The Jerusalem Post

Egypt ‘indifferen­t’ to strike

- • By BEN LYNFIELD

The hunger strike being waged since April 16 by some 1,500 Palestinia­n prisoners in Israeli jails is being met with indifferen­ce in Egypt, an Egyptian activist lamented on Wednesday.

Ahmed Maher, one of the leaders of the demonstrat­ions that toppled president Hosni Mubarak in 2011, wrote on the London-based al-Araby al-Jadeed website that lack of interest in the strike is a symptom that “the Palestinia­n cause has stopped being a central cause for the Arabs as it was in the past.”

The prisoners’ demands include an end to administra­tive detentions, an end to what they allege is negligence in health care, more family visits and use of public telephones. Israeli authoritie­s deny there is maltreatme­nt of prisoners.

Maher is no stranger to prison. In 2014, he was sentenced to jail for three years by the regime of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi for defying a law banning unauthoriz­ed public gatherings. He wrote that Egyptians are inured to news about Palestinia­ns.

“The news such as martyrdom of Palestinia­ns, arrests of large numbers of Palestinia­n youths or raids against al-Aksa [Mosque] have become routine like events anywhere. Internal affairs are seen as most important. The local affairs news coverage is the biggest.

“The Palestinia­n cause has become marginaliz­ed for the Arab youth,” Maher wrote. “Even the news about prisoners and their struggle and their empty stomachs campaign only attracts the attention of a few individual­s here and there. It is a catastroph­e that millions of Arab youth see any attention to Palestinia­n news as abnormal and have been influenced by Egyptian official media which justifies the warm relations with Israel by saying that Palestinia­ns are the ones who sold their land voluntaril­y to the Jews and that the goal of Hamas is to destroy Egypt.”

Maher wrote that Israeli and Egyptian prison authoritie­s are alike in that they “harass prisoners and don’t care about prisoner rights and internatio­nal law.”

But, he added, “What makes us more sorry is to know that what’s happening to Palestinia­n prisoners in Israeli prisons is more merciful than the Egyptian treatment of prisoners.”

In Lebanon, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, speaking in a televised speech on Tuesday, criticized Arab leaders for ignoring the strike. “Palestinia­n hunger strikers are only demanding their basic rights as prisoners in Israeli jails. Where are the Arab leaders and Muslim organizati­ons to see the situation of Palestinia­n hunger strikers?” he said, according to Iran’s Press TV.

Meanwhile, the Arab48 website, citing the National Committee for Jordanian Detainees Affairs, reported that three Jordanian prisoners have joined the hunger strike. The three were identified as Riyad Saleh, Abdullah Abu Jaber and Rafat al-Sous. It could not immediatel­y be determined what crimes they were imprisoned for, but each is serving a 20-year sentence, according to the committee.

There has been active support of the strike by Jordanian Facebook users with many people videotapin­g themselves drinking salted water, the only thing the prisoners ingest, The Jordan Times reported.

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