Palestinian women demonstrating in support of their love ones being held in Israeli prisons. The political prisoners have agreed to end their hunger strike., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Palestinian prisoners agree to end hunger strike
Mon May 14, 2012 6:29PM GMT
presstv.ir
Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails have agreed to end a mass hunger strike after Tel Aviv bowed to their demand for better prison conditions.
The agreement was signed after several hours of negotiations between prison officials and the senior detainees at Ashkelon jail on Monday with the assistance of Egypt.
Under the deal, those prisoners being held under administrative detention would be released at the end of their current period of detention unless fresh evidence emerged against them, a Shin Bet spokeswoman said.
Administrative detention is a controversial practice used by Tel Aviv which allows Israeli authorities to hold people, mostly Palestinians, without charge or trial for up to six months, renewable indefinitely.
Israel has also agreed to return those in solitary confinement to the general population and to permit family visits from both Gaza and the West Bank.
The news of the agreement sparked celebrations in Gaza.
An estimated 1,600 to 2,500 Palestinian prisoners began an open-ended hunger strike on April 17 to protest against Israel’s administrative detention rules, the use of solitary confinement, maltreatment of sick detainees, and difficulty in securing family visits and strip searches that are imposed on visitors.
According to an April 1, 2012 report published by the non-governmental Palestinian prisoner support and human rights association, Addameer, at least 4,610 “political” Palestinian prisoners are held in Israeli jails, 322 of whom are administrative detainees.
Independent sources, however, put the number of Palestinian inmates in Israeli jails at 11,000.
May 14, 2012
Palestinian Prisoners Agree to End Hunger Strike
by VOA News
Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails have agreed to end a weeks-long hunger strike in exchange for promises of better conditions, averting fears of widespread unrest if any of the inmates had died.
Israel Prisons Service spokeswoman Sivan Weizman confirmed late Monday that a deal had been reached. Egypt and Jordan played key roles in mediating between the Israelis and prison leaders representing all Palestinian factions.
The Palestinians won key concessions, including more family visits and limits to a controversial Israeli policy that can imprison people for years without charge.
The agreement also saw roughly 20 prisoners released from solitary confinement back into the general prison population. These include Hamas member Abdullah al-Barghouthi, serving 67 life sentences for helping to plan a series of suicide bombings that killed scores of civilians.
In return, Israel extracted pledges by militant groups "to prevent terror activities," and averted the potentially explosive scenario of prisoners dying in a hunger strike.
Israel's Shin Bet security agency said Monday the prisoners committed themselves to stop helping plan and conduct attacks from inside Israeli jails through networks that enable contact with the outside world. It said renewed violence or resumed prisoner strikes would "annul the Israeli commitment."
Both sides were eager to reach an agreement before Tuesday, when Palestinians have planned mass demonstrations to commemorate a day they call the "nakba," or catastrophe, of Israel's 1948 declaration of independence.
The hunger strike garnered widespread support among Palestinians, with hundreds joining daily marches and sit-in protests.
Outside mediation was necessary because many of the striking prisoners were associated with groups that Israel has no direct contact with, including Hamas, which refuses to recognize Israel, and the even more militant Islamic Jihad.
The mass action was sparked by Khader Adnan, an Islamic Jihad spokesman who fasted for 66 days this year to demand his release from incarceration without charge. He ended his fast after Israeli authorities agreed to release him a few weeks early.
The two longest strikers, Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, have said they would not start eating again until their administrative detentions are lifted. They have survived by occasionally taking infusions of nutrients. Both are Islamic Jihad members.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said last week the death of a hunger striker could be “disastrous,” triggering a backlash that could lead to the collapse of the West Bank's security system.
http://www.voanews.com/content/palestinian_prisoners_agree_to_end_hunger_strike/666450.html
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