Joint Press Release, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, Al-Haq and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel
Ramallah, 16 August 2012 – Palestinian hunger strikers Hassan Safadi and Samer Al-Barq continue to be
severely mistreated
by the Israeli Prison Service (IPS), in the forms of physical brutality
and psychological torture. Addameer, Al-Haq and Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel (PHR-I) express their utmost outrage at recent violent
incidents that have left these already-weakened detainees on protracted
hunger strikes with trauma and injury. Mr. Al-Barq is today on his
87th day of hunger strike, which he began only one week after his previous 30-day hunger strike ended; Mr. Safadi is today on his
57th day of hunger strike, which he also began shortly after the end of his previous 71-day hunger strike.
In a visit with Addameer
lawyer Fares Ziad on 14 August, Mr. Safadi recounted the most recent
violent incident, which had occurred the previous day. At approximately
9:00 am on 13 August, IPS guards entered the isolation room that Mr.
Safadi shares with fellow administrative detainee Mr. Al-Barq in Ramleh
prison medical clinic and announced their intentions to move the two
hunger strikers to a room with other prisoners in the medical clinic who
are not on hunger strike. Mr. Safadi and Mr. Al-Barq refused the
transfer, as they considered it an attempt to further pressure them to
break their hunger strikes by surrounding them with individuals who
would be regularly eating in front of them.
After refusing to be moved, the Israeli prison guards attacked both Mr. Safadi and Mr. Al-Barq.
During the attack, Mr. Safadi’s head was slammed against the iron door
of the cell two times, causing him to fall to the ground, unconscious.
Prison guards then dragged him through the hall to be seen by all the
other prisoners. Later that night, at around 10:00 pm, Mr. Safadi and
Mr. Al-Barq were taken to a new isolation room with no mattresses.
As a result of this
cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, Mr. Safadi subsequently
announced that he would no longer be drinking water, which had so
far been his only sustenance throughout his hunger strike. To protest
the IPS’s brutality, the other prisoners in Ramleh also began to return
their meals.
Mr. Safadi and Mr. Al-Barq
both remain on hunger strike in protest against their administrative
detention orders being renewed following the conclusion of Palestinian
prisoners’ mass hunger strike in May. Mr. Safadi had been explicitly
included in the agreement ending the hunger strike and had been
guaranteed his release following the expiration of his order at the time
- a promise that was not kept. A final decision regarding Mr. Safadi’s
extension has been consistently postponed by an Israeli military judge
and has not been reached to date.
Two other Palestinian
detainees in Israeli prison are also currently on hunger strike: Ayman
Sharawna and Samer Al-Issawi, on days 47 and 16, respectively. Both
detainees were former prisoners who were released in last October’s
prisoner exchange deal and subsequently re-arrested. They are being held
based on secret information and view their hunger strikes as their only
tool to protest against their re-arrest.
Addameer, Al-Haq and PHR-I
insist that the international community intervene with the relevant
Israeli authorities and demand an immediate investigation into these and
other condemnable acts taken against prisoners on hunger strike in
attempts to break them.
Addameer, Al-Haq and PHR-I specifically call on:
- the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the European Union to take action in the strongest manner possible to save the lives of the hunger strikers and prevent any future mistreatment;
- European Parliament members
to bring these cases to the attention of relevant Israeli authorities
without delay and to send a fact-finding mission to examine the
conditions of detention of Palestinians arbitrarily held in Israeli
prisons;
- High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention and all UN Member States
to put immediate pressure on Israel to abide by international
humanitarian and human rights law and 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.
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