OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, April 17 (IslamOnline.net) - The families of Palestinians
held prisoners by Israeli occupation forces marked the Palestinian
Prisoner Day Thursday, April 17, with massive protests in different
Palestinian cities.
"My
son has been deprived of seeing his family and his young daughter
Heba," the mother of prisoner Aymen Aref, 32, told IslamOnline.net.
It
is the same story of some bereaved 8,000 Palestinian mothers, who were
deprived of seeing their sons due the arbitrary measures adopted by the
Israeli occupation authorities.
"We
all feel imprisoned…The Israeli authorities go non-stop in detaining
Palestinian youths," the mother of Nasr Zetawi from Tulkarm said.
Zetawi
is one of four Palestinians from the Islamic resistance movement Hamas
who were sentenced to 20 years in prison for masterminding the martyr
operation in Park Hotel in the Israeli coastal city of Netanya.
Prisoners
On Hunger Strike
Palestinian
prisoners in Israeli jails are continuing their hunger strike for the
third consecutive day, calling for improving the deplorable conditions
inside occupation jails.
The
Palestinian Al-Qanoon (law) non-governmental organization released a
report, a copy of which obtained the London-based Al-Quds Press news
agency, on the appalling conditions suffered by Palestinian prisoners
inside Israeli prisons.
Fahmi
Shukiyrat, a lawyer for the NGO, paid a visit to Al-Ramla prison and met
with four Palestinian prisoners, who told him about their tragedy.
"The
prison officials opened a new cell that can accommodate up to 88
prisoners," they told Shukiyrat.
"Twenty
prisoners were transferred to the new cell raising the number to 128,
some of whom are bedridden due to such unspeakable conditions."
They
said the prisoners also suffer from poor hygienic conditions with the
prison officials denying them access to shaving tools, soaps and
antiseptics under the pretext of a deficit in the prison's budget.
The
NGO urged the "Semitic" countries, signatories of the 1949
Geneva Conventions, to activate such conventions, particularly the
fourth one which obliges the occupying country to detain prisoners of
the occupied one in jails inside the latter.
8,000
Palestinian Prisoners
Chairman
of the Palestinian Prisoner Club, Isa Karak', said in a press release on
Thursday that 8,000 Palestinian prisoners were jailed in Israeli
prisons.
"1400
are administrative prisoners, 700 juveniles, 61 women and 500 are
critically ill and in dire need for intensive care and surgical
operations," Karak' told IslamOnline.net.
He
said the number of detentions have skyrocketed over the past thirty
months, forcing Israeli authorities to open new prisons, such as
Al-Naqab, Ufar and Salem, to accommodate them.
Karak'
asserted that the number of detained Palestinians before the outbreak of
al-Aqsa Intifada was only 1500.
He
also said that the Israeli occupation troops were using different kinds
of torture to extract confessions from the prisoners, such as sleep
deprivation and sexual harassment.