Palestinian Prisoners: 6 Human Rights Organisataions Update
6 Human Rights Organisataions Update re Palestinian prisoners in Israeli custody
PRESS RELEASE Physicians
for Human Rights ]Israel (PHR-Israel), Adalah – The Legal
Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel. the Public
Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI), Addameer (West
Bank), Al Haq (West Bank) and Al Mezan Centre for Human
Rights (Gaza)
26 June 2012, International Day Against
Torture
Update on the current
situation of Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli
custody, six weeks after the conclusion of an agreement
between hunger-strike leaders and the Israeli Prison Service
(IPS)
On 14 and 15 May, an agreement was
concluded between hunger-striking Palestinian prisoners and
detainees and the Israeli Prison Service (IPS). Its
provisions included the release of hunger- striking
administrative detainees whose lives were in danger at the
end of their current terms; ending the use of long-term
solitary confinement for “security” reasons for 19
prisoners; renewal of family visits from the Gaza Strip and
alleviating restrictions for families from the West Bank;
ending punitive measures such as night raids and
restrictions on access to legal counsel and education;
improvement of conditions of incarceration including medical
care; and limiting the use of administrative detention as a
whole.
Despite this agreement, Israel has not changed
its policy of administrative detention, family visits from
the Gaza Strip have not been renewed, and punitive policies
are still employed against prisoners and
detainees.
Moreover, at least one administrative
detainee who was due to be released has had his detention
order renewed in violation of the agreement.
On a
broader level, the underlying issue of impunity remains a
constant and the ongoing issue of torture and ill treatment
with no criminal investigations of reported abuses
continues.
1. Background - The
agreements: First stage – 14 May 2012
-
Agreement reached between Israel and representatives of the
hunger strikers (a committee of nine prisoners from all
political factions), with involvement of the leaderships of
Fatah/Palestinian Authority, Hamas and the Egyptian
government. It dealt specifically with the demands of over
1,600 prisoners who started a mass hunger strike on 17 April
, mainly sentenced 'security' prisoners rather than
administrative detainees.
- Main provisions: in return
for a complete cessation of political activity of prisoners
from within the prisons, 19 prisoners would be released from
solitary confinement (a measure used punitively and/or
against political leaders) to be with other Palestinian
prisoners, and family visits for first-degree relatives who
are denied access to the prisons from Gaza and the West Bank
would be renewed.
- Administrative detention:
initially only a marginal part of the deal, this issue did
not appear in writing. This aroused anger among a separate
group of administrative detainees on hunger strike, who had
been fasting much longer and whose key demand was to be
released from detention and cessation of the policy in
general. They refused to break their fast and were supported
publicly. Because of this criticism and the dangerous
medical situation of at least five of the hunger-striking
detainees, the prisoners' representatives and Palestinian
leaderships continued their negotiations until assured by
the Egyptian government that the agreement would also
include this issue. An informal agreement was reportedly
reached between Israel and Egypt to limit future use of
administrative detention to 'very serious' cases, and to re
]examine renewal of current cases, but there was no
undertaking for the release of all. Egypt undertook to
follow the implementation closely.
- Formalisation:
The only published written text of the agreement is that
composed by the Israeli secret police (Shabak, also known as
GSS or ISA) and posted on the Israeli MFA website, available
here.
According to the prisoners’ representatives, a slightly
different document was actually signed with the
understandings mentioned above, including those on
administrative detention, but it has not been made available
to the public.
Second stage – 15 May
2012
Early in the morning of Tuesday 15 May the state agreed not to renew the administrative detention orders of the five longest-striking detainees whose medical condition was the worst, and to release them once they had completed their current detention orders, in a manner similar to the understanding reached with hunger-striking detainee Khader Adnan in February this year. These detainees then agreed to break their fast.
2. Results -
General:
As of 1 June 2012, 4,659 Palestinian
prisoners were in Israeli custody, including 303
administrative detainees held without formal charge or
trial. An additional detainee, Mahmoud Sarsak, is also being
held without charge or trial under the 'Unlawful Combatants
Law,' applied to residents of the Gaza Strip. Since the
agreement, administrative detention orders have been renewed
for many existing administrative detainees and newly
arrested persons have been placed in administrative
detention; others have been released at the end of their
order terms in accordance with the
agreements.
3. Situation of long-term
hunger-strikers whose release was promised under the
agreement:
a. Hassan Safadi ended his hunger strike after 71 days. His current administrative detention order was due to expire on 29 June 2012 and, according to the agreement, he was supposed to be released on that date. However, his lawyer was informed on 21 June of the renewal of his administrative detention order for a further six months, in violation of the agreement. He has renewed his hunger strike in response. He was subsequently transferred to solitary confinement and is in Hadarim prison.
After the agreement was reached and Safadi
stopped his strike, he was examined by an independent doctor
from Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) on 6
June 2012 at Hadarim prison. Generally his health was
satisfactory and he had gained about 7 kg, but the doctor
was concerned about the absence of a stable re-feeding
nutrition plan and the lack of medical follow ]up
examinations that were supposed to be conducted earlier
during the hunger strike. A medical report with the doctor's
recommendations was sent to the IPS for further follow up
but no response has been received to date.
b. Bilal
Diab ended his hunger strike after 77 days. His current
administrative order ends on 11 August 2012 and he should be
released on that date according to the agreement. After the
strike he was examined by an independent doctor from
PHR-Israel on 6 June 2012 at the medical facility of the IPS
in Ramleh prison.
Generally his health was
satisfactory. He gained about 10 kg in approximately two
weeks after 77 days of fasting; however, the doctor was
concerned regarding the absence of a stable re-feeding
nutrition plan for him.
About two weeks ago he was
transferred to Shata prison in the north of Israel, where he
was allowed to meet with his brother Azzam (a prisoner
serving a life sentence), for the first time since 2006. In
addition, his mother and four of his brothers have been
given permission to visit both of them in July.
c.
Tha'er Halahleh ended his hunger strike after 77 days. His
administrative order ended on 6 June and he was released.
His health is improving although he has had some
complications after his release, and was admitted and
discharged from a hospital in the West Bank.
d. Omar
Abu Shalal ended his hunger strike after 70 days. His
current administrative detention order is due to expire on
30 August 2012 and he should be released on that date
according to the agreement. After the strike he was examined
by an independent doctor from PHR-Israel on 6 June 2012, at
the medical facility of the IPS in Ramleh, after which he
was reportedly moved to another unknown facility. Generally
speaking, his health had improved.
e. Ju'afar Azzedine
ended his hunger strike after 55 days. His current
administrative detention order is due to expire on 20 July
2012, after which he should be released, according to the
agreement. He was moved to Eshel prison a week after ending
his hunger strike.
f. Mahmoud Sarsak, a football
player from Gaza, was not included in the original agreement
as he is being held under the ‘Unlawful Combatants Law,’
applied to residents from the Gaza Strip. He continued his
hunger strike until 18 June, during which he suffered
weakness of the myocardium (heart muscle), intestinal
disturbances, body pain, fainting spells, and could no
longer walk or see, as witnessed by his lawyer, Mohammad
Jabareen. His 92-day hunger strike ended with an agreement
for him to be released on 10 July 2012.
4.
Other prisoners and detainees still currently on hunger
strike:
a. Akram Rikhawi is now on day 76 of
his hunger strike and faces imminent threat to his life. A
resident of Gaza, Rikhawi is serving a 9-year sentence since
7 June 2004. He is on hunger strike to request consideration
of early release due to chronic medical problems including
asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure, atrophy of the eye
lenses, cataracts and osteoporosis.
He was held in
the IPS medical facility in Ramleh ever since his initial
arrest. Despite his condition, on 14 June 2012 the Israeli
District Court rejected an appeal to transfer him to a
civilian hospital and he has been denied access to an
external doctor since 6 June 2012. On 25 June 2012 Rikhawi
was finally transferred to Assaf Harofeh, a civilian
hospital in Israel, following a deterioration in his
condition. Under Israeli law every prisoner is entitled to
ask to be considered for an earlier release when he has
served at least two thirds of his sentence.
Rikhawi
went on hunger strike on 12 April 2012 demanding that his
medical condition and social circumstances be considered
during the discussion of his request. In all discussions,
these factors were disregarded and a file with secret
information was the only material considered.
b. Samer
Al-Barq is on day 37 of his renewed hunger strike, which he
launched when Israel renewed his administrative detention
order on 21 May 2012. A resident of the West Bank village of
Jayyus, 34 year-old Al-Barq is married to Sageda, a
Pakistani citizen. He was held without charge or trial by
the Jordanian intelligence for four and a half years, and
was then transferred to the Israeli secret police (GSS) on 7
November 2010, whereupon an administrative detention order
was issued, and renewed several times since.
Al-Barq
joined the Palestinian prisoners’ mass hunger strike on 17
April 2012 and fasted for 28 days, along with around 2,000
other Palestinian prisoners, until the May agreement was
reached.
On 21 May 2012, Al-Barq's administrative
detention order was renewed for a further three months, and
he resumed his hunger strike to protest this renewal in
violation of Israel's commitment given to the hunger strike
leaders to renew administrative detention orders only in
extremely exceptional circumstances.
Currently Al-Barq
is held at the IPS medical facility in Ramleh. His family
has reported that he suffers from kidney problems and high
blood pressure and has lost more than 20% of his original
weight.
On 21 June 2012, PHR-Israel submitted a
request to allow independent physicians access to him. On
the 25th of June the IPS denied PHR-Israel request with out
stating any reasons to the denial. Both Al-Barq and Rikhawi
are denied family visits and access of independent
doctors.
5. Minors on hunger
strike:
Nine minors held in Hasharon prison
engaged in a hunger strike for five days in mid-June. The
minors launched their hunger strike in protest against their
incarceration without adult supervision, denial of
education, overcrowding, substandard medical care and
sanitation in the cells, denial of family visits, holding of
minors in solitary confinement as a punitive measure, as
well as abuse and violence from prison staff. Their hunger
strike concluded upon agreement from the Hashron prison
authorities that their basic conditions would be improved.
It is as yet unclear if this agreement has been
respected.
6. Solitary
confinement:
Eighteen Palestinian prisoners
have been taken out of solitary confinement and into regular
cells. Dirar Abu Sisi, who has also been held in long ]term
solitary confinement since before the agreement, has not yet
been removed from solitary confinement, in contravention of
the agreement. Abu Sisi was abducted by the Israeli Mossad
from Ukraine last year. An additional prisoner was also
given a 6-month solitary confinement order last
week.
Other Palestinian prisoners are still being held
in prolonged solitary confinement, and the use of solitary
confinement as a punitive measure is still ongoing. The IPS
has claimed that the agreement does not include those
prisoners held in solitary confinement ordered by the IPS
authorities as a disciplinary measure or in order to
maintain prison security and order.
7. Family
visits from the West Bank:
There has been a
partial renewal of visits for relatives from the West Bank
whose access to the prisons was previously denied. As stated
above, Bilal Diab's family received permits to visit, and
prisoners Abdallah Al Barghouthi and Abbas Al Said have
received visits from their younger sons. Both were
previously in solitary confinement for many years and were
denied family visits. It is not yet clear what percentage of
West Bank prisoners' families have now newly been granted
permits and how many have been denied
permits.
8. Family visits from the Gaza
Strip:
Family visits to prisoners from the
Gaza Strip have been denied since 2007. According to the
agreement, visits should have been resumed within one month
of the end of the hunger strike. There are informal reports
that the visits are due to be resumed in July. The ICRC has
reported that they are in contact with the IPS regarding
renewal of visits from the Gaza Strip, but there is no
official date yet. The IPS responded in a letter to Adalah
on 20 June 2012 that due to the large number of parties
involved, including the Israel military, the Attorney
General, the Israeli Police, and other security forces, it
is difficult to arrange permits for family members to
visit.
According to this letter, “[e]ven before
security prisoners began the hunger strike, we began to
examine options for access for families from Gaza to visit
prisoners held in Israel. Taking into consideration that the
issue is complicated, we hope to soon establish a system to
carry out a pilot program to obtain permits for access from
Gaza.”
9. Punitive measures against
inmates:
Violent raids by IPS special forces
on prisoners’ sections continue despite the agreement.
Families of prisoners have reported to PHR-Israel that some
wings are suffering from collective punishment due to
suspicion of holding mobile phones. Punishments include
fines, denial of permission to buy extra food and supplies,
and denial of family visits. The latter is a basic right,
not a privilege.
10. Restriction on access to
higher education:
Despite the agreement,
access to higher education has not been renewed and there is
no discussion of intention to renew it. Adalah filed a
motion to the Israeli Supreme Court in March 2012 for
permission to appeal the Nazareth District Court decision to
reject a prisoner’s request to continue his higher
education in the Open University after two years of study
via correspondence. In June 2011, the IPS had suddenly and
arbitrarily decided to stop all Palestinian political
prisoners from studying higher education courses. To date,
there has been no response from the state.
11
. Access to medical care:
The IPS continues
to deny entry of independent doctors to hunger strikers and
visits have been enabled only through prolonged court
processes. Transfer of hunger strikers to civilian hospitals
is also prevented despite a clear need to provide
specialised care not available in the IPS medical facility.
More generally, the quality of medical care provided to all
inmates is a key complaint of Palestinian prisoners and
their families.
No improvement has been recorded and,
since the announcement by the current Chief Medical Officer
Dini Orkin-Tischler that she is leaving her post shortly,
requests for information and complaints regarding medical
care (transmitted by PHR-Israel) have gone largely
unanswered.
Following the hunger strike, female
Palestinian prisoners held in Hasharon prison boycotted the
prison clinic for one week in protest at the lack of
adequate medical care and unreasonable waiting
periods.
12. Recommendations:
- That the arbitrary and excessive use of administrative detention be discontinued and Palestinian detainees be ensured access to a fair legal process;
- That the agreements reached on 14 and 15 May 2012 be respected, including the release of
administrative detainees who were promised release at the end of their current orders, renewal of family visits and lifting of the punitive measures used against Palestinians in Israeli custody;
- That Akram Rikhawi continue to be hospitalised in a civilian hospital adequate to his needs and that his early release be considered based on his grave medical conditions; and that regular
independent medical visits be allowed to all hunger strikers;
- That the EU publicly and actively engage with Israel to end the arbitrary use of administrative
detention, and condemn the punitive measures used to quell the efforts of the hunger strikers,
who are engaged in legitimate protest.
- That the EU implement and support an experts' fact-finding mission to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory on the subject of conditions of Palestinians incarcerated by Israel.
ENDS