Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Lightning in the Skies of Palestine

 
Historic Hunger Strikes: Lightning in the Skies of Palestine

Richard Falk
http://richardfalk.wordpress.com/2012/05/08/historic-hunger-strikes-lightning-in-the-skies-of-palestine/
8 May
There is ongoing militant expression of Palestinian resistance to the abuses of Israel’s 45 years of occupation and de facto annexation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and five year blockade of Gaza taking the form of a series of hunger strikes. Recourse to this desperate tactic of courageous self-sacrifice is an extreme form of nonviolence, and should whenever and wherever it occurs be given close attention. Palestinians have protested by hunger strikes in the past but failed to inspire the imagination of the wider Palestinian community or shake the confidence of Israeli officialdom. Despite the averted gaze of the West, especially here in North America, there are some signs that this time the hunger strikes have crossed a historic threshold of no return.

These strikes started by the individual exploit of a single person, Khader Adnan, at the end of 2011. Dragged from his home in the village of Arraba near Jenin by a night raid by dozens of Israeli soldiers, humiliated and roughed up in the presence of his two and four year old daughter, carried away shackled and blindfolded, roughly interrogated, and then made subject to an administrative decree for the eighth time in his young life, Adnan’s inner conscience must have screamed ‘Enough!’ and he embarked on an open-ended hunger strike. He continued it for 66 days, and agreed to take food again only after the Israeli authorities relented somewhat, including a pledge not to subject Adnan to a further period of administrative detention unless further incriminating evidence came to the surface. Upon release, Adnan to depersonalize his ordeal insisted on visiting the families of other Palestinians currently under administrative detention before returning to his own home.
He has spoken out with firm gentleness and invited persons of conscience everywhere to join in the struggle to induce Israel to abandon administrative detention, and the accompanying violations of Palestinian human rights. Khader Adnan’s open letter to the people of the world is reproduced below to convey the tone and substance of his struggle.

Following Adnan, and inspired by him, was Hana Shalabi, a young Palestinian woman subject to a similar abusive arrest, accompanied by humiliations associated with her dress and sexual identity. Shalabi was from the villange of Burqin also near Jenin, and had been released a few months earlier in October 2011 as part of the prisoner exchange that was negotiated to obtain the release of the sole Israeli captive, Gilad Shalit. She had seldom strayed from her family home prior to the re-arrest on February 16, 2012, and her life was described as follows by her devoted sister, Zahra: “The four months between October and February were trouble-free days, bursting with dreams and ambitions. Hana loved to socialize and meet with people. She was busy with getting her papers in order to register for university, with her eyes set on enrolling at the American University in Jenin. She wanted to get her driver’s license, and later buy a car. She went on a shopping spree, buying new carpets and curtains for her bedroom…and she dreamed of getting married and of finding the perfect man to spend the rest of her life with.” It is little wonder that when arrested in the middle of the night she reacted in the manner described by Zahra: “She was panicking, and kept repeating over and over again that she was not going with the soldiers because she didn’t do anything.”

As with Adnan, Shalabi was released after she was in critical condition, but in a vindictive manner, being sent to live in Gaza for three years, thereby separated from her family and village, which were her places of refuge, love, and nurturing. She also made it clear that her experience of resistance was not meant for herself alone, but was intended to contribute to the struggle against prison abuse and the practice e of administrative detention, but even more generally as engagement in the struggle for Palestinian rights, so long denied. The example set by Adnan and Shalabi inspired others subject to similar treatment at the hands of the Israelis arrest and prison service. Several Palestinians detained by administrative detention decrees commenced hunger strikes at the end of February, and as many as 1650 others, and possibly more, initiated a massive hunger strike on Palestinian Prisoner’s Day, April 17th that is continuing, and has been named ‘the battle of empty stomachs’ The main battlefield is the mind of the oppressor, whether to give in and seem weak or remain firm and invite escalating censure, as well as Palestinian militancy, should any of those now in grave condition die.

The latest news suggests that Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, continuing their hunger strike that started on February 28th of this year, are clinging to life by a thread. A few days ago they were both been finally transferred to civilian hospitals. Mr. Halahleh after the 70th day without food announced that he was no longer willing even to drink any water or accept further medication.

As might be expected the voices of concern from the international community have been muted and belated. The International Committee of the Red Cross has finally expressed in public its concern for the lives of these strikers. The UN Envoy to the Middle East, Robert Serry, never someone outspoken, acknowledged a few days ago in a brief and perfunctory statement that he was ‘deeply troubled’ by the danger to these hunger strikers, as if such a sentiment was somehow sufficient to the outrages being inflicted.


More persuasively, several human rights NGOs, including Physicians for Human Rights–Israel have been reminding Israel of its obligation to allow family visits, which prison authorities have repeatedly denied, despite it being an accepted tenet of medical ethics that is affirmed in Israel’s Patient’s Rights Law.

On May 7, 2012 the Israel’s High Court of Justice denied urgent petitions for release from administrative detention filed on behalf of Mr. Diab and Mr. Halahleh. The Court in a classic example of the twisted way judges choose to serve the state rather than the cause of justice declared: “Hunger strikes cannot serve as an element in a decision on the very validity of administrative detention, since that would be confusing the issue.” Would it be so confusing to say that without some demonstration of evidence of criminality rejecting such a petition amounts to imposing a death sentence without even the pretensions of ‘a show trial’ that relies on coerced confessions? Israel’s highest judicial body leaves no doubt about their priorities by invoking anti-terrorism as a blanket justification, saying that Israel “should not have to apologize for securing its own safety.”

Other reports that the Israeli government has yet to feel pressure from European governments to act in a more humanitarian manner in response to these hunger strikes, but is worried that such pressure might come soon. After remaining silent for a long time, Robert Serry, the UN Envoy to the Middle East, a few days ago timidly issued a public statement saying that he was ‘deeply troubled’ by the near death condition of the Mr. Diab and Mr. Halahleh.

On a wider canvas, the hunger strikes are clearly having some effect on Israeli prison policy, although it is not clearly discernible as yet. The Israeli Public Security Minister, Yitzhak Aharonovitch, convened a meeting in which he voiced the opinion that Israeli reliance on administrative detention was excessive, and should be reduced. There is also some discussion with officials of the Israeli Prison Service and a committee representing some of the April 17th prisoners on a series of demands relating to prison conditions.

The following demands have been articulated by the April 17th hunger strikers, under the banner of ‘The Prisoners Revolution’:

1. Ending the Israeli Administrative detention and solitary confinement, in which Palestinians were imprisoned for more than ten consecutive years, in solitary cells that lack basic human necessities of life.
2. Allowing family visits to those from the Gaza Strip due to political decisions and unjust laws, such as the so-called “law of Shalit.
3. Improving the livelihood of prisoners inside Israeli Jails and allowing basic needs such as a proper health treatment, education and TV channels and newspapers.
4. Putting an end to the humiliation policy carried by the Israeli Prison Service against Palestinian prisoners and their families, through humiliating naked inspection, group punishment, and night raids.
***********

Khader Adnan’s Open Letter to the Free People of the World

In the name of Allah, Most Compassionate, Most Merciful,*

* Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of
Allah.*

Dear free people of the world. Dear oppressed and disenfranchised around
the globe. Dear friends of our people, who stood with me with a stern belief in freedom and dignity for my people and our prisoners languishing
in the Occupation’s prisons.

Dear free women and men, young and elderly, ordinary people as well as
intellectual elites everywhere – I address you today with an outpouring of
hope and pain for every Palestinian that suffers from the occupation of his
land, for each of us that has been killed, wounded or imprisoned by the
state of terror, that denies anything beautiful in our lives, even the
smile of our children and families. I am addressing you in my first letter
following my release – praying it will not be the last – after Allah
granted me freedom, pride and dignity. I was an “administrative detainee”
in the jail of occupation for four months, out of which I have spent 66
days on hunger strike.


I was driven to declare an open-ended hunger strike by the daily harassment
and violation of my people’s rights by the Israeli Zionist occupation. The
last straw for me were the ongoing arrests, the brutal nighttime raid on my
house, my violent detention, during which I was taken to the “Mavo Dotan”
settlement on our land occupied 1967, and the beatings and humiliation I
was treated to during arrest interrogation. The way I was treated during
the interrogation at the Jalameh detention center, using the worse and
lowest verbal insults in the dictionary. After questioning, I was sentenced
to imprisonment under administrative detention with no charges, which
proves mine and others’ arrests serve only to maintain a quota of
prisoners, to harass us, to restrict our freedom and to undermine our
determination, pride and dignity.


I write today to thank all those who stood tall in support of my people,
with our prisoners, with Hana al-Shalabi and with myself. I call on you to
stand for justice pride and dignity in the face of occupation. The assault
on the freedom and dignity of the Palestinian people is an assault on free
people of the world by a criminal occupation that threatens the security,
freedom and dignity of all, no matter where.


Please, continue in exposing this occupation, boycotting and isolating it
internationally. Expose its true face, the one that was clearly exposed in
the attack of an Israeli officer on our Danish cohort. Unlike that attack,
the murder our people is a crime that goes by unspoken of and slips away
from the lens of the camera. Our prisoners are dying in silence. Hundreds
of defenders of freedom are on hunger strike inside the prisons, including
the eight knights, Bilal Diab and Thaer Hlahalh, who are now on their 61st
day of hunger strike, Hassan Safadi, Omar Abu Shalal, Mahmoud Sarsak,
Mahmoud Sarsal, Mohammad Taj, Jaafar Azzedine (who was arrested solely for standing in solidarity with myself) and Ahmad haj Ali. Their lives now are
in great danger.

We are all responsible and we will all lose if we anything happen to them.
Let us take immediate action to pressure the Occupation into releasing them
immediately, or their children could never forgive us.

Let all those free and revolutionary join hands against the Occupation’s
oppression, and take to the streets – in front of the Occupation’s prisons,
in front of its embassies and all other institutions backing it around the
world.

With deep appreciation,

*Khader Adnan *

++++

Having followed these hunger strikes for several months, I am convinced that these individuals subject to administrative detention are ordinary persons living a normal life, although chafing under the daily rigors and indignities of prolonged occupation. Israeli commentary tends to divert humanitarian concerns by branding these individuals as ‘terrorists,’ taking note of their alleged affiliation with Islamic Jihad. Adnan who is obviously preoccupied with his loving family, a baker by profession, working in his village, does not seem a particularly political person beyond the unavoidable political response to a structure of domination that is violent, cruel, and abusive. The language of his Open Letter is one that exhibits moral intensity, and seeks support for the Palestinian struggle for a sustainable peace with justice. It has none of the violent imagery or murderous declarations found in Al Qaeda’s characteristic calls for holy warfare against the infidels.

I was impressed by Hana Shalabi’s sister’s response when asked about the alleged connection with Islamic Jihad. Zahra responded to the question with a smile saying, ‘She’s not really Islamic Jihad. She doesn’t belong to any faction. When Israel imprisons you, their security forces ask which political faction you belong to. Hana chose Islamic Jihad on a whim.’ Even if it was than a whim, for a religious person to identify with Islamic Jihad it does not at all imply a commitment to or support for terrorist tactics of resistance. Zahra asks rhetorically, ‘Does she have missiles or rockets? Where is the threat to Israel? ..Why can’t we visit her? She has done nothing.’ And finally, ‘I would never place my enemy in my sister’s position…I would not wish this on anyone.’

Israel has by vague allegations of links to terrorist activities tried its best to dehumanize these hunger strikers, or to dismiss such actions as the foolish or vain bravado of persons ready to renounce their lives by their own free will. But their acts and words if heeded with empathy, their show of spiritual stamina and sense of mission, convey an altogether different message, one that exhibits the finest qualities that human beings can ever hope to achieve. Those of us who watch such heroic dramas unfold should at least do our best to honor these hunger strikers, and not avert our eyes, and do our utmost to act in solidarity with their struggles in whatever way we can.

We cannot now know whether these hunger strikes will spark Palestinian resistance in new and creative ways. What we can already say with confidence is that these hunger strikers are writing a new chapter in the story line of resistance sumud, and their steadfastness is for me a Gandhian Moment in the Palestinian struggle.
 Scoop News

US To Grant Israel $1 Billion For “Iron Dome”

  by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies 
The U.S. Congress has granted Israel one billion dollars to develop additional “Iron Dome” missile interception systems. The budget of the US Ministry of Defense was $680 billion in 2010.
Iron Dome Missile firing--Reuters
Iron Dome Missile firing--Reuters
U.S Member of Congress and Member of the House Appropriation Defense Subcommittee, Steve Rothman (Democratic Party) issued a statement declaring; “I am proud to announce that $947 million has been appropriated for the Iron Dome, David Sling and Arrow system for the coming year”.

Rothman added that these defense systems will give Israel’s leaders the ability “to root out terrorists and carefully plan their next move”.

He further stated that President Obama and members of the Appropriations Subcommittee realize what he called the importance of advanced anti-missile technology “both to safeguard our citizens, and the troops of the Jewish State”.

His usage of the term “Jewish State” is controversial. Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and his extremist coalition partners, have asked the U.S to support Israel’s demand that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish State. The US has not officially requested the Palestinians to recognize Israel as a Jewish State, but a number of congress members, senators and officials, have stated their approval of such a demand.

The United States provides Israel with approximately $3.6 billion of annual aid. This figure does not included hundreds of millions of dollars collected by lobbies, and direct donations many of which are tax deductible.

The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) recognized Israel as a state and its right to exist before signing the first Oslo Peace Agreement in 1993. Israel was supposed to reciprocate and recognize the Palestinian right to statehood and independence, but such an official recognition has never been made.

Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, has reiterated that the PLO has officially recognised the State of Israel and its right to exist despite Israel being established on 80% of historic Palestine.

He has also stated that Israel “can call itself whatever it wants” but the Palestinians will not recognize it as a “Jewish State”. Such recognition means dropping legitimate Palestinian rights, especially the Right of Return for the refugees, 50% of the Arab population of then Palestine, and their descendents who were uprooted from their villages and homeland mainly during the creation of Israel in 1948/9. It also poses a direct threat to the Israeli Arab population of about 1.5 million, descendents of the indigenous Arab population that remained in what becaise Israel.
International Middle East Media Center

Two hunger strikers in Ramla hospital in serious health conditions

RAMALLAH, (PIC)-- Lawyer of Addameer association for prisoners and human rights Mahmoud Hassan, who visited on Monday the hospital of Ramla prison, said he found hunger strikers Jafar Izzeddin and Mahmoud Sarsak, in very bad shape.
Lawyer Hassan stated that prisoner Sarsak has been on hunger strike for 47 days and now he is unable to move, suffer from eyesight problems and has been throwing up for five days, adding that he also underwent pancreas tests in Asaf Harofe hospital a few days ago.
Sarsak, 25, from Rafah refugee camp in Gaza, is one of the national Palestinian soccer players and was kidnapped on July 22, 2009 at Erez checkpoint as he was on his way to Nablus to join Balata Youth club.
Soon after his kidnapping, Sarsak was taken to Ashkelon jail and exposed to 30 days of intensive interrogation. Despite the failure of leveling charges and providing evidence against him, the Israeli prosecutor decided to classify him as an unlawful combatant and keep him in administrative detention for an unlimited period.
Sarsak has been on hunger strike since March 19, 2012 in protest at his detention without any guilt. On the eighth of April, he was transferred from Negev jail to an isolation cell in Eichel jail in Beersheba and later on 16 of the same month he was taken to the hospital of Ramla prison after his health worsened.
As for the other prisoner Jafar Izzeddin, on hunger strike for 48 days, lawyer Hassan said his health status is not reassuring especially since he feels constant pain in his head, heart, thigh muscles, and kidneys and are always dizzy which cause him once to collapse and hit his head strongly on the floor.
The lawyer noted that the two detainees are determined to continue their hunger strike until they restore their freedom and all the demands of the captive movement are met.
In a related context, director of Addameer association Sahar Francis condemned the Israeli higher court for rejecting the petition filed on behalf of detainees Bilal Diyab and Tha'er Halala against their administrative detention.
She said the Israeli higher court dedicated itself to serve the Zionist colonial project through providing legal cover for the repressive policies and crimes of the occupation regime as a state above the international law.
Two hunger strikers in Ramla hospital in serious health conditions

Turkey finishes flotilla attack probe

Turkey finishes flotilla attack probe - UPI.com


ANKARA, Turkey, May 9 (UPI) -- Turkey has finished its investigation of the May 2010 Israeli Navy attack on a Gaza-bound humanitarian aid flotilla that left nine Turks dead, an official said.
Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin told Today's Zaman his office is waiting for information from Turkey's Foreign Ministry before announcing indictments against Israeli soldiers.
"When we have this information, we will send the indictments to the concerned courts," Ergin said.
Turkey established its own inquiry into the matter, concluding that the Gaza blockade and the Israeli attack on the flotilla of ships were illegal and a violation of international law.
News reports last year said Turkish intelligence agencies had compiled a list of 174 soldiers who could be prosecuted for their involvement in the raid, the Jerusalem Post reported.

FEATURE-UN's oldest refugee camps look at sensitive upgrades

By Noah Browning
BETHLEHEM, West Bank, May 9 (Reuters) - Three generations of Palestinians displaced by the founding of Israel in 1948 know only life in U.N. refugee camps, going to schools beneath the blue-and-white U.N. flag and drawing their food stocks from U.N. warehouses.
For these Palestinians whose long-cherished goal is "right of return" to the lands they lost 64 years ago, the camps must be seen as temporary no matter how permanent they might seem to others.
Which explains why the latest programme by the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) to upgrade the camps' dilapidated facilities is such a delicate operation.
The United Nations and other agencies have been providing essential services in the camps for decades without implementing permanent institutions, but say the time has come to do more for the growing populations of residents.
"People have a right to be proud of where they are...," said Sandi Hilal, the director of UNRWA's carefully named "camp improvement program" in the West Bank, adding that providing just basic needs "is not enough when we consider people have been living in a place for 60 years".
"Improving the daily life of refugees doesn't jeopardize their right to return back home. Living in dignity is the main goal of the improvement program," she said.
Some 700,000 people fled or were driven from their homes when Israel was created after the 1948 war, but now as many as five million refugees and their descendants live in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, many of them in squalid camps.
Founded in 1949, UNRWA is almost as old as the U.N. itself. Given that prospects for a resolution to Israel's disputes in the Middle East continue to be dismal, it appears to have a long future ahead.
With the help of German government funding, the agency is improving health clinics, sanitation and advanced education in coordination with local committees in five camps in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and two in Jordan.

CLINGING TO HOPE
The 13,000 residents of Bethlehem's Deheishe camp, a warren of cinder block hovels clogged with traffic and electrical wires, are a focus of UNRWA's efforts.
The agency leased the site months after some 2,000 original refugees quit towns and villages around Jerusalem in 1949.
The fate of refugees clinging to the right of return has been one of the toughest issues facing negotiators in two decades of on-off talks aimed at creating an independent Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank.
Israel says the demand for a right to return is a deal breaker in any peace accord, arguing that allowing the refugees into Israel would increase the proportion of Palestinian Arabs living within its borders and thus undermine its nature as a Jewish state.
It also disputes the legal basis of the right of return set out in a U.N. resolution of December 1948 and says the world has not taken into account the plight of Jews forced from their homes across the Arab world in the last 65 years.
Peace talks have been frozen since 2010, with the Palestinians saying they will not re-engage until there is a halt to Jewish settlement building in the occupied territories.
The dejection found in Deheishe has not been reversed by the UNRWA plan to improve it or by the work of 20 non-governmental organisations in its one-km-square area.
As walls turned from felt to cinder block over decades, houses squashed together, pushing community life out into the surreally narrow streets. With no parks for children to play in and few jobs to keep youths busy, people of all ages mingle in its crowded alleyways.
"Standards of living here are plunging," lamented part-time labourer Othman Abu Omar, puffing idly on a cigarette.
"We hope one day to be done with dependence. Everybody should depend on himself," he said.

HOPING "TO DISAPPEAR"
Some residents complain that the decades of U.N. sponsorship have amounted to nothing more than charity, without addressing the underlying political cause of their plight.
"We've gotten health and basic services, but there is no end to the crisis," said Habis al-Aisa, a camp dweller whose family hails from Zakariyya, a town in what is now central Israel.
"We're refugees, and the U.N. should be totally responsible for our needs and our situation, because our status is an international political issue."
The United Nations recognises as refugees those who registered with UNRWA after fleeing their homes and their descendants. They are covered by the U.N. resolutions and eligible to receive the agency's services even if not resident in the camps, but not if they attain citizenship or asylum in another country.
Historically weak and cash-strapped governments in Palestinian-governed Gaza and the West Bank have provided little in the way of infrastructure or subsidies to the camps or their inhabitants. Many remain in the camps for lack of better options.
UNRWA is the only U.N. organization devoted to the refugee problem of a single people. Its spokesman, Chris Gunness, said it has no set policy on where the refugees are to go, or how the Middle East crisis might end.
"UNRWA would like nothing more than to disappear and not be needed anymore. It provides services pending a just and durable solution to the conflict," he said.
The agency's current improvement scheme, subsidized by 19.5 million euros from the German government, stresses close coordination with local parties.
A gleaming new clinic aims to provide services to sufferers of diabetes and hypertension, which afflicts around a sixth of refugees in the West Bank, who previously had few options for treatment.
Living conditions will be improved by shoring up collapsing houses, mending roofs and improving sewage and trash collection.
In a college-level education program, dubbed the "House of Wisdom" after a Baghdad library in the Islamic golden age, young camp dwellers choose their own curriculum and are visited by guest lecturers in small, Socratic learning circles.
"194, 242, 338," student Alaa al-Homuz rattles in staccato, naming U.N. Security Council resolutions dealing with Palestinian refugees which he is studying in a class on international law.
These students disagreed that improving the conditions in the camps would interfere with the concept of the right of return or dull their determination to return to their ancestral homes.
"When you live better and have your essential needs met, it leads to a better way of thinking and to finding better strategies to get our rights," al-Homuz said. (Editing by Douglas Hamilton and Sonya Hepinstall)
FEATURE-UN's oldest refugee camps look at sensitive upgrades - AlertNet

Haneyya urges hunger strikers to stay united and steadfast

Haneyya urges hunger strikers to stay united and steadfast
 



GAZA, (PIC)-- Palestinian premier Ismail Haneyya urged the hunger strikers in Israeli jails to maintain their united position and steadfastness and stand up against any attempt to disturb their unity.
Haneyya made his remarks on Tuesday in a news conference held in the tent that was set up in the Unknown Soldier Square in Gaza city to champion the cause of hunger strikers in Israeli jails.
He expressed his belief that the hunger strike battle as he described reflected positively on the unity of the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank.
The premier also pledged to remain supportive for their demands, especially their quest for freedom.
The premier also noted that a delegation from his cabinet will leave for Cairo on Saturday to meet with secretary-general of the Arab League, Nabil Al-Arabi, to follow up the resolutions that were issued last Sunday in support of the Palestinian prisoners.
In a related context, Hamas prisoner Mahmoud Issa, who has spent the longest prison term in solitary confinement, described in a leaked letter some of the miserable incarceration conditions of Palestinian prisoners isolated in Israeli jails.
The letter was fully published on Wednesday in Arabic by the Palestinian information center (PIC) on its website.
Prisoner Issa talked about how the Israeli jailers deprive Palestinian detainees of their most basic rights including reading, education, food, air, talking and sleep.
He stressed that the hunger strikers in solitary confinement vowed not to surrender until all their demands are fulfilled or they become martyrs.

Jewish settlers set hundreds of olive trees on fire

Jewish settlers set hundreds of olive trees on fire
 http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/en/DataFiles%5CCache%5CTempImgs%5C2012%5C1%5Cimages_News_2012_05_09_olive-fire_300_0.jpg

NABLUS, (PIC)-- Jewish settlers set hundreds of Palestinian olive trees on fire in Jamaeen and Yasuf villages to the south of Nablus.
Fathi Hamdan, a farmer, said on Wednesday that Jewish settlers from the Tafuh settlement started the blaze that destroyed more than 300 olive trees owned by farmers of the two villages.
He charged that the settlers routinely attack Palestinian land in those villages in a bid to terrorize citizens into abandoning their land, which the settlers seek to annex to their settlement.

Abbas warns of disaster if hunger-striker dies

Maan News Agency


RAMALLAH (Reuters) -- President Mahmoud Abbas warned on Tuesday that the death of any one of the hundreds of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israel would be a "disaster" and could trigger a backlash that might slip out of control.

"It is very dangerous," Abbas told Reuters on a day when the Red Cross urged Israel to transfer to hospital six detainees who it said were close to death after not eating for two months.

"If anybody dies today or tomorrow or after a week it would be a disaster and no one could control the situation," Abbas said in an interview at his office in Ramallah. "I told the Israelis and the Americans if they do not find a solution for this hunger strike immediately, they will be committing a crime."

Joining some who began fasting earlier, an estimated 1,600 Palestinian prisoners out of 4,800 launched a mass hunger strike on April 17 to protest against conditions in Israeli jails and to demand an end to solitary confinement and more family visits.

The prisoners include Islamists from Hamas and Islamic Jihad as well as members of Abbas's secular Fatah movement.

The fate of the hunger strikers has touched a raw nerve in the Palestinian territories with daily demonstrations in the occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip to support the protest.

The International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva called on Israel on Tuesday to transfer six prisoners who have forsworn food for around two months to hospital.

All six are in prison under Israel's long-standing policy of detaining people without charge whom it suspects of security offenses, including plotting attacks against Israeli targets. The six have been refusing food for between 47 and 71 days.

In a statement, the ICRC said that the six were in "imminent danger of dying", although it upheld their right to choose whether or not they wanted to receive treatment.

"We urge the detaining authorities to transfer all six detainees without delay to a suitable hospital so that their condition can be continuously monitored and so that they can receive specialized medical and nursing care," said Juan Pedro Schaerer, head of the ICRC delegation in Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

"Their main demands are for a resumption of family visits from Gaza and for an end to solitary confinement in Israeli places of detention," the ICRC said.

'Tragic'

PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad described the plight of prisoners as a "personal story for the Palestinians".

"The most tragic thing is if you look at the list of demands they have presented Israel ... they are generally related to the basic rights of prisoners," Fayyad told Reuters in a separate interview in Ramallah.

"There is a clear violation of the Geneva conventions."

The ICRC's Shaerer stressed that the prisoners' right to fast is protected by international conventions which discourage force-feeding: "While we are in favor of any medical treatment that could benefit the detainees, we would like to point out that, under resolutions adopted by the World Medical Association, the detainees are entitled to freely choose whether to consent to be fed or to receive medical treatment," he said.

"It is essential that their choice be respected and their human dignity preserved," he said.

Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said Israel was providing medical treatment for the prisoners and they were free to choose their own doctors if they wish: "But ultimately, this is not about medical facilities," he said. "This is about hard-core activists, from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, who through this protest are trying to instigate violence."

On Monday, Israel's Supreme Court turned down an appeal by two of the Palestinian detainees.

But in its decision the court said Israeli authorities should consider freeing them on medical grounds.

The scope of the hunger strike has posed a new challenge to Israel, which has come under international criticism over detentions without trial and could face a violent Palestinian backlash if any of the protesters die.

The office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay also voiced concern for the strikers' fate.

"International law is clear: administrative detention should only be used in exceptional cases and only for imperative reasons of security. Administrative detainees have the right to challenge the lawfulness of the detention," spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told a news briefing.

Independent UN investigators and UN rights bodies have raised concerns about Israel's frequent and extensive use of detention without trial, including of children, infringing on detainees right to a fair trial, Shamdasani said.

Israeli forces 'detain 4 teenagers' in Azzun

Maan News Agency
 QALQILIYA (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces on Wednesday detained four teenagers after ransacking their homes near Qalqiliya in the northern West Bank, locals said.

Forces detained Sari Dahbour, 13, Mustafa Riyashi, 15, Ibrahim Shahadeh, 17, and Jaafar Saleem, 18, from Azzun, witnesses told Ma'an.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said four were arrested in Azzun. Soldiers also detained four Palestinians from the Nablus and Bethlehem districts overnight, she said.

Israeli Army Demolishes Three Buildings near Bethlehem

Palestine News & Info Agency - WAFA

BETHLEHEM, May 9, 2012 (WAFA) – Israeli army bulldozers demolished early Wednesday three buildings in the West Bank village of Housan, west of Bethlehem, said local sources.

Head of the village council, Jamal Sabatin, told WAFA that a large force with bulldozers raided the village and demolished three buildings after blocking all roads leading to the site.

He said that one of the buildings was demolished by Israeli army for the third time in one year.

Sabatin said that not only Israeli soldiers demolish houses but they also seize land, uproot trees and prevent farmers from accessing their land.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

The Red Cross is worried about the striking prisoners’ health conditions

 
GAZA (PIC) – The International Committee of the Red Cross expressed, on Monday, its worry about the health conditions of the hunger striking Palestinian prisoners in occupation jails, especially those striking since twenty-one days.
Ayman Shihabi, the spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross in the Gaza Strip, told "AFP" of the committee’s concern for the hunger strikers’ health conditions, especially those striking since a long time.
Shihabi also confirmed that “the International Committee of the Red Cross visit these detainees to check on their health condition and to ensure that they are receiving necessary medical care -according to international standards applicable in the case of the hunger strikes”. He added that the “Red Cross regularly holds non-publicized bilateral meetings with the concerned [Israeli] authorities to discuss the results of those visits.”
He further explained, "The International Committee communicates with the hunger strikers’ families to reassure them about their sons," adding that "the International Committee of the Red Cross reminds the Israeli authorities with their obligations and duties in accordance with the Fourth Geneva Convention."The Red Cross is worried about the striking prisoners’ health conditions

Army Breaks Into Popular Committee Office In Ramallah

 by Regina Qumsieh - IMEMC & Agencies 
The Maan News Agency reported that Israeli soldiers invaded, on Tuesday at dawn, the office of Stop The Wall, a grassroots organization that campaigns against the Israeli separation wall, in Ramallah and confiscated all their files and computers after trashing the office.
Image Ma'an
Image Ma'an
Palestinian MP, head of the Palestinian National Initiative, Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi, condemned the Israeli attack and the confiscation of documents belonging to the committee.

Barghouthi added that this invasion is proof that Israel is carrying out an organized campaign against all forms of popular, nonviolent resistance, and that such actions will only make Palestinians more determined to continue their resistance, and their campaigns until the liberation of their people.

He added that the army recently carried out repeated invasions targeting several media facilities in Ramallah, including the office of Watan TV, and Jerusalem Educational TV in the city center.

Ramallah is classified as Area A under the Oslo peace agreement, supposedly under complete Palestinian civil and security control but the army repeatedly violates these agreements with invasions and assaults.

Dr. Barghouthi said that the response to these invasion should be stronger, nonviolent resistance activities, and more unity among all Palestinians factions. He also called for further activities to express solidarity with the hunger-striking Palestinian political detainees held by Israel.
 International Middle East Media Center

Israeli Bulldozers Raze Land, Uproot Trees near Hebron

HEBRON, May 8, 2012 (WAFA) – Israeli bulldozers Tuesday razed agricultural land and uprooted hundreds of olive and fruit trees in Beit Ola, a town northwest of Hebron, according to local sources.
They said Israeli forces accompanied two bulldozers and members of the Israeli civil administration, the arm of the Israeli military government in the West Bank, razed around 18 dunums of private Palestinian agricultural land, uprooted hundreds of olive trees and destroyed retaining walls.
One of the land owners, Fayez al-Amleh, said Israeli forces earlier destroyed a water reservoir and handed him an eviction notice from his land under the pretext it was state property, adding that an Israeli court will later look into the property ownership case.WAFA - Israeli Bulldozers Raze Land, Uproot Trees near Hebron

Erekat Recovers from Minor Cardiac Arrest

RAMALLAH, May 8, 2012 (WAFA) – PLO Executive Committee member Saeb Erekat is recovering in hospital from a minor cardiac arrest, medical sources said Tuesday.
Executive Director of Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah, Ahmad Bitawi, told WAFA Erekat underwent catheterization process and will completely recover within two days.

Palestine News & Info Agency

Monday, May 7, 2012

IMEMC News - Palestine

IMEMC News - International Middle East Media Center

Monday May 07, 2012 - 14:32
Reuters reported on Monday afternoon that Israel's Supreme Court turned down an appeal to free two Palestinians from administrative detention without trial who have been on hunger strike for nearly 70 days. But in its decision, released by the Justice Ministry, the court said security authorities should consider freeing them for medical reasons. Full Story
File - Palinfo
Monday May 07, 2012 - 12:37
Israeli soldiers kidnapped, on Monday at dawn, five Palestinians in different parts of the West Bank and took them to unknown destination; the kidnappings took place after the army invaded several cities, towns and villages and searched dozens of homes. Full Story
Mohammad Barakeh - Image From Barakeh's Facebook Page
Monday May 07, 2012 - 12:30
During the recent trial of MK Mohammad Barakeh accused of assaulting a border guard, disruptive methods used by the Israeli Military to discredit peaceful demonstrations came to light. Full Story

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Turkey condemns the building of 1100 new housing units in O. Jerusalem

ANKARA, (PIC)-- Turkish foreign ministry has expressed concern at the Israeli government’s endorsement of the building of 1100 new housing units in occupied Jerusalem.
The ministry’s statement on Saturday said that the expansion of the Givat Hamatos settlement was a new addition to the illegal Israeli activity in occupied Palestinian land.
It recalled that Turkey had condemned, alongside the world community, the Israeli plan to establish new housing units in Givat Hamatos last October, and said that achieving peace was not one of Israel’s goals.
The statement renewed Ankara’s rejection of the incessant Israeli settlement activity in blatant violation of the international law, charging that Israel had destroyed peace foundations with such practices.
Turkey condemns the building of 1100 new housing units in O. Jerusalem

IOF troops open gunfire at Palestinian homes

GAZA, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) opened their machinegun fire at Palestinian homes in Juhr Al-Deek area to the south east of Gaza city on Saturday, local sources said.
They told the PIC reporter that the IOF soldiers stationed to the east of Juhr Al-Deek also fired projectiles at Palestinian homes and farmlands.
The intensity of the shooting forced farmers to abandon their farms, they said, adding that no casualties were reported.
IOF troops open gunfire at Palestinian homes

Jewish settlers poison Palestinian grapevines

Jewish settlers poison Palestinian grapevines

AL-KHALIL, (PIC)-- A group of Jewish settlers from Karmi Tzur settlement attacked Palestinian grapevines in Beit Ummar village, north of Al-Khalil, on Saturday.
Locals said that the settlers sprayed toxic chemicals on the grape trees that destroyed their leaves and fruit.
The locals noted that the settlers repeat their attack on the same area each year.
Settlers of Karmi Tzur are notorious for regularly attacking and damaging Palestinian farmlands in Beit Ummar village and its environs.

Fifty Freed Prisoners In Gaza Join Prison Hunger Strikers

  Scoop News

Fifty freed prisoners in the besieged Gaza Strip have announced a hunger strike in sympathy with the striking prisoners in occupation jails.
The freed prisoners made their announcement at a press conference at a tent sit-in, near the Unknown Soldiers Statue in Gaza City, a reporter for Ahrar-Wledna informed.
The hunger strikers also expressed their anger at the silence of the international community after three weeks of the hunger strike, with some strikers having been moved to hospitals and others put into solitary confinement, instead of acceding to their demands or at least taking them to hospital.
Even the Israeli media avoids speaking about the prisoners, their conditions or food strike.
The Zionist Israeli occupation leaders consider the Palestinian prisoners “criminals,” not defenders of rights and destiny.
Our reporter adds that the General Assembly of the UN had issued decision 2034, in December 1972, supporting the resistance against occupation, and denouncing any attempt of suppressing this resistance.

Hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners hospitalized

JERUSALEM - A spokeswoman for Israel's prison service says 10 hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners have been hospitalized.

They are among 1,500 to 2,500 Palestinian prisoners who started refusing food 19 days ago, demanding a halt to imprisonment without charges, an end to solitary confinement and reinstating family visits from Gaza.
Prison spokeswoman Sivan Weizeman said Saturday the 10 were transferred to a prison clinic for medical supervision. Another prisoner, Bilal Diab, was moved to a civilian hospital last week. He has refused food for 68 days so far.
Weizeman did not say when the 10 were transferred or what medical treatment they received.
Israeli officials and Palestinians give different numbers of hunger strikers. Eight prisoners have been on strike for over 50 days.

Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2012/05/05/2452999/hunger-striking-palestinian-prisoners.html#storylink=cpy
Alaska news at adn.com

#OPT Palestinian children and women fight distress in East Jerusalem

UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/NYHQ2012-0306/Pirozzi
A woman and her daughter walk in an arched alleyway in Silwan, a densely populated East Jerusalem neighbourhood in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
By Catherine Weibel
EAST JERUSALEM, Occupied Palestinian Territory, 30 April 2012 – The winding lanes of Silwan  are among the most ancient and picturesque in East Jerusalem. But Silwan is also one of the most densely populated Palestinian neighbourhoods, where poverty and violence are part of daily life.
“People literally live on top of each other, which creates a lot of friction and tension,” said Abeer Zayad, the head of the Ath Thuri Women’s Centre. Today about 30 women and children are crowded on sofas and plastic chair in its main room.
“We are crowded in our houses, we are crowded in our neighbourhood, we are crowded in our schools,” said 12-year old Iman*. “In Silwan, we have no library and no safe area where we could play like other children in the world.”
Muna*, one of the mothers, described the neighbourhood. “In Silwan, the trash is not collected, rats run between the houses, the streets turn into pools any time it rains, and there is no parking. The only way we can fix the crumbling streets is to collect money in the neighbourhood and do it ourselves,” she said. “The Israeli authorities have not built any safe play areas and because schools are not in sufficient numbers, many children, especially boys, hang out on the street where they are exposed to sexual abuse and drugs.”
UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/NYHQ2012-0303/Pirozzi
A boy stands in a street in Silwan, a densely populated East Jerusalem neighbourhood in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
The women’s centre is part of network of 16 psychosocial support groups that offer support to Palestinian women and children suffering from stress or violence. With support from UNICEF and the Palestinian YMCA, and with funds from the European Commission Humanitarian Aid Department (ECHO), the centre’s workers have been trained to identify signs of stress, provide support and refer cases to specialized services as needed.
“All our children experience heightened violence because of poverty, rivalries between local families, drug trafficking and Israeli settlements pressing into our dense Palestinian neighbourhood,” another mother reported. “There is a general lack of law and order because Israeli Security Forces rarely take action against drug traffickers or criminals. They spend most of their time patrolling around settlements only,” she complains.
Living under threat
The development of settlements, coupled with evictions orders, has heightened tensions in Silwan.
“Children are scared to walk alone to school because of the settlers,” Muna explained. Some settlers and their armed guards are known to harass or even attack children. Last year, a 17-year-old Palestinian boy in Silwan was killed by a settler and many other children were injured in other confrontations.
UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/NYHQ2012-0305/Pirozzi
Residents in Silwan, a densely populated East Jerusalem neighbourhood in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, are affected by deep poverty and routine violence.
In addition, it has become extremely difficult for Palestinians to obtain building permission from Israeli authorities in Silwan. Confronted with a serious shortage in housing, many have had no choice but to build without permits, leaving many families vulnerable to eviction and their buildings vulnerable to demolition.
“Some children put toys or clothes in their school bags instead of textbooks,” Ms. Zayad said, “in case their house is knocked down while they are at school… A 9-year-old girl told her mother not to worry, that she was going to look for a tent so the family would not be left under the cold rain.”

The centre tries to help children and their parents cope with these uncertainties. The centre also helps children understand they have a right to protection from violence.
“There is a general climate of violence in Silwan,” Ms. Zayad said. “Families fight each other and their children do the same at school. Most youngsters I’ve talked to think it is normal to beat up one’s wife or fight with one’s neighbours. The centre teaches them how to solve their problems without resorting to violence.”
* Names changed to protect residents’ identities

UNICEF - At a glance: Occupied Palestinian Territory - Palestinian children and women fight distress in East Jerusalem

Amnesty: Palestinian hunger-strikers 'in danger'

Maan News Agency
BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Two Palestinian hunger strikers' lives are in danger, as Israel delays ruling on the appeal against their detention without charge or trial, Amnesty International warned Friday.

A petition on behalf of Bilal Diab, 27, and Thaer Halahla, 33, to the Israeli high court against their administrative detention was heard on Thursday, but the court has yet to issue a decision.

Both have been on hunger strike since February, and have told their lawyers that they have been ill-treated by Israel Prison Service. Diab's lawyer reported that he is shackled to his hospital bed at all times.

"Restraining a seriously ill prisoner to his bed for non-medical reasons amounts to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment," Amnesty said in a statement urging action on the cases.

The statement also said Hassan Safadi, Omar Abu Shalal, Jaaafar Izz al-Din, and Mahmoud al-Sarsak, remain at Ramle prison clinic and have not been allowed to see independent doctors.

Amnesty International urged its supporters to contact Israeli authorities and demand that the six prisoners be released or promptly charged with internationally recognizable offenses.

Ahrar: Detainees on hunger strike till all demands fulfilled

RAMALLAH, (PIC)-- Al-Ahrar center for prisoners' studies and human rights said the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails are determined not to end their hunger strike until all their demands are met.
Commenting on Israeli claims that officials from the Israeli prison authority met with senior prisoners, director of the center Fouad Al-Khafsh said the meeting happened with prisoners not representing the hunger strikers and was aimed to prevent more prisoners from joining the hunger strike.
Khafsh also denied Israeli claims saying that the hunger strikers want more TV channels displaying songs and movies in order to end their strike, and said the Israeli prison authority is making a mockery of the prisoners' just demands.
He noted that more prisoners join the hunger strike everyday and their number so far exceeded 3,000 despite the Israeli attempts to dismantle their protest step through separating them from each other and transferring them to other sections or jails.
The Palestinian center for defending detainees also asserted that the number of hunger strikers in Israeli jails is on the rise.
It said the Israeli jailers relentlessly used many ways to force the hunger strikers to break their strike including cooking near their cells to make them smell the aroma of food.
For its part, Wa'ed society for detainees and ex-detainees warned of dealing with the news claiming that the hunger strikers would mull over the prison authority's response to their demands.
Representative of the hunger strikers Tawfiq Abu Naim told Wa'ed society that the Israeli response to the demands was not worth studying and was an attempt to circumvent them.
Abu Naim affirmed that the committee representing the hunger strikers, that was formed by different Palestinian factions, has the sole right to make a decision regarding the strike.
Ahrar: Detainees on hunger strike till all demands fulfilled

3500 PALESTINIANS ON HUNGER STRIKE

LIVE BLOG ▶ 3500 PALESTINIANS ON HUNGER STRIKE | #PalHunger | Occupied Palestine | فلسطين

Spokesman: Vineyards damaged in Beit Ummar

Maan News Agency
HEBRON (Ma'an) -- Vineyards bordering an Israeli settlement were vandalized Friday, according to a Palestinian activist who blamed settlers from Karmi Zur for the damage.

Muhammad Awad said local residents discovered the vandalism early Saturday. They "found that vine trees were sprayed with a chemical which dried the leaves and blossoms," he said.

He said a heated argument erupted between Israeli guards and the residents, Ali Awad and his wife.

Video: Nabi Saleh - protest against the occupation and the theft of their land

IOF troops block entry of Norwegian solidarity delegation into Jenin

IOF troops block entry of Norwegian solidarity delegation into Jenin: JENIN, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) blocked on Friday the entry of a Norwegian solidarity delegation into Jenin and deported its members to Jordan.

Local sources said that three IOF patrols intercepted the vehicles carrying the delegates at Al-Hamra roadblock between the Jordan Valley and Jenin.

They said that the soldiers took the delegates to a nearby army camp and searched them before forcing them into an army bus that drove them to the Karame crossing leading to Jordan.

A spokeswoman for the delegation said that the delegates were planning to engage in a number of voluntary activities in Jenin. She added that the soldiers told them they would be deported to Jordan for having relations with Palestinian extremist organizations.

Non-violent protests in solidarity with hunger-striking prisoners held in 6 W. Bank villages

 by IMEMC Staff 
Two injuries were reported, and dozens of cases of gas inhalation, when Israeli troops attacked non-violent solidarity protests in six Palestinian villages in the central and southern West Bank.
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
This week, the weekly Friday protests (held in villages located on the path of the Israeli wall) were in solidarity with Palestinian political detainees on hunger strike protesting ill-treatment and the use of administrative detention policies by their Israeli captives.

Protesters declared their solidarity with the prisoners on hunger strike, especially the prisoners Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla for entering the day 67 of their open hunger strike. In Bil'in village, dozens of local youth have set up a tent in the center of the village, and are on day 15 of a solidarity hunger strike along with over 2,000 imprisoned Palestinians.

In the southern West Bank, villages of Al-Khader, Beit Omer and Al Ma’ssara, near Bethlehem city, organized anti-wall protests. Villagers were joined by Israeli and international supporters at all three locations.

Two Palestinians were injured another one arrested and many were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation when soldiers attacked villagers and their supporters at the village of Al-Khader.

Witnesses said that soldiers opened fire at them as soon as they left the village. Later troops invaded Al-Khader and took over roof tops of local homes and used them to fire at protesters.

In Beit Omer and Al Ma’ssara villages troops stopped the protests at the village entrances and used tear gas to force people back. Many were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation.

In the central West Bank, troops used tear gas and sound bombs to attack protesters along with their international and Israeli supporters at the village of Bil’in, Nil’in and Al Nabi Saleh.

Local sources reported that many protesters were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation. In Al Nabi Saleh village troops fired tear gas at residents’ homes causing damage.

In Bil'in village, near Ramallah in the central West Bank, dozens of cases of asphyxiation from gas marked in the weekly march which organized by the popular committee against the wall and settlements. A Norwegian Delegation and dozens of Palestinian, Israeli and international peace activists participated in the demonstration.

Upon the arrival of participants to Abu Lemon area they made some holes in the barbed wire, then they broke through it. The soldiers who were situated behind the concrete wall shot rubber bullets , stun grenades , tear gas and waste water mixed with chemicals towards the participants, which resulted in the suffering of dozens of participants from gas inhalation. All of them were treated by ambulance crews in the field .

Numerous tear gas canisters which were shot into the dry plants caused the burning of villagers' olive groves.
category west bank | non-violent action | news report
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
Photo By Rani Burnat - Bilin
Rani Burnat - FFJ-Bilin
Rani Burnat - FFJ-Bilin
International Middle East Media Center

Palestinian Activists Remove Israeli Flags, Raise Palestinian Flags

  by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News 
As part of a nonviolent activity to express solidarity with Palestinian detainees, holding an open-ended hunger-strike in Israeli prisons and detention centers, a group of Palestinian activists removed Israeli flags for a main road, near Ramallah, to replace them with Palestinian flags.
Photo By Ibrahim Bornat
Photo By Ibrahim Bornat
The road in question links between the West Bank districts of Ramallah and Nablus. It is also used by Israeli settlers living in illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank.

The activists stated that the Israeli flags should not be there because the area question is an important part of the Palestinian territories; therefore, Israeli flags must be replaced with Palestinian flags.

“This is our moral, legal, human and national responsibility”, they said, “This is our land, occupation flags must be replaced with Palestinian flags”.
 International Middle East Media Center

Dozens injured in attacks on marches in solidarity with prisoners

 


WEST BANK, (PIC)-- Dozens of Palestinians and foreign activists sustained injuries on Friday afternoon when the Israeli occupation forces attacked the marches that were held in solidarity with prisoners in different West Bank towns.
In Al-Khader town south of Bethlehem, violent clashes took place when Israeli soldiers attacked a march organized this Friday to champion the cause of Palestinian hunger strikers in Israeli jails.
Spokesman for the popular committee in Al-Khader town Ahmed Salah said the clashes broke out after the Israeli soldiers started to fire tear gas grenades and rubber bullets at the march leading to the injury of many protestors.
The spokesman noted that the IOF deployed snipers on the roofs of some homes in the town and took one Palestinian young man prisoner during the events.
He added that the IOF declared the eastern entrance of Al-Khader town as a closed military zone and imposed a curfew on it.
In Al-Khalil city, the IOF also dealt aggressively with a similar peaceful march held in Beit Ummar town.
Eyewitnesses told a reporter for the Palestinian information center (PIC) that Palestinian young men responded to the firing of tear gas grenades and rubber bullets and hurled the Israeli soldiers with stones before security forces from the Palestinian Authority intervened in favor of the soldiers.
They added that the Israeli soldiers closed the main entrance of Beit Ummar town and erected barriers, while the PA security forces subdued many angry young men.
The weekly anti-wall march in Qafr Qaddum was also not safe from Israeli attacks.
Organizers of the march said it was dedicated this week to supporting Palestinian hunger strikers in Israeli jails.
East of Jerusalem in Abu Dis town, villagers participated in a march in solidarity with Palestinian prisoners and some of them were attacked with sound and tear gas grenades when they marched towards an Israeli military post.
Dozens injured in attacks on marches in solidarity with prisoners

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

IOF incursion in southern Gaza obstructs school day

IOF incursion in southern Gaza obstructs school day



NAZARETH, (PIC)-- According to a source, forty Palestinian prisoners from territories occupied in 1948, took part in the open hunger strike launched by hundreds of prisoners in the Zionist occupation jails fifteen days ago.
The director of the "Yusuf Assedik" Foundation, Firas Amri, said in a press release that 40 captives from the Palestinians inside the green line have taken part in the open hunger strike since its start on the Palestinian Prisoners' Day on 17 April, including 20 prisoners in Gilboa prison, and 20 others in Nafha prison.
The Palestinian human rights activist affirmed that the supportive activities in 1948-occupied Palestine for the prisoners in the occupation jails will continue mentioning several events organized by 1948-Palestinians in solidarity with prisoners.
Amri said that the Islamic movement has decided to organize a Festival in solidarity with the prisoners on 11th May, and an international conference that will be held next Monday in Hakawati Theater in occupied Jerusalem, in coordination between the European Network for the Defense of Palestinian prisoners, Yusuf Asseddik foundation, and the Jerusalemite Families Committee, in addition to a students’ event at Haifa University.
Furthermore, he said that the occupation authorities exercises unjust practices and measures against prisoners from Palestine inside as for those from West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The director of Yusuf Asseddik foundation called on PA to seriously assume its responsibilities towards the prisoners’ issue, stressing that if they lose this battle for rights, they will suffer for years to come.
Page Top

40 captives from Palestinians 48 participate in the hunger strike



NAZARETH, (PIC)-- According to a source, forty Palestinian prisoners from territories occupied in 1948, took part in the open hunger strike launched by hundreds of prisoners in the Zionist occupation jails fifteen days ago.
The director of the "Yusuf Assedik" Foundation, Firas Amri, said in a press release that 40 captives from the Palestinians inside the green line have taken part in the open hunger strike since its start on the Palestinian Prisoners' Day on 17 April, including 20 prisoners in Gilboa prison, and 20 others in Nafha prison.
The Palestinian human rights activist affirmed that the supportive activities in 1948-occupied Palestine for the prisoners in the occupation jails will continue mentioning several events organized by 1948-Palestinians in solidarity with prisoners.
Amri said that the Islamic movement has decided to organize a Festival in solidarity with the prisoners on 11th May, and an international conference that will be held next Monday in Hakawati Theater in occupied Jerusalem, in coordination between the European Network for the Defense of Palestinian prisoners, Yusuf Asseddik foundation, and the Jerusalemite Families Committee, in addition to a students’ event at Haifa University.
Furthermore, he said that the occupation authorities exercises unjust practices and measures against prisoners from Palestine inside as for those from West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The director of Yusuf Asseddik foundation called on PA to seriously assume its responsibilities towards the prisoners’ issue, stressing that if they lose this battle for rights, they will suffer for years to come.


40 captives from Palestinians 48 participate in the hunger strike

Israeli army closes Gaza probe

JERUSALEM, May 2 (UPI) -- The Israeli Army closed a probe into the deaths of 21 members of a Palestinian family in 2009 in Gaza, saying no legal action will be taken.
Maj. Dorit Tuval, deputy military advocate for operational matters, informed the human rights group B'Tselem of the decision on Tuesday, Haaretz and Ynetnews.com said. The Palestinian family members were killed during Operation Cast Lead, the Israeli offensive waged in Gaza against the terror infrastructure in December 2008 to January 2009.
In a letter to the group Tuval wrote no legal action would be taken against those responsible for the incident. "The investigation completely disproved any claims about deliberate harm to civilians, as well as haste and recklessness about possible harm to civilians, or criminal negligence," Ynetnews.com quoted Tuval saying.
Tuval added the military offensive was "conducted mainly in highly populated urban areas, had direct implications on the manner in which operational decision were reached during the incident in question."
Yael Stein head of research at B'Tselem called the decision outrageous. "It is unacceptable that no one is found responsible for an action of the army that led to the killing of 21 uninvolved civilians, inside the building they were under soldiers' orders, even if not deliberately," Ynetnews.com quoted her as saying. Stein said she had expected the army to accept the severity of the event and at least clarify the circumstances in which the Palestinians were killed.
In the three-week offensive some 1,166 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.

Israeli army closes Gaza probe - UPI.com

Military jeeps tour Bethlehem town, fire tear gas

(MaanImages/HO)
 
BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces fired tear gas at students by a Bethlehem neighborhood university on Wednesday, witnesses told Ma'an.

Two Israeli jeeps descended into central Beit Jala, near the town's Orthodox Club, and were photographing buildings, eyewitnesses said.

Some residents threw rocks at the jeep, and forces fired tear gas at students from the Jerusalem Open University, they added. No injuries were reported.

An Israeli army spokeswoman said "approximately 20 Palestinians hurled rocks at the Israeli army on a routine patrol, who responded with riot dispersal means."
Maan News Agency

Israeli Forces Arrest Five Palestinians in West Bank

Palestine News & Info Agency - WAFA

RAMALLAH, May 2, 2012 (WAFA) –Israeli forces arrested five Palestinians from across the West Bank, local and security sources said Wednesday.

Mohammed Awad, from the National Committee against the Wall and Settlement in Beit Ummar, told WAFA forces arrested two Palestinians; Hamzeh Abu Maria and Hamzeh Sabarneh, both in their twenties, from the town of Beit Ummar, north of Hebron after raiding their homes.

Sabarneh’s mother, 56, said masked soldiers snuck into her bedroom, terrorizing her which caused her to temporarily lose her ability to move.

Forces also arrested a 23-year-old Palestinian from his work place in Beit Forik, east of Nablus.

Two Palestinians were also arrested from the Ramallah area.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

ADDAMEER - Urgent Appeal: Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh in Grave Condition

Ramallah, 1 May 2012 – Addameer expresses its utmost concern for the lives of Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, currently on their 63rd full day of hunger strike in protest of their administrative detention. An independent doctor from Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) determined yesterday, 30 April, that Bilal is at immediate risk of death and that both he and Thaer must be transferred immediately to a civilian hospital in order to receive adequate medical attention. Yesterday’s visit by PHR-Israel was only the second visit from an independent doctor since the beginning of their hunger strikes, and only came following a legal petition filed in an Israeli District Court for the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) to allow access to Bilal and Thaer in Ramleh prison medical center. Any subsequent visit may still require going back to court.
According to PHR-Israel, “both detainees suffer from acute muscle weakness in their limbs, which prevents them from standing. They both are in need of full assistance in daily activities such as showering, though such help is not provided in the IPS clinic. They both suffer from an acute decrease in muscle tone and are bedridden, which puts them under dual threat: muscle atrophy and Thromobophilia, which can lead to a fatal blood clot.”  
 
Furthermore, the PHR-Israel doctor noted that Bilal’s life-threatening condition includes sharp weight loss, concern for peripheral nerve damage, extremely low pulse (39 beats per minute) and blood pressure, severe dehydration, and possible internal bleeding. The doctor stated that Bilal should be transferred to a hospital immediately and receive full monitoring of his heart. Following the doctor visit, Bilal was transferred to a civilian hospital, only to be transferred back to Ramleh prison a few hours later. After collapsing this afternoon, he was transferred again to Assaf Harofeh hospital, where he currently remains. These frequent transfers only serve to further endanger his fragile condition.
 
The doctor noted that Thaer is also in grave condition and suffers from sharp weight loss and pain on the left side of his upper back, which, according to PHR-Israel, coupled with his other symptoms “may indicate inflammation of the pleura [membrane around the lungs] or even a blood clot, which can be lethal without proper medical attention.” Therefore, the doctor concluded that Thaer must be transferred to a civilian hospital as he urgently requires a CT scan of his lungs, which is not provided at the IPS medical center.
 
Addameer’s fears that Bilal and Thaer’s serious medical condition has been met with inadequate and harmful responses by the IPS in the Ramleh prison medical center have been confirmed by yesterday’s doctor visit. In addition to the reckless transfers back and forth to the hospital for Bilal, both Thaer and Bilal reported that prison guards had recently entered their cells and carried out violent searches. Thaer also reported being abused by an IPS doctor two days prior.
 
Moreover, Bilal and Thaer’s lawyer Jamil Al-Khatib attempted to visit Bilal this afternoon in the hospital and was refused by the IPS. He was told he had to submit a “special request” to the legal advisors of the IPS. Bilal and Thaer’s petitions to the Israeli High Court against their administrative detention orders will be heard on 3 May. A request for family visits to Bilal was also rejected today by the IPS, who stated that he was officially being denied family visits from 9 February to 9 July for “violating an IPS order” by being on hunger strike. The IPS continues to employ every obstacle at its disposal in preventing access for lawyers and doctors to hunger striking prisoners. These tactics are designed to isolate the hunger strikers as much as possible from trusted sources of support and medical information, in complete disregard to their most urgent condition.  
 
Addameer condemns the IPS’ blatant violation of medical ethics in its treatment of Bilal, Thaer, and all the other hunger strikers requiring medical attention, and holds the Occupation responsible for their current condition. Addameer calls on the international community to demand that both Bilal and Thaer be immediately admitted to civilian hospitals, without further transfers, and that they have unconditional access to independent doctors and their lawyers. Addameer urges the European Union, the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross to take immediate action and intervene with Israel in the strongest manner possible to save Bilal and Thaer’s lives before it is too late.

- ADDAMEER - Urgent Appeal: Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh in Grave Condition

Settlers Destroy 100 Olive Trees near Ramallah

Palestine News & Info Agency - WAFA
RAMALLAH, May 1, 2012 (WAFA) – Israeli settlers destroyed around 100 olive trees in a private Palestinian land near Bitillo, a village west of Ramallah, Tuesday reported local farmers.

They said they discovered dozens of olive trees completely destroyed upon arrival to their land, located near Nahliel settlement in the northwest of Ramallah.

This is the fourth time Israeli settlers destroy trees in the area within few months, raising the total number of destroyed olives trees to 400.

Municipality Crews Hand Silwan Residents Demolition Orders

Palestine News & Info Agency - WAFA

JERUSALEM, May 1, 2012 (WAFA) – Crews from the Israeli municipality of West Jerusalem accompanied by police and border guards Tuesday handed several residents in al-Bustan area of the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan house demolition notices, according to a local activist.
Fakhri Abu Diab, head of the Committee for the Defense of Silwan, said the police sealed off the area as municipality crews handed several shops and homes demolition orders.
Residents clashed with the police throwing rocks and empty glass bottles at them. Police fired acoustic bombs and tear gas canisters at the Palestinians.
The municipality aims to demolish the entire al-Bustan area, which has about 88 buildings housing about 1600 Palestinians, in order to build a park on its ruins.

01.05.2012 Ofer demonstration of solidarity with prisoners By haithmkati...

Palestinians see backlash if hunger strikers die

Palestinian prisoners minister Issa Qaraqaa on Tuesday warned there would be a major backlash if any of the detainees on a mass hunger inside Israeli jails were to die.
"We will not accept our prisoners returning in coffins from the occupation's prisons," Qaraqaa told a 3,000-strong crowd demonstrating in solidarity with the prisoners in the West Bank city of Nablus.
"If anything happens to any prisoner, the explosion will not stay inside prison walls but will extend to the outside," he said.
Around a third of the 4,700 Palestinian prisoners being held in Israeli jails are currently on open-ended hunger strike, according to the Israel Prisons Service, which puts the number at 1,450.
Most have been refusing food for around two weeks, but eight of them are at an advanced stage of their hunger strike and two -- Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla -- have gone 63 days without eating.
A doctor with Physicians for Human Rights who examined them on Monday found they were in danger of dying and were not receiving adequate medical care where they are being held in the Ramle prison infirmary near Tel Aviv.
"I appeal from Nablus to all human rights organisations in the world to act urgently to save the lives of Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla who are in danger of dying," Qaraqaa said.
"I hold Netanyahu's government responsible for everything that is happening to the prisoners," he said, referring to the administration of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Late on Monday, Islamic Jihad also said Israel was responsible for the lives of Diab and Halahla, and warned it would no longer abide by a truce agreement in Gaza if either of them died in Israeli custody.
"The death of either Bilal Diab or Thaer Halahla will nullify the truce," Islamic Jihad official Khader Habib told reporters in Gaza City.
"The enemy has to understand the message: any harm to the lives of the prisoners will lead to an escalation."
Meanwhile, 300 people gathered outside Ofer military prison near the West Bank city of Ramallah in a show of support for the prisoners.
Clashes erupted between stone-throwing youths and the Israeli army, who fired tear gas, rubber bullets and a foul-smelling liquid known as "skunk" to break up the demonstration, according to an AFP correspondent at the scene.
A photographer was badly injured after being hit in the head by a stone thrown by a protester, an AFP correspondent said.
 News UK

PCHR Condemns Continued Attacks Against Gaza Fishermen

  by Palestinian Center For Human Rights - PCHR 
The Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) condemns continued Israeli attacks against Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Strip, and expresses concerns that in the latest attacks Israeli naval troops have arrested 6 fishermen and confiscated their fishing boat and equipment.
According to a statement made to PCHR by Ahmed Imsa’il al-Sherafi, 18, from al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, Israeli naval troops arrested 6 fishermen while they were fishing nearly 2 nautical miles off the Gaza seashore at about 09:30 on Sunday, 29 April 2012. The troops fired at the fishing boat and forced the fishermen to take their clothes off and swim towards an Israeli gunboat.

The soldiers handcuffed and blindfolded the fishermen and transferred them for interogation to the Israeli harbor of Ashdod. At 21:00, five were released at Beit Hanoun (Erez) crossing: Ahmed, Amjad, who was wounded in the right leg, Ashraf and Bilal Isma’il al-Sherafi, 18, 33, 30 and 20 years old respectively; and Yasser Mohammed al-Sherafi, 17. The sixth fisherman, al-Sadat ‘Abdul Mo’ti Hassanain, 33, an Egyptian citizen, remained in custody.

Since the beginning of 2012, Israeli attacks against Palestinian fishermen and their property have escalated. According to PCHR’s documentation, Israeli naval troops have launched 50 attacks against fishermen, including 15 shooting attacks, one shooting attack that left an injury, 7 pursuits, 20 incidents of detention and 7 cases of confiscation of fishing boats and equipment.

Note that the Israeli occupation authorities have imposed stricter limits on fishing in the sea off the Gaza Strip. The original limit specified in the Oslo Accords was 20 nautical miles. It was then reduced to 6 miles. Since 2009, the limit has been decreased even further to 3 nautical miles but Israeli naval troops often attack fishermen within this area. As a result of these restrictions, fishermen have lost 85% of their income.

PCHR condemns continued Israeli attacks against Palestinian fishermen in the sea off the Gaza Strip, and believes they are part of the collective punishment policies practiced against the Palestinian civilian population. These policies violate international humanitarian law and human rights law. Therefore, PCHR demands Israeli occupation authorities:

1. immediately stop attacks against Palestinian fishermen and allow them to sail and fish freely in the sea;
2. return confiscated boats to their owners; and
3. compensate victims of such attacks for the physical and material damage caused.
International Middle East Media Center