Showing posts with label Mahmoud Sarsak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mahmoud Sarsak. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Alive and victorious: Palestinian footballer Mahmoud Sarsak home after epic 3 month hunger strike

July 10, 2012 Electronic Intifada

Palestinian footballer Mahmoud Sarsak was greeted joyously in Gaza today as he returned home from the Israeli prison where he was held for three years without charge or trial and without visits from his family.
According to AP, Sarsak was taken to hospital in Gaza where, “he emerged from an ambulance and kissed his parents and siblings.”

Sarsak staged an epic three month hunger strike that brought him to the edge of death, which he ended last month after Israel met his demands and agreed to free him on this date.

Sarsak, a member of the Palestinian national football team, garnered worldwide support, including from international players’ association FIFPro, FIFA boss Sepp Blatter, and numerous world-renowned football players and athletes.

In IBTimes video report shows many more images of Sarsak’s return home.


Alive and victorious” – but other hunger strikers remain

 

Seventy-eight days into his hunger strike, Sarsak published a poignant “final distress call” along with fellow prisoner Akram Rikhawi. In an unforgettable sentence that spurred global action on the prisoners’ behalf, the men wrote:
there is still enough time and the support that comes late is better than that which does not come at all. It is better that you receive us alive and victorious rather than as lifeless bodies in black bags.
Today, Mahmoud Sarsak returned home alive and victorious to the joyous embrace of his mother. But Akram Rikhawi remains in Israeli jail in increasingly desperate conditions, along with at least two other hunger strikers.

Mahmoud Sarsak’s victory and return is a joyful and amazing achievement that deserves to be celebrated. But even as Sarsak’s release is celebrated, Rikhawi remains at risk of death.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Battle of the Empty Stomachs wages on: Akram Rikhawi’s health continues to deteriorate as Mahmoud Sarsak’s hunger strike successfully concludes

Joint Press Release, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel

Ramallah-Jaffa, 20 June 2012—Addameer and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) reiterate their grave concern for Akram Rikhawi, who continues to face an imminent threat to his life on his 70th day of hunger strike today. Addameer lawyer Mona Neddaf was able to visit him yesterday in Ramleh prison medical clinic, though independent doctors from PHR-Israel are still being denied regular access to him since last visiting on 6 June.
Ms. Neddaf noted following her visit that Akram is extremely tired and weak and now weighs only 49 kilos. Furthermore, since 16 June he is refusing any vitamins and fluids through an IV. Though he is sustaining himself on water alone, Ms. Neddaf was troubled to observe that even drinking water is now very difficult for him and he is only able to consume approximately one liter per day.
Akram has not received a visit from an independent doctor since 6 June, as Israeli authorities continually deny requests by PHR-Israel. Fifteen days have now passed since the PHR-Israel doctor determined that Akram is at immediate risk of death, due to the combination of his protracted hunger strike and his prior chronic conditions, including diabetes and asthma. On 14 June, the Israeli District Court rejected an appeal filed by PHR-Israel to transfer Akram to a civilian hospital, despite his deteriorating health. Akram emphasized to Ms. Neddaf his wishes to be immediately transferred to a civilian hospital for proper care.
Akram is now held in the same room as Samer Al-Barq, who is on his 31st day of renewed hunger strike today in protest of his administrative detention. Akram commented that he and Samer Al-Barq’s morale remains high, though both feel that their cases have been forgotten in the media and other spheres. Akram continues to receive pressure from the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) administration to end his hunger strike.
While Akram and Samer remain steadfast in their acts of resistance, Addameer and PHR-Israel salute Mahmoud Sarsak, who ended his historic 92-day hunger strike on the night of 18 June upon Israel’s agreement to release him on 10 July. Mahmoud, who has been held without charge or trial for three years, successfully challenged Israel’s policy of arbitrary detention, and his incredible courage must be commended.
Surely the increased action from individuals and institutions all over the world on behalf of Mahmoud Sarsak contributed to Israeli authorities’ acceptance of his demands, and it is therefore clear that urgent pressure is needed on behalf of Akram Rikhawi and Samer Al-Barq as well, before it is too late.
Thus, Addameer and PHR-Israel stress the importance of the following demands:
  •  that Akram be immediately transferred and hospitalized in a civilian hospital, where he can receive the standard of care necessary;
  •   that the international community immediately intervene for independent doctors to have unrestricted access to Akram and Samer;
  • that both Akram and Samer immediately be permitted family visits.

Palestinian footballer Sarsak 'ends hunger strike'

 June 19, 2012 BBC

A poster of Palestinian footballer Mahmoud al-Sarsak at a protest tent near Rafah Town in the southern Gaza Strip  
Mahmoud al-Sarsak started his hunger strike on 23 March

A Palestinian footballer who has been on hunger strike in protest at being held in an Israeli jail without charge has agreed to resume eating in exchange for early release, his lawyer says.
Mahmoud al-Sarsak has been detained by Israel for three years.

Israeli officials accuse him of being involved in the militant group, Islamic Jihad, but he has never been publicly charged.

Mr Sarsak has always denied the allegations.

He has been held under Israel's "Unlawful Combatants Law", which allows Israel to indefinitely detain without charge or trial foreign nationals suspected of involvement in organisations or activities hostile to the state. Suspects' cases are reviewed by a court every six months.

Israel says Mr Sarsak was arrested based on information that he was a member of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad, had planted bombs and recruited and trained other militants.

Mr Sarsak's lawyer, Mohammed Jabarin, says an agreement has been reached with the Israeli prison where Mr Sarsak is being held for him to be released on 10 July.

In return, Mr Sarsak will start eating again and will be transferred to a civilian hospital for treatment on Tuesday, according to Mr Jabarin.

An Israeli government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the BBC: "We know that Sarsak was under enormous pressure and intimidation from Islamic Jihad to continue his strike.
"As Islamic Jihad are aware, Sarsak could have died if he did not stop. This death could have been used to spark violence on the Palestinian street against Israelis and others, violence that would not have been welcomed by anyone except Islamic Jihad and their ilk."

Ban Urged

The 25-year-old started his hunger strike on 23 March. He briefly paused in April after rights groups said he was close to death.

In recent weeks, however, he has started taking vitamins, sugar and milk, his lawyer says.
The Palestinian Football Association (PFA) has urged European football's governing body, Uefa, to ban Israel from hosting the continent's under-21 championship next year.

In addition to Mr Sarsak, Olympic squad goalkeeper Omar Abu Rois and Ramallah player Mohammed Nimr are being held in Israel without trial.

The global governing football body, Fifa, expressed its concern last month over the fate of Mr Sarsak and asked Israel's football association to take action.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Support Palestinian footballer – Mahmoud Sarsak!

June 14, 2012 U Free Network
 

As you enjoy the Euro2012 games please give thought to Sarsak, a skillful footballer who once played for the Palestinian National team. He urgently needs your support as he now tackles with death at the hands of the oppressive Israeli regime.

Mahmoud Sarsak is now reaching his 92nd day of hunger strike- the longest hunger strike undergone by a Palestinian Political prisoner. Due to the prolonged suffering to his body and immune system his health is deteriorating rapidly and his condition is now more critical than ever.

UFree urges you to support his case immediately by:

* Signing the letter below and forwarding it to your local MP.  
(Due to a technical error, please copy the letter below and contact your local MP directly)

* Contact the Israeli embassy in your country or consulate and demand for the immediate release of Mahmoud Sarsak.
Israel should be subjected to the same criticism faced by Poland and Ukraine, who are hosting Euro 2012.It is time to end Israel's impunity and to insist on the same standards of equality, justice and respect for international law that we demand of other states.

Letter:

For the attention of Members of Parliaments



Re: Palestinian prisoner Mahmoud Sarsak deteriorating health


As the 2012 UEFA European Football Championship grips the nation I draw your attention to the plight of Palestinian footballer Mahmoud Sarsak. Once a star player in the Palestinian national team, Sarsak was jailed by Israel in 2009, as he left the Gaza Strip en route to a match. Sarsak had been on a hunger strike since 19 March 2012, after his administrative detention was renewed for an astonishing sixth time.

His health condition is now critical and deteriorating fast. Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) have said that Sarsak could die at any time. Israel has not allowed the charity to visit him in Ramle Prison until last week. Sarsak has experienced extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. He frequently loses consciousness and suffers memory lapses.

On Sunday 6th of June, Israeli Prisons Service (IPS) transferred Sarsak to Assaf Harofeh hospital because of his rapid deteriorating health. This transfer was due to the inability of both Al Ramla prison hospital and Mair civil hospital to treat Sarsak's critical health condition.

Sarsak has been held without trial or charge under the infamous "Unlawful Combatants Law", which allows Israeli authorities to detain Palestinians from Gaza for an unlimited time without trial or charge.

I urge you to take the following actions so Sarsak’s life can be saved:

  1. Highlight Sarsaks case by contacting parliamentarians and Israeli embassies across the world and subject Israel to the same criticism faced by Poland and Ukraine, who are hosting Euro 2012.
  2. To urge FIFA to intervene in the case, expressing grave concern regarding Sarsak's deteriorating health. http://www.fifa.com/contact/form.html

I urge your support as we call an end to Israel's impunity and to insist on the same standards of equality, justice and respect for international law that we demand of other states.

Yours sincerely,

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Cantona, FIFA join pressure on Israel, as hunger striker Mahmoud Sarsak determined to reach freedom or death

Ismael Mohamad / United Press International
 Palestinian footballer Mahmoud Sarsak is still on hunger strike and is determined to continue until he dies or Israel agrees to free him, his lawyer Mahmoud Jabarin said today.

The news came as football legend Eric Cantona and other major public figures, and FIFA President Sepp Blatter, joined the growing international calls on Israel to free Sarsak and end its abuses of human rights.

After coming close to death on Sunday, Sarsak has agreed to take milk only until Thursday when the Israeli Supreme Court is due to review his case.

 

Last chance to save him


Ma’an News Agency reports today:
Mahmoud al-Sarsak is on his 86th day of hunger strike but is drinking milk to prolong his life until his court hearing Thursday, his lawyer said Tuesday.
Mohammad Jabarein told Ma’an that Israeli prison officials called him to visit al-Sarsak urgently Sunday because he was in danger of dying. Al-Sarsak was briefly hospitalized that afternoon.
Jabarein met with 15 doctors at the hospital, who said al-Sarsak was at immediate danger of paralysis and losing consciousness.
I decided that al-Sarsak must drink milk,” Jabarein said.
Al-Sarsak was reluctant, but the lawyer said he persuaded him to accept some nutrients so he would survive until his judicial review, which is scheduled for Thursday.
Al-Sarsak agreed to drink milk but would only be fed by his lawyer.
The 25-year-old prisoner has decided that if the Supreme Court does not agree to release him he will refuse all supplements until his death, Jabarein said.
The judicial review Thursday is the “last chance” to save al-Sarsak’s life, Jabarein said.

 

Life still in danger


Despite his decision to take milk, Sarsak’s life is still in danger, as Ma’an notes:
The prisoner rights group Addameer notes that consuming milk does not break a hunger strike.
A representative of Physicians for Human Rights - Israel told Ma’an that milk is less nutritious than other supplements consumed during a hunger strike, which include vitamins, minerals, salts and glucose.
Drinking milk will not reduce the danger to al-Sarsak’s life, PHRI added.

 

FIFA president Sepp Blatter urges Israel to act to save Sarsak


FIFA president Sepp Blatter called on the Israeli Football Association (IFA) to urge the Israeli government to act to save Sarsak, whom Blatter said, “is in a very delicate state due to the fact that he has been undergoing a hunger strike for approximately 90 days in protest of his alleged illegal detention.” Blatter’s official statement added:
FIFA urgently calls on IFA to draw the attention of the Israeli competent authorities to the present matter, with the aim of ensuring the physical integrity of the concerned players as well as their right for due process. The matter came to FIFA’s attention following correspondence with the Palestine Football Association, several international media reports concerning the football player Mahmoud Sarsak and a FIFPro media release.
On Friday, FIFPro, the international association of 50,000 professional football players called on Israel to free Sarsak.

 

Football legend Eric Cantona, other public figures join campaign for Sarsak


Football legend Eric Cantona has co-signed a letter with other international figures including Noam Chomksy, filmmaker Ken Loach, international law expert John Dugard to UK Sports Minister Hugh Robertson, UEFA President Michel Platini and other European government and sporting bodies to protest Israel’s actions and the complicity of international sporting bodies.
The letter, the text of which was provided to The Electronic Intifada by bdsmovement.net in an email release states:
We are all shocked at the racist chanting at football matches in Poland and Ukraine where Euro 2012 is being played. Footballing bodies and politicians have been outspoken in their condemnation. Indeed some government officials are boycotting group stage matches in Ukraine because of perceived human rights abuses in that country.
So why are these same groups silent when Israel is to host the U.E.F.A. Under 21s competition in 2013? Racism, human rights abuses and gross violations of international law are daily occurrences in that country.
Israeli government ministers respond to mob attacks on black refugees by denouncing them as ‘infiltrators’ and calling for them to be imprisoned in military camps.
Israeli jails house around 4,000 Palestinian political prisoners, more than 300 of them “administrative detainees” held without charge or trial. One of these is a footballer from Gaza, Mahmoud Sarsak, aged 25. He has been imprisoned for nearly three years. No charge, no trial. In desperation, he has been on hunger strike for more than 80 days and is now close to death. He, and all victims of abuse by the Israeli state, need our support.
It is time to end Israel’s impunity and to insist on the same standards of equality, justice and respect for international law that we demand of other states.’
FULL LIST OF SIGNATORIES, SIGNING IN PERSONAL CAPACITY:
  • Eric Cantona, actor and former footballer
  • Noam Chomsky, Professor MIT, USA
  • John Dugard, Former Special Rapporteur of UN on Palestine, South Africa
  • Trevor Griffiths, Writer, UK
  • Paul Laverty, Screenwriter, UK
  • Ken Loach, Filmmaker, UK
  • Michael Mansfield, QC, UK
  • Miriam Margolyes OBE, Actor, UK
  • John Pilger, Journalist, author, film maker, Australia
  • Show Racism the Red Card
  • Ahdaf Soueif, Writer, UK
42 Gazan football clubs wrote a letter to UEFA President Michel Platini over a year ago to protest the awarding of the 2013 Under 21 tournament to Israel. They have received no reply.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

World association of professional footballers FIFPro calls on Israel to release Mahmoud Sarsak

June 11, 2012 by Ali Abunimah Electronic Intifada

Update: Sarsak reportedly agrees to take milk while Israel reviews his case

Mahmoud Sarsak, the Palestinian prisoner who has been on hunger strike for more than 80 days, has reportedly agreed to take milk for 72 hours, easing his fast, while Israel reviews his case, Aljazeera reported late on Monday night:
A Palestinian official says a prisoner held by Israel has agreed to ease his hunger strike, and his life is no longer in danger.
Qadoura Fares, who heads a prisoners rights group, said Mahmoud Sarsak, 25, a former player with the Palestinian national football team, agreed to take milk on Monday after a more than 80 days of hunger strike.
Fares said Sarsak agreed to drink milk for the 72 hours it will take for Israel reviews the case.
Information about Sarsak’s condition is difficult to verify as Israel denies access to him by independent doctors and lawyers and does not permit him to contact or receive visits from his family.

World footballers association calls for immediate release of Mahmoud Sarsak

FIFPro, the association representing professional footballers in dozens of countries, called on Israel immediately to release Mahmoud Sarsak, a Palestinian football player who has been on hunger strike since March to protest his detention for three years without charge or trial by Israel.
FIFPro, the voice of all professional footballers in the world, demands that Mahmoud Sarsak be released from prison,” the statement begins.
The statement from FIFPro marks the first high-level attention to Sarsak’s case from professional football. However it is not a moment too soon given his grave health situation.
According to its website:
FIFPro is the worldwide representative organization for all professional players; more than 50,000 footballers in total. FIFPro exists since 1965 and currently has 46 members, 9 candidate members and 9 observers.
Israel is one of FIFPro’s 46 member countries.
The organization also said it is “very concerned about the situation of many other professional footballers in Palestine. Sarsak is not the only player who is suffering from the actions of the Israeli government. There are stories of other players who have been harassed, arrested or even killed.”
Sarsak was detained by Israel as he traveled from his home in Gaza to play in the West Bank. FIFPro notes:
For many players in Palestine, there is no real freedom of movement.
The freedom of movement is a fundamental right of every citizen’, says Philippe Piat, FIFPro’s vice-president and president of FIFPro Division Europe. ‘It is also written down in the FIFA Regulations that players must be allowed to play for the national team of their country.’
But actually for some footballers it is impossible to defend the colours of their country. They cannot cross the border. They cannot visit their family. They are locked up. This is an injustice.’

Israel blocking information about Sarsak’s condition

As the time since Sarsak’s strike exceeds 84 days, Israel has blocked information about his condition.
Yesterday, Sarsak was reportedly moved to a civilian hospital before being sent back to Ramle prison.
Israeli authorities today claimed Sarsak had ended his strike, but those claims were impossible to independently verify. AFP reported:
Israel Prisons Service said on Monday that a Palestinian prisoner who has been on hunger strike for more than 80 days, had ended his protest, but Palestinian sources, including his lawyer, denied the claim.
(Mahmud) Sarsak ended his hunger strike,” IPS spokeswoman Sivan Weizman told AFP, saying he had taken the decision to end his fast after consulting his lawyer and the prison administration. But Sarsak’s family in Gaza, as well as the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club in Ramallah, denied that he had ended his strike.
And his lawyer, Mohammed Jabarin, said he had no comment on the Israeli claim.

Israel denies legal process while attacking victim in media

As international concern has increased, so has high-level propaganda from Israeli government officials. As he has done with other hunger strikers, Israeli spokesman Ofir Gendelman began making lurid charges against Sarsak on Twitter. As many Twitter users pointed out to Gendelman, if there were a shred of evidence, Israel should present evidence and provide an internationally recognized legal process.

FIFPro Statement

FIFPro: release Mahmoud Sarsak from prison
Friday 8 June
FIFPro, the voice of all professional footballers in the world, demands that Mahmoud Sarsak be released from prison. The Palestinian national team player has been imprisoned by the Israeli government for three years without any trial.
On 22 July 2009 Sarsak - who lives in Rafah in the Gaza Strip - was arrested at a checkpoint when he was on his way to the West Bank for a match with his national team. He was interrogated for thirty days and then imprisoned without any trial or a precise legal charge. Family and friends are not allowed to visit him. They do not know why he is being detained for already nearly three years.
According to the Israeli government he is an illegal combatant and therefore they can imprison him indefinitely.
To protest against his condition and lack of civil liberties, Sarsak currently is on a hunger strike. The 25-year old footballer has not eaten for 85 days and has lost approximately thirty kilos in weight. According to human rights organisation Addameer the situation of Mahmoud is critical.
FIFPro is deeply concerned about Sarsak’s health and about his imprisonment and therefore asks for his release from jail.
FIFPro is also very concerned about the situation of many other professional footballers in Palestine. Sarsak is not the only player who is suffering from the actions of the Israeli government. There are stories of other players who have been harassed, arrested or even killed.
For many players in Palestine, there is no real freedom of movement.
The freedom of movement is a fundamental right of every citizen’, says Philippe Piat, FIFPro’s vice-president and president of FIFPro Division Europe. ‘It is also written down in the FIFA Regulations that players must be allowed to play for the national team of their country.’
But actually for some footballers it is impossible to defend the colours of their country. They cannot cross the border. They cannot visit their family. They are locked up. This is an injustice.’
Last year FIFPro paid two visits to Palestine to visit the footballers, to talk about their problems and to talk about the establishment of a professional footballers’ association in Palestine.

Hunger striker Sarsak dying in Israeli hospital

June 11, 2012 Palestinian information Center 

RAMALLAH, (PIC)-- The administration of Assaf Harofeh hospital told the Israeli prison authority that prisoner Mahmoud Sarsak, a Palestinian soccer player on hunger strike for 88 days, is dying and that it cannot be responsible for his death in the coming hours.
Human rights lawyers visited Sarsak on Monday in hospital and affirmed that his health status is more serious than some people think and has become hopeless.
Prisoner Sarsak was transferred on Sunday evening to Assaf Harofeh hospital after a serious decline in his health condition and last Thursday, he was transferred from the hospital of Ramla jail to Meir hospital.
Mahmoud Sarsak was born on January 20, 1987 in Rafah city south of Gaza and is still unmarried. He is a professional national soccer player and a university student majoring in computer programming at the third level.

Time running out for hunger striking footballer as rights groups demand urgent pressure on Israel

June 6, 2012 by Ali Abunimah Electronic Intifada

For the first time since their hunger strikes began, an independent doctor has been allowed to visit Mahmoud Sarsak and Akram Rikhawi in the Israeli jail where they are held, confirming the imminent danger to their lives.
After 80 and 56 days of hunger strike respectively, the critical situation prompted 12 human rights groups making up the Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organisations, and Physicians for Human Rights - Israel (PHR - Israel) to issue an urgent appeal today for international intervention to save the men.
Sarsak, once a star athlete now weighs a little over 100 pounds (51kg) and is close to death.
The groups emphasized the urgent need for both men to be transferred to civilian hospitals, something Israel has refused to do.

Sarsak has lost one third of his body weight

According to the statement:
the PHR-Israel doctor reported that Mahmoud [Sarsak] has experienced extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. He has lost 33 percent of his body weight, from an original weight of 76 kilos down to his present weight of 51 kilos. He also suffers from frequent incidents of fainting and loss of consciousness, in addition to lapses in memory. The doctor further reported that Mahmoud is in danger of pulse disruptions (arrhythmias) that are endangering his life.
As for Rikhawi,
the PHR-Israel doctor reported that Akram also already suffers from extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. His weight has decreased from 68 kilos to 50 kilos, which is a total loss of 26.5 percent. The PHR-Israel doctor determined that a combination of inflammation of prior chronic illnesses and the complications of hunger strike render hospitalization immediately necessary.
Mahmoud Sarsak, 25, is a member of the Palestinian national football team who was detained by Israeli forces nearly three years ago and held without charge, trial or judicial process. Rikhawi has been held in the Ramleh prison medical center since his arrest in 2004.

Urgent distress call

Days ago, Sarsak and Rikhawi issued an urgent plea from prison, that the local and international neglect of their struggle end.
There is still enough time and the support that comes late is better than that which does not come at all. It is better that you receive us alive and victorious rather than as lifeless bodies in black bags,” the men said in a poignant appeal to people around the world to take action on their behalf.
And, Sarsak’s mother echoed her son’s appeal in video statement along with other members of his family.

World must act say groups

The groups signing today’s statement:
  • demand that all hunger strikers in advanced stages are moved immediately to civilian hospitals where they can receive the standard of care necessary;
  • call for immediate intervention for the IPS [Israel Prison Service] to provide all hunger strikers with unrestricted access to independent doctors;
  • demand that all hunger strikers are allowed family visits;
  • urge the Member States of the United Nations to urgently put pressure on Israel to end its policy of arbitrary detention and to abide by the standard rules for the treatment of prisoners adopted in 1955, which set out what is generally accepted as being decent principle and practice in the treatment of prisoners;
  • call on the European Parliament to activate the parliamentary fact-finding mission that includes members of its Subcommittee on Human Rights to investigate the conditions of detention of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons;
  • emphasise that the parliamentary fact-finding mission must include an investigation into Israel’s illegal practice of administrative detention and the use of the “Unlawful Combatant Law”;
  • urge Members of the European Parliament to bring the case of all three hunger strikers to the attention of relevant Israeli authorities without delay.

Media begin to notice

Finally, in recent days, the international media silence surrounding the ongoing hunger strikes has started to break. In recent days, social media users, especially on Twitter, have attempted to draw the attention of journalists and media to the hunger strikers’ cases.
On 5 June, Reuters published a report on Sarsak titled “Israel detention ends Gaza footballer’s dream” which focused on the young footballer’s family and football prowess:
The entire family and friends are afraid for Mahmoud’s life and the worry is killing us,” said Sarsak’s older brother, Emad.
The 25-year-old is in an Israeli jail on secret charges that he is an “unlawful combatant” linked to the militant group Islamic Jihad, an allegation he denies.
Sarsak had joined the local football team in his Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip at 14, becoming the youngest footballer to play in the Palestine Liga A at the time. The midfielder attracted the attention of a German coach while playing for the Palestine national team in Norway.
He always dreamed of playing outside the country, to represent Palestine through playing for an Arab or an international team, and he was talented enough,” Emad said.
The Guardian also carried a report about Sarsak: “Palestinian footballer’s hunger strike sparks fears for his life” and did CNN.
There has been virtually no international media reporting on Akram Rikhawi.

Solidarity

In the latest instances of international solidarity, the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) plans to hold a vigil in Dublin on Thursday, 7 July in solidarity with Sarsak, Rikhawi and Samer Baraq, a third prisoner who restarted his hunger strike two weeks ago after Israel reneged on an agreement to release him from administrative detention.
IPSC also issued a statement calling on
the Irish Government to intervene to save the lives of two Palestinian political prisoners, Mahmoud Sarsak and Akram Rikhawi who have been on hunger strike for 80 days and 55 days respectively. The IPSC also called on the Football Association of Ireland (FAI), the Irish Football Association (IFA), UEFA and FIFA to publicly raise the issue of Mr. Sarsak who is a member of the Palestinian national soccer team.
Supporters also held protests in London, and in Paris.

Full statement

Immediate action needed: independent doctor confirms current hunger strikers face imminent threats to their lives
6 June 2012
Joint Urgent Appeal
As organisations dedicated to the promotion and protection of human rights, the Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organizations (PCHRO) and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) are gravely concerned for the lives of three Palestinian prisoners that remain on hunger strike in Israeli prison. Today, Mahmoud Sarsak and Akram Rikhawi were visited by PHR-Israel’s independent doctor for the first time since they launched their hunger strikes.
Mahmoud Sarsak is currently on his 80th day of hunger strike, resulting in an imminent threat to his life. Despite the urgency of his condition, the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) has denied Mahmoud access to independent doctors from PHR-Israel until today. The IPS also refuses to transfer him to a civilian hospital for proper treatment. Following today’s visit, the PHR-Israel doctor reported that Mahmoud has experienced extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. He has lost 33 percent of his body weight, from an original weight of 76 kilos down to his present weight of 51 kilos. He also suffers from frequent incidents of fainting and loss of consciousness, in addition to lapses in memory. The doctor further reported that Mahmoud is in danger of pulse disruptions (arrhythmias) that are endangering his life.
Mahmoud, 25 years old and a member of the Palestinian national football team, has been detained for nearly three years under Israel’s “Unlawful Combatants Law,” which allows for Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to be detained for an unlimited amount of time without charge or trial. Those detained under the Statute have little or no legal protections, even less than those detained under administrative detention orders in the West Bank.
Also of utmost concern is the condition of Akram Rikhawi, currently on his 56th day of hunger strike. PHR-Israel has made numerous requests to gain access to Akram but all have been denied until today. Following today’s visit, the PHR-Israel doctor reported that Akram also already suffers from extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. His weight has decreased from 68 kilos to 50 kilos, which is a total loss of 26.5 percent. The PHR-Israel doctor determined that a combination of inflammation of prior chronic illnesses and the complications of hunger strike render hospitalization immediately necessary.
Akram has been held in the Ramleh prison medical center since his arrest in 2004, as he suffers from many different chronic conditions, including diabetes and asthma. Akram began his hunger strike on 12 April in protest against his request for early release not being granted despite his medical condition. Yesterday, 5 June, his appeal for an early release on medical grounds was rejected. The IPS doctors’ threats to force-feed and force-treat him, in addition to their determination not to recommend his medicalcondition as worthy of earlier release from prison, has led Akram to regard them with deep distrust. Thus, he often refuses to receive treatmentfor his chronic illnesses, or the complications they generate.
PHR-Israel’s independent doctor strongly recommended that both Mahmoud and Akram be immediately transferred to a hospital, as they are at immediate risk of death. These recommendations were given directly to the IPS doctor present with him during the visit. It should be emphasized that contrary to medical ethic and professional standards, the IPS refused the request of the independent doctor to go over the full medical files of both Mahmoud and Akram. He stated that according to the limited information accessible to him, the medical follow-up they have been receiving is insufficient both in frequency and scope.
A third Palestinian prisoner also remains on hunger strike. Samer Al-Barq, 38 years old, has been held in administrative detention, without charge or trial, since 11 July 2010. Samer is currently held in Ramleh prison medical center. Samer participated in the Palestinian prisoners’ mass hunger strike from 17 April until 14 May. He re-launched his hunger strike on 21 May in protest against the renewal of his administrative detention order in spite of an understanding in the agreement that ended the mass hunger strike, which implied that current administrative detainees would not have their orders renewed.
While administrative detention is allowed under international humanitarian law, it must be used only under exceptional circumstances as it infringes upon basic human rights, including the right to a fair trial. Indeed, the denial of a fair trial constitutes a ‘grave breach’ of the Fourth Geneva Convention, one of the most serious forms of war crimes. This form of arbitrary arrest also contravenes Articles 9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Furthermore, the European Parliament called on Israel in a September 2008 resolution to “guarantee that minimum standards on detention be respected, to bring to trial all detainees, [and] to put an end to the use of ‘administrative detention orders’.” The United Nations Human Rights Committee has stated several times that prolonged administrative detention is likely to result in the exposure of detainees to “torture, ill-treatment and other violations of human rights.”
Given the critical health condition of the hunger strikers and the fact that Mahmoud Sarsak and Akram Rikhawi face imminent death, the PCHRO and PHR-Israel:
  • demand that all hunger strikers in advanced stages are moved immediately to civilian hospitals where they can receive the standard of care necessary;
  • call for immediate intervention for the IPS to provide all hunger strikers with unrestricted access to independent doctors;
  • demand that all hunger strikers are allowed family visits;
  • urge the Member States of the United Nations to urgently put pressure on Israel to end its policy of arbitrary detention and to abide by the standard rules for the treatment of prisoners adopted in 1955, which set out what is generally accepted as being decent principle and practice in the treatment of prisoners;
  • call on the European Parliament to activate the parliamentary fact-finding mission that includes members of its Subcommittee on Human Rights to investigate the conditions of detention of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons;
  • emphasise that the parliamentary fact-finding mission must include an investigation into Israel’s illegal practice of administrative detention and the use of the “Unlawful Combatant Law”;
  • urge Members of the European Parliament to bring the case of all three hunger strikers to the attention of relevant Israeli authorities without delay. The Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organisations and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel:
Addameer Prisoners’ Support and Human Rights Association
Sahar Francis, General Director
Aldameer Association for Human Rights
Khalil Abu Shammala, General Director
Al-Haq
Shawan Jabarin, General Director
Al Mezan Center for Human Rights
Issam Younis, General Director
Badil Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights
Najwa Darwish, General Director
Defence for Children International - Palestine Section
Rifat Kassis, General Director
Ensan Center for Human Rights and Democracy
Shawqi Issa, General Director
Hurryyat - Centre for Defense of Liberties and Civil Rights
Helmi Al-araj, General Director
Jerusalem Center for Legal Aid and Human Rights
Issam Aruri, General Director
Ramallah Center for Human Rights Studies
Iyad Barghouti, General Director
Women’s Centre for Legal Aid and Counselling Maha Abu Dayyeh, General Director
Physicians for Human Rights - Israel Ran Cohen, Executive Director

Sunday, June 10, 2012

War rages on Palestinian soccer

June 6, 2012 Asia Times
By Ramzy Baroud

On June 4, Palestinian national soccer team member Mahmoud Sarsak
completed 81 days of a grueling hunger strike. He had sustained the
strike despite the fact that nearly 2,000 Palestinian inmates had
called off their own 28-day hunger strike weeks ago.

Although the story of Palestinian prisoners in Israel speaks to a
common reality of unlawful detentions and widespread mistreatment,
Sarsak's fate can also be viewed within its own unique context. The
soccer player, who once sought to take the name and flag of his
nation to international arenas, was arrested by Israeli soldiers in
July 2009 while en route to join the national team in the West Bank.

Sarsak was branded an "illegal combatant" by Israel's military
judicial system, and has since been imprisoned without any charges or trial.

Sarsak is not alone in the continued hunger strike. Akram al-Rekhawi,
a diabetic prisoner demanding proper medical care, has refused food
for over 50 days.

At the time of writing of this article, both men were reportedly in
dire medical condition. Sarsak, once of unmatched athletic build, is
now gaunt beyond recognition. The already ill al-Rekhawi is dying.

According to rights groups, an Israeli court on May 30 granted prison
doctors 12 more days before allowing independent doctors to visit the
prisoners, further prolonging their suffering and isolation.
Physicians for Human Rights - Israel (PHRI), which has done a
remarkable job battling the draconian rules of Israeli military
courts, continues to petition the court to meet with both Sarsak and
al-Rekhawi, according to Ma'an news agency.

Sadly, the story here becomes typical. PHRI, along with other
prisoners' rights groups, are doing all that civil society
organizations can do within such an oppressive legal and political
situation. Families are praying. Social media activists are sending
constant updates and declaring solidarity. Meanwhile, the rest of the
world is merely looking on - not due to any lack of concern for human
rights, but due to the selective sympathy of Western governments and media.

Think of the uproar made by US media over the fate of blind Chinese
political activist Chen Guangcheng. When he took shelter in the US
embassy in Beijing, a near-diplomatic crisis ensued. Guangcheng was
finally flown to the US on May 19, and he recently delivered a talk
in New York before an astounded audience.

"The 40-year-old, blind activist said that his lengthy detention [of
seven years] demonstrates that lawlessness is still the norm in
China," reported the New York Post on May 31. "Is there any justice?
Is there any rationale in any of this?" Chen asked. Few in the US
media would contend with the statement. But somehow the logic becomes
entirely irrelevant when the perpetrator of injustice is Israel, and
the victim is a Palestinian. Al-Rekhawi is not blind, but he has many
medical ailments. He has been in Ramle prison clinic since his
detention in 2004, receiving severely inadequate medical care.

Sarsak, who has been a witness to many tragedies, is now becoming
one. The 25-year old had once hoped to push the ranking of his
national team back to a reasonable standing. If Palestinians ever
deserve to be called "fanatics", it would be in reference to soccer.
As a child growing up in Gaza, I remember playing soccer in
increments of a few minutes, braving Israeli military curfews,
risking arrest, injury and even death. Somehow, in a very crowded
refugee camp, soccer becomes tantamount to freedom.

Palestine's ranking at 164th in the world is testament not to any
lack of passion for the game, but to the constant Israeli attempts at
destroying even that national aspiration.

The examples of Israeli war on Palestinian soccer are too many to
count, although most of them receive little or no media coverage
whatsoever. In 2004, Israel blocked several essential players from
accompanying the national team out of Gaza for a second match against
Chinese Taipei. (Palestine had won the first match 8-0.) The
obstacles culminated in the March 2006 bombing of the Palestinian
Football Stadium in Gaza, which reduced the grass field to a massive
crater. Then, in the war on Gaza (Operation Cast Lead 2008-09),
things turned bloody as Israel killed three national soccer players:
Ayman Alkurd, Shadi Sbakhe and Wajeh Moshtahe. It also bombed their
stadium again.

Sarsak was a promising new face of Palestinian soccer. In times of
Palestinian disunity and factionalism, it was the national team that
kept a symbolic unity between Gaza and the West Bank - and indeed
Palestinians everywhere. These young men exemplify hope that better
times are ahead. But Sarsak's star is now fading, as is his life. His
mother, who hasn't seen him since his arrests, told Ma'an that she
thinks of him every minute of each day. "Why is there no one moving
to save his life?" she asked.

Writing in the Nation on May 10, Dave Zirin wrote:
Imagine if a member of Team USA Basketball - let's say Kobe Bryant -
had been traveling to an international tournament only to be seized
by a foreign government and held in prison for three years without
trial or even hearing the charges for which he was imprisoned ...
Chances are all the powerful international sports organizations - the
IOC [International Olympic Committee], [global football's organizing
body] FIFA - would treat the jailing nation as a pariah until Kobe
was free. And chances are that even Laker-haters would wear buttons
that read, "Free Kobe".

Sarsak is the Bryant of his people. But ask any political commentator
and he will tell you why Mohmoud Sarsak is not Kobe Bryant, and why
al-Rekhawi is not Chen. It is the same prevalent logic of a powerful
Washington-based pro-Israel lobby and all the rest.

Even if the logic was founded, why are international sports
institutions not standing in complete solidarity with the dying
Sarsak? Why don't soccer matches include a moment of solidarity with
killed Palestinian players, and the dying young man aching to join
his teammates on the field once more? Why is Israel not fully and
comprehensively boycotted by every international sports organization?

"As long as Sarsak remains indefinitely detained and as long as
Israel targets sport and athletes as legitimate targets of war, they
have no business being rewarded by FIFA or the UEFA, let alone even
being a part of the community of international sports," wrote Zirin
(the second being the European footballing organization).

That would be a belated step, but an unequivocally urgent one, for
Palestinian sportsmen are literally dying.

Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally syndicated
columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book
is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).

Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strikes continue as Israel violates agreements

June 5, 2012 by Linah Alsaafin The Electronic Intifada

Hours before the 64th anniversary of the Nakba, commemorating the ethnic cleansing of more than half of the Palestinian population in the 1940s by Zionist militias, an historic agreement ending a 28-day mass hunger strike was signed by the Israeli Prison Service and the Higher Committee for Prisoners, in the presence of the Egyptian mediator.

The Palestinian prisoners’ mass hunger strike, which began on 17 April (a day that Palestinians commemorate as Prisoners’ Day), was a heartfelt outcry against the arbitrary punishments and gross human rights abuses that the Israeli Prison Service routinely carries out against the prisoners.
The agreement on paper appeared to acquiesce to the three main demands of the prisoners: an end to administrative detention (where a person is detained without any charges brought against him or her, with detention subject to indefinite renewal), the release of 19 prisoners from solitary confinement, and respecting the internationally-recognized right to family visits for the prisoners from Gaza, who haven’t seen their families since 2007 — a form of collective punishment imposed after the capture of an Israeli soldier.

However, once again the realization of the agreement was left for Israel to decide — and since the end of the mass hunger strike in the early hours of 15 May, rumors of Israel reneging on its promises have solidified into facts.

Detentions renewed

The solo hunger strikes of Khader Adnan, Hana al-Shalabi, and five other prisoners who had passed 70 days without food, were in protest of capricious imprisonment — which forced world attention being on to Israel’s indiscriminate use of administrative detention. More than three hundred Palestinian prisoners are administrative detainees, including children and 24 members of the Palestinian Legislative Council.

The signed agreement led many to believe that Israel would curtail its use of administrative detention, especially after it announced that all administrative detainees would be released at the end of their current detention periods unless substantial evidence was provided against them. However, two weeks after the agreement, more than 25 prisoners have had their detentions renewed without such significant evidence presented.

Among these prisoners is Hussein Abu Kweik, who spent a total of 12 years in prison and survived an assassination attempt that killed his wife and three of his sons in 2002. Abu Kweik’s latest arrest was on 31 May 2011, and his detention has been renewed for another six months.

Husam Khader, a former Fatah member of parliament, was arrested on 2 June 2011, and has also had his detention recently renewed. Mohammad Natshe, a Hamas MP, was given a renewal of four months after a year of administrative detention, Agence France Press reported (“Israel extends prisoners’ administrative detention,” Ahram Online, 27 May 2012).

Samer Barq, who also has Jordanian citizenship, was recently transferred to Ramle prison clinic after restarting his hunger strike on 22 May. He was supposed to be released eight days after the signing of the agreement, but was handed another three months of detention instead, according to the Prisoner’s Club (“Transfer of the hunger-striking prisoner Samer Barq to Ramle prison hospital,” PNN, 28 May 2012 [Arabic]).

Other violations are taking place

Spokesperson Amjad Najjar from the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club asserted that other violations against the prisoners have been taking place, away from the media’s eyes.

Prisoners have been subjected to humiliating strip searches in the Nafha, Rimon and Naqab prisons,” he said. The agreement was supposed to improve living conditions for the prisoners and end the punitive measures that the Israeli Prison Service carries out against them. “There are a number of prisoners who have been taken into solitary confinement, but we are not sure of their names or numbers at the moment,” Najjar added.

Despite expectations, solitary confinement is still in use too. Dirar Abu Sisi, who was captured in Ukraine while visiting his brother on 19 February 2011, began refusing one meal a day after he was placed in solitary confinement a week after the agreement was signed. Abu Sisi told a lawyer from the Prisoners Club that he would begin refusing two meals a day if he did not get transferred back to the cell division by 31 May. He has stopped taking medication for asthma, blood pressure and a heart condition since 29 May (“The solitarily confined prisoner Dirar Abu Sisi begins gradual hunger strike and stops taking medicine in order to get out of solitary confinement,” PNN, 29 May 2012 [Arabic])

Ma’an News Agency reported on Monday that prisoner Kifah Khatib has been hunger striking for more than 40 days and is in solitary confinement in Shatta prison. The prison spokesperson Sivan Wiezman however denied that there were any hunger strikers in Shatta (“Hunger-striking prisoner ‘collapses in court’”).

Meanwhile, the logistical arrangements for family visits for the prisoners from Gaza, to be resumed again in June after six years, is yet to be decided upon. Israel offered the prisoners from Gaza the chance to see their families for half an hour every two months, which the prisoners unequivocally rejected. Prisoners from the West Bank receive family visits every two weeks for a period of 45 minutes.

All Israeli policies against Palestinians are entrenched in the spirit of revenge,” said Amaney Dayif, head of the department of prisoners for Physicians for Human Rights-Israel. “Collective punishment is the norm, and naturally with the escalation of Israeli harsh measures comes the escalation of the prisoners’ means of protests.”

Sahar Francis, director of prisoner rights group Addameer, concurred.

Unfortunately the IPS’ [Israeli Prison Service’s] policies is not to respect the basic human rights of Palestinian prisoners, and tries to take away the prisoner’s dignity after incarceration,” she said. “The IPS’ approach is to treat the Palestinian prisoners as if they are criminals and terrorists, with the suppression and violations against the prisoners being an extension of the process against Palestinian people in general.”

Another mass hunger strike on the horizon?

Will Israel’s contravention of the agreement spark the fires for another mass hunger strike, given the intricate and complicated process that comes with coordinating such a huge ordeal?

The prisoners have threatened to go back on hunger strike,” Najjar said. “They’ve already informed their lawyers and the IPS … the Egyptian mediator is too busy with the Egyptian elections to take an important role in this.”

Francis drew attention to how a hunger strike is the last weapon in the prisoners’ arsenal.
There is always dialogue between the prisoners and the IPS regarding the demands of their prisoners, employing legal proceedings,” Francis said. “After dialogue has been exhausted, then a hunger strike is initiated as a last resort. Prisoners coordinate with each other as based on their transfer from one prison to another, from meeting in court rooms or prison hospitals, and through family visits who take the responsibility of disseminating information through newspapers.”

Throughout Israel’s occupation of Palestine, there have been dozens of prisoners’ hunger strikes set to reclaim their basic rights and dignity. Some have failed, whereas others were considered successful. Yet planning for a third mass hunger strike in less than a year’s time is unprecedented.
Many are keen on viewing the agreement between the Israeli Prison Service and the Palestinian prisoners as a victory, overlooking Israel’s infringements in favor for the more general achievement. This may explain why the solo strikes of football player Mahmoud Sarsak (who at the time of publication is on his 80th day of hunger strike) and Akram Rikhawi have gone unnoticed in the media and with little protest in the street.

In a lecture given at the Friends Meetinghouse chapel in Ramallah on 30 May, the high-profile lawyer Jawad Boulos, who is credited with managing the hunger strike deals of Khader Adnan and Hana al-Shalabi, considered that transferring the 19 prisoners from solitary confinement back to the cell divisions was the main success in the agreement.

Close your eyes for five minutes and imagine spending years not speaking to anyone, not seeing anyone, not having any human interaction, all in a 2 meters by 3 meters cell,” he said. “When you remember prisoners such as Hasan Salameh who has spent 13 years in isolation and have described being back in the company of others as a rebirth, then this agreement is definitely a victorious one.”
Linah Alsaafin is a recent graduate of Birzeit University in the West Bank. She was born in Cardiff, Wales and was raised in England, the United States and Palestine. Her website is http://lifeonbirzeitcampus.blogspot.com/.

Demo in Solidarity with Palestinian hunger strikers, Wednesday 30/5/12 at 20:00 in Haifa

May 29, 2012

English follow Arabic

لاسير محمود سرسك يدخل يومه ال 76 للاضراب عن الطعام وتدهور شديد في حالته
الصحيه .
 معركة اسرانا البواسل في سجون الاحتلال ما زالت مستمره .

ندعوكم غداً الاربعاء لمظاهره في حيفا دعما لاسرانا الابطال
في تمام الساعه الثامنه على مفرق الكرمه-شارع الجبل، قبالة "بيت الكرمة" - حيفا
الاضراب مستمر ,نعم للجوع والف لا للركوع
***************

Mahmoud Sarsak - Football player, is held without charge and without trial
since he was arrested while trying to leave Gaza in 2009 (to go to play in
Balata). Now he is on the 76th day of his hunger strike, demanding to be
released, and there is immediate danger to his life. Join us tomorrow,
Wednesday 30/5, at 20:00, in Jabal street, Karma junction, (near Beit
Al-Karma - Beit Ha-Gefen)
for an emergency protest vigil.**************