International strategy for Palestinian prisoners needed
By Joe Catron, on Ufree Network | ||||
Political prisoners, their families, and their concerns and causes enjoy massive support in Palestinian society. Palestinians who may have never joined a boycott campaign or acted to break the siege of Gaza routinely demonstrate for the rights of detainees and contribute to support their families. Among political factions, the liberation of all prisoners is a clear point of consensus. Competing parties demand and celebrate the return of each others’ imprisoned members as a matter of course.
Political
Prisoner Ameer Makhoul argues that the PLO’s official position on
prisoners is, “a recipe for delaying and deferring the liberation of the
prisoners indefinitely.”
In
addition, he says that, “marginalizing the issue within the overall
Palestinian agenda” fails to reflect this overwhelming sentiment.
Unfortunately,
the same can be said of the global movement in solidarity with
Palestinians and their struggle. Too often, it has treated a concern at
the forefront of the Palestinian movement as an inconsequential
afterthought, when it has mentioned it all.
Huge
mobilizations by detainees, like the October hunger strike that, at its
peak, included 3,000 people (and galvanized Palestinian society in
support), received only a minimal amount of responses from overseas.
Also, the daily struggles of individual prisoners, like the current
hunger strike of administrative detainee Khader Adnan, barely elicit any
notice.
Why
does this matter? Aside from a basic principle of solidarity – backing
the priorities of the people we support – these prisoners remind us, and
the world, of “the Palestinians’ right, and duty, to resist occupation,
colonization and displacement employing all means of struggle,” in
Makhoul’s words.
Their
perseverance, inside and outside prison walls, testifies to the fact
that Palestine needs neither our charity nor our sympathy, but rather
deserves our solidarity as it struggles to free itself.
The
“internationalization” of prisoner support Makhoul advocates could
renew the solidarity movement’s focus on this Palestinian agency. While
Israel’s apartheid system includes too many shocking injustices to
count, the prisoners are also an electrifying and radicalizing force,
whose very existence defies attempts to depoliticize their struggle or
reduce it to a humanitarian concern. A mobilized, energized and expanded
worldwide solidarity movement would also offer much-needed political
backing to them, and the families and communities that regularly
mobilize for them.
Many
organizations, both Palestinian and international, work to educate a
global audience about these issues. Addameer, the Campaign to Free Ahmad
Saadat, Defence for Children International, the International Campaign
for Releasing the Abducted Members of Parliament, Samidoun, Sumoud, and
the UFree Network, as well as media like the Electronic Intifada and the
Middle East Monitor, generate tremendous amounts of high-quality
information. But while information is a necessary prerequisite, it is
ultimately from mobilization that public awareness, as well as political
change, emerges.
Putting
information to use – building a global campaign to free Palestinian
prisoners – will require a strategy to build these organizations and
expand their activities, while also engaging broader solidarity
networks. Makhoul proposes a National Coordinating Committee, akin to
the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) National Committee, to
oversee these efforts. In the meantime, international solidarity
activists can and should respond to the current “steadfastness, defiance
and struggle” of Palestine and its prisoners.
Recurring
popular mobilizations, like Palestinian Prisoners’ Day (April 17) and
Gaza’s weekly occupation of the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), could be replicated, on similar or more modest scales, in
cities from New York to Islamabad. (Of course Gaza lacks explicitly
Zionist institutions, which might prove to be more opportune targets
elsewhere.) Rapid response networks could answer detentions, repression,
and resistance by protesting Israeli Embassies, consulates, and
missions, as well as foreign governments and international organizations
collaborating with Israel.
The
prisoners’ struggle can also invigorate existing campaigns. It overlaps
neatly with the three demands of the BDS movement: An end to occupation
and colonization (including detentions), full equality for Arab and
Palestinian citizens (in judicial and correctional matters as well as
all others), and the right of return for Palestinian refugees (like
those expelled from their homes following release from prison).
BDS
organizers have pursued prison profiteers like G4S, JC Bamford
Excavators, the Israeli Medical Association, and the Volvo Group.
Anti-siege efforts like the Free Gaza Movement and Viva Palestinia, too,
could highlight Israel’s prison apparatus as an essential part of the
system of militarized apartheid they oppose – and one explicitly
intended to crush legitimate resistance.
Being
proactive should be the core principle on every front. Many solidarity
activists have complained of the disproportionate media attention
lavished on Gilad Shalit and his family, but few have taken the time to
investigate the global networks built to support them, or to learn the
many lessons they have to offer. Giving Palestinian prisoners meaningful
solidarity will ultimately require a similar movement focused on making
their lives and struggles unavoidable topics of any informed
conversation on Palestine.
The
Israeli government oversees the world’s most militarized society, and
one that cannot sustain itself without massive, ongoing repression, from
its border walls to its isolation units. The prisoners illuminate the
ugly face of this 21st-century apartheid, while offering a glimpse of
the decolonized society that will inevitably replace it. Their struggles
stand at the core of the broader movement for a free Palestine. All of
us who join their struggle should acknowledge their leadership,
appreciate their sacrifice, and offer them our full support.
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