Israeli-Palestinian conflict (21 Viewers)

Is Hamas a Terrorist Organization?

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  • Should there be a Jewish nation SOMEWHERE in the world?

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  • Should Israel be a country located in the region it is right now?

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ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #9,961
    Palestinian inmates plan mass hunger strike Tuesday


    AFP - Some 1,600 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails are due to begin a mass hunger strike on Tuesday to protest their conditions, a Palestinian minister said.

    "There are 1,600 Palestinian prisoners who will start a hunger strike on Tuesday in order to improve their conditions inside the occupation prisons and we have set up a national programme to demonstrate solidarity with them," prisoners minister Issa Qaraqaa told AFP on Sunday.

    The expected hunger strike will coincide with Prisoners' Day, an annual event during which people hold demonstrations and rallies of solidarity with the estimated 4,700 Palestinian inmates being held by Israel.

    There are currently 10 Palestinians on hunger strike in Israeli prisons, four of whom have been transferred to prison hospitals due to the fragile state of their heath, the Palestinian Prisoners Club says.

    All 10 are being held under administrative detention orders, which allow a court to order an individual to be detained without charge for periods of up to six months at a time, which can then be extended.

    Israel Prison Service spokeswoman Sivan Weizman put the figure of detainees on hunger strike at six.

    Two of them, 27-year-old Bilal Diab and 34-year-old Thaer Halahla, have both been refusing food for 48 days, with medics expressing concern for their deteriorating health.

    Although prisoners have been known to stage hunger strikes in the past, the practice of refusing food has becoming an increasingly popular form of protest since a landmark protest by another prisoner who went more than nine weeks without eating to protest his being held without charge.

    Khader Adnan refused food for 66 days, agreeing only to end his hunger strike after a deal was struck ensuring he would be released at the end of his four-month term -- which ends on Tuesday.

    Shortly before he ended his fast, a woman prisoner called Hanaa Shalabi also began refusing food to protest being held under administrative detention.

    She refused food for 43 days before agreeing a deal with Israel under which she would be deported to Gaza for three years in exchange for ending her hunger strike.

    There are 4,700 Palestinians being held in Israeli jails, of which 120 have been held since before the signing of the 1993 Oslo Accords, according to the Palestinian Prisoners Club. Most of them are serving life sentences.

    http://www.france24.com/en/20120415-palestinian-inmates-plan-mass-hunger-strike-tuesday
     

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    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #9,963
    From Getty Images

    Protected by Israeli police, Israeli Jewish settlers move into the home of Khaled Natshe, a Palestinian family who were forced to hand it over their houses to the Jewish settlers in the Israeli annexed Arab east Jerusalem neighbourhood of Beit Hanina, on April 18, 2012. The eviction of the 14-member Natshe family from two houses in Beit Hanina was the first successful attempt by settlers to secure a property in the well-heeled Arab district in the northern part of east Jerusalem, rights groups said.









     
    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #9,969
    The prisoners' strike is going on since more than 20 days for more than 2000 freedom fighters in jail.

    Some prisoners have already started the strike earlier and two of them have finished today their 70th day. It is expected that we may lose one of them in the coming hours because of the strike...
     
    Jul 2, 2006
    18,920
    Israel court says U.S. activist not unlawfully killed



    An Israeli court rejected on Tuesday accusations that Israel was at fault over the death of American activist Rachel Corrie, who was crushed by an army bulldozer during a 2003 pro-Palestinian demonstration in Gaza.

    Corrie's family had accused Israel of intentionally and unlawfully killing their 23-year-old daughter, launching a civil case in the northern Israeli city of Haifa after a military investigation had cleared the army of wrong-doing.

    In a ruling read out to the court, judge Oded Gershon called Corrie's death a "regrettable accident", but said the state was not responsible because the incident had occurred during what he termed a war-time situation.

    At the time of her death, during a Palestinian uprising, Corrie was protesting against Israel's demolition of Palestinian homes in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

    "I reject the suit," the judge said. "There is no justification to demand the state pay any damages."

    He added that the soldiers had done their utmost to keep people away from the site. "She (Corrie) did not distance herself from the area, as any thinking person would have done."

    Corrie's death made her a symbol of the uprising, and while her family battled through the courts to establish who was responsible for her killing, her story was dramatised on stage in a dozen countries and told in the book "Let Me Stand Alone."

    "I am hurt," Corrie's mother, Cindy, told reporters after the verdict was read.

    Few Israelis showed much sympathy for Corrie's death, which took place at the height of the uprising in which thousands of Palestinians were killed and hundreds of Israelis died in suicide bombings.

    Corrie came from Olympic, Washington and was a volunteer with the pro-Palestinian International Solidarity Movement.

    Senior U.S. officials criticised the original military investigation into the case, saying it had been neither thorough nor credible. But the judge said the inquiry had been appropriate and pinned no blame on the army.
     
    Oct 3, 2004
    1,118
    :lol:

    Seriously though, Netenyahu should be the last person on Earth to talk about Iran's bombs. Because his country's bombs have never killed innocents in Palestine and Lebanon.

    :sergio:
     

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