Thursday, December 31, 2009

Israeli forces detain 15 including PA security officer in raids

Nablus – Ma’an – Israeli forces detained thirteen young men including an officer with the PA security forces and two minors overnight after storming their home, locals reported.

Local Palestinian sources in Barqa village south of Nablus told Ma’an that Israeli military vehicles stormed the area after midnight and raided a number of houses before detaining the young men.

The detainees were identified as: Shabib Shabib, 20, Amr Ahmad Shabib, 17, Ali Muhammad Salah, 16, Ameen Taysir Salah, 16, and Samer Safe, 20, a guard in the Palestinian National Security forces.

Locals said Israeli forces withdrew from the village at 5 am and took the detainees to the Huwara investigations center.

According to Israeli sources, a total of 11 Palestinians were detained in overnight raids, including five from the Nablus area.

From Az-Zoun east of Qalqiliya, those detained were Amjad Jamal Salim, 21, Ahmad Na’eem Hussein, 17, Yousif Hisham Radwan, 22, and Salam Salim, 23.

Local sources said Israeli military vehicles entered the town in the early hours of the morning and took the men to an unknown location.

In the southern West Bank at the Al-Aroub Refugee Camp Hassan Abed Al-Kareem At-Teeti, 15, and Hassan Maher Al-Shareef were detained early morning after the forces stormed several homes, the Hebron police operations room said Thursday.

The forces also detained a man identified as Nabil Ref’at Abu Rahmeh, 26, stopping him in the street in the central city. All three were taken to an unknown location.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

IOF troops deliberately break the limbs of 3 Palestinian workers

[ 30/12/2009 - 10:02 AM ]


BETHLEHEM, (PIC)-- Four Palestinian workers from the districts of Jenin and Tulkarem were beaten up by Israeli occupation forces (IOF) near Walaja village, Bethlehem district, on Tuesday.
Local sources said that the workmen were trying to enter Palestine occupied in 1948 through this village since the separation wall had closed all entrances near their districts in northern West Bank, but they were spotted and chased by the soldiers.
Eyewitnesses said that the soldiers were not content with beating the laborers but deliberately broke the limbs of three of them and arrested one of them.
They said that two were hospitalized in Beit Jala for treatment.
The IOF soldiers at an early hour on Wednesday rounded up four citizens in a number of West Bank areas at the pretext they were wanted for interrogation.
The Jewish settlers, for their part, assaulted two Palestinian shepherds north of Al-Khalil and shot at and wounded a Palestinian youth in Al-Khalil city on Tuesday.
Medical sources said that the young man's injuries were "moderate", noting that the shepherd was rearing his sheep near the settlement of Bat Ayin when a settler told him to leave the land and when he refused the settler shot him.

Friday, December 25, 2009

Israeli forces detain Hebron teen

Bethlehem – Ma’an – Israeli Border Police detained a 17-year-old Palestinian at military checkpoint in the center of the city of Hebron on Thursday for allegedly carrying a sharp tool.

The teen was arrested “after arousing their suspicion,” according to the Israeli news website Ynet.

The teen was handed over to police for interrogation, the report added. The reported incident took place at a checkpoint near the Ibrahimi Mosque.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Israeli court postpones decision on sentence of PLC member


Nablus – Ma’an – Israel’s Salem military court postponed a ruling on the fate of Palestinian lawmaker Jamal Tirawi on Wednesday, pushing the next hearing back to 28 December.

Tirawi’s brother Raed, who attended Wednesday’s hearing along with his brother’s wife, said the session lasted eight hours.

He added that the journey to the court from prison and the hearing were difficult for his brother.

A member of President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party from Nablus, Jamal Tirawi was arrested in 2007. He was indicted for organizing the bombing of a Tel Aviv cafĂ© in 2002 which killed an Israeli woman.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Israel extends detention of anti-wall campaigner Juma


Bethlehem – Ma’an – An Israeli judge extended the detention of Jamal Juma, the Palestinian anti-wall activist, during a hearing on Monday, a spokesman said.

Prosecutors demanded another 14 days of detention, but the judge ordered only four, according to Ghaith Hilal, a spokesperson for the Stop the Wall Campaign of which Juma is the coordinator.

But Hilal said, it was “very likely” that he would be held beyond the four days. Juma is being held in West Jerusalem’s Russian Compound prison on “suspicion of incitement,” he said.

Monday’s hearing, in the courthouse adjacent to the prison, was the first time Juma saw a lawyer since he was detained by Israeli forces on 16 December, Hilal said.

Juma is the latest of several high-profile figures from Palestinian civil society who have been jailed by Israel. Campaigners say Israel is using arrests to quash popular demonstrations, boycotts, and other means of civil opposition to the occupation.

In a statement on Sunday, the Stop the Wall Campaign called the arrest “yet another escalation of Israel's attack on Palestinian human rights defenders and clampdown on the right to freedom of expression and the right to association.”

In September, another well-known member of the Stop the Wall campaign, Mohammad Othman, was detained by Israeli forces at the Allenby border crossing upon returning to the West Bank from Norway.

On 10 December Israeli soldiers seized Abdullah Abu Rahmah, the coordinator of the anti-wall Popular Committee in the West Bank village of Bil’in, during a raid on his house.

Brothers detained during Gaza war released

Gaza – Ma’an – Israeli officials released Gazan brothers Saed and Ibrahim Kassab from prison Sunday, after both served nearly a year in administrative detention.

The brothers, from the Zaytoun neighborhood in Gaza City, were detained by Israeli soldiers during that country's war on the Gaza Strip which began on 27 December 2008.

The men were taken during raids into area when Israeli troops entered the Strip during the ground invasion on 3 January.

The brothers were held without charge, the Wa’ed Detainees Association reported on Monday.

The men were received by their friends and family at the Erez crossing in the northern Gaza Strip.

Al-Aqsa member sentenced to 5 years in jail

Nablus – Ma’an – The Israeli military court in the settlement of Ofer sentenced Yousef Dabak, from the village Tayasir near Tubas, to five years in prison on Monday for membership in the Al-Aqsa Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah.

Dabak was also fined 3,000 shekels.

After being listed on Israel’s “wanted” list for five years, Dabak was detained on 4 December 2007.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Israel jails anti-wall campaign leader


Bethlehem – Ma’an – The Stop the Wall Campaign announced on Sunday that its coordinator, Jamal Juma, has been imprisoned by Israel since 16 December.

Juma’s arrest follows what activists say is a military-legal crackdown on popular expressions of rejection of Israeli occupation. Dozens of protest leaders, boycott campaigners, and other civil society advocates have been arrested in recent weeks.

The Ramallah-based Stop the Wall Campaign, a coordinating body for local anti-wall initiatives said in a statement “This latest arrest is yet another escalation of Israel's attack on Palestinian human rights defenders and clamp down on the right to freedom of expression and the right to association.”

According to the campaign, Israeli security summoned Juma for interrogation at midnight 15 December. After questioning he was brought to his home.

“Juma was handcuffed while soldiers searched his house for two hours as his wife and three young children looked on helplessly,” the anti-wall campaign said in a statement.

The soldiers told Juma’s wife “she would only see her husband again through a prisoner exchange.”

“Since then, Juma has been detained, and banned from speaking to a lawyer or his family, with no explanation for his arrest,” the organization added.

A prominent figure in Palestinian civil society Juma, 47, served as coordinator of the Stop the Wall Campaign since 2002 and helped found the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees (PARC).

In September, another well-known member of the Stop the Wall campaign, Mohammad Othman, was detained by Israeli forces at the Allenby border crossing upon returning to the West Bank from Norway where he met with the country’s Finance Minister Kristin Halvorsen and other officials.

On 10 December Israeli soldiers seized Abdullah Abu Rahmah, the coordinator of the anti-wall Popular Committee in the West Bank village of Bil’in, during a raid on his house.

Witnesses said that the Israeli military raided houses in Bil’in and another village, Nil’in, early on Saturday. Both villages hold weekly demonstrations against the construction of the separation wall on their land.

According to the Stop the Wall Campaign, Jamal Juma’s court date is set for Monday.

Palestinians in Megiddo prison say not shielded from rain

Gaza – Ma’an – Prisoners in Israel’s Megiddo detention center are reporting that their living situation is awful, the Hussam prisoners organization said on Sunday.

The group said it had been contacted by Palestinians held in the facility saying that wind and rainwater has been coming into their cells through cracks in the walls. They also reported that they were not provided with winter clothing, and that their drinking water was contaminated.

The Israeli prison administration has banned Palestinian families from giving clothes to the inmates in Megiddo, the organization added.

Three prisoners are suffering from kidney diseases, and the prison’s clinic lacks the appropriate equipment and supplies to treat them.

The prison’s yard, they report, is only large enough for seven people to stand in during designated times.

There are more than 10,000 Palestinians in Israel’s prisons.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Sandstorm devastates Negev prison inmates


Gaza – Ma’an – A ferocious sandstorm hit Israel's Negev desert prison this week, blasting the tent-compounds with raging winds and debris for three days, a prisoners society reported Saturday.

The story caused severe losses at the camp, destroying many of the personal possessions of Palestinian prisoners and causing harsh living conditions, particularly those sentenced to live in tents in the outdoor compounds.

The Higher Committee of the Media department in Hamas' Prisoners association said the storm disrupted daily programs at the prison, and accused Israeli prison authorities of standing idly by as the compound was hit with the storm.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Palestinians mark 23, 24 years in Israeli prison



Gaza – Ma’an – Two Palestinians are marking their 24th year in Israeli prison this week, expert in Palestinian detainees issues, Abdel Nasser Farwaneh told Ma'an on Friday.

Abdel Rahman Al-Qiq, 46, is one of the longest-serving Palestinian detainees in jail, Farwaneh said, adding that today, he marks 24 years behind Israeli bars.

Al-Qiq was sentenced on 18 December 1986 to life in prison for allegedly participating in a Palestinian national resistance effort against Israel.

Later this week, Kahlid Al-Ju'eidy, 44, will mark 23 years in prison. Al-Ju'eidy was detained at Rafah and sentenced for supporting the Islamic Jihad movement and resisting the Israeli occupation in Gaza.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

IOF Penetrates and Attacks the Border Area, Arrest Two Children in Gaza

Al Mezan

10-12-2009


At approximately 12:30pm on Thursday 10 December 2009, an Israeli force penetrated approximately 350 meters into the north of the Gaza Strip, into an area of demolished industrial premises southwest of Erez Crossing. Palestinians who were removing rubble from the area were present there when the IOF advanced.
The Israeli force arrested two children; Mahmoud Jamil Hassan Al Yazji, Mohammed Hatem Qassem Al Kafarna(16 and 17 respectively), and took them into Israel. A few hours later, the IOF released Mohammed Al Kafarna while Mahmoud Al Yazji has remained in detention. This is the second time in which the IOF invade this area and arrest Palestinian civilians.
According to Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights lawyer, the IOF transferred the child Mahmoud Al Yazji to Ashkelon prison and interrogated him. On Sunday 13 December 2009, the Israeli court extended the detention period until Friday 18 December 2009

Prisoners ministry calls for pressuring IOA to allow winter clothes to prisoners

GAZA, (PIC)-- The ministry of prisoners in Gaza has asked the international human rights groups to pressure the Israeli occupation authority (IOA) to allow winter clothes to prisoners from the Gaza Strip.




Riyadh Al-Ashqar, the ministry's spokesman, said in a press release on Saturday that those 760 prisoners have been deprived of family visits for more than 30 months.



The IOA only allowed winter clothes for those prisoners twice, he said, adding that the ban was doubling the suffering of those prisoners in the harsh winter weather especially in desert prisons.



The IOA does not provide clothes to those captives and compels them to secure their needs either through their relatives or at the prison's canteen, where the prices are very high, Asqar said.



He noted that the Gaza prisoners used to secure their needs of clothes through relatives of their West Bank comrades but the IOA foiled the measure by limiting quantity of clothes to the West Bank prisoners.



The ministry appealed to the UN to pressure the IOA into allowing family visits to those prisoners in order to see their relatives and to secure their needs.

Female detainee kept in isolation for insulting guard

Gaza – Ma’an – A woman Palestinian prisoner has been kept in solitary confinement following a verbal incident with an Israeli prison guard, the Hussam prisoners association said on Tuesday.




Wafa’ Al-Lubs, 26, has been held in solitary confinement at the Ar-Ramlah prison for 100 days and has been prevented from making or receiving phones calls or visitors after she verbally assaulted a prison guard, the association said.



Al-Lubs’ father contacted the Hussam association to visit his daughter, who expressed his deep concern for her, having received no news on his daughter.



Three months ago, Al-Lubs was permitted to have surgery for a nervous system condition that affects her left hand and fingers, following three years of continued pressure on the Israeli Prison Services by fellow detainees.



Al-Lubs was born on 8 July 1984 in Jabaliya, in the northern Gaza Strip, and was detained by Israeli forces in 2005 at the Erez checkpoint in northern Gaza and sentenced to 12 years.



The Hussam association said that, as a result of torture in the Israeli prison, Al-Luba has lost one of her eyes.

Israeli forces seize PFLP members in Nablus raid

Nablus – Ma’an – The Israeli army seized several members of the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) during an incursion in the West Bank city of Nablus on Tuesday night, according to Palestinian and Israeli sources.




PFLP sources linked the operation to the negotiations toward a potential prisoner swap which could involve the release of the party’s secretary general, Ahmad Sa’adat, from an Israeli prison.



The sources said Mussa Salama, 47, and Wa’el Al-Faqeeh Abu As-Sabe, 45, were both from north of Nablus. Another PFLP affiliate, Ziad As-Sal’ous, was detained at the Huwwara military checkpoint while returning to Nablus from Ramallah.



Maysar Itiany, 45, an activist in prisoner and human rights, and her brother Abdul-Nasser Itiany, 38, were seized from their home in the Rafidiya neighborhood of Nablus.



Palestinian sources in Al-Ein Refugee Camp in Nablus said Israeli forces entered the camp and detained a number of young PFLP supporters. The detainees were identified as Mahmud Suleiman, Muhammad Ibrahim Dahbour, Yousef Rajab, and Rabi Abu Khalifa.



Israeli forces also raided the village of Awarta, sources said, and detained Nabih Abdul-Aziz Awwad, 47, from his house. Awwad works in the local Palestinian Authority government and is a supporter of the PFLP.



The Israeli military said it detained 14 people from the West Bank on Tuesday night. Military sources told Israel Radio that Israeli soldiers found guns and ammunition in a house during the operation in Nablus.



Palestinian security officials confirmed that a number Israeli military jeeps entered Nablus after midnight. Israeli soldiers raided a number of houses in the city, the security sources said.



Separately the Palestinian Authority’s police department said Israeli soldiers detained two students from near Bethlehem.



The media office of the PA police department said Israeli forces entered the town of Ubeidiya, east of Bethlehem, and set up a checkpoint on a road leading to the As-Sawahreh neighborhood.



The soldiers arrested Walid Farid Ar-Rajee and Ubeida Khaled Abu Arqub after stopping their car and checking their IDs, the police report said. The two Al-Quds University students are being held in an unknown location.



Israeli soldiers in armored vehicles also entered the town of Beit Sahour, west of Bethlehem and searched several houses, according to PA security sources.



The sources said soldiers delivered papers summoning some residents to be interrogated at a military installation called Kfar Etzion, in a nearby Israeli settlement. No detentions were reported.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Hamas must say NO to proposed deportation of prisoners

By Khalid Amayreh in the West Bank
The Palestinian liberation movement, Hamas, is conducting complicated and exhaustive negotiations with Israel in an effort to conclude a prisoner-exchange accord between the two archenemies.



The German-mediated negotiations are expected to produce a swap deal that would see the release of hundreds of Palestinian political activists and freedom fighters from Israeli jails and dungeons in return for the release of an Israeli soldier captured by Palestinian guerillas near Gaza more than three years ago.



Israel, which detains as many as 10,000 thousand Palestinian prisoners, including many political and resistance leaders, hoping to use them as bargaining chips in any prospective final-status talks with the Palestinian Authority (PA), has exhausted all possible efforts to free the captured soldier by force. However, thanks to Hamas’s legendary vigilance and iron-clad will, all these efforts failed to retrieve Gilaad Shalit from Hamas’s custody.



Now, Israel is trying to outsmart Hamas by insisting that an undisclosed number of the would-be released prisoners be deported.



Hamas must reject this contemptible Israeli proposal since expulsion is probably the worst calamity that could afflict any Palestinian after murder.



Israel is of course accustomed to the wanton practice of expelling Palestinians from their ancestral land. Indeed, Israel itself wouldn’t have seen the light of the day had it not been for the massive ethnic cleansing preceding the expulsion of the bulk of Palestinians from their motherland.



The barbarian practice of expelling Palestinians from their homeland has always been a typical Zionist behavior. Zionism, or Jewish Nazism, is based on ethnic cleansing. Zionism and ethnic cleansing are two sides of the same coin.



Hence, it is more than imperative that Hamas should even refuse to listen to these criminal proposals since the extirpation of a human being from his native land is a calamity that can only be compared to murder.



In the Quran, expulsion is equated with death.



In Sura IV, verse 66, we read that “ If We had ordered them to sacrifice their lives or to leave their homes, very few of them would have done it: But if they had done what they were (actually) told, it would have been best for them, and would have gone farthest to strengthen their (faith)”



It is true that deportation, especially if it lasts for a short duration, is better in comparison to a last abode in Zionist dungeons and concentration camps.



However, it is equally true that Palestinians must never lend legitimacy to this nefarious practice. After all, the extirpation of our people from our homeland is our ultimate Nakba, our ultimate holocaust.



Hamas does have a glorious history in thwarting Israeli designs to expel more Palestinians from occupied Palestine.



In the early 1990s, when hundreds of Islamic activists were deported by Israel to Marj al-Zuhur in southern Lebanon, tremendous efforts were made to make the expulsion as brief as possible.



Eventually, Israel was forced to repatriate all the deportees.



Fortunately, deporting Palestinians is no longer as easy now as it was 20 years ago. Neighboring Arab countries, including Jordan, Egypt, Syria and especially Lebanon wouldn’t allow the Judeo-Nazi authorities in Tel Aviv to treat the freedom fighters as “garbage” and Lebanese territory as a “dumping ground.”



Nor would any other country collaborate with the Zionist regime in implementing an ethnic cleansing measure since such collaboration would amount to a clear violation of international law.



But Israel could just throw people from the West Bank to the Gaza Strip as it has done repeatedly since Hamas lacks the strength to prevent such an act.



This is why Hamas has to be highly emphatic in its rejection of any proposed deportation of any of the prisoners.



There is no doubt that a successful prisoner-exchange deal with Israel will be one of the greatest Palestinian achievements ever. It will give hope to thousands of Palestinian detainees, many of them languishing in prison without charge or trial, namely that their fate doesn’t necessarily depend on Israeli magnanimity, assuming that Israel possesses such a character.



A final word to the Israeli public. It is your oppressive treatment of our people, especially our prisoners, that forces our freedom fighters to risk their lives by capturing your soldiers in order to force you to free our activists.



We know that the fate of Gilaad Shalit is important to you. But you should understand that the fate of thousands of Palestinians languishing in your dungeons is likewise very important to us.



We are not children of a lesser God.

Hosam society: Conditions of Palestinian prisoners in Etzion inhumane

GAZA, (PIC)-- Hosam society for detainees and ex-detainees said Saturday that the incarceration conditions of Palestinian prisoners in Etzion prison are extremely inhumane because of the prison administration’s repressive practices against them.




The society explained in a statement that Etzion administration does not provide prisoners with adequate food or allow them to bathe especially those placed in isolation, which led to the outbreak of skin diseases among them.



It added that the prisoners are deprived of sleep and going to bathrooms as well as they are often physically assaulted and exposed to psychological pressure through demanding them to collaborate with Israel in exchange for improving their imprisonment conditions.



In another related context, specialist in prisoners’ affairs Abdelnasser Farwana stated Saturday that any negotiations which do not give long-serving prisoners freedom are meaningless and any swap deal excluding them will lose its luster.



Farwana underlined that those long-serving prisoners have been in Israeli jails before the signing of Oslo agreements and the establishment of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and they number 320 detainees.



He added that those prisoners suffered much more than others, where the shortest period some of them served until now was 16 years and the longest was 32 years, noting that they suffer from deteriorating health conditions as a result of the long years of captivity and their old ages.



The specialist stressed that the Palestinian people look forward to an honorable prisoner swap deal that is able to break the Israeli standards and overrun Oslo mistakes and gaps and lead to the release of all long-serving prisoners without conditions or discrimination.

Brother of prisoner appeals for ending suffering of his sister in Israeli jails

GAZA, (PIC)-- The brother of female detainee Somoud Karajeh appealed to all organizations concerned with the issue of prisoners to urgently intervene and pressure the Israeli occupation authority (IOA) to end the psychological suffering his sister is exposed to in Israeli jails.




Hasan Karajeh, the brother of the prisoner, said that his 21-year-old sister was detained in October 2009 and was transferred to Hasharon prison recently after a long journey of interrogation and moving from one jail to another.



He added that his sister was exposed during investigation to many psychological pressures such as detaining her in cold cells, with no heavy clothes, which are full of moisture and bugs, and transferring her from one investigation center to another.



Karajeh also said that his sister is not allowed to receive any piece of clothes from her family or any side and until this moment she has not changed her clothes since she was detained and have nothing to protect herself against extreme cold, noting that his family sought the help of the Red Cross, but to no avail.



In another context, the Israeli Haaretz newspaper quoted Israeli security and political circles as saying that the prisoner swap deal with Hamas would not bring any change regarding the blockade imposed on the Gaza Strip.



The newspaper added that the US and Arab countries pressure Mahmoud Abbas to extend his term of office until the coming election to prevent the fall of the West Bank in the hands of Hamas following the completion of the swap deal.



It pointed to Israel's fears that the Palestinian political landscape may change because, according to Palestinian law, Hamas speaker Aziz Dweik would become the president in case Abbas resigned.



The newspaper noted that the Israeli security and political circles believe that Abbas would not leave the political arena for Hamas and would not resign, as he alleged, next month.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Palestinian Prisoners’ Plight

Bianca Zammit and Fadi Skaik
29 November 2009
There are currently approximately 11,000 Palestinian prisoners being held captive in Israeli jails across Israel. Whilst their imprisonment is of itself in direct contravention of international law, the whole arrest, judiciary and imprisonment process compromises their basic human rights. In Gaza, the families of prisoners in Israeli jails meet every Monday at the premises of the International Committee of the Red Cross to hold a weekly vigil asking for the release of Palestinian prisoners. The demonstration also takes place at the ICRC building in order to send out a message to the international community, asking it to uphold international law and put pressure on Israel for the release of all prisoners.
Palestinians taken captive are held in one of the 24 prisons across Israel. The Fourth Geneva Convention through Article 76 prohibits an occupying power, in this case Israel, from imprisoning prisoners outside the territory it occupies and Article 47 of the same Convention clearly outlines that convicted prisoners should serve their sentence within the occupied territory.
Since September 2000 Palestinian citizens living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip require special permits to travel within the 1967 borders of Israel, yet these permits are very hard to come by. For these last three years all permits have stopped being issued and Palestinians from West Bank and Gaza are prohibited from entering 1948 land1.
The use of telephone is controlled and only in rare exceptions are Palestinian prisoners allowed to call their families. Without family visits and telephone calls the only ways of communicating is through letters and greetings families send through radio stations. Letters are received sparingly by both sides, months after they were written and sent2.
Hazem Shubair was imprisoned in an Israeli jail in 1993. His brother Tayseer has been denied the permit to visit his brother for the past 15 years. Hazem’ parents were allowed to visit him until 2002 and for the last 7 years they were forbidden access. All forms of communication between Hazem and his family have been severed. Hazem was sentenced to life imprisonment and the prospects of him being released in the near future are bleak. “I just want to see him, to have the opportunity of talking with him once more and to know how he is doing. These 17 years have been horrible” Tayseer states. Hazem has another 6 siblings anxiously awaiting his news and to be able of seeing him.
In terms of the judiciary system, Palestinians are tried within Israeli military courts located within Israeli military centers. These military tribunals are conducted by a panel of three judges appointed by the military, two of whom often do not have any legal training or background. This juxtaposes the impartiality and reliability of the legal apparatus since the judges are also soldiers who work on orders they receive from their supervisors and are dependent on the latter for promotion.3 These tribunals rarely fall within the required international standards of a fair trial.
Many Palestinian prisoners are either wounded or ill. Many prisoners were taken captive after having been shot at with live ammunition. According to Addameer Centre for Human Rights based in Gaza, “prison clinics tend to offer aspirin as a remedy for all health treatments and physicians within the clinics are all soldiers. Health examinations are conducted through a fence, and any necessary surgery or transfer to hospital for additional medical treatment is usually postponed for long periods of time”.
In 1999 the Israeli High Court of Justice ruled that it does not forbid the use of torture but rather allows interrogation methods deemed as torture to be used in situations of national defense. The victim of torture can only submit a complaint in that case that torture can be clearly proven. Israel interrogators are able to use methods of torture without impunity. Legalized torture includes sleep deprivation, denial of food and water, denial of access to toilets and shackling4. A Palestinian detainee can be interrogated for up to 180 days, during which access to a lawyer may be denied for 60 days.
Many prisoners receive administrative detention where charges are based on secret evidence. In this case both the lawyer and the detainee are not aware of the reason for arrest and cannot practice their right of defense. The detainee and lawyer are also not informed about the date of release. In administrative detention the army hands over the detainee to the Israeli Security Agency (ISA) who interrogates the prisoner. After interrogation, ISA can either file for indictment or release detainee. If none of these two paths are chosen the military commander can choose administrative detention. Administrative detention can be extended indefinitely. This usage of administrative detention as a tool to imprison civilians violates International Law and Human Rights Charters but is legal according to Israeli legislation5.
Nayef Abu Azra, a 23 year old from Beit Hannoun, was arrested in 2007. Since then he has never been brought before a court. To Nayef’ mother there is no consolation. Asia Abu Azra stated “A group of Israeli infantry soldiers invaded our home and took Nayef. We do not know why he was arrested or when he shall be released. Nobody is giving us any information. Nayef was hard working and well respected in the community. My only hope is to see him again”.
Nowhere can the discriminatory laws within Israeli judiciary be clearer than in terms of Palestinian imprisonment which is reminiscent of apartheid South Africa. A Palestinian can be held in custody for 18 days before being brought before a judge. An Israeli citizen, however, can be held in custody for only a maximum of 48 hours before being brought before a judge. A Palestinian can be held without charge, by order of a judge for a period from one to 6 months. An Israeli citizen can be held without indictment for 15 days and can only be extended to 15 days. Lawyer visits can be prohibited for up to 3 months for a Palestinian detainee. The meeting between an Israeli detainee and his attorney can be delayed for 15 days6. In addition, when Palestinian detainees are arrested, the army is not obliged to inform the detainee’s family of their arrest or the location of their detention.
38 year old Ashraf Al-Balouji from Al-Sahaba area in Gaza was detained in Ramallah on December 14, 1990. He was ordained in the Israel military court and sentenced to 320 years imprisonment. His father Hassan Al-Balouji states “there is a different policy for Palestinians and Israelis in Israel. If my son were Israeli then his sentence would be very different. We all know that. Three years ago my wife passed away and Ashraf was not allowed to visit her or attend her funeral. His 7 children are also prohibited from visiting him.”
These discriminatory laws also affect children. There are now 337 Palestinian children in Israeli jails.7 Like the majority of other Palestinian prisoners, Palestinian child prisoners routinely face violations of their human rights during arrest, interrogation and imprisonment. They are exposed to physical and psychological abuse, amounting to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, and sometimes torture. They are denied prompt access to a lawyer and often denied contact with their families and the outside world. This is a clear breach of international law, which makes special provisions for the prisoners, specifically forbidding the use of physical and psychological torture8.
Nedal Mohammed Al-Soufi was just 17 years old when he was arrested. In 2007 during an army incursion, Israeli soldiers entered their home in Rafah and took him. Jana Al-Soufi, Nedal’ mother does not know the reason for his arrest. Nedal was sentenced to 9 years. The lack of communication sources between Nedal and his family concerns his mother. “I worry for his health and mental state. I have not received his news for many months”.
The imprisonment of Palestinians has been used routinely by Israeli authorities as one of the main tools to enforce the apartheid regime and ensure the ongoing success of the occupation. Israel has violated and is still violating a number of basic human rights in the way it kidnaps Palestinians, holds them captive without access to a lawyer and eventually tries them in a mock court which itself falls short of internationally agreed upon minimum standards. The injustices being perpetuated upon the 11,000 Palestinians prisoners must not be overlooked.
Bianca Zammit is a human rights activist and a member of the International Solidarity Movement “ISM” in Gaza.
Fadi N. Skaik is a BDS activist and an independent author based in Gaza

[1] Amnesty International (2009) Israel and Occupied Palestinian Territories

[2] Addameer – http://www.addameer.org/index_eng.html
[3] UN Human Rights Committee (2007) Article 14: Right to equality before courts and tribunals and to a fair trial, UN Doc: CCPR/C/GC/32, 23 August 2007, page 6, paragraph 22.
[4] Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (2008) No Defense: Soldier Violence against Palestinian Detainees, page 3 – http://www.stoptorture.org.il/en/node/1136
[5] Hamoked and B’Tselem (2009) Without Trial -Administrative detention of Palestinians by Israel and the Internment of Unlawful Combatants Law, page 9.
[6] Addameer – http://www.addameer.org/index_eng.html

[7] Save the Children (2009) Fact Sheet – Palestinian Child Detainees at http://mena.savethechildren.se/Documents/Resources/Fact%20Sheet_oPt_detainees.pdf

[8]Defense for Children International (2009) Palestinian Child Prisoners- The systematic and institutionalized ill-treatment and torture of Palestinian children by Israeli authorities, DCI Palestine: Jerusalem.
Updated on November 29, 2009

November 23, 2009 10-year-old boy beaten and detained for 11 hours







[RAMALLAH, 22 November 2009] – DCI-Palestine fieldworkers have recently documented an incident in which a 10-year-old boy was chased, beaten and detained for approximately 11 hours by Israeli soldiers after he attended a demonstration against the Wall, in Deir Leghsoun village, north of Tulkarm, in the Occupied West Bank.
At about 9:00am, on 14 November 2009, 10-year-old Husam left his house in Deir Leghsoun to attend a protest against the Wall. The Wall borders the village to the west, only two kilometres away from Husam's house. The protestors were chanting "No to the Wall," and carrying banners and flags. They reached the Wall (made up of razor wire and electrified fence in this section) and broke through a gate. Military jeeps arrived immediately and soldiers started firing tear gas canisters and rubber-coated steel bullets.
Half an hour after the army 's violent response started, Husam and other children began to run away in different directions. Husam was hiding behind a tree when a soldier grabbed him. “I felt so scared that my legs started shaking.” The soldiers asked him to raise his hands and struck his legs for about five minutes with something resembling a horse whip. “I was shouting in pain and he would say 'Shut up! Shut up!'”. The child sustained minor injuries of which DCI has photographic evidence. The soldiers then cocked his weapon and ordered Husam to walk in front of him, aiming his weapon at the child. They walked to the main street where soldiers tied his hands with plastic cords but not tightly.
Husam was then placed in the back of a jeep with a number of other boys “I was scared, wondering where they were taking us.” The vehicle stopped, in what Husam later learnt was Ariel settlement, and soldiers shouted at the boys to get out of the jeep. One of them dragged Husam out, as he did not understand the order. The boys were held for several hours and later taken to a container-like room where they slept on the floor, still blindfolded and tied. They were given military vests to keep them warm.
Later on that same night Husam was put inside a jeep with two soldiers, and allowed to remove his blindfold. The driver told him "This time it's ok because you're just a kid, but those boys are going to prison... You'll be killed or go to prison if you do it again". The journey was long, it was night time. When the jeep stopped at a checkpoint, a policeman pulled Husam out and untied his hands. “I was shivering because I was cold; especially because I was wearing shorts and a T-shirt.” The police officer stopped a taxi and ordered the driver to take Husam home. Husam got home at around 10:00pm, “shocked”, “tired”, “hungry and cold”.
Husam told DCI: “Now I feel scared whenever I remember what happened to me. I am scared it might happen to me again; especially because they threatened to kill me or lock me up.”
DCI-Palestine strongly condemns the disproportionate use of force against unarmed Palestinian demonstrators, including children. Husam posed no threat to the soldier who beat him. In July 2008, 10-year-old Ahmad Mousa was killed when Israeli Border Police shot him in the head with live ammunition as he took part in a non-violent demonstration against the Wall in Ni’lin.
For further information on Palestinian child detainees please see DCI-Palestine’s latest report: Palestinian Child Prisoners: The systematic and institutionalised ill-treatment and torture of Palestinian children by Israeli authorities

PA: UN wants Israel to admit secret prison

Published Sunday 22/11/2009 (updated) 25/11/2009 21:35

Ramallah – Ma’an – The UN has sent an official request to Israel to admit the existence of secret prison camp 1391, dubbed in the press “Israel’s Guantanamo Bay,” according to the Palestinian Authority minister of prisoners affairs.

Minister Issa Qaraqe told a news conference in Ramallah on Saturday that the UN had asked the Israeli government in a letter to officially acknowledge that the facility.

Human rights experts with the United Nations Committee Against Torture questioned Israeli officials about the facility in may when the country came up for a regular review under a treaty obligation, Reuters reported.

Although Israel declined the UN’s request to discuss 1391 earlier this year, Israeli officials have indirectly confirmed the facility's existence. Former Israeli Justice Minister Dan Merridor told the Haaretz newspaper that he was aware of the site but never visited it.

News reports say that Israel has held Palestinians, Lebanese, and other Arabs at the site. The detention of Palestinians there reportedly increased during the second intifada. Former inmates told the Guardian newspaper that they were held in black, windowless cells with little light.

After being detained and transported to the prison wearing hoods, prisoners said they were told they were “in Honolulu,” “outside the borders of Israel,” or “on the moon,” the newspaper said. The government has even airbrushed ariel photographs and altered maps to conceal the facility’s existence, according to the report.

In interviews with the Israeli and foreign press, former prisoners have also reported cases of rape, prolonged nudity, and tactics regarded as torture. Unlike other Israeli prisons, the Red Cross is not allowed to visit the facility.

Prisoner release?

Asked about Israeli news reports that the country could release Palestinian prisoners ahead of the Muslim Eid Al-Adha holiday next week, Qaraqe said that the PA has not received any official information on the subject. He added that Israel has decided to release prisoners in the past without informing the PA, and that it’s possible that some could be freed.

Qaraqe also spoke about the Palestinian Authority-sponsored conference on the plight of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails which will be held in Jericho on Tuesday. He said forty people and thirteen institutions will participate in the summit, which will address subjects such as the torture of women and children, prisoners’ rights, and efforts to seek international designation of the Palestinian detainees as prisoners of war, not terrorists.

Qaraqe was also asked about the health condition of a detainee named Nahed Al-Aqra, who was accused of blowing up an Israeli tank in Gaza. Qaraqe responded, “The ministry is following up the difficult health condition of Al-Aqra. The ministry also entered a petition with the High Court of Justice demanding his release along with that of other sick prisoners including Akram Mansour.” He also said that the Red Cross is working for the release of ill prisoners.

Human Rights Defender Mohammad Othman Receives his First Administrative Detention Order

Sixty Days after his Arrest, Human Rights Defender Mohammad Othman Receives his First Administrative Detention Order

[Ramallah, 24 November 2009] On 23 November 2009, after 61 days of detention for the purpose of interrogation by Israeli Security Agency officers, human rights defender Mohammad Othman received his first administrative detention order. The administrative detention order is
set for a three month period, during which time Mohammad will be held without charge or trial.

The judicial review of the order is scheduled to take place on 25 November at the Military Court of Administrative Detainees in Ofer Military Base, near the West Bank city of Ramallah.

The administrative detention order against Mohammad comes just one day after a hearing on 22 November 2009 at the Military Court of Appeals ended Mohammad’s interrogation period. In the Appeals Court hearing, the judge decided to release Mohammad because no measurable progress had been made during the two months he had been held in interrogation, no external evidence had been brought to the attention of the court and the military prosecution had been unable to formulate substantiated allegations or charges against him.

The Appeals Court judge thus accepted Addameer’s appeal against the seventh extension of Mohammad’s detention, which had taken place five days earlier. At the same time, the judge ordered Mohammad’s release on 10,000 NIS bail (about $2,500 USD) and with the conditions that he not travel outside the occupied Palestinian territory, and that he regularly reports to the Israeli police. However, the military judge also gave the military prosecutor 24 hours to issue an administrative detention order
against Mohammad, and remanded Mohammad to detention during this period. At 6:30 p.m. on 23 November 2009, Addameer confirmed with the Israeli Security Agency that an administrative detention order had been issued against Mohammad, and that he would not be released.

Mohammad Othman, a long-time human rights defender and activist with the “Grassroots Stop the Wall Campaign”, was arrested at the Allenby Bridge Crossing between Jordan and the West Bank. On the day of his arrest, 22 September 2009, Mohammad was on his way back to Ramallah from an advocacy tour in Norway where he had been engaged in a number of speaking events.

Addameer is alarmed by reports from Mohammad that he was repeatedly threatened with administrative detention during his two-month long interrogation period. Addameer believes that with these repeated threats, the Israeli interrogation police aimed to coerce Mohammad into giving a false confession to crimes he did not commit. Most recently, on 19 November, after Mohammad was transferred back to Kishon detention center from Ohalei Keidar prison in Beersheba where he had been held in a so-called “collaborators’ cell”, he was told by one of the Israeli interrogators that his detention would not be extended again and that he would be placed under administrative detention if he failed to confess.

Addameer therefore contends that Mohammad’s arrest and administrative detention are completely arbitrary and are a prime example of Israel’s use of administrative detention as a substitute for prosecution, rather than as
a preventative measure allowed by international humanitarian law for “imperative reasons of security” or “if the security of the Detaining Power makes it absolutely necessary” (Fourth Geneva Convention, Articles 42 and 78).

Further, Addameer reiterates the position that Mohammad’s arrest constitutes a violation of a number of international human rights instruments, in particular the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders. Considering that, sixty days after Mohammad’s arrest Israeli authorities have been unable to cite any legitimate suspicions or allegations to justify his detention, and that the Court of Appeals judge directed that Mohammad should be released, Addameer believes that Mohammad is being detained
administratively as a punishment for his human rights activism. In addition, there is reason to believe that the Israeli military authorities use  Mohammad’s continuous detention as an example to deter other activists, including those active against the occupation and the Annexation Wall in
particular, from continuing their human rights work.

BACKGROUND ON ADMINISTRATIVE DETENTION
Administrative detention is a procedure that allows the Israeli military to hold detainees indefinitely on secret evidence without charging them or allowing them to stand trial. In the occupied Palestinian West Bank, the Israeli army is authorized to issue administrative detention orders against Palestinian civilians on the basis of Military Order 1591. This order empowers military commanders to detain an individual for up to six months renewable periods if they have “reasonable grounds to presume that the security of the area or public security require the detention.” On or just before the expiry date, the detention order is frequently renewed. This
process can be continued indefinitely.

There is no explicit limit to the maximum amount of time an individual may be administratively detained, leaving room for indefinite legal detention. The grounds on which someone can be detained under Military Order 1591 are also unclear, leaving it up to the military commanders to
decide what constitutes “public security” and “security of the area”.

Detainees subject to administrative detention orders are rarely informed of the reasons for their detention; neither are their lawyers. At the judicial review of a detention order, which is held in a closed hearing before
a military judge, the judge can uphold, cancel or shorten the order. In most cases, however, administrative detention orders are confirmed for the same periods as those requested by the military commander. Although the detainee can appeal the decision at the judicial review, in practice, the vast majority of appeals are rejected.

For more information about administrative detention and Addameer’s Campaign to Stop Administrative Detention please visit our website: www.addameer.info . For more information about Mohammad’s arrest, please refer to previous statements and updates on the case issued by
Addameer and “Stop the Wall”, or directly contact:
Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association
Tel: +972 (0)2 296 0446 / (0)2 297 0136

DCI-Palestine on the BBC World Service: Kids under arrest

November 13, 2009





Kids Under Arrest
Palestinian kids who throw stones know they risk arrest by the Israeli military. However others can be wary too, as claims are made in the West Bank of childrens' wrongful arrests and abuse by authorities - claims the authorities deny.

Mohammad Salem Abu Eid is a 15-year-old Palestinian boy who spent four months in an Israeli prison. He was accused of throwing stones at the barrier the Israelis built in the West Bank, but Mohammad says he was innocent.

His case is one of those taken up by Defence for Children International, who say Israel is violating childrens' rights.

Matthew Bannister met Mohammad and his mother Somaya to hear about their experiences. He spoke to Gerard Horton of Defence for Children International, and he also talked to the BBC Correspondent in Jerusalem, Katya Adler, who says the Israeli authorities refute the claims made against them.
Listen to the 12-minute interview on the BBC World Service website.
**DISCLAIMER: Please note that the views expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the views of DCI-Palestine, and that the data may contradict ours**
Source: BBC

Israel releases Palestinian professor held without charge


Salfit – Ma’an – Israel released a Palestinian law professor on Thursday after holding him for 20 months in three different prisons without charge.

Dr Ghassan Khaled (known as "Abu Nasser") is a lawyer and lecturer in commercial law at An-Najah University in the West Bank city of Nablus.

Khaled was arrested in January 2008, interrogated for 20 days, then released and re-arrested on 31 March 2008. He was held in administrative detention until last Thursday. According to the human rights organization Ahrar, Khaled was tortured while in Israel's Negev, Megiddo and Ofer prisons.

Akram Daoud, the dean of the law faculty at An-Najah, told the Chronicle of Higher Education earlier in November that his colleague was held completely without charges.

“There are no charges. This was the first time he was arrested. He is religious. He is someone who prays and sometimes talks in the mosques, but he’s not connected to any kind of political party,” Doud was quoted as saying.

“They couldn’t prove that he has any link with any political party—this is why they are going to put him in administrative detention, because they don’t have any charges against him,” he said.

“This guy has very close connections to Israelis from the peace movement—they are coming daily to his house. He has many friends in Israel and among the Israeli people,” he also told the journal.

Ahrar’s director, Fuad Al-Khafsh, said Khaled was a human rights activist who was relentless in his defense of liberty. The professor was born in the village of Jayyus, near Qalqiliya, in 1970 and studied law in Russia, were he also earned a PhD.

IOF troops arrest a disabled Palestinian boy on his way to hospital

[ 29/11/2009 - 01:42 PM ]


KHAN YOUNIS, (PIC)-- IOF troops arrested a 19-year-old disabled Palestinian boy Ahmad Samir Asfour, from the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis, on his way to a hospital in Jerusalem, according to local sources.
The family of the Palestinian captive said, in a statement it distributed through the Prisoners' Studies Centre, that their son Ahmad was treated in Egypt after being wounded during the Israeli occupation war on Gaza, where he had to have several amputations on parts of his limbs and that his treatment was to be followed up at Jerusalem hospitals.
The family added that they were surprised that the IOF arrested Ahmad, turned back his father who accompanied him and confiscated $2500 and the mobile phones they had on them.
The family said that Ahmad takes regular medication which he needs for his condition and they fear that this medication will not be made available to him by the Israeli occupation prison authority.
They also expressed fear that the Israeli occupation interrogators will use his health condition as a tool to pressure him into admitting to false charges and held the Israeli occupation fully responsible for his life.
Asfour was wounded in a rocket attack fired by an Israeli occupation drone during the war on Gaza last December/ January resulting in amputations of parts of his limbs, paralysis in his right arm as a result of  damage to nerves and had internal injuries to the pancreas and stomach. Three other members of his family were injured in the same attack.
Director of the prisoners' studies centre, Raafat Hamdouna, said that Israel puts itself above the law by using the need of patients for treatment by arresting them on occasions or by trying to blackmail them into collaboration on other occasions.
He called on human rights organisation to oppose these Israeli acts, stressing that silence towards these Israeli policies encourages it to continue with such policies.

UPDATED list: Israel pardons 90 former Fatah fighters


Nablus – Ma’an Exclusive – Israel has agreed to remove 90 former Palestinian fighters from its list of “wanted” men on the eve of the Muslim Eid Al-Adha holiday, Palestinian sources said on Thursday.

The sources indicated that on Wednesday night the Palestinian Authority (PA) handed Israeli officials a list of 93 people it wants removed from the wanted list during a meeting.

Initial reports Thursday said Israel agreed to pardon 26 of the men, and ease restrictions on the movement and rights of others. Reports by Friday morning were that Israel had decided to pardon 90. Only eight of the total, however, received full pardons. Thirty-two received partial pardons, and the rest received "improvements" to their conditions.

Not all the men were fully pardoned. Of the initial 26, all of the men had to report to a PA compound and sleep there at night will now be able to sleep at home. Seven of the first round of pardons will be released from the PA’s Juneid prison, outside the West Bank city of Nablus.

Since 2007 former Palestinian fighters signed “amnesty” agreements in which they would hand in their weapons, swear not to fight, and spend a term in a PA jail in exchange for a return to normal life, free of the threat of arrest or assassination by Israeli.

One of the newly pardoned men was Ala Sanakreh, 29, of Balata Refugee Camp in Nablus, who is now working for the PA security forces. Israel agreed not to track or pursue him, making him fully pardoned. He told Ma’an he was elated at the news, and considered the decision a step toward peace.

Sanakreh was formerly one the most wanted men in the West Bank. He said he escaped several assassination attempts. The Israeli military killed his brother Ibrahim in 2006 and and another brother Ahmad in 2007.

“We, as Palestinians should be able to live freely like any other people around the world. We deserve to live a happy life,” he said.

Totally pardoned:

1- Ala Muhammad Ibrahim Sanakreh – Nablus
2- Yousef Khamis Hasan Abu Mustapha – Nablus
3- Muhammad Hussen Sa’id Zabaro – Nablus
4- Ayoub Khalil Musa Kin’an – Bethlehem
5- Muhammad Abdul Rahman Saleh Zeid – Ramallah
6- Ra’ed Muneer Muhammad Silama – Jenin
7- Ghaleb Ismail Muhammad Shafe’y – Tulkarem
8- Naser Ibrahim Salem Othman – Tulkarem

Movement without restrictions in Palestinian areas

9 - Louay Mahmud Musleh Eklik – Nablus
10 - Bassam Hasan Ali Abu Shallal – Nablus
11- Yassin Omar Ahmad Banat – Nablus
12- Yousef Khamis Hassan Abu-Mostafa – Nablus
13- Muhammad Sa’id S’oud Khaled – Nablus
14- Nael Sa’d S’oud Khaled – Nablus
15- Nidal Abdel-Fattah Yousif Mizher – Nablus
16- Abdel-Moneim Saleh Rajeh Sanakreh – Nablus
17- Na’im Saleh Rajeh Sanakreh – Nablus
18- Thaer Shaker Mahmud Mashi – Nablus
19- Saleh Abdel-Rahman Zaki Al-Ashkar – Nablus
20- Jamal Muhammad Mahmud Abu Ar-Rub – Ramallah
21- Kamel Taha Ahmad Ghannam – Ramallah
22- Ali Ibrahim Ali As-Sabah – Qafin
23- Wadi Ibrahim Abdul Latif Shadid – Tulkarem
24- Musheer Farouq Othman Mansoury – Tulkarem
25- Thafer Hassan Ali Eiran – Balata
26- Muhammad Ameen Musa Hammad – Jenin
27- Salim As’ad Salim Hussen – Jenin
28- Sa’id Mustafa Sa’id Mer’y – Kufur Dan
29- Hani Ahmad Anees Masad – Kufur Dan
30- Mu’ath Ahmad Saleh Saba’neh – Qabatya
31- Abdul-Salam Muhammad Aref Hanaysha – Qabatya

Partial relief (see details)

32- Mohammed Mazen Ma’moun Hanbali – Nablus
33- Ahmed Amr Muhammad Abu Salha – Nablus
34- Ghassan Ata Musa Abu Rish – Nablus
35- Saher Jaber Muhammad Hamayel – Nablus
36- Mithqal Subhi Fares Abu Salah – Jenin
37- Ahmad Sedqy Fayeq Qasem – Jenin
38- Sa’ed Thabet Muhammad Abu Obeid – Jenin
39- Yousif Mahmud Hussen Taleb – Jenin
40- Jalil Afif Hussen Sarhan – Jenin
41- Zakaria Afif Hussen Sarhan – Jenin
42- Maher Khaled Muhammad Haj Ali – Qabatya
43- Muhammad Safa Muhammad Kamil – Qabatya
44- Mubarak Alyan Muhamad Zedat – Hebron (must turn in his weapon)
45- Ali Rajab Ramzi Yumna – Yatta (must turn in his weapon)
46- Muhammad Othman Salman Abu Aram – Yatta (must turn in his weapon)
47- Hashem Muhammad Abdel-Majeed Azzam – Bethlehem
48- Nidal Odeh Hussen Malsh – Bethlehem
49- Mahmud Ibrahim Odeh Jubran – Bethlehem (must turn in his weapon)
50- Ala Kamel Musa Al-Hawareen – Ramallah
51- Tareq Ahmad Ahmad Skout Gaza-Ramallah
52- Muhammad Hussen Shalsh Zeid – Ramallah
53- Ala Ahmad Musa Sharaka – Ramallah
54- Khaled Abdel-Ra’ouf Sa’id Injas – Ramallah
55- Suleiman Naief Suleiman Hawareen – Ramallah
56- Munir Abdel-Raheem Muhammad Harb – Ramallah
57- Walid Ali Eid Dar Abed – Ramallah
58- Khaled Mussa Muhammad Hantsh – Ramallah (must remain in jail)
59- Fadi Atieh Muhammad Jawabra – Ramallah (must remain in jail)
60- Tareq Ziad Ali Abu Wazneh – Ramallah (must remain in jail)
61- Ahmad Mahmud Husen Ubed – Ramallah (must remain in jail)
62- Ibrahim Husam Ibrahim Abu Thaher – Ramallah (must remain in jail)
63- Luai Awad Muhamad Hosheh – Ramallah (must remain in jail)

Now permitted to sleep at home (as opposed to at the detention center)

64- Ibrahim Sa’id Issa Masemy – Nablus
65- Ahmad Hashem Muhammad Ramadan – Nablus
66- Nael Rebhy Abdul-Rahman Mansour – Nablus
67- Ammar Ibrahim Baker Kaddoumi – Nablus
68- Mohammed Nadi Muhammad Saleh – Nablus
69- Louay Muhammad Abdel-Qader Madeni – Bet Iba
70- Fathi Ahmad Fathi Ahmad Muna – Rojeeb
71- Yousef Hasan Muhammad Tayeh – Al-Far’a camp
72- Omar Ahmad Ali Sweilem – Nablus
73- Ahmad Walid Ismail Radwan – Qalqiliya
74- Abdullah Muhammad Abdullah Samhan – Qalqiliya
75- Jameel Mansour Ali Mansour – Salfit
76- Hazem Ali Ahmad Hamad – Jenin
77- Jaser Ameen Ibrahim Nazzal – Jenin
78- Ra’ed Salem As’ad Abu Srour – Jenin
79- Ahmad Walid Muhammad Ibrahim – Jenin
80- Majd Husny Alaf Abu Husen – Jenin Refugee Camp
81- Ragheb Sami Rajab Zeid Al-Keelany – Ya’bud
82- Zaher Ahmad Naji Subeh – Ramallah
83- Abdel-Kareem Hamed Shtaya – Ramallah
84- Majed Musa Muhammad Qattouf – Yatta
85- Wajd Hamed Abdel-Hady Al-Husseny – Bethlehem
86- Mu’ath Atef Mussa Abu Aker – Bethlehem
87- Muhammad Ahmad Abdullah Alqam – Qalandiya
88- Khaled Mahmud Ahmad Mateer – Qalandiya
89- Raby Theeb Nimer Ayyad – Qalandiya
90- unknown

IOF soldiers arrest fifth son of Um Bakir


[ 28/11/2009 - 10:13 AM ]


NABLUS, (PIC)-- The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) spoilt the Eid joy for the Palestinian old widow Um Bakir in Nablus on Friday and took away her fifth son to join his four brothers in detention.
Local sources reported that large numbers of IOF soldiers broke into the home of late Sheikh Said Bilal and savagely searched it before taking away the only remaining son of the family into custody.
Um Bakir told the Ahrar human rights center that Israel wants to pressure the families of prisoners after it failed to pressure the resistance into concluding the prisoners' exchange deal according to its own terms.
Fuad Al-Khafsh, the center's director, denounced the detention of Omar Bilal, who is the only son for that family out of prison.
He explained that the eldest son Bakir has been held under administrative custody for two years while the other son Muaz, who has been in prison for 11 years, is serving 26 life sentences, Othman, who has served 15 years in jail, is sentenced to life, while Obada was sentenced to ten years and his wife was taken into custody in mid November this year.
Now they have taken the fifth and remaining son of the family Omar, Khafsh pointed out.
He called on the local and international media outlets to shed light on the suffering of this Palestinian family and to expose the criminal image of the Israeli occupation authority.

Israel: 980 Palestinians slated for release


Bethlehem - Ma'an - Israel will release 980 Palestinians in exchange for a soldier captured in 2006, its State Attorney's Office said Sunday.

The office said Hamas will select 450 names and Israel will choose the rest.

The announcement came after an activist group petitioned the country's Supreme Court against a swap deal, according to the Hebrew-language daily newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth.

In response, the State Attorney's Office disclosed, "As part of an agreement with Hamas, which would allow the return of soldier Gilad Shalit to Israel ... there is a possibility for the release in principle of about 450 prisoners whose names are being delivered by Hamas."

Some 530 Palestinians selected by Israel will also be released "[a]s a gesture to the Palestinian people" in a second stage of the deal, the office added. "The list of these prisoners has not been formed yet and no criteria have been set on this matter."

The office stressed that "contrary to the release of prisoners as part of a gesture and/or diplomatic agreement, this is an incident of bargaining, which can be seen as an ongoing terror attack, as part of which negotiations are being held to reach the lowest price possible as far as the State of Israel is concerned."

State defends military censorship

The State Attorney's Office was responding to a petition filed by a group called the Almagor Terror Victims Association and the fathers of three Israeli children said to have been killed by Palestinians. They were demanding to know why the government was using its military to ban the publication of news items reporting details of the prisoner exchange.

The office responded by saying Hamas and Israel had agreed to a request from a foreign mediator that both sides refrain from discussing the talks "as a condition for the negotiations."

Other state representatives added that "the military censorship is authorized to ban the publication of a certain [news] item, when it reaches the conclusion that publishing that item would most probably substantially damage the possibility of returning soldier Gilad Shalit."

Also on Sunday, an informed Palestinian source told Al-Jazeera that a German mediator will meet Hamas leaders to receive the Islamic movement's final response to Israel's offer. The source said negotiations will be completed in Gaza, and that Hamas wants to clarify certain safeguards required to complete the deal.

Responding to reports by Israeli analysts on Sunday evening the deal was weeks away, Al-Jazeera's source denied that negotiations with Israel had reached an impasse.

According to the source, the chief obstacle has become the United States, which believes the deal would strengthen Hamas and consequently weaken the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. The US is demanding that it be put off or altered because it inordinately favors Hamas, the source said.

Meanwhile, the London-based Guardian newspaper's Sunday edition, The Observer, reported that the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad has recommended that Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti not be freed in the deal.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

PA minister: No peace deal without prisoner release



Jericho – Ma'an – Issa Qaraqe, the minister of detainees and detainees affairs, said on Thursday he would not sign a peace agreement with Israel until all Palestinian prisoners had been released from its jails.

Speaking at an international conference in Jericho on the plight of Palestinian prisoners, Qaraqe said children and women in Israel's jails deserved the attention of the international community, which he urged to intervene.

He also alleged that Palestinians suffer widespread torture and medical neglect, that the issue was at the top of President Mahmoud Abbas' agenda, and that there would never be a peace agreement with Israel that did not address detainees.

Among the participants on Thursday were Sinn FĂ©in member and former political prisoner Patrick Sheehan, former EU vice president Luisa Morgantini, UK lawyer and activist Liam Pepper, US ex-detainees activist Victoria Britain, Swedish lawyer and International Court of Justice -child detainees group member Arne Malmgren, Greek Committee for Human Rights representative Christina Papadopoulou, US activist member Nancy Murray and Friends of Ahmad Sa'adat - USA representative Dr Renee Levant.

Detainee To Be Allowed To Receive Medical Treatment Abroad, Won’t Be Allowed Back

Wednesday November 25, 2009 11:11 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News

Palestinian sources reported Wednesday that the Israeli Authorities decided to release detainee Akram Oneiter, 25, who will be receiving urgent medical treatment abroad under the condition that he does not return to the country.
Free The Detainees
Free The Detainees
Oneiter is from Borqeen town, near the northern West Bank city of Jenin. He is suffering from several health conditions, including a skin disease and acute infections.

He previously had several surgeries and has platinum implants in his back.

He is detained at the Negev Detention Camp, and is not receiving the needed specialized medical treatment. Oneiter was kidnapped and imprisoned two years ago.

The Israeli Prison Authorities kept delaying looking into his case for several months.

His family said that they rejected Israeli offers to deport him as Israel used his health issue as a bargaining chip, but his gradually declining health conditions left them no other choice.

They added that they contacted several international institutions and eventually Spain agreed to host him for medical treatment.

Yet, Israel kept rejecting to release him and delayed a decision for this regard for three months.

His mother stated that he will be undergoing extensive and lengthy treatment in Spain, approximately for three years, as he needs several surgeries and ongoing follow-up.

It is worth mentioning that Algeria agreed to host him after he completes his medical treatment.

His mother voiced an appeal to Spanish human rights and legal groups to adopt the case of his son to ensure he is allowed to return back home after completing his medical treatment.

According to the Palestinian Prisoner Society, there are currently 7350 detainees, including 34 women and 377 children, imprisoned by currently Israel.

201 detainees died in Israeli prisons due to torture and medical neglect while some were shot and killed after being detained. 76 detainees died in Israeli prisons since 2000.

Barghouthi: Negotiations failed to release prisoners



Bethlehem – Ma’an – Jailed Fatah Central Committee member Marwan Barghouthi said he regrets the failure of talks with Hamas and Israel to guarantee the release of Palestinians in Israeli prisons, a letter from the leader said Tuesday.

The letter, addressed to the International Conference on Detainees launched in Jericho told participants that “it is regrettable that the negotiations and agreements have failed to release the prisoners. The victims of this failure are the hundreds of prisoners who have been in jails for more than 32 years such as Na’el Al-Barghouti, Fakhry Al-Barghouthi, Karim Younis, Othman Musleh, Fuad Ar-Razemand and many others.”

It was not clear, however, whether the letter from Barghouthi was proclaiming as failed the most recent round of talks between Israel and Hamas via Germany over the possible release of 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the handing over of a captured Israeli soldier. Though some Israeli officials have sworn never to release Barghouthi "even if he is elected Palestinian President," the latest reports have hinted that he could be included if a swap is secured before Eid.

Focusing his letter on the poor treatment of Palestinians in Israeli prison, Barghouthi urged fellow detainees to boycott the Israeli courts and work on the development of a unified Palestinian strategy to show that the authority of the courts is not recognized by Palestinians. He said he considered the courts an integral part of the Israeli military system, working for its service over the past 42 years.

“The Palestinian prisoner is not only a victim of the Israeli occupation, but also of the Israeli civil and military courts," Barghouthi continued. He accused the courts of lacking the "minimum in proper legal procedures," and noted that "less than 1% of prisoners have been found 'not guilty' by Israeli courts."

Barghouthi took several paragraphs to explain the conditions in Israeli prisons, lamenting that "hundreds of sick prisoners who suffer from severe diseases, some of them are suffering to death, are not released instead they are being treated [in military health clinics]. There are also hundreds of women and children and hundreds of Palestinians in Administrative Detention, locked up without charge or due process. There are also dozens of prisoners in solitary confinement."

More Than 370 Children Currently Imprisoned By Israel

Monday November 23, 2009 13:28 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies

Riyadh Al Ashqar, head of the media department at the Palestinian Ministry of Detainees in Gaza, stated that Israel is currently holding captive more than 370 child detainees under the age of 18.
Child Detainee - Arabs48
Child Detainee - Arabs48
The Al Aqsa TV reported that child detainees are sent to courts that prosecutes cases of adult detainees an issue which directly violates the International Law.

Dozens of child detainees received harsh sentences by the courts while military judges never dealt with them as minors.

Similar to the case with adult detainees, children in Israeli detention camps are also fined and subjected to torture and abuse.

Al Ashqar demanded the International Red Cross and human rights groups to intervene and stop the Israeli violations against underage detainees.

He also called for ensuring that Israel complies with the International Law by stopping the violations against the detainees, especially children and women.

Gaza families upset at jilt from Jericho prisoners conference



Gaza – Ma’an – The Gaza Committee of Parents of Detainees called the conference on Palestinian prisoners in Jericho a "great national step" in efforts to gain international recognition for the abuse of prisoners by Israeli officials, but expressed disappointment over their exclusion from the proceedings.

Members of the Gaza delegation said they had been promised invitations by conference organizers, but said they never received any sort of request for their attendance. According to organizers however, the conference, which ended Wednesday, was not attended by any delegates from Gaza because they could not secure permits for travel to the West Bank.

Delegates were frustrated with the lack of communication from the conference organizers, saying they were promised follow-up via the Ministry of Prisoners Affairs.

A statement from the group said they were surprised to have been ignored by the organizers, and disappointed that there was no one present at the conference to represent prisoners from Gaza.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Blind prisoner exposed to harsh interrogation by Israeli officers

[ 23/11/2009 - 12:23 PM ]



OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- The information committee of Hamas in Israeli jails revealed Monday that prisoner Obadah Bilal, who is a blind 30-year-old young man, has been exposed to harsh interrogation by Israeli officers since he was transferred a week ago to Petah Tikva interrogation center where his wife is also detained.
The committee said that after the kidnapping of Bilal’s wife last week, he was transferred from Negev prison to join his wife in Petah Tikva, where Israeli interrogators maltreated and physically assaulted him despite the fact that he cannot see.
In another incident, the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) prevented the mother of prisoner Hamza Qa’kour, an Islamic Jihad leader in Jenin, from visiting him in Shata prison and confiscated her visit permit which she obtained from the Red Cross without giving reasons.
The mother of Qa’kour said the Israeli troops also took her ID upon arrival with other Palestinian families of prisoners to Jalama military checkpoint on board a bus belonging to the Red Cross and told her that she cannot visit her son.
Different Palestinian local sources said that a large number of IOF troops invaded at dawn Monday the districts of Qalqiliya, Bethlehem and Jenin and kidnapped two Palestinian citizens.
According to the sources, the troops stormed the village of Azzun in Qalqiliya at an early hour Monday and kidnapped a Palestinian young man.
They also kidnapped another citizen in Bethlehem after breaking into and ransacking his home.
In Jenin, the Israeli troops raided the house of a Palestinian young man called Sari Sabihat in Rumana town and interrogated his family members after forcing them out without any reported kidnappings.

Hamdan: a prisoner swap deal not possible without meeting resistance demands

[ 22/11/2009 - 10:05 PM ]


BEIRUT, (PIC)-- Osama Hamdan who is in charge of the foreign relations in the Hamas Movement said Sunday that his Movement was and still is concerned to achieve a prisoner swap deal with the Zionist occupation if it meets the humanitarian demands of the Palestinian resistance.
Although he refused to disclose the steps that the German and Egyptian mediators had achieved in this regard, Hamdan opined that the process might take more times due to the Israeli stubbornness.
“We are sincere in concluding the deal, but it seems that matters couldn’t be completely achieved 100% unless the Israeli premier submits to the conditions put forward by captors of Israeli corporal Gilad Shalit… we are not talking about results on the ground, but one thing I can say that we are keen on concluding this issue based on the objectives we put since the first day Shalit was captured,” underlined Hamdan in press release he issued Sunday.
However, he categorically rejected any link between the swap deal and the Palestinian factions agreement not to fire rockets on the Zionist entity, explaining that the agreement was made in order to give more attention to the PA government’s program to rebuild homes, government, and private institutions in the Gaza Strip destroyed during the 23-day Israeli onslaught on the Gaza Strip last December/ January.
Nevertheless, Hamdan underscored that the understanding to halt missile attacks from Gaza Strip shouldn’t be understood as a cancellation of the Palestinian right to resist the occupation if it attacks Gaza.
As far as the Palestinian national reconciliation is concerned , Hamdan explained that Hamas was and still is keen to make the Egyptian efforts succeed, adding, “Everyone knows that it was Hamas that revived the reconciliation file last September after it was almost buried last June after foreign parties interfered in the issue.
He stressed, “national reconciliation could only be achieved through harmony and not through coercion…. we have some reservations on the modified Egyptian paper for the reconciliation, and we urged the Egyptians to review those remarks and we told them that we were amenable to discuss the modified paper”, Hamdan emphasized.