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Karameh hunger strike launched for April 17, Prisoners’ Day, throughout Israeli jails

The following statement has been issued by Palestinian Prisoners in Israeli jails. Prisoners from a number of different political currents have organised the ‘Karameh’ (Dignity) Hunger Strike. Protest action will be stepped up on a daily basis until the 17th of April (Palestinian Prisoners Day) when an indefinate hunger strike will be launched.

The statement has been translated from Arabic, and appeared on the Ajnad news website:

The various political currents in the prisoners movement who are held in the zionist jails have reached an agreement to escalate the ongoing hunger strikes in order to achieve the human rights which Israel have denied prisoners for many long years.

Prisoners will begin an indefinate hunger strike this month. This means they will refuse all forms of food and liquid (with the exception of water) until their demands are met. The hunger strike has been initiated because this is the the the only tool that the Palestinian prisoners have to achieve their rights. We must pressurise the occupying government and force it to negotiate on the demands the prisoners movement has been striving to achieve. The hunger strike is supported by the prisoners movement as a whole, with agreement amongst all member parties.

The demands of the Karameh Hunger Strike are:

1. 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.

2. 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.

3. An improvement in the living conditions of prisoners and an end to the ‘Shalit’ law, which outlaws newspapers, learning materials and many TV channels.

4. 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.

The aim of the hunger strike is to shift local, regional and international public opinion. It aims to put pressure on the occupying government and hold it responsible for the health of all prisoners.

Palestinian Prisoners are calling on free people across the world to to do everything in their power to support them in their struggle for rights.

بيــان صادر عن الأسرى الفلسطينين في سجون العـدو الصهيوني ,, مطالب الأسرى في إضراب الكرامة القادمبيان صادر عن الأسرى في سجون الاحتلال الصهيوني، يوضحون فيه مطالبهم العادلة، التي يخوضون من أجلها خطوات احتجاجية، تتصاعد لتصل في يوم الأسير الفلسطيني 17/4، إلى خطوة الإضراب المفتوح عن الطعام، وهذا نص البيان:

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

على مدار ثلاث سنوات مضت، سعت الحركة الأسيرة في سجون الاحتلال الصهيوني، بكافة أطيافها السياسية على التواصل والتنسيق فيما بينها لبلورة خطوة الإضراب المفتوح عن الطعام، لنيل الحقوق الإنسانية البديهية، التي تنكرت لها حكومة الاحتلال على مدى سنوات طويلة مضت، إلى أن تكللت هذه الجهود بالتوافق على خوض إضراب مفتوح عن الطعام، في منتصف شهر نيسان من هذا العام .الإضراب المفتوح الذي سيخوضه الأسرى الفلسطينيون: هو إضراب أقرته الحركة الأسيرة، بكافة أطيافها السياسية، يقضي بالامتناع عن الطعام والشراب، عدا الماء حتى تتحقق كافة المطالب، التي انطلق من أجلها الإضراب. والإضراب هو الوسيلة الوحيدة التي يمتلكها الأسرى الفلسطينيون لنيل حقوقهم، والضغط على حكومة الاحتلال ودفعها للتفاوض مع الوفد، الذي تشكله الحركة الأسيرة لهذا الشأن والرضوخ لمطالبه.المطالب الرئيسية من إضراب الكرامة “نيسان”:

1.إغلاق ملف العزل الانفرادي، الذي يقضي بموجبه أسرى، مضى على عزلهم أكثر من عشر سنوات متتالية، في زنازين انفرادية تفتقر لمقومات الحياة البشرية والنفسية والمادية

.2. السماح لأهالي أسرى قطاع غزة بزيارة أبنائهم في السجون، الذين حرموا منه منذ ست سنوات متتالية. فمنذ ذلك الحين لم تقم ولا زيارة واحدة لأي أسير غزي

.3. تحسين الوضع المعيشي في السجون، الذي تداعى بقرارات سياسية وقوانين جائرة، مثل ما يسمى “بقانون شاليط” الذي حرم الأسرى من أبسط الحقوق، كالتعليم ومتابعة الإعلام من خلال سحب العديد من القنوات الفضائية وكل الصحف المكتوبة.

4. وضع حد لسياسة الإهانة والإذلال التي تقوم بها مصلحة السجون بحق الأسرى وذويهم، من خلال التفتيش المهين العاري، والعقوبات الجماعية، والاقتحامات الليلية

.معادلة الإضراب:يرتكز الإضراب بشكل مباشر على تحريك رأي عام محلي وعربي ودولي، يضغط على حكومة الاحتلال، ويهدد مصالحها وعلاقاتها السياسية، ويحملها كامل المسؤولية عن حياة الأسرى الفلسطينيين المضربين عن الطعام، إضافة إلى إلقاء الكرة في الملعب الحكومة الصهيونية، وإجبارها على تحمل عواقب تضييقها على الأسرى وسلبها حقوقهم.نداء بالأمل:على ضوء المعادلة، سابقة الذكر، يتوجه الأسرى الفلسطينيون إلى كافة أحرار العالم، من دعاة ومفكرين ومثقفين وفعاليات وصحافة وإعلام وأحزاب، لبذل الجهود والعمل على مساندة ونصرة الأسرى، في إضرابهم المفتوح عن الطعام . الأسرى الفلسطينيين في سجون الاحتلال

Reham Alhelsi:Palestinian Prisoners on Hunger Strike: The Struggle for Freedom, for Justice, for Palestine Continues

The following important piece was published and written by Reham Alhelsi at A Voice from Palestine:

In messages to the Palestinian people and the free people of the world, Palestinian administrative detainee Ja’far Izz Iddin called for more support and solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners, particularly with administrative detainees, until they are all free. Determined to continue his open-ended hunger strike, Izz Iddin said that he will not be broken or defeated and that it is either victory and freedom or martyrdom: “Our detention is unjust and illegal just like the occupation is illegal, thus I will not retract from the battle for freedom until administrative detention is abolished … Because our demands are legitimate and just… Because administrative detention is void and prohibited by international humanitarian law, we are determined to resist it and to reject it… it is either victory and freedom or martyrdom”.[1] Today, Ja’far Izz Iddin is on his 23rd day of open-ended hunger strike in protest of his detention without charge or trial. When on 21.03.2012 his house was raided and he was kidnapped blindfolded and handcuffed, the Israeli occupation army officer who dragged him from the midst of his family told Izz Iddin:”you organize solidarity activities with Khader Adnan, and today we will send you to jail to join him in solidarity”[2]. Izz Iddin is only one of at least 13 Palestinian prisoners and detainees currently on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli dungeons. The latest to join the struggle for freedom is isolated prisoner Abdallah Barghouthi who started his hunger strike today to protest the policy of isolation. According to Palestinian prisoners’ sites, the following prisoners/detainees are on hunger strike:

1 Bilal Thiab: 43 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Bilal Thiab © google images

On 01.03.2012, administrative detainee Bilal Thiab, 27 years old from Kufr Ra’i, Jenin, started an open-ended hunger strike in solidarity with Hana’ Ash-Shalabi and against administrative detention. He has been in administrative detention since August 2011. After preventing him from meeting his lawyer, Thiab stopped drinking water as a second phase of his hunger strike. His health is deteriorating and he is currently in Ramleh prison “hospital” and can only move on a wheelchair. Thiab was detained several times, spending a total of 7 years in Israeli jails, and one year in administrative detention, which has been recently renewed.

2 Tha’ir Halahleh: 43 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.  

Thair Halhleh © google imagesThair Halhleh © google images

On 01.03.2012, administrative detainee Tha’ir Halahleh, 33 years old from Kharas, Hebron, started an open-ended hunger strike in solidarity with Hana’ Ash-Shalabi and against administrative detention. On 05.04.2012, and despite prior coordination between the Israeli prison authority and the Red Cross, Halahleh’s family was not allowed to visit him. After the long journey, the family was told by the Israeli prison authority that Halahleh is prevented from visits until June 2012. His health is deteriorating and he is currently in Ramleh prison “hospital”. More recently, his lawyer was prevented from seeing him. Halahleh was detained several times, spending a total of 9 years in Israeli dungeons, 6 of which in administrative detention without charge or trial. With his latest detention, he has been held without charge or trial since 22 months.

3 Hasan As-Safadi: 38 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Hasan As-Safadi © google images

On 05.03.2012, administrative detainee Hasan As-Safadi, 34 years old from Nablus, started an open-ended hunger strike to protest administrative detention. On 04.04.2012 As-Safadi was transferred from Majido prison to Al-Jalameh interrogation centre and locked up with Israeli criminals. Two days later, he was transferred to Ramleh prison “hospital” after his health deteriorated. He suffers from unconsciousness and at one time fell and injured his leg badly. As-Safadi also stopped drinking water and suffers from severe headache and stomachache, low sugar and blood levels and lost 24 kg. To force As-Safadi to break his hunger strike, Israeli jailors told him that he will be fined 1000 NIS for every strike day and that family visits will be prohibited. On 10.04.2012, he was reported to be in coma as his health continues to deteriorate. As-Safadi was administratively detained for 10 years, during which he was released twice and rearrested. According to his sister, the Israeli prison authority offered him deportation in exchange for captivity but he refused. His current administrative detention has been repeatedly renewed since 30.06.2011.

4 Omar Abu Shallal: 38 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

On 05.03.2012, administrative detainee Omar Abu Shallal, 54 years old from Nablus, started an open-ended hunger strike to protest administrative detention. His health deteriorated rapidly and he is currently in Ramleh prison “hospital”.

5 Ahmad Nabhan Saqer: 28 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

On 18.03.2012, administrative detainee Ahmad Nabhan Saqer, 47 years old from Askar RC, Nablus, started an open-ended hunger strike in protest of the arbitrary so-called administrative detention. He is longest serving administrative detainee and has been locked up behind Zionist bars without charge or trial since 28.11.2008. Saqer is currently held captive in Shatta prison. His current administrative detention ends on 24.04.2012, and he threatens to stop drinking water in case his administrative detention is renewed for the 14th time. Saqer lost 17 kg due to the hunger strike and he suffers from heart problems and pain in the limbs.

6 Mohammad At-Taj: 27 Days of Hunger Strike to Demand Recognition as POW.

At-Taj © google

Palestinian prisoner Mohammad At-Taj, 44 years old from Toubas, is on his 27th day of hunger strike. He started an open-ended hunger strike to demand Israeli prison authority treat him as Prisoner of War (POW). At-Taj was sentenced to 18 years in Israeli captivity. He has been in isolation in Majiddo prison since his hunger strike, before recently being transferred to Shatta prison, where he continues his hunger strike.

7 Faris An-Natour: 24 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Administrative detainee Faris An-Natour, from Nablus, has been on an open-ended hunger strike since 24 days in protest of the arbitrary so-called administrative detention. He is currently held captive in isolation cells in Al- Jalameh prison.

8 Ja’far Izz Iddin: 23 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Ja’far Izz Iddin © google images

On 22.03.2012, administrative detainee Ja’far Izz Iddin, 41 years old from Arraba, Jenin, started an open-ended hunger strike to protest the arbitrary so-called administrative detention. Izz Iddin suffers from severe headache, low blood pressure and low sugar levels and pain in the limbs and kidney and he lost 11 kg. Despite isolation in Al-Jalameh and his deteriorating health, Izz Iddin told his lawyer: “I will not be broken or defeated… either freedom and victory or martyrdom”. For refusing to break his hunger strike, Izz Iddin was punished with a fine of 1500 NIS and deprived of family visits. In protest, he decided to stop drinking water. More recently, his lawyer was prevented from seeing him. Izz Iddin was kidnapped from his home on 21.03.2012 at 3 am, handcuffed, blindfolded and dragged half naked to Dotan illegal Zionist colony and left in the cold from 4 am till 9 am, before being transferred to Majiddo prison. Next day he was ordered into administrative detention. According to latest reports, Izz Iddin was transferred to Ramleh prison “hospital” after his health deteriorated rapidly.

9 Oday Daraghmeh: 21 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Administrative detainee Oday Daraghmeh, from Toubas, is on his 21st day of hunger strike to protest the arbitrary so-called administrative detention. He is currently held captive in Al-Jalameh prison.

10 Abdallah Barghouthi: 1 Day of Hunger Strike to Protest the Policy of Isolation.

Abdallah Al-Barghouthi © google images

Today, 12.04.2012, Palestinian prisoner Abdallah Barghouthi, 39 years old from Beit Rima, and held captive in Israeli dungeons since 2003, started an open-ended hunger strike to protest the policy of isolation. He will continue his hunger strike until he is released from isolation and allowed to see his father, his wife and children. According to former detainee Ahlam At-Tamimi, Barghouthi said that all isolated Palestinian prisoners held captive in Israeli dungeons will join the hunger strike on 15.04.2012 to demand an end to isolation. Currently, Barghouthi is held captive in Ramleh isolation cells.

In addition, other reports add the following Palestinian detainees to the list of hunger striker:

Mahmoud As-Sirsik: 21 Days of Hunger Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

Mahmoud As-Sirsik © google images

Administrative detainee Mahmoud As-Sirsik, 25 years old from Rafah RC, Gaza, has been on hunger strike since 21 days to protest his illegal detention. He was detained on 23.08.2009 while on his way to Balata RC to join the football team with which he had signed a contract as player. Since then, his detention has been renewed without charge or trial. On 08.04.2012, he was transferred from Naqab prison to the isolation cells of Eshel prison.

Mohammad Sleiman: 3 Days of Strike to Protest Administrative Detention.

To protest his illegal detention without charge or trial, Palestinian prisoner Mohammad Sleiman, from Aroura, is on strike since 3 days by which he refuses to take blood units. A Thalassemia patient, Sleiman is currently held captive without charge or trial in Ofer since over a year. On 06.04.2012, his administrative detention was renewed for the 3rdconsecutive time despite his illness and need for blood units every 2 to 3 weeks.

Ahmad Haj Ali

Ahmad Haj Ali © google images

On 02.04.2012, Ahmad  Haj Ali, 74 years old from Nablus, stopped his hunger strike which lasted 15 days after the Israeli prison authority promised not to renew his administrative detention and to release him on 06.04.2012. He had been illegally detained without trial or charge since 07.06.2011. Some reports mention that he already resumed his hunger strike on 09.04.2012 after the Israeli prison authority extended his administrative detention till 05.05.2012. Other reports say that he will resume his hunger strike on 17.04.2012. Haj Ali, the eldest administrative detainee held captive in Israeli dungeons, is one of 27 members of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) held captive by Israel, and has been in a renewed administrative detention in Majiddo dungeon since 9 months. Al-Haj Ali suffers from various ailments including diabetes and heart problems.

On 07.04.2012, Palestinian Prisoner Society reported that at least 36 Palestinian detainees were punished by Israeli prison authority for their solidarity with their fellow comrades on hunger strike. They were each fined a sum of 420 NIS, their prison section is to be closed for 2 months to restrict their movement and their interaction with other prisoners and are not to be allowed any family visits for 2 months. According to latest statistics, there are 4700 Palestinian prisoners held captive in Israeli dungeons, including 185 children, 9 female prisoners, 322 administrative detainees and 27 MPs.

Palestinian Prisoners Call for Mass Hunger Strike after Negotiations Fail with Prisons’ Administration

Published on Thursday, 12 April 2012 13:15
http://english.pnn.ps/index.php/prisoners/1364-palestinian-prisoners-call-for-mass-hunger-strike-after-negotiations-fail-with-prisons-administration

On Thursday, April 12th Hassam, a society for detainees and ex-detainees said negotiations that took place recently between Palestinian prisoners and the Israeli prisons’ administration to seek prisoners’ demands has failed.

The failure of these negotiations was attributed to the unflinching obstinacy of the prisons’ administration towards prisoners’ demands.

The representatives of the detainees in the southern prisons of Nafha, Ashkalon, Negev, Eshel and Rimon prisons sent a letter to Hussam explaining why they chose to cease negotiations. Prisoners confirmed that Israel’s intention was to mislead the public by showing its concern to achieve prisoners’ demands, but simultaneously procrastinating on decisions in order to circumvent the demands and dissuade prisoners from challenging the status quo.

In the letter, prisoners cited that though they decided to cease negotiations with the administration, they have created an honor agreement with all the prisoners, hoping to unite their efforts and start a mass hunger strike protesting the actions of the administration.

Prisoners of all Palestinian political factions as well as forces outside prisons began to sign a similar agreement to unite efforts.

Palestinian prisoners called on the Palestinian people inside and outside Palestine to show solidarity, announcing that the hunger strike will begin on April 17th, which coincides Palestinian prisoner day.

Eleven Palestinian Political Detainees Continue their Hunger Strike

Thursday April 12, 2012

by Ghassan Bannoura
http://www.imemc.org/article/63298

Eleven Palestinian political prisoners continued on Thursday their hunger strike, Palestinian human rights groups reported. According to the report two of the prisoners, Thaer Halahla and Bilal Thiyab, have entered on Thursday their 45th day of hunger strike.

The political detainees are protesting the Israeli policy of administrative detention and ill-treatment inside detention centers.

The Israeli government uses administrative detention to hold Palestinians for unspecified time without any charges.

Last month prisoner Hana ash-Shalabi ended her hunger strike after a deal was reached to deport her to Gaza for three years before she can come back to her home in northern West Bank.

Immediately after being abducted by the Israeli army in the West Bank, Ash-Shalabi, 30, years old conducted a 43-day hunger-strike demanding an end to her illegal detention.

Brussels, April 17: Protest for Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

17 APRIL TE BRUSSEL:

MANIFESTATIE BIJ EUROPESE COMMISSIE (12-14 UUR) EN SOLIDARITEITSAVOND (18-22 UUR) 

17 APRIL TE DEN HAAG:
PICKET VAN 12.30 – 13.30 UUR VOOR DE ISRAELISCHE AMBASSADE OP HET BUITENHOF.

http://www.palestina-komitee.nl/agenda/693

EISEN 

Wij eisen de onmiddellijke vrijlating van alle Palestijnse politieke gevangenen die door Israël worden vastgehouden. Zij zijn het slachtoffer van een onwettig en onrechtvaardig rechtssysteem, dat voortkomt uit het systeem van racisme en discriminatie in Israël.

In het bijzonder eisen we dat een einde gemaakt wordt aan volgende praktijken:

  • Administratieve detentie,
  • Marteling en mishandeling,
  • Eenzame opsluiting,
  • Het illegale gebruik, in de bezette Palestijnse gebieden, van militaire rechtbanken om burgers te veroordelen.
  • Het gebruik van “geheime bewijzen”, hetgeen een flagrante schending betekent van het recht op een normale en eerlijke rechtspraak
  • De arrestaties onder de kwetsbare groepen van de bevolking, zoals kinderen, gehandicapten, ouderen en zieken.

Locatie

Brussel en Den Haag

World Federation of Trade Unions: Call to Action for Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

The World Federation of Trade Unions issued the following call on April 13, 2012:

Dear Colleagues,

Today in Israeli prisons there are 4,600 Palestinians imprisoned militants. Of these:

560 have been convicted to life imprisonment by Israeli courts. 220 are children. 24 are Members of the Parliament. 204 prisoners have died in Israeli prisons.

Among the prisoners there are great Palestinians and Arab militants who have dedicated their lives to the struggle of the Palestinian People to get their own independent homeland.

The WFTU from the first day of its establishment is firmly on the side of the Palestinian People.
On April 17th is the International Day of Action for Palestinian people for the release of all prisoners in Israeli jails. All of those militants kept illegally and undemocratically by the imperialists and their organs.

For years now the International Organizations are limited to words. They show indifference. They allow the government of Israel to kill, to imprison, and to terrorize the people of the region.

The WFTU in a joint meeting with the GUPW held recently in Ramallah decided to call upon all our affiliates and friends to act on April 17. To submit statements to the Israeli embassies in their countries, as well as international organizations and to demand the immediate release of all the militants from Israeli prisons.

We ask you all to act. To express active solidarity with the best possible way. All together on April 17 calling for:

– The immediate release of all political prisoners kept unfairly in Israeli prisons.

– To stop the settlement activity and the dismantling of the settlements.

– The immediate lifting of the unfair and inhumane blockade of Gaza Strip, the withdrawal of the Israeli army from all occupied territories, which is there since 1967, including the Golan Height and the Shebaa area of ​​southern Lebanon.

– The demolition of the racist wall.

– The creation of an independent, democratic and truly free Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital and the return of all Palestinian refugees to their homeland.

– The international community to undertake its responsibilities and to implement all decisions of the United Nations and the Security Council!

Send your protest letters, photos and statements to the following e-mail addresses:

mohammad_yahya2007@yahoo.commohiqn62@gmail.cominternational@wftucentral.org

– UN Human Rights Council: civilsociety@ohchr.org– Israeli Foreign Minister: sar@mfa.gov.il-High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy: COMM-SPP-HRVP-ASHTON@ec.europa.eu

Montreal, April 19 – An Evening of Solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners

Thursday, April 19, 2012
6:30pm until 9:30pm
Concordia University Hall Building
Room H-110
1455 de Maisonneuve West
Metro Guy-Concordia
Montreal, Quebec

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/273290676089860/?ref=ts

****
(français à suivreSince 1967, it is estimated that approximately 650,000 Palestinians have been detained by Israel as part of its repression of the popular resistance. As of March 2012, there were 4,637 Palestinians behind bars in Israeli jails, among them 5 women and 183 children. In addition, there are currently 320 Palestinians being held under six month administrative detention orders, without charge or trial, which can be and usually are renewed.

While imprisoned, Palestinian political prisoners from the West Bank face a military justice system that is often characterized by trumped up charges, low standards of evidence, a lack of due process, an acceptance of torture, as well as sentencing that is disparate and far harsher than that encountered in the Israeli civil justice system. As such, the vast majority experience some form of mistreatment during their detention, including torture, coercive interrogation, isolation, food and sleep deprivation, along with the frequent denial of family and legal visits.

If Palestinian political prisoners have experienced considerable oppression in the occupation’s jails, they have also remained active participants in the Palestinian struggle for freedom and self-determination. In recent months, Khader Adnan and Hana Shalabi have captured the attention of many worldwide, staging lengthy hunger strikes to courageously confront Israel’s military justice system and protesting administrative detention practices.

On February 11, 2012, Khader Adnan issued a call, requesting that solidarity groups make April 17th- Palestinian Prisoner’s Day- an international day of action. With this in mind, during the week of April 17th, prisoner support groups and Palestine solidarity networks around the world will be gathering to demand justice and freedom for political prisoners. Please join us for a pane ldiscussion and screening to highlight prisoner struggles, affirm our support and stand in solidarity with Palestinian political prisoners.

Featuring:

* Issam Al-Yamani

A founding member of the Palestinian Left, Issam Al-Yamani is a Palestinian activist, writer and political commentor. Currently, he is also the Executive Director of Toronto’s Palestine House, which was defunded by Minister Jason Kenney in February 2012.

* Serin Atiani

A Palestinian researcher and activist, Serin Atiani has advocated for Palestinian human, civil and political rights for over a decade.

The event will also feature a screening of a video produced by Addameer, featuring an interview with Suha Barghouti, wife of Ahmed Qatamesh. A prominent Palestinian writer, academic and activist, Qatamesh is currently under an administrative detention order and has been held without charge since his arrest on the night of April 21, 2011.)

 

Organized by Tadamon! Montreal and SPHR Concordia

For more information:
*Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Organisation
www.addameer.org

*Tadamon! Montreal
www.tadamon.ca

*Solidarity For Human Rights (SPHR)-Concordia
www.sphr.org

Tadamon! Montreal
Tel: 514-664-1036
E-mail: info@tadamon.ca
Twitter:@tadamonmontreal

************************
Sumoud : une soirée de solidarité avec les prisonniers politiques palestiniens

Jeudi, 19 avril 2012
18h30, Université Concordia
Pavillon Henry-F.-Hall, local H-110
1455 Boul. de Maisonneuve Ouest
Métro Guy-Concordia
Montréal, Québec

Depuis 1967, il est estimé qu’environ 650 000 Palestiniens ont été détenus par Israël dans sa répression de la résistance populaire contre l’occupation. En mars 2012, on comptait quelques 4 637 Palestiniens dans les prisons israéliennes, parmi eux 5 femmes et 183 enfants. De plus, 320 Palestiniens sont présentement détenus sous ordres administratifs, sans charge ou jugement. Les prisonniers politiques palestiniens de la Cisjordanie sont soumis à un système de justice militaire qui est caractérisé par des charges vagues, des standards d’évidence très bas, un manque de procédures standards, une acceptation de la torture ainsi que de sentences incompatibles et beaucoup plus sévères que celles rencontrées dans le système judiciaire civil israélien. En conséquence, la grande majorité des prisonniers subissent de mauvais traitements au cours de leur détention, ceci incluant la torture, des interrogations coercitives, l’isolement, la privation de nourriture et de sommeil ainsi que l’empêchement fréquent de visites légales et familiales.

Si les prisonniers politiques palestiniens ont vécu de l’oppression dans les prisons de l’occupation, ils demeurent des participants actifs dans la lutte palestinienne pour la liberté et l’auto-détermination. Dans les derniers mois, Khader Adnan et Hana Shalabi ont capté l’attention de milliers à travers le monde avec leur grèves de faim de longue durée afin de confronter courageusement le système israélien de justice militaire et de protester contre les pratiques de détention administrative. Le 11 février 2012, Khader Adnan a fait appel à la communauté internationale afin de faire du 17 avril – la journée du prisonnier palestinien – un journée internationale d’action.

Avec cet appel en tête, des groupes du support de prisonniers et des réseaux de solidarité palestiniens autour du monde se réuniront afin de réclamer justice et la libération des prisonniers politiques. Veuillez vous joindre à nous pour une discussion et projection vidéo visant à jeter lumière sur les luttes des prisonniers, tout en affirmant notre support et solidarité avec les prisonniers politiques palestiniens.

Avec :
* Issam Al-Yamani
Un des membres fondateur de la gauche palestinienne, Issam Al-Yamani est activiste palestinien, auteur et commentateur politique.
Il est présentement directeur de la Maison de Palestine à Toronto, organisme qui a vu ses budgets coupés par le ministre Jason Kenney en février 2012.

* Serin Atiani
Recherchiste et activiste palestinienne, elle est active dans la lutte pour les droits politiques, civils et humains des Palestinien depuis plus de dix ans.

La soirée inclura aussi la projection d’une vidéo produite par Addameer comportant une interview de Haneen Qatamish, conjointe du prisonnier politique Ahmad Qatamish. Auteur, activiste et académicien palestinien de renom, Qatamish est présentement sous détention administrative et est détenu sans charge depuis son arrestation dans la nuit du 21 avril 2011.

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Chicago: Hungry for Justice: Fast in Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners – April 17

Join CMPR for a community dinner and discussion with prisoner rights activist Bekah Wolf

Tuesday, April 17, 7:00pm
CAIR-Chicago Gallery
28 E. Jackson Blvd, Suite 1700

Chicago, IL 60604

**Free and open to the public, but space at the venue is limited. To ensure a seat, please RSVP to chicagompr@gmail.com as soon as possible.**

Earlier this year, Khader Adnan completed a 66-day hunger strike, the longest carried out by any Palestinian prisoner. Since then, Adnan has issued a call for April 17, 2012 to be observed as a Day of International Action on behalf of Palestinian prisoners. In response to his call, events have been scheduled to take place all over the world that day, from Vancouver to Brussels to Amman.

Since 1974, April 17 has been commemorated annually as Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. Currently there are more than 4500 Palestinians in Israeli prisons and detention centers; nearly 200 of these prisoners are children. Just like Hana Shalabi and Khader Adnan, 320 prisoners are held – without charge or trial – under administrative detention.

Here in Chicago, the Chicago Movement for Palestinian Rights (CMPR) is calling on people of conscience to fast from sunrise to sunset on April 17 in solidarity with Palestinian prisoners. According to latest reports from prisoner rights group Addameer, 8 prisoners are currently on hunger strike.

Joining us that evening via Skype will be Bekah Wolf. She is a Jewish-American activist and co-founder of the Palestine Solidarity Project. Married to former Palestinian prisoner Mousa Abu Maria, she lives in the town of Beit Ommar and has worked in the West Bank since 2003. She will speak on recent developments in the prisoner rights movement, with a special focus on child detainees and administrative detention.

Attendees will also have the opportunity to write letters on behalf of Palestinian prisoners, make political art/posters and network with local solidarity activists.

Dinner will be provided by generous local businesses. Vegetarian options will also be available. Attendees are encouraged to bring a dessert to share.

Sponsored by: Chicago Movement for Palestinian Rights (CMPR), American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), Jewish Voice for Peace-Chicago (JVP), Palestine Solidarity Group-Chicago, and US Palestinian Community Network-Chicago (USPCN)

For additional information, or to RSVP, please contact chicagompr@gmail.com

Facebook Event: www.facebook.com/events/301360836599124/

Click here to learn more about Khader Adnan’s call to action and to find out about events in other cities.

April 17, Toronto: Palestinian Prisoners’ Day: Perspectives on the Current Struggle

Tuesday, April 17

7:00 PM

Beit Zatoun, 612 Markham St., Toronto, ON

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/352427434794172/

April 17th is International Palestinian Prisoners Day. As of 1 March 2012, there were 4,637 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli prisons and detention centers, including 183 children. Just like Hana Shalabi and Khader Adnan, 320 prisoners are held–without charge or trial–under administrative detention.

Speakers:

Ameena Sultan is a lawyer practicing in Toronto. She is a director and founding member of the Arab Canadian Lawyers’
Association.

Shaira Vadasaria is an anti-racist feminist activist and doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology at York University. Her areas of research attend to feminist contestations of colonial violence, occupation, incarceration and the ‘war on terror’. Her current research concerns anti-colonial strategies of political mobility advanced by Palestinian womyn political prisoners.

Issam Al Yamani is a Palestinian refugee, an activist and a writer who was been in Canada since 1985.

Join us at Beit Zatoun at 7PM on April 17th to learn more about the current situation in Israel for Palestinian prisoners and to help build the next stage of this struggle.

 

Inter-Parliamentary Union calls for freedom for PLC members, end of isolation for Ahmad Sa’adati

Kampala/Geneva, 5th April –  The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) is today calling on Israel to end the practice of administrative detention and to either immediately release members of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) held under such terms or prosecute them using normal criminal procedure if there is any criminal involvement on their part.

The call is part of a series of resolutions on human rights violations of parliamentarians adopted at its 126th Assembly in Kampala, which ended today.

Twenty-three Palestinian legislators, close to 20% of the PLC’s total membership, are currently being held in administrative detention, nine of them for more than a year and one of them more than 72 years old. Among those detained is the Speaker of the Council.

The IPU expresses serious misgivings on the ability of those kept in administrative detention to benefit from due process.

The Organization is also urging Israeli authorities to end an isolation order on another Palestinian MP, Ahmad Sa’adat, arrested two months after being elected to the PLC in 2006. In poor health and reportedly without medical attention, Sa’adat has been in solitary confinement for almost three years.

International human rights bodies, including the UN Committee against Torture, have concluded on several occasions that prolonged periods of isolation are cruel, degrading and inhuman punishment.

The IPU is seeking access to Sa’adat to ascertain his conditions of detention and reaffirming its position that his imprisonment was related to his political activities as General Secretary for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), is calling for his immediate release.

It is also reiterating its call for the release of Marwan Barghouti, arrested in the West Bank town of Ramallah and transferred to an Israeli prison. Barghouti has this week been put into solitary confinement.

Elsewhere, the Organization expressed satisfaction at the release in Myanmar of the last five members-elect of the People’s Assembly as part of an amnesty of more than 600 prisoners in January.  However, stressing that they were political prisoners held on the basis of unjust laws and unfair procedures, the IPU considers it essential that the People’s Assembly repeal these laws as a matter of priority.

It deeply regretted the deaths of seven former MPs in prison or shortly after their release due to the conditions in detention and urged authorities to put in place a new Prisons Act that will ensure prisoners are treated according to international norms.

Other resolutions on human rights cases of MPs include high profile political names such as Anwar Ibrahim in Malaysia, Sam Rainsy in Cambodia and Sheikh Hasina in Bangladesh.

The IPU Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians is currently following 77 cases involving 201 MPs from around the world.  Thirty-four of these cases are public including that of Iceland’s Birgitta Jónsdóttir whose co-production of a video released by Wikileaks led to a US court order for Twitter to hand over details of her account to the government.

 

The IPU passed resolutions on 31 cases today. Of these, five were in Africa including a new case in Cameroon; three in Europe; five in the Middle East; 12 in Asia including four in Sri Lanka and 6 in the Latin American country of Colombia.

 

To access all the resolutions in full detail, please go to:

 

http://www.ipu.org/PDF/hrres190_en.pdf

 

For further information, please contact:

 

Jemini Pandya, IPU, Tel: + 41 79 217 3374 or Email: jep@mail.ipu.org

 

Follow IPU on Twitter at IPUparliament

 

L’UIP est préoccupée par le maintien en détention et les violations des droits fondamentaux de parlementaires palestiniens et d’autres pays

 

Kampala/Genève, 5 avril – L’Union interparlementaire (UIP) appelle Israël à mettre fin à la pratique de la rétention administrative et lui demande, soit de libérer immédiatement les membres du Conseil législatif palestinien (CLP) ainsi détenus, soit de les poursuivre selon la procédure pénale normale, s’il y a des motifs de le faire.

 

Cette demande fait partie de toute une série de résolutions adoptées à la 126ème Assemblée de l’UIP qui s’achève aujourd’hui à Kampala, quant à des violations des droits de l’homme.

 

Vingt-trois parlementaires palestiniens, soit près de 20 % des membres du CLP, sont actuellement en détention administrative, pour neuf d’entre eux depuis plus d’un an. Le Président du CLP est du nombre. Soulignons aussi que l’un de ces détenus a 72 ans.

 

L’UIP doute sérieusement que ces personnes bénéficient d’une procédure équitable.

 

Elle demande en outre instamment aux autorités israéliennes de lever la détention au secret d’un autre parlementaire palestinien, M. Ahmad Sa’adat, arrêté deux mois après avoir été élu au CLP, en 2006. M. Sa’adat, qui est pourtant en mauvaise santé, ne bénéficierait pas du suivi médical requis et serait détenu à l’isolement depuis près de trois ans.

 

Les organismes internationaux de droits de l’homme, et notamment le Comité des Nations Unies contre la torture, ont affirmé à plusieurs reprises que les périodes prolongées d’isolement équivalaient à un traitement cruel, dégradant et inhumain.

 

L’UIP demande à rencontrer M. Sa’adat, de façon à pouvoir se rendre compte de ses conditions de détention. Elle continue à soutenir que son incarcération est liée à ses activités politiques de Secrétaire général du Front populaire pour la libération de la Palestine (FPLP) et demande qu’il soit immédiatement libéré.

 

Par ailleurs, l’UIP a de nouveau appelé à la libération de Marwan Barghouti, arrêté à Ramallah, en Cisjordanie, avant d’être transféré dans une prison israélienne. Cette semaine, M. Barghouti a été placé en isolement cellulaire.  

 

Au Myanmar, les cinq derniers parlementaires-élus encore emprisonnés ont été remis en liberté en janvier dans le cadre d’une opération d’amnistie touchant plus de 600 prisonniers, ce dont l’UIP s’est félicitée. Elle a toutefois souligné qu’il était urgent que l’Assemblée du peuple abroge les lois et procédures iniques autorisant la détention de prisonniers politiques.

 

Déplorant vivement le décès de sept anciens parlementaires morts en prison ou juste après leur remise en liberté en raison des conditions de détention qu’ils avaient subies, l’UIP a engagé les autorités à adopter un nouveau code des prisons qui garantirait un traitement des prisonniers conforme aux normes internationales.

 

Au nombre des autres résolutions sur les droits de l’homme des parlementaires, on citera celles qui concernent les cas très médiatisés d’Anwar Ibrahim en Malaisie, de Sam Rainsy au Cambodge et de Sheikh Hasina au Bangladesh.

 

Le Comité des droits de l’homme des parlementaires de l’UIP suit actuellement 77 cas concernant 201 parlementaires de différents pays du monde.  Trente-quatre de ces cas sont publics, dont celui de Birgitta Jónsdóttir, la parlementaire islandaise qui avait coproduit une vidéo diffusée par Wikileaks. Un tribunal américain a ordonné que des données figurant sur son compte Twitter soient communiquées au gouvernement des Etats-Unis.

 

Aujourd’hui, l’UIP a adopté des résolutions sur 31 cas, dont cinq se rapportaient à des pays d’Afrique, y compris un nouveau cas au Cameroun. Trois résolutions avaient trait à des cas européens; cinq concernaient le Moyen-Orient, 12, l’Asie, dont quatre le Sri Lanka, et six, la Colombie.

 

On trouvera le texte intégral des résolutions sur le site en anglais pour l’instant (le français sera disponible prochainement) :

http://www.ipu.org/PDF/hrres190_en.pdf

 

 

Pour toute information complémentaire, veuillez vous adresser à :

Jemini Pandya, UIP, tél: + 41 79 217 3374 ou courriel: jep@mail.ipu.org

Suivez l’actualité de l’UIP sur Twitter @ IPUparliament