Arab News

Israel bars jailed Palestinia­n lawmaker from daughter’s funeral

Leading PFLP member Khalida Jarrar, 58, has been in and out of Israeli prison in recent years

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Israel refused to let a prominent jailed Palestinia­n lawmaker attend her daughter’s funeral on Tuesday, despite a campaign by activists and human rights groups for her to be released on humanitari­an grounds.

Khalida Jarrar, 58, a leading member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, has been in and out of Israeli prison in recent years.

A military court sentenced her to two years in March for being a member of an outlawed group. With time served, she is set to be released in October.

The PFLP has an armed wing and is considered a terrorist group by Israel and Western countries, but Jarrar has not been implicated in attacks. The Israeli military acknowledg­ed in March that she “did not deal with organizati­onal or military aspects of the organizati­on.”

Jarrar was sentenced to 15 months in 2015 on charges of incitement and membership in the PFLP. She has also been held for months at a time in what’s known as administra­tive detention, under which Israel detains Palestinia­n suspects for lengthy periods without charge.

Her 30-year-old daughter Suha, who worked on issues related to gender and climate change for the Al-Haq human rights group, was found dead on Sunday in her home in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, the group said. It did not give a cause of death.

Al-Haq launched a campaign calling for Jarrar’s “immediate and unconditio­nal release on humanitari­an grounds,” and said it had

appealed to other countries as well as the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

Entreaties poured in from other activists and rights groups in an online campaign under the hashtag #freekhalid­ajarrar. An online petition drew more than 11,500 signatures.

Natan Dublin, a spokesman for Israel’s public security minister, said the request could not be approved by the prison service because Jarrar is considered a security prisoner.

The daughter’s funeral was held without her.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch said Jarrar’s repeated arrests are part of Israel’s wider crackdown on nonviolent political opposition to its half-century military occupation of lands the Palestinia­ns want for a future state.

“Detaining Khalida over her political activism violates her freedom of associatio­n,” said Omar Shakir, the group’s director for Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s. “Having repeatedly detained Khalida in violation of her rights, Israeli authoritie­s should at minimum allow her to say goodbye

to her daughter.”

Voucher system for aid

Israel wants foreign aid to Gaza disbursed through a voucher system, as a safeguard against

donations being diverted to bolster the Palestinia­n enclave’s Hamas rulers and their arsenal, a government minister said.

Humanitari­an agencies put the latest reconstruc­tion costs for the impoverish­ed Gaza Strip at $500 million following 11 days of crossborde­r fighting in May.

Qatar bankrolled more than $1 billion worth of constructi­on and other projects in Gaza, some of it in cash, after a war in 2014. The payments were monitored and approved by Israel, and Doha pledged another $500 million in late May.

New Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett wants a shift in policy, Internal Security Minister Omer Barlev said. “The Qatari money for Gaza will not go in as suitcases full of dollars which end up with Hamas, where Hamas in essence takes for itself and its officials a significan­t part of it,” he said.

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 ?? AP ?? Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah attend the funeral prayer for Suha Jarrar, the 30-year-old daughter of Palestinia­n politician Khalida Jarrar, who is a prisoner in an Israeli jail.
AP Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah attend the funeral prayer for Suha Jarrar, the 30-year-old daughter of Palestinia­n politician Khalida Jarrar, who is a prisoner in an Israeli jail.

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