Palestinian woman’s hunger strike enters third week against arbitrary detention by Israel
Submitted by Ali Abunimah on Thu, 03/01/2012 - 13:25 Electronic Intifada
School
children in Jenin protest in solidarity with Hana al-Shalabi, who has
been on hunger strike since 16 February against her detention without
charge or trial by Israel.
(Aljazeera)
(Aljazeera)
Today marks the 15th day of Hana al-Shalabi’s hunger strike against her arbitrary imprisonment by Israeli occupation forces in the West Bank.
Currently held in the Hasharon prison, she was seized from her home
in a violent nighttime raid in the early hours of 16 February, when, according to an Addameer profile,
50 Israeli soldiers raided her house in Burqin village, near Jenin, in the early morning. The soldiers were accompanied by an intelligence officer and a large number of dogs and first raided her brother’s home before coming to her house. The IOF [Israeli occupation forces] moved through his house with the pack of dogs, causing the children of the household to panic.
Al-Shalabi, 29, is being held without charge or trial under an
“administrative detention” order, a practice dating back to British
colonial rule, that goes until 16 August. Al-Shalabi previously spent
two years in administrative detention from September 2009, to October
2011, when she was released as part of the Hamas-Israel prisoner
exchange deal.
During the raid, Hana and her family were subjected to violence and
harassment, and since her detention she has been subjected to further
abuse, including solitary confinement to punish her for her hunger
strike, according to Addameer.
No due process
A 29 February Addameer release
reports that a hearing by an Israeli military judge (an occupation
military officer) to review the administrative detention order was
postponed from 29 February, and that:
the judge stated he would be meeting with an Israeli intelligence officer on 4 March. In the meeting, neither Hana nor her lawyers will be permitted to be present. The military judge will make his decision regarding the confirmation of her order following the meeting.
Israel frequently renews administrative detention orders, effectively turning the practice into a form of indefinite detention, as in the case of political prisoner Ahmed Qatamesh.
Parents hunger strike and solidarity
The Addameer release added:
On 23 February, Hana’s mother, 65, and father, 67, also began an open-ended hunger strike in solidarity with their daughter. Hana’s hunger strike began during the 66-day hunger strike of Palestinian administrative detainee Khader Adnan, whose case has helped to raise awareness about Israel’s use of arbitrary detention and its violations of international humanitarian law, which permits limited use of administrative detention only in emergency situations, but does not allow for its use as punishment when there is not sufficient evidence for criminal procedures.
An Aljazeera Arabic report (video above) showed Hana’s parents on
hunger strike in a solidarity tent near their home in Burqin. Umm Omar,
Hana’s mother, said she had attended the military court to see her
daughter but was not allowed to see her. Other solidarity actions,
included a protest by children at a local school and rallies by the
families of other Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
Addameer has asked people all over the world to contact officials
to demand that Al-Shalabi be immediately released and Israel halt the
widespread practice of detention without charge or trial. Currently more
than 300 Palestinians are held in “administrative detention,” including
21 elected members of the Palestinian legislative council.
During the hunger strike of Khader Adnan, Amnesty International called on Israel to end its use of administrative detention and launched a petition that over five thousand people have signed.
Samidoun, the Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, has also issued an action alert with suggested solidarity actions concerned people can take.
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