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New Israeli aggression puts life of Palestinian hunger striker Maher al-Akhras in immediate danger

“My will to my people is to protect the homeland." - Maher al-Akhras

Maher al-Akhras, who has been on a hunger strike since his administrative detention on July 27, is waging a battle against the mighty Israeli occupation apparatus.  Every day brings him closer to death, as Israel seems to be trying to prove through his case that the life of Palestinians, like their freedom and human rights, are worth nothing. But the formidable insistence of his hunger strike against the principle of administrative detention, and his determination that the strike will end only once he is free or becomes a martyr, is mobilizing more and more people to his support. On Friday, the 89th day of his hunger strike, it seemed that his Israeli torturers finally lost their nerve.

Background

On the August 27, after he completed the first month of his hunger strike, al-Akhras was transferred from the Ofer military prison to the central clinic of the Israeli “Prisons Service” in Ramleh prison. It is an institute with a very bad reputation; the prisoners call it “a graveyard for the living”. On September 9, after farther deterioration in his medical condition, the prison’s doctors said they couldn’t treat him anymore and he was transferred to Kaplan hospital, a civilian institution in the town of Rehovot.

Al-Akhras continued his hunger strike and his body became ever more fragile. His lawyer, Ahlam Haddad, applied several times to Israel’s High Court to demand his immediate release. As usual in such cases, the high court’s judges heard the “secret accusations” against al-Akhras from the security services’ officers behind closed doors, without disclosing them to the prisoner or his lawyer. The court refused to void the detention decree.

However, on September 22, taking into account al-Akhras’ medical condition, they decided that in his current health condition he couldn’t constitute any “danger to state security”. On this basis they suspended his detention, but said that even though he was not a detainee, he was still not allowed to go to his home or to a hospital in the West Bank. This was to make it easy to renew his detention once his health improved.

Al-Akhras was then actually detained as a “potential-administrative-detainee” in Kaplan hospital. His wife joined him in the hospital, and there were several demonstrations in solidarity with him front of the hospital. His hospital bed became a center of attention to activists who traveled to stand in solidarity with him.

Demonstration in support of Maher al-Ahkras in front of Kaplan Hospital October 24, 2020 (Photo: Iris Bar)
Demonstration in support of Maher al-Ahkras in front of Kaplan Hospital October 24, 2020 (Photo: Iris Bar)

Prisoner Re-Arrested

On Friday, October 23, the occupation authorities informed al-Akhras’ lawyer that the Kaplan hospital was no longer willing to keep him, due to the fact that he refused their medical treatment, and also claimed that his visitors endangered other patients with viruses. With this, Israeli authorities renewed his administrative detention and al-Akhras was transferred again to the Ramleh prison clinic. This contradicted the High Court decision given on September 22, more than a month ago, that due to his medical situation al-Akhras didn’t constitute a danger. Since that hearing he had continued to be on a hunger strike, and there were clear medical reports outlining his deteriorating health to the point of imminent danger to his life or permanent damage to his body systems. It also contradicted the prison medics themselves who stated on September 9 that they couldn’t treat him. 

Al-Akhras’s lawyer immediately turned to the high court again, asking to stop the prison authorities from moving him to the prison clinic (he had not been transferred yet), to abolish the renewal of the administrative detention, and to order his immediate release based on his deteriorating health. On Friday their struggle won a small victory when the court ordered to suspend al-Akhras’ transfer and leave him in Kaplan hospital until the deliberations were complete. The main plea is expected to be heard on Sunday, October 25.

Torturing the family

A screenshot of a video showing a prison guard stopping al-Akhras’s daughter and his mother in a wheelchair from entering his hospital room. (Video by Muhammad Babai)

On Saturday afternoon, al-Akhras’s family, including his wheelchair-bound mother, his wife, and three of their six children arrived in the Kaplan hospital to see their beloved son, husband, and father. They could only come from their home in Silat a-Dhahr, near Jenin, in the occupied West Bank, with a special security clearance. 

But when they arrived, the prison guards surrounding the patients’ room prevented them from entering, even to have a glance of their dear one. His mother and his kids hadn’t seen him since he was arrested three months ago. Now, as there was an immediate danger to his life, this stubborn insistence by the guards was heart breaking. 

The family and some of their supporters, including Knesset member Ofer Cassif from the Joint List, announced that they will be starting a hunger strike in the hospital until they are allowed to visit him.

Widening Solidarity

Maher al-Akhras's family and supporters on hunger strike in front of his hospital room after being prevented from entering - October 24, 2020. (Photo: Muhammad Kana'aneh)
Maher al-Akhras’s family and supporters on hunger strike in front of his hospital room after being prevented from entering – October 24, 2020. (Photo: Muhammad Kana’aneh)

Despite the harsh political conditions and powerful distractions, there is a growing wave of solidarity actions with Maher al-Akhras.

One week ago, on October 17, there was a demonstration in Haifa, called by prisoners’ support activists and by Herak Haifa. The main street of the German Colony was closed and one activist was arrested. On Monday there was a central demonstration called by the “high coordination committee” – the united leadership of all Palestinian parties and movements in the 48 territories – near the Megido prison in the north.

When the news came of al-Akhras’s transfer to the Ramleh prison clinic, activists immediately declared a vigil for Saturday in front of the Ramleh prison. When the news came later that he was actually still in the Kaplan hospital, the demonstration was extended – after finishing in Ramleh the demonstrators gathered again in front of the hospital.

Maher’s Will

On Saturday morning al-Akhras’ lawyer visited him in the Kaplan hospital. She wrote down his words, describing Friday’s events and expressing his last wishes for his funeral and for the future of his people. Here is a translation to English of his words as she wrote them:

This report that I write is in the words of prisoner Maher al-Akhras, who has been on hunger strike for 90 days, when I visited him today, Saturday morning. He says:

“Yesterday 23-10-2020, at 12:00 a force of prison guards, security service agents, and hospital guards entered. They forced my wife to exit the room so I was left alone. Three prison guards got me out of the bed. I don’t know if it was on purpose or not, but they removed their grip and I fell on the ground on my face. Then they carried me and took me in a wheelchair to room 303 in the same department.

“At around 2:00 pm, from the intensity of anger of what happened, I felt a strong headache, stress in my heart and severe pain throughout the body, the first time I felt these aches. My whole body shuddered and I did not hear anything and did not see anything. The medical staff gathered around me. According to what I remember, I told them not to touch me, I do not want you to treat me, and not to approach me. I don’t know what happened after that. I just woke up with the doctor next to me trying to wake me up and it was 5:00 in the afternoon. Three hours passed while I was unconscious.

“Today I feel very weak, my body shivering and trembling. I hardly can focus, talk or see. I feel stress on my heart.

“Maher’s message and will: 

“I ask that my mother, my wife and my children visit me.

“I do not want to die in Kaplan and I do not want them to help me. If they want to help me, let them take me to a hospital in the West Bank. I want to die among my family and my children.

“I do not want them to put me in the refrigerator and not to dissect my body at all, neither here nor in the West Bank. 

“I want the veteran prisoners who wages the battle through hunger strikes and the families of the martyrs to carry my coffin.

“My will to my people is to protect the homeland.”

Maher Al-Akhras will and declaration, Oct. 24, 2020.

Yoav Haifawi
Yoav Haifawi is an anti-Zionist activist and maintains the blogs Free Haifa and Free Haifa Extra.

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http://www.dci.plo.ps/en/article/16726/Dr-Hanan-Ashrawi-Murder-of-Amer-Snoubar-is-a-monstrous-act-of-brutality-motivated-by-hate-and-encouraged-by-impunity

Press release: The Palestine Liberation Organization, Oct 25/20

Dr. Hanan Ashrawi: ‘Murder of Amer Snoubar is a monstrous act of brutality motivated by hate and encouraged by impunity.’

(October 25, 2020): “The vicious murder of 18-year-old Amer Snoubar at the hands of Israeli occupation forces is a monstrous act of brutality against a defenseless young man whose only crime was being Palestinian. Israeli occupation soldiers bludgeoned Amer this dawn, and medical authorities have confirmed that he was beaten repeatedly on the back of the neck then left for dead. 

“Such crimes are perpetrated by Israeli occupation soldiers because they are part of a regime that awards criminality and ensures impunity for crimes, domestically and internationally. The daily structural violence against Palestinians, which is the lifeline of this illegal occupation, entrenches a culture of racism, hate, and dehumanization against the Palestinian people, allowing for such crimes to happen without shame, fear, regret, or accountability.

“This hostile and hateful environment also allows for other forms of inhumane disregard for Palestinian lives, as demonstrated in the continued imprisonment of Maher al-Akhras, who is now on day 91 of his hunger strike to protest his detention without charge or trial under so-called ‘administrative detention.’

“This cruelty is what drives Israeli occupation authorities from preventing Maher’s elderly mother, wife and children from seeing him while he battles to stay alive. It explains the steep rise in demolition of Palestinian homes in the middle of a raging pandemic and provides context for Israel’s targeting of schools, medical facilities, and other basic services.

“The only way for these crimes to end is for the illegal Israeli regime of occupation to end. International concern and outrage will not save Palestinian lives or property. They will not protect Palestinian rights or dignity. The only responsible and moral response to these senseless crimes is accountability.”