Palestinians in Europe Conference launches solidarity campaign

April 28, Copenhagen – At the Tenth Palestinians in Europe conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, the Secretariat of the Conference of Palestinians in Europe, the Palestinian Return Centre in London, the Palestinian Forum in Denmark and the UFree Network, the European Network for the defense of the rights of Palestinian prisoners, launched a new campaign in solidarity with Palestinian prisoners.

The organizations announced a campaign of European and international institutions to collect signatures worldwide in support of the hunger striking prisoners and their demands. Mohammed Hamdan of UFree said that the signed petitions will be submitted to the European Parliament and Members of the European Union, as part of ongoing international work in solidarity with the prisoners.

The annual conference will address a number of issues including Palestinian refugees’ right to return, Palestinian prisoners, Jerusalem, and struggling against settlements. The conference was held in past years in various European cities, including London 2003, Berlin 2004, Vienna 2005, Malmo, 2006, Rotterdam 2007, Copenhagen 2008, Milan 2009, Berlin 2010, and Wuppertal, 2011.

 

Abuse and torture of women in Israeli occupation prisons

Russia Today ran an important story on April 27, 2012, detailing Palestinian prisoners’ experience with torture, oppression, and humiliation in Israeli occupation prisons, looking at the causes of the hunger strike.

The RT article details women’s experiences, particularly women’s experience with abuse, torture and poor health care during pregnancy and childbirth. This reflects a paradigmatic example of the deep impacts of mass imprisonment on Palestinian health. Sami Kishawi takes up these themes, and in particular the gendered structures of oppression used against Palestinian women in detention and occupation prisons, in an important article at Sixteen Minutes to Palestine.

The Russia Today article follows:

Surviving Israeli jail: Torture, humiliation and giving birth by Nadezhda Kevorkova

Thousands of Palestinians are on hunger strike in Israeli prisons – for over a week, they have been protesting against indefinite detention without charge and alleged ill-treatment. Some of those who got out, told RT about their life behind bars.

Human rights groups in the West Bank say 2,000 Palestinians have been on hunger strike for more than a week, and others are ready to join next week. At the moment there are an estimated 5,000 Palestinians in Israeli jails. Each year, 700-800 minors are arrested, and in all, 20 per cent of Palestinians have experienced Israeli prison.

Yahya as-Sinwar was arrested in 1988 and sentenced to 462 years in prison. He served 23 years and is now 50. He is one of the founders of Hamas and the Islamic University of Gaza.

Israel accused him of organizing and leading Hamas internal security unit MAJD and killing Palestinian traitors who spied for Israel. As-Sinwar says that they had no choice, because these people put the resistance movement in jeopardy.

Speaking about his years spent in an Israeli jail, as-Sinwar says different kinds of torture were routine practice.

“They kept me awake for 10 days in a row. Whenever I dozed off, they would pour ice-cold or boiling water on me – depending on their personal preferences. They would tie my arms behind my back, throw me on the floor, a prison guard would sit on my stomach or chest, apply pressure to the groin – the pain was excruciating,” Yahya as-Sinwar recollects.

According to as-Sinwar, the Shabak [Israeli General Security Service] handles torture during the investigation, and the Shabas [Israeli Prison Service] tortures sentenced prisoners. “They have two departments – Nahshon and Metzada – which are responsible for the total psychological destruction of a person. These methods are not used anywhere else in the world.”

He says Israeli prison guards could tie a prisoner to a child’s chair and make him balance on it for days; put a person in an ice box (after this the person’s limbs are usually amputated).

“They have this form of torture when they tie a prisoner’s hands and leave him hanging for 24 hours. Or they suffocate the prisoner, watch him turn blue, let him breathe for a bit, and then repeat this several times,” as-Sinwar told RT. “When they tortured my close friend, they beat him on the back of the head with tightly rolled newspapers. A person has terrible headaches afterwards, becomes hysterical, all the internal organs get damaged.”

According to as-Sinwar, these kinds of torture leave no marks and even a very keen doctor would find it very difficult to discover any signs of abuse.

“They study the prisoners and come up with something especially humiliating for this particular convict. For a Palestinian it is easier to die than suffer humiliation – they know it very well and humiliate our people in a very cruel way.”

As-Sinwar says the prisoners could not get proper medical treatment in custody: “After long hours of waiting in pain, all you get is not a doctor but a nurse without any experience who gives you one cure for all conditions – a painkiller. They don’t care if a prisoner lives or suffers terrible pain.”

As-Sinwar believes hunger strikes are the only way for Palestinian prisoners to express their protest.

“Prisoners in Israel get 10 per cent of the amount of food served in the prisons of other countries. After many days of hunger strikes convicts look like the walking dead. Prison guards have to carry them to interrogation sessions on stretchers, and throw them on the stone floor in their prison cells.”

 

Cells space of 1.2 by 0.8 m

All the fences in the neighborhood around Ayman Hatem Afif al-Shakhshir’s house in Gaza are covered with citizens’ wishes of health and well-being to him.  He spent 19 years in an Israeli prison out of the 550-year term he was sentenced to, and was released in exchange for Corporal Shalit. Ayman Hatem Afif al-Shakhshir stems from a well-known Palestinian family. He was arrested at the age of 28. His three daughters grew up, and two of them got married and had children without him around.

Ayman was the head of one of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas. He was arrested on charges of taking part in assaults on Israeli military personnel deployed in Gaza.

“None of the detainees had a single visitor for five years since 2006. My father died without seeing me once in the last 10 years of his life. It was only through the Red Cross that I occasionally received letters – it was the only way to keep in touch with the family, while my children were growing up without me,” says Ayman.

He says his cell was not fit to hold people.

“It was a tiny cell measuring 1.2 by 0.8 m where one person could not lie down, or stand up or stretch his legs, it had no furniture, and food was given once a day, and it’s so bad you couldn’t eat it. I know three prisoners who spent 25 years each in such cells.”

“Israeli propaganda is advertising their prisons to the world as if they were five-star hotels – but this is all lies. And what they say about prisoners having the opportunity to complete their education in Israeli schools is also a lie.” 

Ayman himself got his Bachelor’s degree in Social Defense through the remote education program from Gaza University. “Now prisoners are denied any education opportunities whatsoever. A whole system to break the prisoners’ will is in place, they get denied everything a person needs to feel connected with the outside world,” he says.

Ayman is convinced that meaningless imprisonment terms of many times a lifetime are given with the sole purpose of breaking the prisoner’s will.

“They want a person to sit in this stone well and know that this is where he is to die. But they are hugely mistaken. Each Palestinian has a hope for help from God, and there is no taking this away.”


Yahya as-Sinwar with his wife (Photo: Nadezhda Kevorkova, RT)

Giving birth with hands and feet tied

Samar Isbeh was arrested when she was 22 following a student protest. She was sentenced to 2.5-year term in prison. She is now 28, and lives in Gaza, while her own and her husband’s families live in the West Bank.

“I was arrested three months after my wedding. I was the head of the student council at the Islamic University. We organized a protest against occupation. I was arrested in my husband’s home in Tulkarm. Two days later my husband was arrested too and sentenced to 9 months in prison, although they had nothing to charge him with whatsoever,”says Samar.


Samar Isbeh (Photo: Nadezhda Kevorkova, RT)

She has now been deported to the Gaza Strip and is denied entry to Tulkarm, so she can see neither her husband nor her children.

“I was in my fist weeks of pregnancy when I got arrested. I went through every kind of torture. They tortured me in an underground cell for 66 days. They made me balance on a children’s chair, they kept me in a freezing cold disciplinary cell,” says Samar.

“My hands and feet were tied when I was going through labor. They C-sectioned me, not because I required it but simply out of hatred. They let me have the child but treated him as a prisoner, too. They gave us no milk or diapers, or only expired ones. I was kept in terrible conditions during and after I gave birth. I wasn’t allowed to go out for fresh air. The only medicine they ever gave me and my child for any condition was Paracetamol.” 

 

Pregnant on Hunger Strike

Patima Zakka is 42. She was released from an Israeli prison in exchange for a video tape featuring Gilad Shalit during his captivity. The video was passed by Shalit’s captors just before Patima was due to stand trial, and she was released one day short of the hearing. That is why she never received a sentence.


Patima Zakka with her son (Photo: Nadezhda Kevorkova, RT)

Patima had been charged with conspiring to suicide-bomb a bus full of Israeli military personnel. The prosecution had demanded a 12-year prison sentence for the mother of eight.

“I did not know I was pregnant before I got arrested,” says Patima. “A nurse found that out while I was in detention. My eight children were left without me at home. No one had instructed me to blow up anybody. It is true that they [Israelis] had killed my brother and a number of relatives – but that is the case with most people in Palestine.”

Patima says she was put through the full sequence of interrogation techniques.

“They tortured me while I was pregnant,” she says. “They kept me in an ice-cold cell, relocating me from one cell to another time and again. They wanted me to have a miscarriage. This mistreatment got me to the point of bleeding.”

This prompted Patima to go on hunger strike. She lasted 21 days.

“They did not leave me a choice,” she explains. “Allah be praised, I did not have a miscarriage. My son was born in jail. His name is Yusef.”

“The obstetrician yelled at me and treated me like I was an animal,” says Patima. “She refused to put me on an IV, and she denied me anesthesia. She was calling down terrible curses upon me. But you know, a punishment ensued for her right away: she hit her head real bad right in my cell. Allah helped me. She told me, “You are a terrorist, and your child will be a terrorist.” But I delivered my beautiful Yusef. And the real terrorists are those medics in Israeli prisons.” 

Nadezhda Kevorkova, RT

Prisoners’ hunger strike enters 12th day – Take Action Now! 60 Days of Hunger for Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh

12 days into the open-ended Hunger Strike for Dignity, Palestinian political prisoners are persisting in their strike. Over 1300 prisoners launched an open-ended strike on April 17, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day, joined by 2300 more prisoners on one-day hunger strikes. Since April 17, hundreds of additional Palestinian prisoners have joined the open-ended strike, and hundreds more have announced plans to join on May 1. These prisoners have explicitly called for international solidarity – act now to support their struggle! Send a letter to Israeli authorities demanding full implementation of the prisoners’ demands.

Tweet Now: Demand Israeli occupation implement demands of #PalHunger Strikers #PalestinianPrisoners http://samidoun.ca/?p=859

The hunger strike has several key demands, including:

  •  An end to the policy of solitary confinement and isolation which has been used to deprive Palestinian prisoners of their rights for more than a decade;
  • An end to administrative detention;
  •  To allow the families of prisoners from the Gaza Strip to visit prisoners. This right has been denied to all families for more than 6 years;
  • An improvement in the living conditions of prisoners and an end to the ‘Shalit’ law, which outlaws newspapers, learning materials and many TV channels; and
  •  An end to the the policies of humiliation which are suffered by prisoners and their families such as strip searches, nightly raids, and collective punishment.

Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike have been hit hard with retaliation from Israel Prison Services, including beatings, transferring from one prison to another, confiscation of salt (an act that could have severe health consequences for hunger strikers), denial of family and lawyer visits, and isolation and solitary confinement of hunger strikers.  Ahmad Sa’adat, Palestinian national leader, General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and isolated political prisoner, has already lost 6 kg, even as he reports that prisoners’ morale is high. Palestinians have protested across Palestine, while protesters at Ofer prison were attacked by occupation soldiers.

As the massive hunger strike continues, eight prisoners who have been on lengthier hunger strikes face health crises, including Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, who have now been on hunger strike for over sixty days. Addameer writes as part of an extensive update:

Seven of these prisoners have been transferred to Ramleh prison medical center. Thaer Halahleh and Bilal Diab are on their 57thday of hunger strike today. Despite their rapidly deteriorating medical condition, both of their appeals against their administrative detention orders were rejected by an Israeli military judge on 23 April. Yesterday, 24 April, Hassan Safadi’s petition to the Israeli High Court against his administrative detention was rejected. He is on his 52nd day of hunger strike. Administrative detainees Omar Abu Shalal and Jaafar Azzedine are on their 50th and 35th days of hunger strike respectively. Also now in Ramleh prison medical center are Mohammad Taj, on his 39th day of hunger strike demanding to be treated as a prison of war, and Mahmoud Sarsak, on his 34th day of hunger strike in protest of being held under Israel’s Unlawful Combatants Law. Lastly, Abdullah Barghouti, held in isolation in Rimon prison, is on his 14th day of hunger strike. Addameer reiterates its grave concern that these hunger strikers are not receiving adequate healthcare in the IPS medical center and that independent doctors are still being denied visits to them

Palestinian prisoners have put their bodies on the line for dignity, justice and freedom, and they need international support. Palestinian Prisoners’ Day saw a call supported by over eighty organizations, with events taking place in Toronto, Seville, Pisa, Madrid, Vancouver (see videos and photos), Seattle (see photos), Chicago, Glasgow (see photos), Dublin, Bradford, Den Haag, Brussels (see video), Manchester (see photos) and many more. The Scottish Trades Union Congress passed a historic resolution supporting Palestine and Palestinian political prisoners. More action is needed urgently now! 

TAKE ACTION! 

1. Sign a letter demanding the Israeli state implement all of the demands of hunger striking Palestinian prisoners.  Tell the Israeli Prison Services that the world is watching! Click here to sign.

2. Join a protest or demonstration for Palestinian prisoners. Major marches will take place in Edinburgh on April 28, at 12 noon, assembling at Charlotte Square; and in London on April 28 at 4 pm, across from 10 Downing Street. Organizing an event, action or forum on Palestinian prisoners on your city or campus? Use this form to contact us and we will post the event widely. If you need suggestions, materials or speakers for your event, please contact us at samidoun@samidoun.ca.

3. Contact your government officials and demand an end to international silence and complicity with the repression of Palestinian political prisoners. In Canada, Call the office of John Baird, Foreign Minister, and demand an end to Canadian support for Israel and justice for Palestinian prisoners, at : 613-990-7720; Email: bairdj@parl.gc.ca. In the US, call the office of Jeffrey Feltman, Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs (1.202.647.7209). Demand that Jeffrey Feltman bring this issue urgently to his counterparts in Israel.

4. Write to the International Committee of the Red Cross and demand they uphold their duties to protect the rights of Palestinian political prisoners. Click here to sign a one-minute letter and make your voice heard!

5. Distribute materials, including factsheets and videos, telling the story of Palestinian prisoners. Click here for videos and here for factsheets.


 

Hunger strike leaders transferred to Asqelan prison

Ma’an reported that the Israeli Prison Service transferred a number of members of the Leadership Committee of the Hunger Strikers to Asqelan prison on Friday, April 17, including Mahmoud Shureitah, Abdullah Abu Houleh, and Nasser Abu Hamid. It was reported that Muhannad Shreim would also be transferred to Asqelan from Ramon prison.

1000 additional prisoners are expected to strike on May 1 if the occupation prison authorities do not accede to prisoners’ demands to end administrative detention, end isolation, allow family visits, educational rights, and ending other forms of repression against prisoners.

Protest with prisoners at Ofer attacked by occupation soldiers, multiple injuries

The occupation military forces attacked a demonstration on Thursday, April 26 outside Ofer prison near Ramallah, calling for freedom for Palestinian prisoners and solidarity with hunger strikers, in which dozens were overcome by tear gas.

The Democratic Pole at Bir Zeit University called for the protest, which was also attended by family members and supporters of the prisoners, including the family of hunger striker Thaer Halahleh, who has been on hunger strike for 60 days protesting his administrative detention, Wafa Abu Ghoulmeh, the wife of isolated Palestinian hunger striker and member of the hunger strike leadership committee Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh and Abla Sa’adat, the wife of imprisoned Palestinian leader Ahmad Sa’adat.

The occupation soldiers fired rubber-coated metal bullets and tear gas canisters directly at demonstrators, wounding four and producing dozens of cases of severe asphyxia.

The Bir Zeit students marched to Ofer prison to coincide with 150 prisoners joining the open-ended hunger strike inside the prison. Abdullah Abu Rahma, a leader of the popular resistance in Bil’in was himself arrested by occupation forces after insisting on his right to remain and protest in solidarity with those behind the bars of the occupation’s prisons.

Ayman Karajeh of Addameer reported that this was another example of the escalation of Israeli occupation attacks against the prisoners since the beginning of the strike, including transferring prisoners from one prison to another, cutting off water and electricity, imposing fines, transferring leaders into isolation or disappearance. Karajeh reported that family and lawyer visits had been barred to many hunger strikers, as well as the withdrawal of salt from prisoners’ cells, and the refusal of the Prison Service to provide health care.

He emphasized that the withdrawal of salt is extremely serious, as salt supports the maintenance of life while on hunger strike, saying that this is contrary to international law and even the Israeli Prison Service’s own regulations in an attempt to force prisoners to break the strike.

Hunger strikers subjected to retaliation in Israeli prisons

The Palestine Information Centre reported that the Israeli prison service (IPS) has organized summary trials for dozens of Palestinian prisoners as a penal measure for going on hunger strike, prisoners told the PIC on Thursday.

They said that many prisoners were punished by visit deprivation, fines, and canteen denial in those trials, which took place over the past few days.

They pointed out that the IPS imposed an undeclared curfew on the prisoners and completely isolated them from the outside world, as they were deprived of visitation and the daily stroll outside their cells.

For its part, the Ahrar center for human rights said that the IPS moved 165 prisoners from Megiddo jail to Gilboa and Shatta prisons including 140 affiliated with Hamas and 25 with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

It said that the prisoners had gone on hunger strike on 22 April and were jammed into small cells, each nine inmates crammed in a room made for six.

Bilal Diab: Hunger Strike until Victory or Martyrdom

IMEMC reported that Palestinian political detainee, Bilal Thiab, sent a letter from his hospital bed at the Ramla Israeli Prison hospital that lacks adequate supplies and equipment, stating that he is persistent and determined to continue his hunger-strike until death or until he is released.

“I swear to almighty God that I will continue this battle, the battle of dignity, freedom and pride until I break my shackles with will and faith, it is either freedom or martyrdom”, Thiab said, “I am sending you this message from my cell at the prison hospital, while intense pain and weakness invade my body, not from hunger but from the cruelty of my jailor”.

“Despite the tiredness and the pain, I receive my patience and determination from those who stand in solidarity with me, and I am telling you now, the time has come to break this savage occupation”, He added, “Detainees Khader Adnan and Hana’ Ash-Shalabi who won their battle of empty bowels paved the road for me, to walk the path of pride and dignity, and we will all walk this path until victory and freedom”.

On Friday, Thiab entered his sixtieth day of ongoing hunger-strike demanding to be released. Several hunger-striking detainees were moved to hospital but refused to break their strike. Thiab is from Kufr Ra’ey village, near the northern West Bank city of Jenin.

Also on Friday detainee, Tha’er Halahla, entered his 59th day of hunger-strike at the Ramla Prison Hospital; prison doctors warned Thursday that his body is losing its immune system and his organs might be failing.

There are more than 4,600 Arab political prisoners held by Israel according to latest figures published by the Ad-Dameer Prisoner Support Association on April 17 – Palestinian Prisoners Day.

The vast majority are from the West Bank, while approximately 475 are from the Gaza Strip, and 360 are from occupied East Jerusalem and the 1948 territories.
Israel is still holding captive six women, 183 children, and 27 democratically-elected Palestinian legislators, including Marwan Barghouthi who was sentenced to more than five life-terms, legislator Jamal Terawi, who was sentenced to 30 years, and Ahmad Sa’adat who was sentenced to 30 years.

In addition, 24 legislators are currently being held under Administrative Detention orders without charges.

120 Palestinian detainees have been imprisoned since before the first Oslo peace agreement was signed between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization in 1993; 23 of them have been imprisoned for more than 25 years.

Ahmad Sa’adat: Striking prisoners have high morale

Palestinian hunger striking prisoner and national leader Ahmad Sa’adat, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,  said in a letter smuggled from isolation that “all prisoners in the occupation jails have high morale despite their loss of weight and are determined to continue their hunger strike, confident of victory and the importance of their demands and their cause. He called for the masses of the Palestinian people, the Arab nation and all progressive forces, individuals, and institutions around the world to do their utmost to support the prisoners’ struggle.”

Sa’adat’s letter said that the demands of the prisoners are for their legitimate rights, chief among them abolition of solitary confinement as a cruel form of torture, utterly unjustified and contrary to international conventions against torture, ending the policy of preventing family visits to prisoners from Gaza, as well as the need to expand family visits to all relatives.

Sa’adat noted that the occupation forces had confiscated all electrical appliances, additional clothing and access to the canteen, as well as repeatedly inspecting prisoners’ cells, with the goals of provoking exhausted prisoners and putting pressure on thm to end the strike.

He noted that the strike involves all Palestinian factions, parties and political forces and reflected true national unity on the ground.

Hunger striking prisoners in Mejiddo prison beaten

Palestinian prisoners reported that fellow prisoners in Mejiddo prison have been beaten violently by Israeli occupation prison guards in retaliation for their hunger strike, including Hassan Fatafteh, Thabet Nassar, and Fadah Zogheibi of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. This was reported by the Palestinian Prisoners Committee. This is another example of the ongoing repression against hunger striking prisoners, who have been placed in isolation and solitary confinment and repeatedly transferred.

This report comes just 2 days after another prisoner, Palestinian detainee Mohammed Ermaila survived an assassination attempt at the hands of Israeli prison guards in Megiddo jail, the Palestinian prisoner’s association said.

It said that Ermaila, 40, was suffering from severe pain in the head and blurred vision in addition to dizziness and fainting after the assault on him inside his cell in Megiddo before transferring him to Ofer jail.

A lawyer for the association met Ermaila, who hails from Jenin, in his Ofer jail and quoted him as saying that the Israeli guards woke him up and beat him on his head and tried to suffocate him and only left him when he lost consciousness as they believed he was dead.

He said that Ermaila was carried to a hospital in Afula where he remained unconscious for 48 hours. He was returned to jail as soon as he regained consciousness. A CT scan of his head showed that his skull was broken in the assault. Ermaila has been in administrative custody since October last year.