Meanwhile,
the UN urged Friday, August 27, Israel to comply with its obligations
under the Fourth Geneva Convention and other related agreements which
provide the protection for prisoners and civilians during the wartime.
"The
UN agencies and offices remind Israel of its obligations under the
fourth Geneva Convention and relevant international human rights
instruments which provide for the protection of detainees and
prisoners," UN Middle East peace envoy Terje Roed-Larsen said in
a statement.
The
human rights groups and Israeli Arab organizations, for their part,
had urged the Israeli government to improve the conditions of the
Palestinian detainees in the Israeli jails.
Israeli
lawyer Lea Tsemel, who recently visited Beer Sheva prison in the south
of the country, said the Israeli hospitals no longer offer medical
treatment to the sick Palestinian strikers.
"The
sick prisoners are locked in a room, tempted with food for five hours
and, if they refuse to eat, returned to their cells without
treatment," AFP quoted Tsemel as saying.
Hannah
Friedman, executive director of the public committee against torture
in Israel, said her organization had lodged a complaint with the
prison authorities about water stoppage in the Beer Sheva prison.
"Israel
is in complete violation of the international conventions it has
signed regarding prisoners' rights," she added.
Humanitarian
Disaster
The
Palestinian prisoners had appealed Thursday for the UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan and world human rights groups to interfere to
prevent their hunger strike from turning into a "humanitarian
disaster."
"We
ask human rights organizations all around the world, and especially
the UN, represented by its Secretary General Kofi Annan, to take a
stand and help us end the miserable circumstances we are living,"
a spokesman for prisoners at a military-run detention center in the
southern Negev desert told AFP by phone.
"We
ask you to assume the legal and ethical responsibility by taking a
quick and effective action to prevent a humanitarian disaster,"
he added.
The
prisoners said the intolerable practices of the Israeli jail
authorities had pushed them to go on their "empty stomach"
battle to protest the Israeli procedures.
"The
unbearable treatment had pushed us to go on this hunger strike after
all our tries to obtain a change had failed and the prisons'
administration had refused to respond to our simple needs as human
beings," the spokesman said.
"We
ask the Israelis to respect our dignity, improve our conditions and
allow family visits, stop the naked searching policy, the solitary
confinement policy for a huge number of prisoners, improve the food
quality and quantity and improve health care".
The
Egyptian foreign minister Ahmed Abul Gheit had also urged the
international community to intervene to end the plight of the
Palestinian prisoners in the Israeli jails.
"The
world community should step in to end the sufferings and the
maltreatment of prisoners in Israeli jails," Abul Gheit told
reporters.
Abul
Gheit expressed Egypt' s concern over the status of the Palestinian
prisoners who have been on hunger strike 13 days running.
He
stressed the need to implement the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention for
the treatment of civilians during the times of war.