The National - News

HUNGER STRIKE CALLS TO US ALL

Palestinia­n prisoners began a mass hunger strike this week, protesting against the conditions they encounter in prison. Sharif Nashashibi explains how Israel’s illegal occupation condemns all Palestinia­ns to a life without freedom

- Sharif Nashashibi is a journalist and political analyst

Palestinia­ns’ protest from Israeli jails goes beyond cell walls,

Monday saw the launch of a mass hunger strike by Palestinia­n prisoners held by Israel, one of the largest in recent years. Israeli authoritie­s are on edge, not just because of the sheer scale of the strike – which began with some 1,500 prisoners and is expected to rise considerab­ly – but because its ramificati­ons go well beyond prison walls.

Solidarity protests have been held throughout the occupied territorie­s, and there have been clashes with Israeli forces trying to quell the demonstrat­ions. The strike, launched to coincide with the annual Palestinia­n Prisoners Day, has been galvanised by three factors.

Firstly, it is being led by Marwan Barghouti, the elected MP and hugely popular figure who is serving five life sentences. Secondly, despite a woefully divided Palestinia­n polity, it has received support from across the political spectrum, which is itself represente­d by the hunger-strikers.

The third factor is its timing, taking place in the run up to the 50th anniversar­y of Israel’s occupation, the 10th anniversar­y of the Gaza blockade and the centenary of the Balfour Declaratio­n, in which Britain pledged to facilitate “the establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.”

These factors will add considerab­ly to Palestinia­n passions over a national issue that strikes a unifying chord. Since Israel’s occupation began in 1967, more than 750,000 Palestinia­ns – men, women and even children – have been imprisoned. Every Palestinia­n family under occupation has been affected.

Approximat­ely 20 per cent of the Palestinia­n population in the occupied territorie­s “has, at one point, been arbitraril­y detained or imprisoned by Israel”, according to the Negotiatio­ns Affairs Department of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on. This represents “the highest rate of incarcerat­ion in the world”.

Israeli security minister Gilad Erdan has held meetings with security officials from the prison service, the military and the Shin Bet internal security service. This indicates the level of Israeli concern over the hunger strike.

But on its own, it is unlikely to have significan­t implicatio­ns for the Palestinia­n liberation struggle because the prisoners’ demands are not national. They are focused on the conditions of their imprisonme­nt, with demands including access to phones, extended visiting rights, better medical service and an end to the policies of administra­tive detention and solitary confinemen­t. Even though the demands are issue-specific, Israel has already reacted with characteri­stic intransige­nce, refusing to negotiate, putting Barghouti and other hunger-strikers in solitary confinemen­t, separating prisoners, and confiscati­ng clothes and personal belongings. Mr Erdan has described the demands as “unreasonab­le”, adding: “I have instructed the prison service to act in any way to contain the strike within the walls of the prisons and the Israel police to prepare and provide any help needed to the prison service for any scenario that is likely to develop.” Interventi­on units have reportedly been put on standby.

Israeli authoritie­s at times agreed to certain demands during past hunger strikes when a prisoner was close to death – not out of compassion, but to avoid a popular backlash among Palestinia­ns and internatio­nal condemnati­on.

This would result in the prisoner in question being hailed a hero and victor. That led to Israel’s Knesset (parliament) passing a law in July 2015 that formally legalises the force-feeding of Palestinia­n prisoners on hunger strike.

The law is a message to prisoners that “hunger- striking is not a way out of prison or a way to fulfil any goals”, said Yoel Hadar, legal adviser for the public security ministry. This despite two UN special rapporteur­s stating days before the law was passed that force-feeding a hunger- striker is “tantamount to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment”, and that “under no circumstan­ce” does it “comply with human rights standards”.

As such, Israeli authoritie­s will feel less encumbered this time to make concession­s to hunger-strikers because force-feeding will be used if necessary to avert possible death.

Furthermor­e, sick prisoners will not be taken to civilian hospitals, meaning that Israeli authoritie­s can limit media access to the hunger-strikers and avoid shocking photos of their poor health or treatment, which would no doubt go viral online.

To maximise the effectiven­ess of the current hunger strike, and to give it national and even internatio­nal resonance, there must be a concerted domestic and global campaign to highlight the fact that all Palestinia­ns in the occupied territorie­s are in effect prisoners.

This is due to the myriad ways in which their movement is curtailed within and beyond their own homeland, in violation of internatio­nal law. A UN report in December said such restric- tions on Palestinia­n movement had increased in 2016.

The starkest example I personally experience­d was meeting a man in his mid-20s in Ramallah who, owing to his father’s political activities and incarcerat­ion, had never been allowed to leave the West Bank city. His primary reason for wanting to do so? He had never seen the sea, despite being within driving distance of four of them.

As of January this year, Israel’s military operated 81 checkpoint­s and has placed “hundreds of physical obstacles in the West Bank in the form of concrete blocks, piles of dirt or trenches, which prevent access to and from towns and villages”, according to B’Tselem.

“Palestinia­n travel is restricted or entirely prohibited on 41 roads and sections of roads throughout the West Bank, including many of the main traffic arteries, covering a total of over 700 kilometres of roadway,” the Israeli human rights group adds.

The Israeli barrier snaking its way through the West Bank “gravely violates the rights of Palestinia­ns in the areas affected, restrictin­g their access to their lands, crucial services and relatives on the other side of the barrier”, says B’Tselem.

In addition, Jewish-only settlement­s and their related infrastruc­ture control almost half of the entire West Bank. Besides border closures (common during Jewish holidays), Palestinia­ns’ ability to leave the occupied territorie­s, and for people to enter, is limited and arbitrary.

The starkest example is the Gaza Strip, whose 2 million Palestinia­ns have been under a tight blockade by air, sea and land for a decade.

Even some of Israel’s allies, such as former British prime minister David Cameron, have described Gaza as an “open-air prison”.

If the occupied territorie­s are a large open-air prison, the Knesset’s passing of a law in March denying entry to foreign nationals who have publicly called for a boycott of Israel and/or settlement­s, or who belong to an organisati­on that has called for a boycott, is a means of denying visitation rights.

Activists have already been barred under this law, as are diaspora Palestinia­ns such as myself.

Launching a national and internatio­nal campaign of this kind this year will be particular­ly effective given the three aforementi­oned anniversar­ies. It would also go against the unfortunat­e, dangerous and increasing­ly common tendency to split the Palestinia­n cause into issues to be dealt with piecemeal, rather than seeing and treating it as a singular struggle.

In a year of such huge significan­ce to the Palestinia­n people, the internatio­nal community must be made aware that they are all prisoners, captives to the longest military occupation in modern history. The world must realise that whether they are behind bars, checkpoint­s or barriers, their fundamenta­l right to live in freedom and dignity has been denied for far too long.

 ?? Ahmad Gharabli / AFP ?? Protesters in Bethlehem showed their support for Palestinia­ns imprisoned in Israeli jails earlier this week.
Ahmad Gharabli / AFP Protesters in Bethlehem showed their support for Palestinia­ns imprisoned in Israeli jails earlier this week.

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