RAMALLAH, August 3, 2015
(WAFA) – Two Palestinians detained in an Israeli jail have been on hunger
strike for almost eight days in protest of administrative detention
and medical negligence, according to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club (PPC).
An attorney with PPC told
WAFA that prisoner Khere Daraghmeh, an ailing prisoner from the West Bank town
of Tubas, has been on hunger strike against Israel’s medical negligence towards
him since July 27; while Daraghmeh’s health requires an immediate surgery in
his lower abdomen, the prison authorities gave him a surgery appointment of two
years from now.
Medical
negligence has been widely reported as a systematic policy by the Israeli Prison
Service.
Meanwhile, detainee
Abdul-Majid Khderat, also from Tubas, entered his third day in hunger strike
against administrative detention, without charge or trial.
Administrative detention
and medical negligence in Israeli jails have been largely the main drive behind
hunger strikes by Palestinian prisoners and detainees.
Under
administrative detention, prisoners are held without charge or trial and for an
indefinite and renewable period of time.
The use
of administrative detention dates from the “emergency laws” of the British
colonial era in Palestine. Israel uses administrative detention routinely as a
form of collective punishment and mass detention of Palestinians, and
frequently uses administrative detention when it fails to obtain confessions in
interrogations of Palestinian detainees.
According
to the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, “Israel's use of administrative
detention blatantly violates the restrictions of international law. Israel
carries it out in a highly classified manner that denies detainees the
possibility of mounting a proper defense. Moreover, the detention has no upper
time limit.”
Some
5,442 Palestinian security detainees and prisoners are currently held in
Israeli prisons, 350 of them from the Gaza Strip, according to B’Tselem.
M.N/M.H