RAMALLAH,
February 10, 2015 (WAFA) – The Israeli authorities Tuesday sentenced nine
Palestinian detainees to serve administrative detention terms, ranging between
four and six months in prison, according to the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club
(PPC).
PCC,
a local organization concerned with the issue of Palestinian prisoners in
Israeli jails, said while some of those prisoners received an administrative
sentence for the first time, others had their old administrative detentions
renewed.
The
nine detainees, who received a sentence of six months, were identified as Hamza
Abu Sneneh, Ismail Okal, Rami Abu-Shark, Saadi al-Atrash, Mohammad Rummaneh,
Ayed Hemoni, and Raed al-Jabari.
Meanwhile,
those who received a four-month sentence were identified as Munther Abu-Wardeh,
and Mohammad Shalaldeh.
Under
administrative detention, detainees are held in prison without charge or trial and
for an indefinite, renewable term.
According
to the international law, administrative detention can be used only in the most
exceptional cases, as the last means available to preventing danger that cannot
be thwarted by less harmful means. Yet Israel uses this form of collective
punishment systematically.
There
are currently around 500 detainees serving administrative detention in several
Israeli jails, 18 of whom are members of the Palestinian legislative Council.
Palestinian
detainees have continuously resorted to open-ended hunger strikes as a way to
protest their illegal administrative detention and to demand an end to this
policy which violates international law.
The
last open-ended hunger strike was in May 2014, where more than 700 Palestinian
prisoners went on open-ended hunger strike for two weeks.
M.N/M.H