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16-02-2012, 12:09   #1
KyussBishop
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Palestinian hunger striker - 61 days, detained without charge, near death

This has received little to no attention in most mainstream media (only read about it recently myself), and seems something that should be gathering a lot more attention/significance.

Khader Adnan has been on hunger strike for the last 61 days (apparently the longest hunger strike in Palestinian history), after being arrested without charge, and without a trial by the Israeli Army; he is currently shackled to a bed in an Israeli hospital.

His lawyers have petitioned for his release continuously over this period, but no date has been set for a hearing, despite his condition worsening and him now being near death.
He has appealed to stand trial, but on Monday this appeal was rejected, so it looks very likely that his hunger strike will continue until death.

It's reported that other Palestinian prisoners are starting to refuse food now as well, in solidarity with this.

A full article on this:
Quote:
Palestinian hunger striker Khader Adnan 'near death' in Israeli detention
Medical report warns Israeli court Khader Adnan is in immediate danger after 61 days of protest at his 'administrative detention'

A Palestinian prisoner on his 61st day of hunger strike while shackled to a bed in an Israeli hospital is in immediate danger of death, according to a medical report submitted to the supreme court in an effort to secure his release.

Khader Adnan, 33, a baker from a village near Jenin, is being held without charge by the Israeli authorities under a four-month term of "administrative detention". He began his hunger strike on 18 December, the day after being arrested.

Adnan's lawyers have submitted a petition for his release to Israel's supreme court, but no date has been set for a hearing. The situation was urgent, lawyer Mahmoud Kassandra told the Guardian. "This is the last chance. The medical report says he could die at any minute. We hope this will succeed but I am not optimistic."

Adnan's hunger strike is in protest at his detention without charge or being told of any evidence against him, and over his claims of abuse and degrading treatment during arrest and interrogation. This is his ninth period of detention, according to reports. In the past he has acted as a spokesman for the militant group Islamic Jihad.

He was examined by a doctor from Physicians for Human Rights on Wednesday at the Rebecca Ziv hospital in Safed. Adnan was shackled by both legs and one arm, the doctor reported.

"He has lost 30kg and weighs 60kg. He suffers from stomach aches, vomiting, sometimes with blood, and headaches … His general condition is pale and very weak, his tongue is smooth, he has slight bleeding from the gums, dry skin, loss of hair, and significant muscular atrophy. His pulse is weak, blood pressure 100/75. He is permanently connected to a heart monitor."

Adnan agreed to be treated with an infusion of liquids and salts, with the addition of glucose and vitamins, the doctor reported. "However, he maintains his refusal to end his hunger strike." He was lucid and aware.

He was "in immediate danger of death," the doctor concluded. "An absolute hunger strike in excess of 50 days causes the decomposition of muscles... and the creation of toxins in the body. Death may occur suddenly, due to heart failure or the result of infection following the collapse of the immune system. Bleeding in the digestive tracts and renal or hepatic failure are possible.

"A fast in excess of 70 days does not permit survival. Infusion of liquids, adjustment of salts, and the addition of glucose and vitamin cannot prevent certain death due to such a protracted hunger strike."

Adnan's wife, Randa, his two daughters and his father were permitted to visit him on Wednesday, although his mother, sister and brother were refused.

"Randa told me he was very thin and his health was worsening but his mental health is good," his sister Maali said from the family home in Arrada. "But the whole family is worried, and Randa doesn't know if she will see him again."

Adnan's elder daughter, also called Maali, who is nearly 4, understood her father is very sick and was anxious about giving him a hug, the older Maali said. "She is telling her mother, please stop crying." The younger daugher, Bissan, is 18 months and Randa is six months pregnant with the couple's third child.

Following the visit, Adnan's father addressed a demonstration outside the hospital in solidarity with Adnan, reporting that his son's morale was high. "He does not undertake this hunger strike for its own sake, but he yearns for freedom for his people, for his countrymen, in order to live with heads held up high, without occupation," Jihad Adnan told protesters.

Thousands of Palestinians and other supporters of Adnan have protested in the West Bank and Gaza, and outside Ofer military prison near Jerusalem. There have been clashes with police, who have fired tear gas and rubber bullets.

According to Addameer, a Palestinian prisoners' support group, detainees in other prisons have also begun refusing food.

Many protesters say Adnan has become a symbol of Israel's occupation and its treatment of prisoners. More than 300 Palestinians are held under "administrative detention" orders in Israeli prisons.

The Palestinian Authority has appealed for Adnan's release. Physicians for Human Rights on Thursday urged to Israel's president, Shimon Peres, to intervene in the case because of the prisoner's dire medical condition.

Earlier this week, an Israeli military court rejected an appeal against Adnan's continued detention. The Israeli prison service has said Adnan was being dealt with in accordance to his "definition as a security-administrative prisoner" and with humanitarian sensitivity.

Adnan's hunger strike has attracted a big following on Twitter and Facebook. Many of his supporters complain his case is being ignored by the mainstream media. There has been little coverage in the the Israeli and international press.

Bobby Sands, the Irish republican prisoner who died on hunger strike in a Northern Ireland prison in 1981, lasted 66 days without food. According to the British Medical Association, death generally occurs between 55 and 75 days of a hunger strike.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012...-hunger-strike

Must take an unbelievable amount of discipline/bravery to be able to do something like this, it's a very unpleasant way to go; I think it's disgusting that the Israeli Army has arrested him without even any charge, and is just leaving him to waste away like this (and also, that the Israeli government has not made any efforts to intervene).
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16-02-2012, 12:24   #2
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With any luck his protest will bring the issue to international attention, but I can't see the Israelis feeling any pressure to release him. As far as they're concerned, if he dies than that's a result for them.
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16-02-2012, 12:27   #3
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Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels.
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16-02-2012, 12:27   #4
Conall Cernach
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I only heard about this in the last week or so too. It's a terrible thing to happen but I don't expect the Israeli army will give two f*cks what happens to this man.

As this is After Hours I fully expect a lot of sick posts about how he should be allowed to die etc. to spoil this thread.
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16-02-2012, 12:29   #5
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He should totally be allowed to die.


/Thread spoiled
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16-02-2012, 12:31   #6
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might have been a good idea to start doing this a long time ago instead of blowing up busses and randomly firing missiles into civilian areas
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16-02-2012, 12:32   #7
KyussBishop
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Originally Posted by Conall Cernach View Post
As this is After Hours I fully expect a lot of sick posts about how he should be allowed to die etc. to spoil this thread.
Perhaps; a wider audience though
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16-02-2012, 12:33   #8
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The Israeli's (and tbh the US and many other Western countries), don't particularly care about the lives of Palestinians. They will claim he is a terrorists or come up with some other lie to smear him, and say he deserved to die or some other excuse. He won't be released and he will sadly die, and his name will be probably be smeared with all sorts of lies.
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16-02-2012, 12:36   #9
dlofnep
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Originally Posted by mikemac1 View Post
Very possible he is guilty of something and deserves jail
Who needs a court date when you have already worked out the statistics for the possibilities of his guilt? The only thing he deserves at the moment is a charge and a fair trial.
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16-02-2012, 12:37   #10
wes
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Originally Posted by mikemac1 View Post
Very possible he is guilty of something and deserves jail
Without a court case and verdict who knows
Innocence is presumed generally in civilised countries. So until they can actually find him guilty at a fair trial (which won't happen as Palestinians are unlikely to recieve a fair trial from Israel), he is to be presumed innocent.
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16-02-2012, 12:39   #11
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Yeah this will totally work. I mean, it worked for Bobby Sands and co. Right? RIGHT?
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16-02-2012, 12:42   #12
KyussBishop
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Originally Posted by wes View Post
The Israeli's (and tbh the US and many other Western countries), don't particularly care about the lives of Palestinians. They will claim he is a terrorists or come up with some other lie to smear him, and say he deserved to die or some other excuse. He won't be released and he will sadly die, and his name will be probably be smeared with all sorts of lies.
Indeed; it's a serious shame that this only seems to be gaining meager international attention now, when it's just about over for him.

I think over time, now that more and more people are gathering news disseminated over the internet, it's going to become more and more difficult for the governments/media organizations in Israel/US (and the western world in general) to downplay or ignore these kinds of inhuman actions/events.

I hope that as time goes on, the transformation between current media and the propagation of news on the internet, will turn this on its head eventually, so that stuff like this simply can't be hidden, downplayed or ignored.
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16-02-2012, 12:43   #13
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Originally Posted by mikemac1 View Post
Very possible he is guilty of something and deserves jail
Without a court case and verdict who knows

If the authorities have something then he should be charged and given a court date immediately
They must have very little evidence against him though if they have not charged him with a crime, don't you think? Here the word of a Garda Superintendent is considered good enough evidence to convict someone of membership of the IRA. I'd imagine the Israelis have similar laws that could be used to "legally" put people away if they choose to use them.
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16-02-2012, 12:49   #14
KyussBishop
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Originally Posted by Conall Cernach View Post
They must have very little evidence against him though if they have not charged him with a crime, don't you think? Here the word of a Garda Superintendent is considered good enough evidence to convict someone of membership of the IRA. I'd imagine the Israelis have similar laws that could be used to "legally" put people away if they choose to use them.
Yes, it's notable that they haven't even provided evidence against him, to try and justify his detainment:
Quote:
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement that Israel should "immediately end its unlawful administrative detention" of Khader Adnan and "charge or release him".
...
"Israel should end, today, before it's too late, its almost two-month-long refusal to inform Adnan of any criminal charge or evidence against him," Whitson said.
http://www.aljazeera.com/video/middl...516502377.html
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16-02-2012, 12:56   #15
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Sad thing is - by this stage, the damage is already done. Even if he ended his hunger strike, he'd be dead within a few years from internal organ damage.
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