Thursday, May 30, 2019

PALESTINIAN FORMER MK BASEL GHATTAS RELEASED FROM ISRAELI PRISON


Palestinian former MK Basel Ghattas, convicted two years ago of smuggling mobile phones to Palestinian political prisoners, was on Monday released from prison, local media reported.

Ghattas, a Palestinian citizen of Israel from the northern town of Rameh, served as a member of the Israeli parliament (Knesset) for Palestinian-majority party Balad until 2017, when he was imprisoned over the smuggling scandal.

The former politician was sentenced to two years in prison including time served, as well as a further 18 month suspended sentence and a 120,000 shekels ($32,890) fine, on charges of fraud, breach of trust, and providing "material support for the perpetuation of an act of terror" after smuggling a letter and cellphones to Palestinian prisoner.

He was also found guilty of "moral turpitude", a charge that in Israel carries economic sanctions, including the cancellation of state benefits to which former MKs are entitled, and a ban from public office for seven years.

That sentence came as part of a plea bargain in which Ghattas admitted to handing over phones and SIM cards to inmates, actions which he said were motivated by "humanitarian and moral positions towards prisoners".

He had initially denied the charges, describing his arrest as political persecution.

Shortly before entering prison, the former MK said: "I enter prison with my head held high and I will continue my battle for prisoners' rights."

Ghattas had requested an early release but was denied referral to a prisoner rehabilitation programme after Israel’s prison service accused him of being a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), which Israel considers a terrorist organisation.

The former MK denies being a PFLP member.

Ghattas admitted two years ago to smuggling phones, SIM cards, chargers and a pair of headphones into a high security prison on the request of Walid Daka, a PFLP member who participated in the abduction and killing of IDF soldier Moshe Tamam more than three decades ago.

While Ghattas admitted to the charges, Palestinians say numerous other cases of fraud, money laundering and material support for terrorist organisations filed against Balad Party representatives are symptomatic of anti-Palestinian incitement and an ongoing campaign against the movement.

According to Israeli NGO B'tselem, there are currently 5,132 Palestinian "security" prisoners and detainees in Israeli prisons, around a third of whom are held in administrative detention.

Monday, December 24, 2018

PFLP: WE WILL NOT STAND IDLY TOWARD ISRAELI CRIMES


The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) said in a statement issued Saturday that Palestinian resistance factions cannot stand idly by while Israel continues its crimes against the Palestinian people.

The statement came following Israel’s killing of four Palestinian youths during Friday protests along Gaza borders.

Israeli carried out a new crime by killing four Palestinians in cold blood during their participation in the 39th week of Gaza March of Return, the statement reads. 

The PFLP called for adopting a new strategy to put an end to Israeli continued escalation. 

"Such crimes will never succeed to break our people’s strong will and steadfastness," according to the statement. 

Four Palestinians, including two children, were killed and dozens others injured on Friday when the Israeli soldiers fired at participants in the Great March of Return.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

'Revolutionary Salute': Palestinian Prisoners of PFLP Express Solidarity With US Prison Strike



'Revolutionary Salute': Palestinian Prisoners of PFLP Express Solidarity With US Prison Strike

“We extend a special revolutionary salute to the imprisoned strugglers of the Black Liberation Movement," the statement read.Several Members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, all of whom have been jailed by Israel for their participation in the struggle for national independence, have released a statement in solidarity with the national U.S. prisoners strike, which began on Tuesday.“We write today as imprisoned Palestinians of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, held in Israeli jails for our participation in struggle for the liberation of our land and people from colonialism and occupation,” the letter opened.

“Today, we extend our solidarity to the prisoners in the jails of the United States participating in the national prison strike beginning on August 21, fighting exploitation, racism and capitalism from within the heart of imperialist prisons...Black communities, Latino communities, Arab communities are under attack, facing mass incarceration and a system that seeks to imprison and exploit rather than support and nurture youth and elders.”

The statement expressed the group's “mourning for George Jackson, the imprisoned revolutionary and martyr of the Black Liberation struggle. The strike is beginning on the 47th anniversary of his martyrdom, an event that was recognized in Palestine and around the world at the time as an assassination of a true voice of struggle by the U.S. ruling class.”

It also noted that Jackson was an “internationalist and that the works of Palestinian poet Samih al-Qasem – addressing imprisonment and resistance – were found in his cell after his assassination. Today, we write to you to once again forge that connection of struggle, despite our different circumstances.”

“We extend a special revolutionary salute to the imprisoned strugglers of the Black Liberation Movement and other liberation movements, including Mumia Abu-Jamal, whose consistent internationalism and principled struggle is known and resonates around the world. We demand the freedom of these freedom fighters in U.S. jails, from Leonard Peltier to Mutulu Shakur...We know from our experience that it is through struggle and confrontation that true freedom can be realized.”

Prisoners across the United States, home to the world's largest prison population, went on strike in at least 17 states Tuesday. Prisoners are refusing to work, holding sit-ins and going on hunger strike from Aug. 21, the 47th anniversary of the murder of Black Panther member, by correctional officers in San Quentin, until Sept. 9, which marks the 47th anniversary of the Attica prison uprising for humane conditions and fundamental sociopolitical rights.

Led by incarcerated members of the Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, a group of prisoners providing mutual help and legal training to other inmates, the strike aims to bring attention to and an end to “modern slavery” conditions in U.S. prisons.

“Fundamentally, it’s a human rights issue. Prisoners understand they are being treated as animals. Prisons in America are a war zone. Every day prisoners are harmed due to conditions of confinement. For some of us it’s as if we are already dead, so what do we have to lose?” a statement read by the group.

This year's strike was triggered by the April 15 prison riot at the Lee Correctional Institution in South Carolina, which left seven inmates dead, according to The Guardian. The deceased included: Corey Scott; Eddie Casey Gaskins; Raymond Angelo Scott; Damonte Rivera; Michael Milledge; Cornelius McClary; and Joshua Jenkins.

Every day, over 800,000 inmates are forced to work in different industries operating in U.S. prisons. In an industry that rakes in two billion U.S. dollars per year, prisoners in the state of Louisiana, for example, receive just four cents per hour.

A shortlist of companies profiting from prison labor include Microsoft; American Airlines; Starbucks; BP; Victoria Secret; Walmart; and McDonald's.

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Sa’adat slams PLO for planning to convene National Council


Ahmed Sa’adat, secretary-general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), has strongly denounced the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) for intending to convene the National Council, describing such step as an attempt to overstep the national consensus and evade its obligations towards the inter-Palestinian reconciliation.

In an article he wrote recently, Sa’adat said that holding the National Council in its current form would reflect persistence in monopolizing the decision-making process and making decisions away from the national consensus.

He also described such step as “a violation of the PLO’s statute, and its national nature and content,” as well as the national reconciliation agreements, especially the 2005 Cairo accord.

On the 12th anniversary of the attack on Jericho prison: Resistance continues until liberation

On the 12th anniversary of the attack on Jericho prison: Resistance continues until liberation

The following statement was issued by the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat on the infamous anniversary of the assault on Jericho prison: 

March 14, 2018 marks the 12th anniversary of the infamous Zionist attack on the Jericho prison and the kidnapping of Ahmad Sa’adat, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and his comrades Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, Majdi Rimawi, Hamdi Qur’an and Basil al-Asmar, along with Fuad Shoubaki, in a violent attack on the Palestinian Authority prison. The repercussions of this attack are still being felt today, as the kidnapped Palestinian leaders face lengthy sentences inside the prisons of the Zionist colonizer.

The assault on Jericho prison underlined the network of repression and collaboration that had already seen Sa’adat and his comrades imprisoned in a Palestinian Authority jail for over four years before the attack by Israeli occupation forces. Not only was the PA imprisoning Palestinian leaders and strugglers for their role in resistance to Israeli occupation, the prison at Jericho was secured not solely by Palestinian guards but by U.S. and British guards, colonial authorities maintained in place in order to cement their imprisonment. Among the British guards at Jericho prison reportedly were those who had previously served as prison guards against Irish republican prisoners jailed for their struggle against British colonization of Ireland.

Prior to the attack, the U.S. and British guards left their positions in a clear sign of coordination that made clear that their mission to “ensure the security” of the prisoners was always a mere facade; instead, they were present to serve the interests of the occupation, which carried out its assault on Jericho with U.S.-made and U.S.-funded weaponry and armed bulldozers. The imprisonment of Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades is a direct result of the actions of U.S. and British forces alongside that of the Israeli occupation – not to mention the treachery of the Palestinian Authority. 

It was the continued security cooperation of the Palestinian Authority with the Zionist occupation that meant that these Palestinian strugglers and leaders were locked up and held behind bars for over four years in a “Palestinian” prison, even in defiance of the Palestinian Authority’s own laws and courts. They were seized after the armed wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine carried out the assassination of far-right, racist extremist Zionist tourism minister Rehavam Ze’evi in retaliation for the Israeli assassination of PFLP General Secretary Abu Ali Mustafa; like the attack on Jericho, the assassination of Abu Ali Mustafa was conducted by Zionist forces using U.S.-made and -provided helicopter-fired missiles directly into his Ramallah office. 

Palestinian Authority security coordination ensured that Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades were under full view of the occupying forces at all times, where they could be attacked and abducted at the whim of the occupier. Indeed, the pretext used for the assault on Jericho was that recent Palestinian Legislative Council elections had indicated that Palestinians were unwilling to allow their prisons to be used any longer to jail their own leaders and strugglers. However, 12 years later, security coordination continues and Palestinian resisters remain behind bars in PA prisons. The Israeli occupation prisons and PA security services are a “revolving door” for Palestinian strugglers who face repression, surveillance and imprisonment at every turn.

Today, Sa’adat and his comrades are leaders behind bars as their resistance continues at the heart of every mass hunger strike, protest and struggle of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement. Sa’adat was subjected to over three years in solitary confinement until the 2012 mass hunger strike won his return to the general population along with 18 other prominent Palestinian leaders. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison on charges of “incitement” and his leadership role in the PFLP, while Abu Ghoulmeh, Rimawi, Qur’an and al-Asmar are all serving life sentences in Zionist colonial prisons.

In Israeli prisons, they continue to struggle, on the front lines of daily confrontation of the Zionist occupation, from their confrontation of the attacking forces and raids that invade their cells daily to their political struggle for the liberation of Palestine and their people. In messages released from prison, they urge solidarity with all imprisoned strugglers, urge Palestinian unity to confront the occupier and tell their stories of imprisonment, resistance and struggle. They are among the over 6,100 Palestinian political prisoners who daily lead the Palestinian struggle for liberation and inspire the strugglers everywhere around the world who stand with Palestine.

On this notorious anniversary, the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat renews its call and its dedication to intensify and build its efforts to struggle for the liberation of Ahmad Sa’adat, Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, Majdi Rimawi, Hamdi Qur’an, Basil al-Asmar and all of the Palestinian strugglers imprisoned for their commitment to liberation for their people and for the world. Their imprisonment highlights the importance of confronting Zionist colonialism and U.S. and British imperialism and also PA security coordination and collaboration in order to free the Palestinian prisoners and win a free, liberated on the entire land of historic Palestine.

PFLP slams PA for failing to protect Palestinians in West Bank


Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) condemned the abducting of a Palestinian man, Shadi Maali, at the hands of Israeli occupation undercover forces from al-Mahd Street in Central Bethlehem. 

In a statement on Saturday, the PFLP slammed the Palestinian Authority (PA) for their failure to protect Palestinians in the West Bank.

The PFLP Movement called on the PA to bear their responsibilities for confronting Israeli occupation Special Forces.

Earlier at dawn Saturday a group of Israeli masked men, in a Palestinian car, stopped by arrested Maali and transferred him to Barrier 300 north of Bethlehem. Maali is a member of the PFLP and was arrested several times in Israeli jails.

Friday, December 29, 2017

Israel Extends Administrative Detention of MP Jarrar


The Shin Bet, Israel’s internal intelligence agency, on Wednesday extended the administrative detention of Palestinian lawmaker Khaleda Jarrar, with no indictment or trial.

Informed sources said that the administrative detention of MP Jarrar was extended for another six months at the pretext that she poses a threat to Israel’s security.

Jarrar, 54, was kidnapped from her home in Ramallah last July, and she has been in jail administratively since then.

She is one of the prominent officials of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and an outspoken opponent of the Palestinian Authority’s policies and practices.