Gulf News

Palestinia­n ‘Day of Rage’ tomorrow

Mohammad Assaf calls on world to show solidarity with ‘heroes behind Israeli bars’

- RAMALLAH

The West Bank ruling Fatah party has called on Palestinia­ns to participat­e in a ‘Day of Rage’ tomorrow in support of the hunger-striking Palestinia­n prisoners. Palestinia­n officials and activists put the number of hunger strikers at 1,300 and 1,500, respective­ly, and they are only ingesting salt and water. The hunger strike that began on April 17 is being led by Marwan Barghouti the icon of Palestinia­n resistance.

Palestinia­n pop singer Mohammad Assaf has urged people all over the world to show solidarity with the “heroes behind Israeli bars”. “Our hearts are with you,” he said in a video posted on his official Twitter account.

Internatio­nal organisati­ons like the Red Cross, Palestinia­n Knesset members and lawyers are forbidden from visiting the prisoners on strike. These Israeli measures are illegal and contravene ... human rights” Fedwa Barghouti | Marwan Barghouti’s wife

Fatah has called for a general strike today, followed by a Day of Rage tomorrow, to express solidarity with one of the largest Palestinia­n prisoner hunger strikes in recent history.

The hunger strike led by Marwan Barghouti, a renowned icon of Palestinia­n resistance who was jailed during the second Intifada (Uprising), began on April 17.

Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territorie­s captured during the 1967 war and claimed by the Palestinia­ns as part of a future state, reaches the half-century mark in June.

The Palestinia­n prisoners seek better conditions, including more contact with relatives, and an end to Israel’s practice of detention without trial.

Palestinia­n officials and activists put the number of hunger strikers at 1,300 and 1,500, respective­ly, and they are only ingesting salt and water.

News of Barghouti’s health sharply deteriorat­ing has inflamed Palestinia­n anger on the street, with regular protests being held in support of the strikers — the jailed icon has reportedly refused medical attention.

After 15-20 days, it is believed that Israeli authoritie­s will start negotiatin­g with the leaders of the hunger strike.

The prisoners’ health is said to be quickly deteriorat­ing as well.

“Many of those on strike are sick and old — this doubles their risk of dying,” Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinia­n Prisoner Club, told Gulf News.

He called for a doubling of solidarity efforts in the street, to pile pressure on Israeli occupation authoritie­s to meet the prisoners’ demands.

Fares says he is confident that Israel will have to give in, at some point, especially because of internatio­nal scrutiny and attention on its inhuman treatment of prisoners.

Israel has said it does not plan to negotiate with the prisoners and have punished Barghouti for organising the strike by placing him in solitary confinemen­t.

There is currently more than 7,000 Palestinia­n prisoners in 28 Israeli jails. This includes 56 women and around 300 minors.

Israel calls them security prisoners — held for offences ranging from stone throwing and membership in outlawed groups to allegedly carrying out attacks that killed or wounded Israelis. Several hundred are being detained without charges in a widely decried practice called ‘administra­tive detention’.

Israel has forbidden any contact with the prisoners for the past nine days, Barghouti’s wife, who is a lawyer, said on Tuesday.

“Internatio­nal organisati­ons like the Red Cross, Palestinia­n Knesset members and lawyers are forbidden from visiting the prisoners on strike,” said Fedwa Barghouti, who like her husband is a senior member of president Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party.

“These Israeli measures are illegal and contravene the most basic of human rights,” she said.

Popular Barghouti

Lawyers had got Israel’s Supreme Court to declare the ban illegal, but “were surprised to find they were still not permitted to visit detainees on the pretext that their health did not allow it”, Barghouti added.

Barghouti, the strike leader, is a prominent figure in the Fatah movement. Polls suggest that Barghouti, 58, is the most popular choice among Pales-

Palestinia­ns are incarcerat­ed in 28 Israeli jails at present.

tinians to succeed the 82-yearold Abbas.

Barghouti, a leader of the 2000 Palestinia­n uprising, is serving five life terms after being convicted by an Israeli court of directing two shooting attacks and a bombing that killed

of the Palestinia­n prisoners in Israeli jails are minors.

three Israelis.

Barghouti, who disputed the court’s jurisdicti­on and didn’t mount a defence, has been in prison since 2002.

In an opinion piece published this month in The New

York Times, Barghouti illustrate­d

prisoners led by Barghouti have been on hunger strike.

how Palestinia­n prisoners and detainees in Israel “have suffered from torture, inhuman and degrading treatment, and medical negligence”. He said he organised the hunger strike to fight back, after exhausting all other options.

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 ?? AFP ?? Protesters throw stones at Israeli occupation forces during a demonstrat­ion in support of Palestinia­n prisoners on hunger strike, near Beit Al, north of Ramallah, on Monday.
AFP Protesters throw stones at Israeli occupation forces during a demonstrat­ion in support of Palestinia­n prisoners on hunger strike, near Beit Al, north of Ramallah, on Monday.

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