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New Berlin, NY woman on hunger strike for Palestinian prisoners

The following article ran in the New Paltz Daily Star on April 6, 2012:

Woman on hunger strike for Palestinian prisoners

By Jake Palmateer

A New Berlin woman said Thursday that she is 15 days into a hunger strike over Israel’s treatment of Palestinians.

“I’m getting weaker,” Sandra Twang said.

Twang said she is protesting Israel’s administrative detention policy for Palestinians and was inspired by the recent hunger strikes of two prisoners.

“I have been reading about the Palestinians for a couple years now and the conditions they live under,” Twang, 57, said by phone to The Daily Star.

Twang said she learned last year of a prisoner named Khader Adnan.

Khader Adnan went on a 66-day hunger strike last year after being detained by Israeli authorities. He was eventually released from detention.

“During his hunger strike he did appeal to the courts and his appeal was denied,” Twang said. “I just watched with such sadness and such rage.”

And earlier this year, she followed another case — that of Hana Shalabi.

Shalabi went on a 44-day hunger strike after she was arrested. Her strike ended when she was released from prison and deported to the Gaza Strip.

Earlier this week, Shalabi sent letters to U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.; Rep. Richard Hanna, R-Barnevald; and President Barack Obama.

In her letters, she urges them to request Israel to:

“¢ charge and allow due process for all Palestinians being held under administrative detention or release them;

“¢ end the practice of administrative detention in accordance with international and human rights law;

“¢ respect international, human rights and humanitarian law during arrest and detentions in the Palestinian territories.

Twang, a certified nursing assistant, said she has been on worker’s compensation since last June for a back injury. She said she has consulted with her doctor, who agreed to monitor her hunger strike.

Twang, who lives with her 17-year-old son, said she started off drinking tea and water, along with vitamins. But she said she is now drinking mostly just water with lemon.

“My stomach is getting to the point where it doesn’t want (tea) anymore. I am still able to get my vitamins down every day,” she said. “I get very shaky sometimes. I can still get around and still do chores, but I have to rest a lot.”

Twang said she has gone from 198 pounds to about 183.

Twang said she has not decided how long she will continue her hunger strike. That, she said, will depend on what sort of feedback she gets.

“My government needs to take Israel to task,” Twang said.

A representative from Schumer’s office called her Wednesday to acknowledge her letter was received, and he urged her to stop the hunger strike.

Radio Against Apartheid features Addameer

The following description comes from Radio Against Apartheid. Download the full episode here.
This week on Radio Against Apartheid, we honor the memories of Juliano Mer Khamis, Martin Luther King Jr., and Trayvon Martin.

We are joined on the program by a representative of Addameer, the Palestinian Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association to talk about the recent hunger strikes of Hana Al Shalabi, Khader Adnan, the process of administrative detention, and the “kangaroo courts” of the Israeli military in the occupied territories.
Palestine News Network provides a tribute to the memory of Juliano Mer Khamis, and gives a wrap-up of this week’s news in the occupied territories.
Finally, we are proud to conclude the show with a song from Philadelphia’s own tUnE-yArDs, who back in January canceled their show in Tel Aviv as a demonstration of their support for the Palestinian call for a cultural boycott of Israel.
It should be noted that in the United States prisoners are being unjustly held in solitary confinement. Two such cases which have gotten the attention of the BBC and Amnesty International are those of Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace, two black men held in solitary for almost 40 years.
Please sign Amnesty’s petition to LA state governor Bobby Jindal to have them both released to general population, and to hold the state accountable for this cruel and inhumane punishment.
Direct download: Show_23.mp3

Columbia University to livestream “Carceral Politics and Palestine” tonight, 6 PM EST

The Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University is hosting “Carceral Politics and Palestine” tonight, Thursday April 5. For those not able to attend, Columbia will be livestreaming the event, which you can watch below:

Live stream videos at Ustream

This panel will explore comparative approaches to Israeli prisons and detention. PANELISTS:

Judith Butler, English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
Lena Meari, Center for Palestine Studies Fellow, Columbia University
Mai Masri, Independent Documentary Filmmaker, Beirut, Lebanon
Angela Davis, Prison Activist and History of Consciousness, UC Santa Cruz

This event is brought to you by the Center for Palestine Studies and the Institute for Research on Women and Gender and generously co-sponsored by:

The Barnard Center for Research on Women
The Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race
The Heyman Center
The Department of Anthropology
The Office of Diversity, GSAS
Center for Gender and Sexuality Law
The Institute for Comparative Literature and Society

April 17, Brussels: International Day of Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners

Internationale dag voor de Palestijnse gevangenen

Dagprogramma

  • Manifestatie in Brussel 
     dinsdag 17 april 2012
    12u00-14u00 
     Europese Commissie te Brussel (Schuman-Rotonde)

en een

  • Solidariteitsavond 
    18 tot 22 uur 
    film (25 min.): “Libres dans la prison de Gaza” 
    Chris Den Hond en Mireille Court (2012)

OPROEP

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.

Toelichting:

Op 4 januari 2012, bevonden zich 4417 Palestijnse politieke gevangenen in Israëlische gevangenissen, waaronder 170 kinderen en zes vrouwen. Net zoals dat het geval is voor Khader Adnan of Hana Shalabi, worden 310 gevangenen vastgehouden zonder proces of enige vorm van aanklacht, maar op basis van de wet op de administratieve detentie . Onder hen bevinden zich 20 parlementairen…

Sinds 17 april 2011 bracht het ongezien verzet van de Palestijnse gevangenen en de inzet van verzets- en solidariteitsorganisaties de strijd voor de vrijlating van Palestijnse gevangenen opnieuw in het centrum van de wereldbelangstelling.

Op 27 september 2011  begonnen honderden Palestijnse gevangenen in Israëlische gevangenissen een hongerstaking tegen de eenzame opsluiting, waaronder die van Ahmed Saadat, leider van de PFLP, en tegen het ontzeggen van familiebezoek en de vernedering van gevangenen tijdens de gevangenistranferts.

Eind 2011 werden 1.027 Palestijnse gevangenen vrijgelaten in ruil voor een Israëlische soldaat via een overeenkomst tussen Israël en Hamas. Inmiddels zijn een aantal van hen opnieuw gevangen genomen en duizenden andere Palestijnen gearresteerd.

Op 17 december 2011, na zijn arrestatie en zijn plaatsing in administratieve detentie, begon Khader Adnan een hongerstaking, die 66 dagen heeft geduurd. Hana al-Shalabi, een van de gevangenen die was vrijgelaten in ruil voor de Israëlische soldaat, werd opnieuw gearresteerd op 16 februari 2012, minder dan vier maanden na haar vrijlating. Ze is begonnen met een hongerstaking, die tot op de dag van vandaag doorgaat, tegen haar administratieve detentie.

Door het inzetten van het wapen van de hongerstaking, het wapen van hun lichaam, als enige dat hen nog rest, en het ondernemen van andere acties, hebben de Palestijnse gevangenen een golf van wereldwijde solidariteit losgemaakt. Niet voor niets groeide Khader Adnan uit tot de Palestijnse Bobby Sands. Meer dan ooit staan de Palestijnse gevangenen en hun strijd symbool voor de eenheid van het volk en voor het recht en de plicht om weerstand te bieden aan de onderdrukking.

Onze actie in Brussel onderschrijft de oproep voor 17 april 2012 van Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, Defence for Children International – afdeling Palestina, UFREE Network, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoners Solidarity Network, Campaign Free Ameer Makhoul en Campaign Free Ahmad Sa’adat. Die oproep draagt de titel  “De wereld moet luisteren en de oproep van Khader Adnan beantwoorden“.

Addameer

Een oproep van :

U kan als verantwoordelijke van een organisatie of vereniging de oproep mede onderschrijven door een mail te sturen naar : vervaetluk@gmail.com

April 6, Philadelphia: Palestinian Prisoners: Generations Behind Bars

Palestinian Prisoners: Generations Behind Bars
Friday, April 6
3:00pm until 4:30pm
Temple University, Anderson Hall Room 821, 1114 W Berks Street
Philadelphia, PA
https://www.facebook.com/events/391013160917072/

Temple Students for Justice in Palestine Present:

“Palestinian Prisoners: Generations Behind Bars”

In direct violation of International Law, Palestinians suffer indefinite and arbitrary imprisonment under Israeli Occupation. Palestinian youths especially are targeted and held for large periods of time without due process. The recent hunger strikes of Hanaa Shalabi and Khader Anan have brought attention to these illegal detentions.

Jeff Pickert, a representative from the Palestinian Solidarity Project, will lead a presentation on the subject matter. Having lived in the West Bank for more than a year, the talk will center on his experiences in the non-violent resistance movement. In addition he will examine the problem of child arrests and home raids in the West Bank and speak on his work with the Palestinian Youth Bail Fund.

This event is sponsored by the History Department and CLA and is apart of the Dissent in America teach-ins series.

For more information on the Palestinian Solidarity Project please refer to their website: http://palestinesolidarityproject.org/palestinian-youth-bail-fund/

Questions/ Comments/ Concerns: email us at sjptemple@gmail.com

April 5, Philadelphia: Captive Youth: Palestinian Political Prisoners and Human Rights

Captive Youth: Palestinian Political Prisoners and Human Rights
Thursday, April 5
6 pm – 8 pm
JMHH 250 Jon H. Huntsman
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA
https://www.facebook.com/events/170017949786568/

In direct violation of International Law, many Palestinians suffer indefinite and arbitrary imprisonment by Israeli military occupying forces. Palestinian youth and children especially are targeted and held for large periods of time without due process, as the recent hunger strikes of Hanaa Shalabi and Khader Adnan have highlighted.

Jeff Pickert, an American representative from the Palestinian Solidarity Project and the Youth Bail Fund, has lived and worked in the West Bank to protect the human rights of Palestinian civilian youth. He will present on the growing non-violent resistance movement in the Occupied Territories, and the effects of child arrests and home raids on Palestinian families and society.

For more information on the Palestine Solidarity Project, please visit: http://palestinesolidarityproject.org/

April 5, New York: Carceral Politics in Palestine and Beyond

CARCERAL POLITICS IN PALESTINE & BEYOND: Gender, Vulnerability, Prison
Thursday, April 5, 2012
6 pm – 8 pm
Room 1501, International Affairs Building, Columbia University
420 West 118th Street, New York, NY

DOORS OPEN AT 5:30 PM. The event will begin promptly at 6 PM.

***seating is on a first-come, first-seated basis.

REGISTER: https://calendar.columbia.edu/sundial/webapi/register.php?eventID=57504&REGISTER_SESSION_NAME=8e0688276aa31ffd3aa9e8e1f470b012&state=init&
This panel will explore comparative approaches to Israeli prisons and detention.

PANELISTS:

JUDITH BUTLER, English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
ANGELA DAVIS, Prison Activist and History of Consciousness, UC Santa Cruz
MAI MASRI, Independent Documentary Filmmaker, Beirut, Lebanon
LENA MEARI, Center for Palestine Studies Fellow, Columbia University
This event is brought to you by the Center for Palestine Studies and the Institute for Research on Women and Gender and generously co-sponsored by:
The Barnard Center for Research on Women,
The Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race,
The Heyman Center, and
The Institute for Comparative Literature and Society.

photo credit: Michael Kennedy

Addameer and PHR: Conditional Release: Hana Shalabi Expelled to Gaza Strip Today

Joint Statement, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel

Ramallah-Jaffa1 April 2012− As organizations dedicated to the promotion and protection of human rights and closely connected to Hana Shalabi’s case, Addameer and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) are alarmed at the announcement that Hana Shalabi will be expelled to the Gaza Strip today, only three days after purportedly ending her 43-day hunger strike. Addameer and PHR-Israel condemn the Israeli Prison Service (IPS)’s denial of access to both parties to visit Ms. Shalabi in the days leading up to the deal for her release and expulsion to the Gaza Strip and since the deal was reportedly finalized on 29 March. Addameer and PHR-Israel fear that, given her grave medical condition, the restriction of access of Ms. Shalabi’s physician and lawyers, in addition to the prevention of family visits, were used as methods of coercion. Furthermore, serious concerns exist regarding the availability and arrangement of adequate medical care matching Ms. Shalabi’s urgent needs in light of her swift transfer.
Ms. Shalabi deserves utmost respect for her steadfastness in her hunger strike. While her release from administrative detention should be welcomed, Addameer and PHR-Israel are obligated to highlight their concerns with those aspects of the deal that are fundamentally at odds with international law. Ms. Shalabi’s release is contingent upon her expulsion for a period of three years to the Gaza Strip, which, although part of the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt), has been hermetically sealed off from the rest of the oPt by Israel. Therefore, with no guarantees that she or her family will be permitted to travel, her expulsion could essentially become an extension of her previous isolation from her home and family while in prison.
There are numerous examples of similar agreements made by Israel regarding the forced transfer or deportation of Palestinian political prisoners or “wanted” persons. Most recently, in the October 2011 prisoner exchange deal, 18 West Bank prisoners, including those from East Jerusalem, were expelled to the Gaza Strip for a period of three years while an additional 146 were forcibly relocated there on a permanent basis as conditions of their release. An additional 41 prisoners were deported outside of the oPt. In past deals, individuals who were expelled to the Gaza Strip for short-term periods were not necessarily allowed to return home after completing the agreed upon period.
The terms of these expulsions violate Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits forcible transfers and deportations of protected persons, a proscription that is part of customary international humanitarian law. Unlawful deportation or transfer also constitutes a grave breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention (GC IV) and qualifies as one of the most serious war crimes. Given the stark asymmetry in power, resulting from the belligerent occupation, between the Palestinian and Israeli parties involved, neither the potential “consent” of the prisoners nor the fact that these deals have been negotiated by a Palestinian authority can serve as justification for the deportations as this contravenes the spirit of articles 7, 8 and 47 of the GC IV concerning the inviolability of the protections afforded by the Convention.
In Ms. Shalabi’s case, further concerns are raised when considering her fragile medical condition after such a protracted hunger strike. The transfer of Ms. Shalabi from Meir Hospital to the medical center of the IPS in Ramleh Prison on 28 March throws into doubt whether considerations of her medical care were given appropriate weight. A 43-day hunger strike causes a clear threat to the life of the hunger striker, and requires close and professional medical observation, which is not provided by the IPS medical center. The attentive follow-up to such a long hunger strike is also essential to the sustained health of the individual. The fact that Ms. Shalabi was transferred to the IPS medical center while still on hunger strike, without informing her independent physician, and that she began eating without being under observation by a hospital casts additional doubts on the decision-making process of the IPS and the non-medical considerations that might have influenced the decision to discharge her from the hospital. Moreover, the IPS has created obstacles that have made it nearly impossible to adhere to the instructions provided by the Malta Declaration regarding medical care of hunger strikers, mainly by denying access of an independent physician to the hunger strikers. In the cases of both Khader Adnan and Ms. Shalabi, the first visit by an independent physician was enabled only after court intervention.
Ms. Shalabi’s independent physician was again not consulted upon the announcement of her expulsion to the Gaza Strip today. Addameer and PHR-Israel fear that transferring her while she is still recovering from her hunger strike to the destabilized Gazan medical system might further jeopardize her medical condition.
Addameer and PHR-Israel reiterate that forcible transfer and conditional release is not an alternative to Israel ending its practice of administrative detention. It is imperative to demand a permanent resolution to Israel’s practice of arbitrary detention, in compliance with international humanitarian law. Addameer and PHR-Israel call on the international community to intervene and demand that Israel immediately comply with its legal obligations, cease its policy of administrative detention and provide adequate and trusted healthcare for all hunger striking prisoners.

Al Mezan Condemns Deportation of Hanaa’ Ash-Shalabi to Gaza; Reiterates Its Condemnation of Administrative Detentionand Expresses Its Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners on Hunger Strike

At approximately 3:20 pm on Sunday 1 April 2012, Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) deported administrative detainee Hanaa’ Yihya Ash-Shalabi, 30, to the Gaza Strip, following an ambiguous agreement under which she will spend three years in the Gaza Strip before returning to her place of residence near Jenin in the West Bank.  She is being deported to the Gaza Strip in order to bring an end to her hunger strike.

Hanaa’ Ash-Shalabi began an open-ended hunger strike upon her detention by Israel on Thursday 16 February 2012, shortly before she was sentenced to six months’ administrative detention and jailed at HaSharon prison.  She continued her hunger strike for 44 days before the current deal was reached.  Ms. Ash-Shalabi’s health condition was described in a recent press release issued by Physicians for Human Rights – Israel, which following a medical examination and blood tests found that Ms. Ash-Shalabi was “in danger of imminent death.”

It should also be noted that dozens of Palestinian prisoners went on hunger strike in solidarity with Ash-Shalabi and in protest against Israel’s arbitrary administrative detention and other violations of detainees’ rights.  According to the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, the number of Palestinian detainees on hunger strike stood at 29 prisoners as of last week, before its lawyers were prevented from visiting detainees.

The Al Mezan Center for Human Rights reiterates its expression of solidarity with Ash-Shalabi and other Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons.  It also reiterates its condemnation of the gross Israeli human rights violations committed against Palestinian detainees, including expanding use of administrative detention, solitary confinement, medical negligence, denial of family visitation rights, and other acts in contravention of human rights principles, particularly the United Nations’ Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners.

Al Mezan strongly condemns Israel’s forcible deportation of Ash-Shalabi to the Gaza Strip, in an agreement that gives her no option but to abandon a part of the rights guaranteed to her under international law and human rights principles.  Human rights are non-negotiable, irreducible, and inalienable.  Al Mezan views the deportation of Ash-Shalabi under current conditions as a gross violation of international humanitarian law, particularly the Fourth Geneva Convention, which forbids forcible transfer or deportation of any person from their country.  International human rights law also forbids arbitrary detention and deportation, and grants all people freedom of movement and residency.

Al Mezan stresses Ash-Shalabi’s right to return to her home, and calls on the international community to promptly intervene to ensure her return and to end Israel’s systematic violations of Palestinian detainees’ rights, including its regime of administrative detention.  Al Mezan calls on human rights defenders around the world to express their solidarity with Palestinian detainees and to support them in their struggle for freedom, justice, and dignity, and to work to bring an end to the practice of arbitrary administrative detention.

Students fast in support of Hana Shalabi

“Students fast in support of Palestinian prisoner”

by Haley Goldberg, Daily News Editor
MICHIGAN DAILY
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor campus
March 30, 2012
“As the clock struck 11 p.m. last night, plates of hummus, chicken, fattoush, pizza and cookies were placed atop the desks in room 2436 of Mason Hall, as 14 members of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality hungrily dug into the spread after spending the last 23 hours participating in a hunger strike in honor of Hana Shalabi.
“In response to an international call for a day of hunger by one student at every American and European college, about 25 University student members of SAFE began a hunger strike at 12:01 a.m. yesterday to raise awareness for Shalabi, a Palestinian woman who was arrested and detained last month by Israeli forces without charge for allegedly supporting the Islamic Jihad militant group. In protest of the arrest, Shalabi began a hunger strike that lasted for 43 days, spurring movements for solidarity around the world.

“LSA senior Abbas Alawieh, education chair for SAFE, said the organization decided to participate in the hunger strike at its meeting on Wednesday night. While only one student was asked to participate, Alawieh said about 25 members agreed to strike.
“Members wore orange ribbons around their arms in solidarity of the international hunger strike, and Alawieh said the strike raised awareness for the more than 300 Palestinian prisoners being held without charge in Israeli prisons….

************************************************
“Four NU students fast in support of Palestinian prisoner”
By Paulina Firozi
THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN
Northwestern University (Evanston, Illinois)
Friday, March 30, 2012
At:
Four Northwestern students, along with students from other universities across the country, chose Thursday to go on a 24-hour hunger strike in support of Hana Shalabi, a Palestinian prisoner who had been on a hunger strike for 42 days.
Since her arrest by Israeli Occupying Forces at her home in Burquin, Jenin, Shalabi had been in administrative detention, or detention without a charge or trial, according to a prisoner report by the Palestinian Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association.
Plans were made Thursday to release Shalabi, which prompted the end of her hunger strike. Students had already made plans for their strike.
In October, Shalabi was released from two years in prison after being detained because of a prisoner exchange between the Israeli government and Hamas. One thousand and twenty-seven political prisoners from Palestine were later released reportedly in exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, according to the prisoner report.
The four students represented NU’s chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine.
Weinberg sophomore Salek Khalid, Weinberg senior Natasha Singh, Weinberg freshman Serene Darwish and Weinberg sophomore Nouha Boundaoui were the four SJP students involved.
“I feel like on college campuses, solidarity is a really important thing,” Darwish said. “That’s how it started with South Africa — apartheid fell and we will get there with Palestine.”
Khalid said the students had heard of about 320 prisoners who are currently under administrative detention and that many of them have also been inspired to begin hunger strikes.
More than 30 universities including Harvard University and Columbia University have students who were involved in the one-day strike.
“When we got the call to action by organizers, we thought it was important for us to respond,” Khalid said. “It’s not just to raise awareness, but it’s an act to be presented to Hana’s family, that we stand with her and they are not alone….”