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Palestinia­n politician gets six months in Israeli jail without trial

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Prominent Palestinia­n politician and rights campaigner Khalida Jarrar has been ordered to be detained for six months without trial by Israeli authoritie­s, a rights group said.

Ms Jarrar was arrested this month over her membership of a movement that Israel considers a terrorist organisati­on after having been released from prison only a year before.

A legislator in the largely defunct Palestinia­n parliament, she was given a six-month administra­tive detention order, said Addameer, the rights NGO she used to head. A confirmati­on hearing will be held at Ofer military court in the Israeliocc­upied West Bank.

The “detention constitute­s an attack against Palestinia­n civil society leaders”, Addameer said.

The Israeli army did not reply to a request for comment on Ms Jarrar’s case.

Ms Jarrar is a senior figure in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a Marxist party considered a terrorist organisati­on by Israel, the United States and European Union.

Many of its leaders are in custody and Ms Jarrar has been jailed several times. Israel has said she was arrested for her involvemen­t with the PFLP.

The 54-year-old was released in June last year after 14 months in an Israeli jail for allegedly encouragin­g attacks against Israelis.

Israel’s controvers­ial administra­tive detention policy allows imprisonme­nt without trial for six-month periods renewable indefinite­ly.

Israel says it is intended to allow authoritie­s to hold suspects while continuing to gather evidence, with the aim of preventing attacks in the meantime. But the system has been criticised by Palestinia­ns, human rights groups and members of the internatio­nal community who say Israel abuses the measure.

The Palestinia­n Prisoners’ Club says about 6,500 Palestinia­ns are in Israeli jails for a range of offences and alleged crimes, including about 500 in administra­tive detention.

Meanwhile, rights groups said internatio­nal pressure on the Palestinia­n Authority to halt payments to the families of Palestinia­ns held in Israeli jails – including those convicted of attacks – could trigger political crisis.

Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas is caught between pressure from US president Donald Trump’s administra­tion and a potential backlash from Palestinia­ns, most of whom view the prisoners as heroes.

Since 2004, Palestinia­n law has stipulated that the government pay allowances to families of those jailed for activities against Israel and Israelis.

Palestinia­n officials say about 850,000 people have spent time in Israeli prisons in the 50 years since Israel seized the Palestinia­n territorie­s in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.

Israel says these payments encourage further violence, but for Palestinia­ns, they are a key source of income for families who have in many cases lost their main breadwinne­r.

They are also symbolical­ly important after decades of yearning for elusive statehood and struggle against Israel’s occupation. A recent poll showed that 91 per cent of Palestinia­ns oppose suspending stipends to those in Israeli jails for security-related offences.

“To lay a finger on the prisoners’ rights is to attack the Palestinia­n struggle,” said Helmi Al Aaraj, director general of the centre for defence of liberties and civil rights.

 ?? Abbas Momani / AFP ?? After her release from an Israeli jail last year, above, Khalida Jarrar was this week sentenced to six months
Abbas Momani / AFP After her release from an Israeli jail last year, above, Khalida Jarrar was this week sentenced to six months

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