Sunday, March 29, 2009

Jailed former Al-Aqsa Brigades fighters ask PA to release them

Date: 29 / 03 / 2009 Time: 21:44

[Ma'anImages]
Bethlehem – Ma’an – Seven former Palestinian fighters jailed as a part of a deal with Israel appealed to the Palestinian Authority (PA) for their release on Sunday.

The men are former member of the Al-Aqsa Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah, and have been held in the PA security compound in Bethlehem for a year after signing agreements to renounce armed struggle in exchange for a “pardon” from Israel. Under the amnesty deal between the PA and Israel, fighters agree to spend time in prison before they are pardoned.

One of the men, Hadi Da’dara, said they are still waiting for Israel to issue the pardons. They directed their appeal at Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to intervene and resolve their ordeal.

They also called the Palestinian interior minister, Abdel Razeq Al-Yahya, to assist them.

The men were identified as: Ziyad Mizher, Khalil Obeiat, Mu’ath Abu Aker, Shadi Abu Jalghif, Hadi Da’dara, Muhammad Ramadan and Jamal Jibrin.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Hamas denies it agreed on the deportation of detainees

Saturday March 28, 2009 05:40 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies

In an interview with the Arabs48 news website, Fawzi Barhoum, media spokesperson of the Hamas movement, said that Hamas did not agree on the Israeli condition to deport some of the detainees who would be freed in the framework of a prisoner exchange deal.

Fawzi Barhoum - Media Spokesperson of Hamas - Image reprinted from Ramattan
Fawzi Barhoum - Media Spokesperson of Hamas - Image reprinted from Ramattan

Barhoum stated that Hamas cannot accept the deportation of any detainee as this is considered another punishment, and that the law does not allow for a detainee to receive two punishments for the same charge.

He added that the occupation is not entitled to punish the Palestinian detainees as this violates the international law, and that all deported Palestinians should be allowed to return to their country and homes.

Barhoum described the rumors about its acceptance to the deportation of 120 detainees as “a media fabrication, and a bubble game to test the response of Hamas”.

He said that Hamas has a clear and fixed stance regarding the prisoner-swap deal.

“The occupation must accept the demands of Hamas because its demands are justified and fair”, Barhoum stated, “In spite of Israeli manipulation and blackmail, our stance remains the same”.

It is worth mentioning that Israel rejected an Egyptian offer to make more concessions, and Israel’s envoy, Ofer Dekel, and the Shabak head, Yuval Diskin, said that “this is all what Israel has to offer”, and that “Hamas must present a new list of detainees if it wants the talks to continue”.

Mohammad Ibrahim, senior Egyptian intelligence official, arrived in the country on Thursday and met with Diskin and Dekel along with other Israeli officials, but Israel refused to change its conditions.

Dekel and Diskin said that Hamas is the side who must present a new list of 125 detainees if it wants the deal to advance.

Hamas originally presented a list containing the names of 450 detainees, Israel approved the release of 325 detainees, and demanded Hamas to chose different names of the remaining 125.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Hamdi al-Ta'mari receives second administrative detention order

UA-1/09 – URGENT APPEAL – DCI-Palestine

Name: Hamdi Mohammad Shahadeh al-Ta'mari
Age at arrest: 15 and 16 respectively
Place of residence: Bethlehem
Date of arrest: 25 July 2008 and 18 December 2008
Charge: No charge
Place of detention: Ofer Prison, Occupied Palestinian Territory

Hamdi was arrested for the first time from the family home in Bethlehem at 4:00 am, on 25 July 2008. He was woken by the sound of Israeli soldiers banging on the front door.

Hamdi's hands and feet were immediately tied and he was ordered to lie on the floor, as soldiers pointed their assault rifles and torches at him. Whilst on the ground, a number of soldiers slapped, kicked and beat him with their assault rifles. His hands were tied so tightly that they began to swell. After 15 minutes, Hamdi was blindfolded and placed on the floor of a military vehicle.

The military vehicle drove for around two hours during which time Hamdi was insulted, slapped and kicked by the soldiers sitting around him. One of the soldiers told Hamdi that they had killed his father because he was a terrorist and that they were going to kill all terrorists. At around 6:00 am the vehicle arrived at Ofer Interrogation and Detention Centre, near Ramallah. Hamdi was taken to a small room where he was again assaulted by a number of soldiers.

On 28 July 2008, four days after his arrest, Hamdi was interrogated whilst sitting handcuffed in front of a desk. The interrogator asked Hamdi whether he was a member of Islamic Jihad, an organisation banned by the Israeli authorities. Hamdi replied that he had nothing to do with the organisation and he supported independent members of the Fateh movement. The interrogation lasted about one hour and Hamdi was then taken back to his cell.

Several days later Hamdi was informed that he would be detained for three months without charge or trial in administrative detention. On 13 November 2008, Hamdi was released from administrative detention without having been charged with any offence.

On 18 December 2008, one month after his release, Hamdi was again woken up at 2:00 am by the sound of Israeli soldiers banging on the front door of the family home. Around five or six soldiers entered the house and Hamdi was tied and blindfolded. He was again placed in a military vehicle and driven for half an hour to Etzion Interrogation and Detention Centre. On 21 December 2008, three days after his arrest, Hamdi was transferred to Ofer for interrogation. The interrogator wanted to know who Hamdi had met with since his release on 13 November, asked him about the flags flying from the roof of his house and what other activities he had been up to since his release. Hamdi replied that he had met with relatives and neighbours and had had no involvement in politics.

On 28 December 2008, Hamdi, without a lawyer or family member present, was taken before the Administrative Detention Court in Ofer Military Base. The military judge told Hamdi that there was a four month administrative detention order against him based on 'secret evidence'. Hamdi told the judge that he had not done anything wrong and was only arrested because his father had been targeted for assassination.

Hamdi's administrative detention order comes up for renewal on 15 April 2009.

Background information

On 12 March 2008, Hamdi?s father was killed, along with three others, by an Israeli special unit in Bethlehem. The Israeli human rights organisation, B’Tselem, investigated the circumstances of the killing and reported that in defiance of an Israeli High Court ruling, there was strong evidence to suggest that the operation was a targeted assassination.

Hamdi's older brother also received an administrative detention order, as did the son of one of the other men killed on 12 March, Mohammad Balbol, who has been in administrative detention since 25 July 2008 (see DCI-Palestine - UA 1/08).

Administrative detention

Administrative detention is detention without charge or trial and is often based on 'secret evidence'. Israeli Military Order 1591 empowers military commanders to detain Palestinians, including children as young as 12, for up to six months if they have 'reasonable grounds to presume that the security of the area or public security require the detention'. The initial six month period can be extended by additional six-month periods indefinitely. This procedure denies the detainee the right to a fair trial and the ability to adequately challenge the basis of his or her detention.

There are currently at least 548 Palestinians being held by Israel without charge or trial in administrative detention, of which six are children. For more information visit DCI-Palestine website at Freedom Now.

Recommended action

The detention of a child in these circumstances does not conform with Israel's obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child or the Convention Against Torture. Please send Urgent Appeals to the Israeli authorities urging them to:

  • Immediately cease the practice of holding children under the age of 18 in administrative detention; and
  • Immediately and unconditionally release all persons currently held in administrative detention, or charge them with a recognisable offence and promptly try them in a proper court of law with internationally accepted standards for a fair trial.

Prime Minister
Office of the Prime Minister
3 Kaplan Street, PO Box 187, Kiryat Ben-Gurion, Jerusalem, 91919, Israel
Fax: +972- 2-651 2631
Email: rohm@pmo.gov.il, pm_eng@pmo.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Prime Minister

Ehud Barak
Minister of Defence, Ministry of Defence,
37 Kaplan Street, Hakirya, Tel Aviv 61909, Israel
Fax: +972 3 691 6940
Email: minister@mod.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Minister

Minister of Justice, Fax: + 972 2 628 7757; + 972 2 628 8618

Attorney General, Fax: + 972 2 627 4481; + 972 2 628 5438; +972 2 530 3367

***Please inform DCI-Palestine if you receive any response to your appeals and quote the UA number at the top of this document – ria@dci-pal.org

Israeli military court sentences Palestinian to life, plus ten years

Date: 27 / 03 / 2009 Time: 19:57

Qalqilia – Ma’an – The Israeli military court at Salem sentenced 30-year-old Meqdam Ibrahim Jaber from the West Bank city of Qalqiliya to life in prison, plus an additional ten years.

The Palestinian man was arrested in 2006 and charged with planning a suicide bombing in Israel that killed an Israeli.

The man is expected to be imprisoned in the Majedo facility in northern Israel.

March 29: Letter writing night for Palestinian student political prisoners

posted on Sumoud

Anarchist Black Cross Federation & Teachers for Palestine [Toronto Event]

Join us for a night of food and camaraderie in solidarity with imprisoned Palestinian student political prisoners.
Suggested donation: $2 or PWYC.

WHEN: Sunday March 29, 6 p.m.
WHERE: 62 Fraser Ave. (south east of Dufferin and King)
WHAT: Dinner, discussion and writing letters to Palestinian and North American political prisoners
WHO: Toronto Anarchist Black Cross Federation (ABCF) & Teachers for Palestine

Co-sponsored by Students Against Israeli Apartheid (SAIA University of Toronto) and the Right to Education Campaign


Featuring presentations by Palestinian solidarity activists Kole Kilibarda and Yafa Jarrar, and statements from North American political prisoners.

Kole Kilibarda is an organizer with the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid in Toronto.

Yafa Jarrar is a member of the Peterborough Coalition for Palestinian Solidarity. She was born in Jerusalem, Palestine, moved to Canada in 2003. In 2001, she represented Palestine in the Arab League of Nations in Cairo, speaking on the effects of the Israeli occupation on the Palestinian educational process, and was then elected to represent Palestine to speak at the United Nations. She is currently finishing her degree in Politics and International Development Studies at Trent University.

Please RSVP to torontoabcf@gmail.com so that we can make enough food!

Two Arab residents sentenced to 14 years for “aiding the enemy”

Friday March 27, 2009 09:35 by IMEMC & Agencies

The Central Israeli Court in Haifa convicted on Thursday two Arab residents of Israel of “aiding the enemy” during the war on Gaza.

Archive - Haifa Court, image by bokra.net
Archive - Haifa Court, image by bokra.net

The court sentenced Anis Jamil Saffoury for 14 years after convicting him of “contacting the enemy during the time of war, contacting a foreign agent and planning to kill Israeli pilots and scientists”.

Saffoury was also convicted of monitoring Israeli military roadblocks in order to plan and carry attacks against them.

Furthermore, the court convicted Husam khaled Khail of contacting the enemy and concealing information, and sentenced him to two years imprisonment.

The prosecution claimed that the two confessed to the charges against them during interrogation.

The two were not allowed to meet their lawyers or contact them during the interrogation period.

Although no connection between the two cases, the judges referred to the booby-trapped vehicle that was found last Saturday at the external parking lot of Lev HaMifratz Mall in Haifa, and said that their ruling is reasonable.

Abnna Al-balad rejects sentences against 2 of its members

Freedom to All Palestinian Prisoners

http://www.pflp.ps/english/?q=node/1493
The so-called Israeli Central Court of Haifa, composed of three racist judges issued a 14 years sentence against comrade Jamil Anis Suffori on charges of “aiding the enemy and foreign agent and planning to kill pilots”. The court also sentenced comrade Hussam Khaled Khalil an actual imprisonment for two years on charges of providing assistance to the enemy and hide information .

The movement of Abnna Al-balad (People of the country) in the occupied Palestine 1948 said in a statement today , Friday march 27th 200 . “according to the prosecution's claim the detainees confessed to the charges against them after an investigation that lasted more than two weeks without being allowed to see and meet with lawyers and family."

Abnna Al-balad rejected the court decision, saying that “ this is part of the political prosecutions against many of our members and comrades and it targets the masses of our people at home" adding that " the physical and psychological pressure exerted on the detainees during the investigation and the false confessions " are fabricated charges.

Israel transfers seven Hamas leaders to administrative detention

Friday March 27, 2009 00:51 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies

The Ramattan News Agency reported on Thursday that the Israeli Authorities transferred seven Hamas leaders, who were kidnapped recently, to administrative detention for six months without charges or trial.

Archive Photo
Archive Photo

The decision was made after a demand was made by the Israeli prosecution at the Ofer Prison Court.

The agency identified the Hamas leaders as; Nasser Ed Deen Al Shaer, Adnan Asfour, legislator Ayman Daraghma, Nizar Ramadan, Azzam Salhab, Mazin Al Reemawi and Shaker Amarna.

Last week, Israel kidnapped several Hamas ministers, legislators and leaders in the occupied West Bank.

The arrests were carried out after Israel declared the failure of prisoner-swap talks, and the Israeli government decided on a series of measures to practice pressure on Hamas.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Al Mezan Calls for Release of All Detainees Held by Israel and Especially those Categorized as ‘Unlawful Combatants’

Al Mezan Calls for Release of All Detainees Held by Israel and Especially those Categorized as ‘Unlawful Combatants’ in Contravention of International Law and Human Rights Principles

Reference: 32/2009

On Tuesday 24 March 2009, the Chief of General Staff of the Israeli Army ruled to release five detainees being held as ‘unlawful combatants’: Sameer Hamouda Saleh Hamada, 40; Saleh Mohammed Saleh Hamada, 33; Mohammed Anwar Hamouda Hamada, 35; Hasan Ali Nasar Abu Hlaiyl, 48; and Sameer Ali Mohammed Al-Atar, 38. They are from Beit Lahiya town and were arrested by the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) from their area of residence over which the IOF took control during its 23 day invasion of 27 December 2008 – 18 January 2009.

The Israeli authorities announced that a number of detained Palestinians had been transferred to the Beer el-Sabe (Beer Sheva) District Court to confirm their status as ‘unlawful combatants’ under a special law, “The Unlawful Combatants Law” (5762-2002). On the basis of this law the Beer el-Sabe District Court ruled that the detainees were “unlawful combatants” after the army claimed that it had confidential files and confidential intelligence information about what it described as their ‘activities against the security of Israel’ and ‘membership in hostile organizations.’

According to The Unlawful Combatants Law, the Israeli Chief of Staff may submit a request to the Beer el-Sabe District Court to categorize any Gaza Strip resident as an ‘unlawful combatant’ on the basis of confidential evidence and Israeli intelligence reports. The continued detention of these detainees does not require an admission of guilt or the existence of evidence acceptable as part of fair trial standards. This law essentially licenses the military to hold individuals arbitrarily and indefinitely, on the basis of assumed rather than proven guilt that they are conducting direct or indirect activities that could harm the security of Israel or are affiliated to groups working to harm the security of Israel. The law as applied to Palestinian citizens who are residents of Gaza has retroactive force.

Israel passed this law for political considerations. The Israeli government sought to ensure its ability to detain Gaza’s residents for long periods of time without a trial meeting bare minimum fair trial standards in a flagrant violation of the rules of international humanitarian law, customary international law and international human rights law applicable to the Gaza Strip.

The law removes the need that an ‘individual protected person is definitely suspected of, or engaged in, activities hostile to the security of the State’ required by Article 5 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. The Fourth Geneva Convention stresses also the right to a fair trial. The Unlawful Combatants Law therefore constitutes a grave violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, especially as the law also enables indefinite detention without specific charges. The law also constitutes a violation of Article 50, paragraph 1 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions which is considered customary international law. This article states: “In case of doubt whether a person is a civilian, that person shall be considered to be a civilian.” Israeli practice is the opposite, as the categorization as unlawful combatants of Gaza residents is made on the basis of assumption.

The Israeli law also violates the basic principles of international law that prohibit the passing of a law with retroactive effect. The Unlawful Combatants Law was applied retroactively to people being held on the date of the commencement of the law. The retroactivity contravenes international humanitarian law and the fundamental principles of international law; non-retroactivity is enshrined the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 11 and Article 15 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The decision to release the five abovementioned detainees confirms previous assertions by Al Mezan Center for Human Rights that the categorization of Gazan detainees as ‘unlawful combatants’ is an arbitrary practice, based not on evidence, but on the inability of the IOF to present any charges against the detainees.

Al Mezan Center for Human Rights considers the continued and indeed increasing categorization of Palestinians resident in Gaza as ‘unlawful combatants’ as yet further evidence of the nature of the Israeli judiciary which provides legal cover to the grave human rights violations perpetrated by the IOF in the oPt.

Al Mezan calls on the international community to:

· Immediately intervene to provide protection to Palestinian detainees

· Press for the repeal of the ‘Unlawful Combatants Law’

· Assume its legal obligation towards Palestinian civilians subject to grave and systematic human rights violations, especially detainees

ADDAMEER Launches Campaign to Stop Administrative Detention

posted on Sumoud

Ramallah, 26/03/2009 - Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association launches today a global campaign to stop the Israeli use of administrative detention, a procedure under which Palestinian detainees can be indefinitely held without charges or trial. The primary objective of the campaign is to compel Israel to end this practice unconditionally and stop its policy of arbitrary arrests in the occupied Palestinian territory. Addameer calls upon Israel to immediately release all administrative detainees and abide by internationally recognized standards of fair trial.

?All detainees should be charged with a recognizable offence, tried in a suitable court of law in accordance with internationally accepted standards for fair trial. In the lack of sufficient evidence against them, they should be immediately released? - said Adv Sahar Francis, Addameer Association?s General Director. ?The problem is that I, as a lawyer, cannot defend my clients as their detention is based on secret information, which neither of us is allowed to see. Administrative detention cannot be continuously used as a substitute for prosecution.?

There are currently approximately 540 Palestinian administrative detainees, including 3 children under the age of 18 and 2 women held in Israel without charges or trial. Over the last 8 years following the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada in September 2000, there has been an average of more than 800 administrative detainees a year. Some have been kept in administrative detention for years, like in the case of recently released Adnan Hamarsheh who spent a total of nearly 6 years in prison from 28/12/2003 until 12/2/2009 or Khalid Kaaba who was arrested on 10 January 2005 and is still detained to this date. The vast majority of administrative detainees are held in old, threadbare tents exposing them to extreme weather conditions, in three detention centers, neither of which meets international minimum standards ? Keztiot in the Negev, Megiddo in the north of Israel and Ofer in the central West Bank. Although located within the occupied Palestinian territory, Ofer is equally inaccessible to families of detainees due to the path of Israel?s Separation Wall. Although no charges are presented against them, administrative detainees often suffer from humiliating and degrading treatment when arrested and interrogated. Addameer calls upon Israel to respect the Fourth Geneva Convention, in particular Article 84, which clearly highlights the difference between administrative detainees who ?have not been tried or convicted of any offence? which must be kept separately from ?persons detained for any other reason?. Israel must also ensure that detention conditions of administrative detainees meet international standards. Similarly, their lawful rights to regular family visits and adequate legal defence must be implemented.

Administrative detainees are not informed of the precise reasons for their arrest, even after their release. They can be held in such a state of suspension from a period of 1 to six months, based on the issuance of an administrative detention order against them, which can be renewed indefinitely by the military judge. Although they have the right to a review of the military order before a military judge and to appeal his decision, the process can neither be deemed as fair or independent. ?The review is a mockery of legal safeguards? ? said Adv Sahar Francis. ?The detainee is not able to confront and check basic facts, including confessions about his or her case, as all information presented to the Court is classified. In vast majority of the cases, administrative detention orders end up being confirmed?.

Addameer firmly insists that the judicial review of administrative detention must meet minimum international standards for due process. It must also be conducted regardless of whether the detainee initiates an appeal. ?Above all, Addameer believes that Israel must release administrative detainees as soon as the reason for detention ceases to exist. Through the campaign, we are determined to challenge the Military Court?s decisions and demonstrate their unfounded nature by compiling information on all current administrative detainees and the details of their legal cases? ? said Abdel Latif Ghaith, Addameer?s Chairman of the Board of Directors. ?The time has come for the international community to assume its role and hold Israel to account under international law as well as under its contractual agreements with the European Union. Throughout the years, we have seen enough of Israel?s human rights violations against the Palestinian people and enough of the international community?s inaction. We are handing today all international actors enough detailed and reliable information to finally act and put pressure on Israel to end its practice of administrative detention and arbitrary arrests. The international community?s lack of effective response to date has forced us to seriously question its commitment to fundamental human rights. Now is the time to prove that human rights principles and values are backed with action?.

For media interviews on the campaign, please contact:
Email: info@addameer.ps
Phone: +972 (0)2 2960 446 / 297 0136

Palestinian, you are on your own!

Natalie Abou Shakra | Gaza 08

He said, “Your wife is beautiful, I want to sleep with her.” During the interrogation, they would hit us extensively. They prevent us from sleeping, urinating, drinking and eating. During my friend’s interrogation, they brought in his wife. They touched her breasts, her sensitive areas in front of him. They wanted him to admit to their accusations. Imprisonment by the occupation forces is the attempting to murder a resistant spirit… all that we have against their state-of-the-art weaponry .

Gilad Shalit “who turned 22 in captivity, will have been a hostage of Hamas for about 1,000 days,” writes Isabel Kershner on March 8th 2009, in the New York Times . ِAround 11,700 Palestinians resisting illegal occupation, including children under the age of 18 and elderly, are held hostage by Apartheid Israel, writes the history of the oppressed. Most of those detained, according to Ali ‘Olwan a lawyer at the Ministry of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs in Gaza, have spent more than twenty years in captivity. These prisoners are held under inhumane conditions, says ‘Olwan, in denial of medical examination, no visits by their families and children are allowed, in addition to being subject to various torture techniques. Majdi, who is now 43, hasn’t seen his brother, Bashir, who has been in captivity since 1986, 23 years of age then. “My mother’s wish is to see her son before she dies. It has been 15 years that she last saw his face.”

After collecting information about you, they would break into your house one night. The Shin Bet would arrest you, take you into prison, remove all your clothes off. Sometimes with underwear, sometimes without. Undressing you is a must. Then, they begin the hakirah , which includes extensive interrogation… and hitting. They would then bring you clothes with an acrid smell, and begin to use their torture techniques. Have you heard of the shabeh ?

Ihab Bidir, 30, arrested by the IOF on the Mata’hin checkpoint in Gaza six years ago after being accused of affiliation with Hamas, was released on the 27th of January, 2009. Before his release by four days, Bidir, in his testimony, admitted that he was taken into a special division of the Naqab prison, called division 1, which is not under the jurisdiction of the Israeli Prisons Authority, but under the military’s control. He specified being accused as an “enemy combatant” and that the officer investigating his case denied him access to legal representation and an independent and impartial court claiming his file as “top secret” and that this was “not a legal matter, but entirely political.” He was released after spending four nights in division 1, in solitude. Bidir was clueless as to why he got to be placed in, and why he was later released.

The chair would be made of metal. A low seated chair, with a low back support. They’d tie your hands to the back, so that your spine would be inclined against the metal low back support. Being seated as such for hours, the pain resulting from the back, and the spine, would be intolerable. And, then, they would ask you to spread your legs wide open, and begin to whack your member- you would go insane!

After the Israeli Occupation Forces claimed withdrawing its troops from Gaza in 2005, while redeploying them, it stopped implementing administrative arrest codes, but begun placing the detained under the category of “enemy combatant.” This category was used by Israel in dealing with Hezbollah detainees. Prof. Peter Jan Honigsberg of the University of San Francisco School of Law writes that “enemy combatant did not and does not exist under international law,” that it was a “generic term until February 2002,” and that the US administration created it for the case of its detainees (Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghreib) since it “circumvent[ed] the Geneva Conventions and the international human rights laws,” in addition, he continues, to “shelter individual members of the administration from being charged with war crimes.” Since January 18, 2009, after the 22 day genocidal attacks on Gaza, Israel has placed more than 20 Palestinian detainees under the category of “enemy combatant”, says Ali ‘Olwan, and the number is increasing, making each individual placed under this category unprotected by international law.

They would ask if you smoked, and then try to lure you into admitting into their accusations by allowing you a cigarette, or with food, water, or by admitting you to go to the bathroom. If you wet yourself, they would rub your body against the liquid on the floor and strike you. Did I tell you about placing detainees in refrigerators?

The Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War in its 13th, 14th, and 15th articles states that the detainees must be treated humanely, with no violence and “physical mutilation” in cruel treatment and torture, in addition to no offenses upon “personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment”, along with “free of charge medical attention.” In placing prisoners under an internationally unrecognized category such as “enemy combatant,” the state of Israel adds on to the growing list of crimes against humanity yet another heinous violation. Kershner in her article published in the New York Times, states that “in a small country where 18-year-olds are conscripted into the army complete strangers feel intimately connected to the Shalits.” On a land whose non-Jewish natives underwent ethnic cleansing genocidal wars since 1948, it is time for the world to stand in solidarity with and be “intimately connected” to the six million refugees worldwide, the remaining families of martyrs, those men, women and children burnt alive, those who became physically challenged, those who live below the poverty line, those who cannot have an education, those who are racially discriminated against, those who want no help in fighting for their right to live with dignity on their land, those who choose to resist, limited resistance against the largest nuclear power in the region. What Kershner also needs to realize is that Shalit is an illegal occupier, and that the 11,700 detained Palestinians have the legal right to defend themselves, their land against any occupier, or modern-day colonizer.

More than 11,000 of us are in there. Is Shalit-the-occupier more human than us?

Updated on March 26, 2009

Detainees Society: Palestinian had pelvis broken by Israeli guards at Ofer

Date: 26 / 03 / 2009 Time: 13:40

Tubas - Ma'an - Israeli soldiers at the Ofer prison beat a prisoner so badly his pelvis was broken, Head of the Detainees Society in Tubas Mahmoud Sawafta said Thursday.

The family of Hassan Youssef Dabak from Tayasir in the northern West Bank contacted the society last week after visiting their son in prison and observing his extremely poor health conditions. The improperly healed break in his pelvis causes him immense pain when he tries to walk.

Dabak was stalked by Israeli troops for four years and detained on 12 April 2008. He was transferred from the Jericho to the Ofer prison during the winter.

Comrade Samir Al-Attar released from Zionist jails



http://www.pflp.ps/english/?q=node/1018

Comrade Samir Al-Attar, who was arrested by the Israeli occupation forces during its war of aggression against our people in Gaza Strip, was released on March 26, 2009 after he spent three months in the Negev desert prison.

The PFLP issued a statement today regarding his release, saying that "Comrade Al-Attar returned to his family and his friends and loved ones in the Atatra area west of Beit Lahia in the northern sector of the Gaza Strip."

The PFLP participated in the welcoming reception with the family and friends of Comrade Samir, and renewed its demand to release all of our brave prisoners in the occupation jails, who have practiced their legitimate right to resist the occupier and struggle for the freedom of our people and our land, a natural right protected by national and international laws.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Israel puts two Hamas affiliates in administrative detention

Date: 25 / 03 / 2009 Time: 16:48

[Ma'anImages]
Nablus – Ma’an – Two of the nine Hamas members Israeli forces nabbed from the West Bank last week were taken before a military court Wednesday and transferred to administrative detention for a period of six months.

Attorney Faris Abu Al-Hassan said the presence of his clients - Hamas leader Ra’fat Nassif from Tulkarem and Professor at An Najah National University in Nablus Issam Rashed Al-Ashkar - was requested at the Salem Court, an Israeli military court in the north of the West Bank.

The seven other Hamas members taken from their homes last week have not yet been put in front of a judge. They include:

Deputy Prime Minister Nasser As-Sha’er
Hamas political leader Adnan Asfour
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) member Ayman Daraghmeh
Head of the deputies’ office Mazen Ar-Rimawi from Ramallah
PLC member Azzam Salhab from Hebron
PLC member Nizar Ramadan from Hebron
Khaled Tafesh from Bethlehem

The mass detentions were part of a push to force Hamas’ hand in prisoner swap negotiations with Israel who were pressing for the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

Israel seized dozens of Palestinian lawmakers from the West Bank and Gaza after Palestinian fighters captured Shalit in 2006. Rather than yielding to Israeli pressure, Hamas has not altered its demands that Israel release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Shalit, including the lawmakers.

There are more than 11,000 Palestinian political prisoners in Israel’s jails.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Likud, Kadima MK’s submit bill to worsen conditions of Palestinian detainees

Tuesday March 24, 2009 10:45 by IMEMC & Agencies

Israeli online daily, Haaretz, reported o Monday that Likud member of Knesset (MK), Yariv Levin, and Kadima MK, Yoel Hasson, submitted a bill that calls for worsening the living conditions of imprisoned Hamas members.

File, Palestinian detainee - Image by Maan News Agency
File, Palestinian detainee - Image by Maan News Agency

They said that those who are responsible for “terrorist attacks, and for holding captive Gilad Shalit, should be denied all privileges”, Israeli online daily, Haaretz, reported.

The bill calls for placing some detainees in solitary confinement for extended periods, denying visitations, issuing Administrative Detention orders against the detainees who finish their terms, and barring detained students from continuing their education.

Several members of Knesset already declared their support to the new proposal. The MK’s who expressed support to the illegal bill are of the Yisrael Beiteinu Party, Shas Party, National Union Party, the Likud, and the Jewish Home.

It also aims at increasing Israel’s bargaining power over Hamas in talks for the release of the captured Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, Haaretz said.

The two MK’s claimed that Palestinian detainees imprisoned by Israel “are living in better conditions than the captured soldier”.

Likud MK, Levin, who used to the vice-president of the Israeli Bar Association, claimed that the bill “would be balanced, and will be in line with the international law”.

He also claimed that the bill will not violate the Geneva Convention. He said that the Convention only applies to prisoners of war and Israeli does not recognize the Palestinian detainees as prisoners of war.

Furthermore, Haaretz reported that a ministerial committee in Israel urged on Thursday the government to revoke some right of Palestinian detainees in order to increase the pressure on Hamas.

Such a decision is a violation to the basic rights of the detainees and constitutes collective punishment. Israel claims this decision is against detained Hamas members, but on the ground all detainees are imprisoned together and face the same aggression.

All Palestinian detainees are prisoners of war as Israeli is illegally occupying the Palestinians land and fully ignores and disregards the international law which labels occupation as a war crime.

Hundreds of detainees died in Israeli prisons since 1967. Most of them died due to extreme torture, while the rest died as the Israeli Prisons Authority denied them access to adequate medical treatment.

Israeli legalizes torturing detainees to obtain confessions, and several detainees died due to torture. Approximately 10.000 Palestinians, including hundreds of women and children, are imprisoned by Israel. The number of Israelis imprisoned by the Palestinians in One.

Palestinian detainees to protest Israeli decisions against them

Tuesday March 24, 2009 13:02 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News

The Prisoners Center for Studies (PCS) reported on Tuesday that Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons have decided to protest against the Israeli decisions against them, specifically calls for placing some in solitary confinement, and denying them visits and the right to education.

The Prisoners Center for Studies
The Prisoners Center for Studies

The PCS said that the decision came after the Israeli government decided several measures of collective punishment were taken against them following failed prisoner-sap talks with Hamas.

The measures also include barring prisoners from watching al-Jazeera new agency, and placing some of them in solitary confinement for indefinite periods, in addition to denying the detainees the right to education.

The center said that the detainees will not surrender and will not accept that Israel removes achievements they obtained through years of struggle and hunger strikes.

Furthermore, the PSC stated that there will be cooperation between the detainees and several factions and institutions in Palestine in order to organize massive protests marking April 17, the Palestinian Prisoners Day.

Ra’fat Hamdouna, head of the center, said that there are serious threats and violations against the detainees, especially the recent decision of the Israeli government to impose further restrictions on them.

Hamdouna appealed to the international community and different human rights groups to intervene and stop Israel's violations of human rights and international treaties that call for protecting detainees.