Your Mail

ÚÑÈí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

Search »

Advanced Search »

 

Palestinian Women Jailed in Israel End Hunger Strike

The women were fasting to protest inhuman treatment by the Israeli prison guards

BETHLEHEM, West Bank, August 18 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Palestinian women held in the Israeli prison of Neve Tirtza near Tel Aviv ended a 17-day hunger strike late Sunday, August 18, following positive discussions with the prison authorities, their lawyer said.

"The prisoners have agreed to stop their hunger strike after 17 days, following talks with the jail administrators who promised to [try to] solve their demands," lawyer Mamun al-Hashim told Agence France-Press(AFP).

Some 40 Palestinian prisoners started their hunger strike in early August after the prison sent four women to solitary confinement, Hashim said. Another four women were put in isolation after the start of the strike, he added.

Several of those considered to be the group's leaders were transferred to solitary confinement, including Amana Jawad Mona, 25, who was jailed last year.

The women were also fasting to protest inhuman treatment by the Israeli prison guards who used tear gas to break up demonstrations against poor sanitary conditions in the prison, the lawyer said.

A week into the strike, a spokeswoman for Israel's prison administration confirmed that around half of the female "security detainees" in Neve Tirtza had been on hunger strike for nine days, feeding only on drinks with sugar.

However, she denied the sanitary problem in the prison, claiming instead that the detainees had flooded and vandalized their cells, forcing the wardens to take what she described as "disciplinary measures."

Meanwhile, thousands of Palestinians arrested in Israel's massive military sweeps of the West Bank are being held in harsh conditions, rights groups said Sunday.

Since late March, Israel has stormed and reoccupied West Bank towns and villages and has locked up thousands of innocent Palestinian civilians whom it claims are suspected of planning anti-Israeli attacks, Agence France-Press(AFP) reported August 18, 2002.

The prisoners number 6,000, with some 1,800 being held in administrative detention, a relic of British inter-war rule, according to Issa Qaraqi, head of the Bethlehem-based Palestinian Prisoners Club.

An army spokesman said some 2,600 Palestinians were being held in the three main detention centers.

The administrative detention procedure, left over from emergency laws applied during the British mandate period, means the Palestinians can be held for extended periods without being formally charged.

The detainees have been idling in the military camps of Ofer, near Ramallah in the West Bank, Megiddo in northern Israel, and Ketziot in the Negev desert, known among Palestinians as Ansar III, as well as other army interrogation centers around the country.

Human rights activists are concerned about the situation in the camps, where detainees are cut off from the outside world waiting for authorities to complete case-by-case investigations.

"The Ofer camp has many wounded and ill and we have asked without success to be allowed to treat them," Noam Lebel, spokesman for the Association of Civil Rights in Israel, told AFP.

"As for Ketziot, it is very bad. During the day it is extremely hot and at night very cold," said Lebel, adding that Palestinian detainees in this desert camp are confined to tents.

Many have not changed their clothes since they were arrested and the army has not allowed their families to bring them fresh clothes or provisions, Lebel added.

Mohammed Berghal, a Palestinian lawyer, says the conditions in Ketziot are terrible: “Toilets are basic, beds are often just pieces of wood laid out on the earth, and the tents are crammed.

“It is particularly difficult for the 240 of the 900 Palestinians at Ketziot who are held in administrative detention,” Berghal told AFP.

He said some prisoners had been held for months without even being questioned by security interrogators, who according to Israeli media reports have been busy by the whole number of people detained in Israel's continual raids of the West Bank.

However, Tamar Peleg, a lawyer from the Center for the Defense of the Individual, an Israeli rights group, disagreed. The prisoners are "cut-off deliberately from the rest of the world, without press, radio or television," Peleg said.

The prisoners' lawyers are often barred from seeing them, even in cases when they have received special permission to visit, said Peleg, whose organization brings human right violations in the occupied territories before Israeli courts.

The Prisoners Club said several detainees in Ofer were beaten earlier this month when hundreds of prisoners clashed with Israeli guards as tempers boiled over.

 

Yesterday's News

Search Articles 

 

 

News Archive :
Day:   Month: Year:   


Send Mail

Related Links


News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Muslim Affairs | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map