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Al-Ahed Telegram

Jailed MPs a symbol for Palestinians

Jailed MPs a symbol for Palestinians
folder_openHOSTAGES access_time16 years ago
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Source: BBC, 6-4-2006
GAZA CITY--The Hamas-led Palestinian government was inaugurated on Wednesday, but not all those elected to the new parliament are able to take up their seats.
For some, the best they can do is have a life-sized photograph of themselves propped up in their place.
About 10 members are represented in this way. They are absent because they are in "Israeli" jails.
As the parliament`s debates rage, the silent presence of the photographs is meant to serve as a constant reminder of those Palestinians behind bars.
Detentions have always been among the most hated aspects of the "Israeli" occupation, and Palestinians will demand that the release of all prisoners be part of any final peace deal.
Wide-ranging detentions
At the moment, there are about 9,000 Palestinians in prison for breaching security laws, it is an experience shared over the years by a huge number of men in the occupied territories.
In a 1999 survey conducted by the International Committee of the Red Cross, 45% of Palestinian males under the age of 40 said they had been in jail at some point in their lives.
The new Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniya, his foreign minister, his interior minister and a number of their cabinet colleagues, have all known the inside of an "Israeli" prison.
The finance minister, Omar Abdul Razeq, was released just a few days before taking up his post.
All the main Palestinian militant groups have launched attacks on "Israelis", not just in the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem (al-Quds) and Gaza, but also in "Israel" itself.
Down the decades, the detentions have been used to suppress resistance in the occupied territories. Before the Oslo peace accords, flying the Palestinian flag was enough to get you jailed.
You could end up behind bars for displaying a poster of Yasser Arafat or participating in a demonstration or throwing stones at soldiers. Possession of a weapon in the occupied territories can now earn you several months in prison, and so can membership of the governing party, Hamas.
Charade
Many Palestinians regard all those in jail as heroes, whatever they have been sentenced for.
Analyst Toufic Hadad says electing prisoners to parliament "is a fitting symbol for what the Palestinian people truly are - an imprisoned nation, fighting for their freedom".
"In recent years, other democracies such as Britain, Italy and Canada have used administrative detention when faced with the threat of (so-called) "terrorism" or large scale civil disorder
"Israeli" government
More than 700 of those in jail at the moment are in what is called administrative detention.
They are held without charge or trial and this can go on for more than two years.
"Israeli" officials point out that administrative detention in occupied territories is authorised in international law, under the Fourth Geneva Convention.
And in its defence, the "Israeli" government says: "In recent years, other democracies such as Britain, Italy and Canada have used administrative detention when faced with the threat of (so-called) "terrorism" or large scale civil disorder."
But the "Israeli" human rights group, B`Tselem, says: "While detainees may appeal, neither they nor their attorneys are allowed to see the evidence.
"`Israel` has therefore made a charade out of the entire system of procedural safeguards in both domestic and international law regarding the right to liberty