Activists in Chicago with the Palestinian Movement for Human Rights posted the following video, featuring Maureen Murphy’s art for Hana Shalabi on display around the city and highlighting Hana’s image and words as her hunger strike stretches to 35 days:
Protests in Belfast demand release of Hana Shalabi
Gaza TV News published the following report from Belfast on March 16, 2012: For the second time this week, hundreds of Irish people turned out in Belfast to show support and solidarity for Hana Shalabi, the Palestinian woman who has now entered her 30th day on Hunger Strike in protest at her incarceration under “Administrative Detention” in an Israeli prison.
Hana had previously been held in administrative detention at the HaSharon prison in Israel for a 30 month period between 2009 and 2011. Hana was released in the prisoner exchange four months ago that freed 1027 Palestinians, and the lone Israeli soldier captive, Gilad Shalit.
Since her release she had been trying to recover from the deep sense of estrangement she experienced in prison, and rarely left her home or the company of her family. As she was returning to normalcy, she was re-arrested in an abusive manner, which allegedly included a strip-search by a male soldier and sexual abuse.
On February 16, 2012, the day of the renewal of her administrative detention, Hana indicated her resolve to start a hunger strike to protest her own treatment, and to demand an end of administrative detention now relied upon by Israel to hold at least 309 Palestinian in prison.
Her parents have been denied visitation rights, and Hana has been placed in solitary confinement. Her health has deteriorated to the point of concern for her life. Impressively, her parents have committed themselves to a hunger strike for as long as their daughter remains under administrative detention.
Just like in the case of Khader Adnan, the Irish people have stood tall, and recalling the experiences of the infamous 1981 hunger strikes where 10 men died, they have gathered together to show solidarity and support for Hana in her hour of need. When it comes to Palestinian solidarity, the Irish have not been silent.
March 24 – EMERGENCY Vigil for Hana Shalabi, Palestinian prisoner on Hunger Strike for 36 Days – Vancouver
EMERGENCY Vigil for Hana Shalabi, Palestinian prisoner on Hunger Strike for 36 Days
Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid: Take Action as Hana Shalabi’s Medical Condition Deteriorates + Protest to Canadian Officials
The following alert was issued on March 22 by the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid in Toronto. Samidoun encourages all supporters in Canada to take this action:
Hana Shalabi, 30 years old and resident of Burqin village near Jenin, was arrested on 16 February 2012 and is being held under Administrative Detention in Hasharon Prison, Israel. She has been on hunger strike since 16 February in protest against her violent arrest, the harmful and degrading treatment she suffered following her arrest and her administrative detention. She was previously held for over two years in administrative detention and released in the prisoner exchange on 18 October 2011.
She has never been charged or gone to trial. According to Article 9 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.”
Administrative detention is a procedure that allows the Israeli military to hold prisoners indefinitely on secret evidence without charging them or allowing them to stand trial. Approximately 309 Palestinians are currently held in administrative detention in Israeli prisons. The use of administative detention and the prison system is central to maintaining the Israeli Apartheid system. We recommend you readthis article by Ameer Makhoul a Palestinian civil society leader and political prisoner at Gilboa Prison for background on the role of the prisoners campaign in the struggle against Israeli Apartheid.
Hana Shalabi is challenging the walls of silence and international complicity, she is refusing indignation and the violations of basic human rights from a state that many Canadian politicians insist on calling the only democracy in the Middle East. Languishing under severe hardship in Israel’s notoriously inhumane prisons, Hana Shalabi and all Palestinian political prisoners implore international civil society to act. Following yet another successful Israeli Apartheid Week, we urge people to join the BDS movement to assure that Hana Shalabi’s courage translates to effective international solidarity.
The Palestinian prisoners’ movement has always been at the forefront of the Palestinian struggle for freedom, justice and self determination. We must hold Israel accountable for its crimes against Palestinian political prisoners and the Palestinian people at large by intensifying BDS campaigns to pressure both Israel and the Canadian government which offers Israel uncritical support.
Actions that you can take to help free Hana Shalabi and Palestinian Political detainees:
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ATTEND THE VIGIL IN TORONTO in support of Palestinian Political Prisoners, especially Hana Shalabi, this Friday evening:
23 March 2012
In front of the building housing the Israeli consulate 180 Bloor Street West Toronto: Northwest corner of Bloor and Avenue Rd. Across from the ROM
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SEND AN E-MAIL TO Canadian Minister for Foreign Affairs, John Baird, demand that he protest the Israeli government’s abusive use of administrative detention and that they release Hana Shalabi and all other Palestinian Administrative detainees. See one minute action below.
We also encourage you to copy and paste this letter and send it to your Federal MPs email address. You can find it here.
Thank you for taking action. This campaign is now closed.
March 23: Vigil for Hana Shalabi and Palestinian Prisoners – Toronto
VIGIL in support of Palestinian Political Prisoners, especially Hana Shalabi, this Friday evening:
23 March 2012
In front of the building housing the Israeli consulate 180 Bloor Street West Toronto: Northwest corner of Bloor and Avenue Rd.
DCI-Palestine issues new report: Bound, Blindfolded and Convicted: Children held in military detention (2012)

- An interview with a lawyer who represents children in the military courts;
- An interview with the director of the YMCA rehabilitation programme;
- An interview with an Israeli soldier, courtesy of Breaking the Silence;
- A Psychological opinion into the effects of military detention on children; and
- 25 case studies taken from child-detainees.
The report found that there is a systematic pattern of ill-treatment, and in some cases torture, of children held in the military detention system, with the majority of the abuse occurring during the first 48 hours. The key findings of the report are presented in the table below:
# | Common complaints and areas of concern | Number of cases | Percentage of children |
1 | Hand ties | 296 | 95% |
2 | Blindfolds | 281 | 90% |
3 | Physical violence | 234 | 75% |
4 | Detention inside Israel in violation of Article 76 | 196 | 63% |
5 | Arrested between midnight and 5:00 am | 188 | 60% |
6 | Confession during interrogation |
180 | 58% |
7 | Threats | 178 | 57% |
8 | Verbal abuse and/or humiliation | 169 | 54% |
9 | Strip searched | 102 | 33% |
10 | Transferred on floor of vehicle | 98 | 32% |
11 | Signed/shown documents written in Hebrew | 91 | 29% |
12 | Solitary confinement | 38 | 12% |
The testimonies reveal that most children are arrested from villages located close to friction points, namely settlements built in violation of international law, and roads used by the Israeli army or settlers. The report includes 10 recommendations, which if implemented, would reduce the level of ill-treatment, but no one should be under any illusion that the treatment documented in the report can be eliminated so long as the friction points remain and Palestinian children are treated as second-class individuals.
The full report is available on line, and hard copies are available on request.
March 23: Emergency Rally for Hana Shalabi – New York City
EMERGENCY RALLY FOR HANA SHALABI @UNION SQUARE (14TH STREET AND BROADWAY ON STEPS OF PARK)
Friday, March 23, 2012
5:00pm until 7:00pm
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/350938041607190/
Existence is Resistance calls on all that are able to please join us at an emergency rally for Hana Shalabi in Union Square in NYC this Friday.
We know its short notice but Hana has been transferred to hospital and is in and out of consciousness at this time.
Hana is a 29 year old Palestinian woman who was held over 2 years on Israels “Administrative Detention” which means you can be held 6 months at a time (renewable indefinitely) with no charges.
Israel released her during the prisoner swap for Gilad Shalit and then rearrested her 4 months later (February 16th) – she has since been on Hunger Strike entering her 35th day today.
Please come out and stand in solidarity and help us spread her message that being held with no charges under Administrative detention is unacceptable.
March 24: March to BBC for Palestinian Prisoners – Glasgow, Scotland

Saturday 24 March, Glasgow
http://www.addameer.org/
It took almost 50 days for Khader Adnan’s hunger strike to receive the limited coverage it received here in the UK and we must take the streets of Glasgow to show that we will not accept or be party to this wall of silence that we will not let Hana and the others die in silence.
The BBC has a woeful record in covering the Palestinian issue and we will marching down to the BBC building to hand-in a letter of complaint and an appeal to them and all media outlets to give this story the coverage it deserves.
Students in Scotland led the way in calling for a Global Hunger Strike day of action on Friday 16th March, which saw hundreds worldwide fasting for one day in solidarity.
To keep the momentum and to do our very best to raise awareness students will be joining the rolling hunger strike called by Glasgow University Palestine Society which began on Saturday 17th March. One person has been fasting for 24 hours to be replaced by someone else the next day and will continue as long as Hana Shalabi remains on hunger strike. Saturday’s demonstration will also to be to mark week #1.
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Silence is complicity, we refuse to be silent, join us and help make the message from Scotland loud and clear:
“No to arbitrary detention, Freedom for Hana Shalabi, Freedom for all the prisoners, Freedom for Palestine
Adnan Case More than Scrapping Israeli Detention Law by Ameer Makhoul (English/Arabic)
Please see below for Arabic text.
The case of the freedom fighter Khader Adnan reminds us of where the strength of the Palestinian people lies. This is the strength that was squandered and dissipated in the Oslo process and the pursuit of a state at the expense of national liberation.
With his historic hunger strike and his heroic resolve in his fight against the occupying state, Adnan has reaffirmed an important principle of resistance to colonialist regimes: when the people, or individuals, who are their victims remain resolute, the world will react. Sympathy turns into solidarity, and that in turn can nurture a growing movement of support for the struggle which is capable of shaking the foundations of the colonialist system.
His case has also confirmed the fact that the colonizer’s agencies can never protect its victim. Its project can only be defeated by breaking the dominance of those agencies and the rules they enforce.
Adnan’s battle for life and dignity is a model to be emulated in the Palestinian liberation struggle. It has lessons to offer the participants in that struggle, including prisoners and international solidarity activists, on how their work can be integrated.
Adnan seized the initiative and declared an open-ended hunger strike to protest against his imprisonment under an administrative detention order. His aim was clear: to defy both the order and the Israeli system of oppression. He also was seeking to serve notice that Palestinians refuse to accept the treatment meted out to them by the occupation authorities.
The campaign he triggered illustrated how the components of popular struggle can be brought together. Inspired by the prisoner’s determination, Palestinians in the 1948 territories responded quickly. A popular media and mobilization campaign was rapidly launched, both locally and internationally. A variety of youth and other grassroots organizations became immediately involved, as did prisoners’ families and political groups.
This activism soon spread to the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and Jerusalem. It also spread among the Palestinian diaspora and spawned a formidable worldwide movement.
Prisoners in Israeli jails also launched a campaign to champion, support, and share the responsibility with Adnan. They adopted the principles of organized collective escalation, which began by rejecting meals and refusing to receive supplies (the prison authorities responded by closing off the open-air courtyards and preventing the prisoners from leaving their cells). Growing numbers also declared open-ended hunger strikes.
The prisoners knew that their battle was not with the prison authorities per se, but the occupation state as a system, with all its extensions and institutions. But the prison authorities were the weak link within the security apparatus on which pressure could be applied. The prisoners thus sent a message to the government of Israel that Adnan speaks for them all and warned of the consequences of endangering his life.
The prison authorities in turn urged the government to resolve Adnan’s case as quickly as possible in order to forestall the growing unrest among the prisoners. In effect, the prisoners’ message was received.
The Israeli security apparatus was extremely worried when the hunger strike continued and Adnan’s condition became critical. They were not concerned for his life, but feared his death could help trigger a new Palestinian intifada, including in the 1948 territories.
The strategy of rapid multi-faceted action proved its effectiveness. In addition to Palestinian action, a major and influential role was played by international solidarity movements. This pressure, coupled with fear of what would happen if there was an explosion of Palestinian anger, prompted even the US and European countries to make statements in the last few days of the hunger strike against the administrative detention of Adnan.
Solidarity and Empowerment
One of the major strengths of the campaign to support Adnan was that it told his personal human story, as well as of his life in politics and his struggle, in a manner that successfully conveyed both his suffering and his resolve. Adnan’s story also embodied the essence of the Palestinians’ experience and their quest for their rights and freedom, and serve to expose Israel’s essence for what it really is.
This was more effective at moving people than mere facts and figures – important as they are – could have been. The main part in the drama was played by the prisoner himself. Adnan family, wife, father, and children also played heroic roles.
This battle highlighted the bankruptcy of the discourse of “moderation” which Israel and the US have foisted on the official Palestinian leadership. This moderate stance claims that if we Palestinians wish to secure international support, we must adopt a moderate posture. In practice, this means voluntarily accepting the oppressive controls imposed by the globalized terror of the state. “Moderation” here means abandoning the right to resist the occupying state.
Yet what we have just witnessed is that the world lends support when Palestinians themselves fight back and stand firm, regardless of their political affiliation. The ability to affect and move international public opinion and secure effective wide-scale solidarity was not the outcome of a public relations strategy but of a real struggle on the ground to stand up to the oppressive colonialist machine.
Exposing Israeli courts
In all cases when an Israeli administrative detention by military order has been legally challenged – or an emergency regulations provision such as a ban on travelling or entering the territories occupied by Israel in 1967 – the Israeli high court has always upheld the policies of the military, security, and intelligence services.
What happens in court is that the judge asks the Palestinian challenging the order, whether he is an Israeli citizen or not, to authorize the Israeli judges to see the “secret evidence” which the victims and their lawyers are not allowed to see or know. If the victim agrees, the judges rule on the basis of the “secret evidence” and invariably agree with the finding of the security agencies, normally issued in the name of a relevant minister or military leader.
Should the victim refuse to trust in the honesty or credibility of the occupying state, the legal challenge is in effect over, as the judges will throw it out and blame the victim for its failure.
Lessons Unlearned
During the Adnan campaign, a number of Palestinian political leaders, human rights activists and media outlets used the argument that if Israel had any evidence against Adnan, it should have brought him before an ordinary court. Others have suggested that the success of his campaign should inspire a new one against the use of administrative detention orders in general.
These are dangerous notions, particularly when coming from people of standing and influence. Israel is an occupying state and a colonialist entity. Even international law protects the victims of occupation and prohibits their transfer to prisons within the borders of the occupying state. Therefore, both administrative detention and the “ordinary” occupation prisons are equally illegal.
Moreover, what is “evidence” supposed to mean here? Evidence of resisting the occupation? Resisting the occupation is legitimate: it is the Israeli occupation and colonization, with its settlements and courts, that are illegitimate. Have the thousands of Palestinian and Arab prisoners in Israeli jail been legitimately sentenced? They have all been tried on “evidence” that is mainly secret and neither they nor their lawyers are allowed to see.
There is another factor. Israeli academic studies have proven unequivocally the scale of scandalous discrimination in the sentences handed down by judges in criminal cases. The sentences given to Palestinian citizens of Israel are much harsher than those given to Jewish Israeli convicts. So what can one expect when the judge representing the occupying state adjudicates on a charge of resistance by victims of this occupation?
The battle against Israeli emergency laws is a battle for the Israelis, not for the Palestinian people.The real concern for the people under occupation is not whether the detention of their sons or daughters was carried out using an Israeli administrative order or a military or civilian court order. The oppression, repression, and plunder are the same no matter which tool the occupation uses. Adnan’s battle is a fight against the whole colonialist project and not just one of its tools.
But when Palestinian leaders and human rights activists declare that the next step is to escalate the campaign against administrative detention orders, it indicates weakness or faulty vision.
The battle for the Palestinians, and all in the world who oppose occupation and colonialism, is against the occupation and the occupying state, and for national liberation, recovery of the homeland, and the return of its people who are refugees and exiles.
The case of Adnan proves that victory over the colonialist project is not a mission impossible. It is possible. And it has renewed and strengthened the hope that the Palestinian people are capable of energizing heir free will…the will for victory.
Ameer Makhoul is a Palestinian civil society leader and political prisoner at Gilboa Prison.
This article is co-published by The Electronic Intifida and Al-Akhbar, translated from Arabic.
Hana Shalabi ‘could have been me, or my sister’: Palestinian Canadian student launches solidarity hunger strike with Hana Shalabi
This article by Charlotte Kates was published at Mondoweiss on March 22, 2012.
Mohammed Horreya, 20, a third-year student at Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada, and the president of Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights (SPHR) at the university, launched his hunger strike on Monday, March 19. He says he was inspired to begin his hunger strike because “Hana’s case has not received the slightest bit of media attention here in Canada. That is devastating to me. To think that if she had been born anywhere else in the world, subject to less than half of the cruel treatment she had to endure, she would have been presented on every big media outlet…it’s disheartening.”
“Hana Shalabi, Khader Adnan, and all other political prisoners who follow in their footsteps represent an Idea. That is, freedom and dignity are more important than anything else,” says Horreya. As a Palestinian Canadian, he points out that, in another situation, “It could easily have been me, or my sister. I sympathize with Hana, and in solidarity with her I chose to go on Hunger Strike to try and reach out to many people here in Toronto; because I know if people actually knew about her, they would genuinely care.”
Shalabi’s case – like that of Khader Adnan before her – has captured the attention of people around the world and filled many blogs and websites, but at the same time, has largely been marginalized in mainstream media. Khader Adnan ended a 66-day hunger strike on February 21, after his own protest of administrative detention without charge or trialsparked international protests, solidarity hunger strikes, and the call to end administrative detention was taken up both by Palestine solidarity activists globally and also by human rights organizations like Amnesty International. Shalabi had been freed after two years in administrative detention in the prisoner exchange of October 2011 only to be re-arrested in February 2012 and once again placed in administrative detention, immediately launching her hunger strike. Despite a reduction of her sentence to four months, she has refused to end the strike, demanding freedom.Hana Shalabi and Khader Adnan are two of 310 Palestinian prisoners held in administrative detention, without charge or trial, and of 4,498 total Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons. “Palestinian prisoners represent our freedom. As Hana’s father said, ‘Hana is not only my daughter, she is the daughter of every Palestinian.’ Khader Adnan, Hana Shalabi, and others like them represent the values of Palestinians and demonstrate just how far we are willing to go to demand our freedom…. More than that, Hana, Khader, and all other political prisoners represent the courage of the Palestinians,” said Mohammad Horreya.
Looking at the situation on his campus and among Canadian students, Horreya noted that “generally speaking, support for Palestine on campus is there but hidden.” Regarding Palestinian political prisoners, he said “I don’t think it’s something that many students even know about. This is one of the reasons I decided to take on the hunger strike… I wear a shirt designed with words of support for Hana, info on her (any my) hunger strike, and twitter hashtags. Automatically people are learning about Hana whether they want to or not…. So I think the more people know about Hana, they will respond to her and all other prisoners’ calls.”
Canadian policy toward Palestine under the Stephen Harper government has become stridently pro-Zionist even beyond its long-term support for Israeli occupation, including Foreign Minister John Baird’s involvement in attempts to oust a Palestinian speaker on Palestinian legislators imprisoned by Israel from the UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva this week; Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney’s condemnation of Israeli Apartheid Week (condemned by over 70 organizations across the country); Baird’s affirmation of Canada as Israel’s “greatest friend”; and the systematic defunding of Palestine House, the Canadian Arab Federation and Kairos, attempting to silence and bankrupt community organizations and institutions that highlight the Palestinian cause. Kenney’s ministry, in fact, cited Palestine House’s hosting of an event celebrating the release of Palestinian political prisoners (who it labelled “terrorists”) as the reason for the defunding of Palestine House’s separate immigrant resettlement programs.
Horreya pointed out the sharp disconnect between the proclaimed values of the Canadian government and its actions in regard to Palestine. “Canadian policy on Palestine is flawed to say the least,” he said. “We stand for equality, Israel defines itself as a ‘Jewish State,’ it cannot be disputed that Muslim and Christian Arabs living within Israel are subject to less freedom and rights. With various members of parliament condemning Israeli Apartheid Week recently, it is becoming clear that in defending Israel they are taking steps to dissolving Canadian values like freedom of speech. Canadian policy on Palestine and Israel needs a makeover, it is a 64 year long story on an oppressed and an oppressor; the Harper administration clearly has it backwards.”
He placed the imprisonment of Shalabi and her thousands of fellow political prisoners within the context of the struggle for justice, return and liberation for Palestine and the Palestinian people. “The fact that Israel is practicing mass imprisonment proves that the struggle is far from over. Throughout the 64 years of occupation, Israel’s oppression towards the Palestinian people has evolved. It has now reached a point where there is a complete and utter disregard for what the world thinks about it. …After the Nakba, Palestinians stood firm, after the Naksa, Palestinians stood firm, after the first and second Intifada, Palestinians still stood firm. Israel has learned that no matter how many bombs they drop, and how ever many acts of genocide they commit, unless they kill us all Palestinians will not just get off of their land. To me these imprisonments also represent a way to get people out of their homes.”
Protests and demonstrations are continuing around the world as Shalabi’s health situation has grown more dire. Demonstrations are planned in New York and Toronto on March 23,Glasgow on March 24, and a number of other cities, while many more are mobilizing for April 17, Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association has reported that over 24 Palestinian prisoners have joined Shalabi’s open-ended strike, and protests and solidarity sit-ins have taken place throughout Palestine.
Horreya said that Palestinians in Canada, and around the world in exile and diaspora, can play a major role in supporting Palestinian prisoners and their freedom everywhere they are. Speaking of the prisoners, he said, “while they don’t know me, I know them, and they are a big part of me. They are my inspiration to spread the word about the Palestinian cause; they give all the doubters and propagandists something to think about. Hana is the first person on my mind when I wake up and the last on my mind before I go to sleep.”
About Charlotte Kates
Charlotte Kates is a Palestine solidarity activist with the Boycott Israeli Apartheid Campaign (http://boycottisraeliapartheid.org) and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network (http://samidoun.net) in Vancouver, on unceded Coast Salish Territories. She is a member of the Organizing Committee of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (http://www.usacbi.org) and is active with the National Lawyers Guild and its International Committee (http://www.nlginternational.org).