The Jerusalem Post

Israeli detained in Jordan over drugs

- (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) • By YASSER OKBI /Maariv Hashavua and ELIYAHU KAMISHER

four new justices, the coalition is still panicking that the court will be activist,” she said. “They want complete freedom to crush our democracy and to legislate racist and anti-democratic bills.”

Gal-On added that “they should stop acting like a bunch of cowards and declare their real intention – erasing the value of equality under the law and making Israel a democracy for Jews only.”

Kamal Ramadan Abu Latif, an Israeli citizen, has been held in Jordan since March 15 over accusation­s that he was in possession of illegal drugs. However, his family asserts that the so-called drugs found on Abu Latif were prescripti­on medication­s for a variety of medical conditions the 60-year-old man suffers from.

Abu Latif, a resident of the Negev town of Rahat, was arrested at the Jordanian border in possession of Tramadex (a pain reliever), as reported by Maariv and confirmed by The Jerusalem Post.

However, according to medical documents notarized by lawyer Shahada Ibn Bari, Abu Latif was prescribed Tramadex along with three other medication­s for multiple medical conditions, including back pain, leg pain and epilepsy. “It’s shocking,” Ibn Bari told the Post. “They just arrested him.”

“This is a person who received this prescripti­on from a health provider in Israel,” one of Abu Latif’s sons told Maariv Online. “We are on our way to sign the documents, which were translated by a notary into Arabic, to the Jordanian Embassy in Tel Aviv, and then we will go to the Foreign [Affairs] Ministry in Jerusalem so they can sign the documents, and then to Jordan to hand the documents over to the prosecutio­n there.”

Abu Latif’s cousin, Ribhi Abu Latif, blamed the ministry for mishandlin­g the case and said he has no idea of the medical state of his cousin, who he believes is being held in a prison in the Jordanian city of Zarqa. “He went out on a trip to Jordan and he brought some pills that were prescribed to him, he didn’t have any idea [it would be a problem],” he told the Post.

According to Maariv, the Foreign Affairs Ministry only began dealing with the issue once Maariv notified them of the case. Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said Israel is working on the release of Abu Latif, but would not comment on the circumstan­ces of his arrest.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? MOTI YOGEV
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) MOTI YOGEV
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ZEHAVA GAL-ON

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