Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Jailed Palestinian hunger striker faces death
Jailed Palestinian hunger striker faces death
Oct 31, 2025 11:15 PM

  "He is chasing death," Samer Issawi's sister, Shireen, says. "My brother is in serious danger."

  Issawi, 33, has been on a hunger strike in an Israeli jail for more than 203 days. Initially released by Israeli authorities in an October 2011 prisoner swap, Issawi was re-arrested in July 2012 and told he would have to serve the remaining 20-years of his original sentence for allegedly violating the conditions of his release.

  It is not officially known how prison authorities have kept him alive during months of not eating. Some of Issawi’s supporters said he was being force-fed through an intravenous tube, but the latest reports from prison indicate that he has begun refusing all nutrients and water and that he faces imminent death.

  His sister said that Palestinian Prisoner Society lawyer Jawad Boulos, who represents Issawi, recounted that on a recent hospital visit that the hunger-striker told him: "I'm reaching the end of the tunnel. I'm either going to see the light of freedom or the light of martyrdom."

  Issawi’s supporters say he has been held since July in administrative detention - which means he has not been formally charged with a crime. He either wants to be formally charged and given a fair trial, or released, and will continue his hunger strike until one of these things happens.

  Disputed circumstances

  

  The Israeli army did not respond to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment on the case, which has drawn significant international attention.

  A spokesman for the Israeli army, however, told the Jerusalem Post newspaper that Issawi’s arrest was due to a violation of his release conditions. “The release of Samer Issawi stipulated that he would not commit any offense punishable by three months’ imprisonment or more, among other release conditions,” an official told the newspaper. “During 2012, he was convicted, according to his confession, of violating a legal order… The court has not yet reached a verdict in his case.” He was first arrested more than ten years ago for allegedly planning attacks against Israelis.

  His sister said he was re-arrested in July while visiting a location near Hizma which is in the Jerusalem municipality, where he was allowed to be, and that he did not violate the terms of his release.

  Rights groups said Issawi is one of several Palestinians to be re-arrested under dubious circumstances after they were released in the July 2011 prisoner swap, when 1,027 Palestinians were traded in phases of about 400 at a time for Israeli solider Gilad Shalit.

  Daleen Elshaer, a Palestinian-American who organized the "Free Samer Issawi Campaign" told Al Jazeera that he "was not the only prisoner released in the swap who was re-arrested soon after".

  Addameer, a Ramallah-based prisoners' rights group, says eight others were also re-arrested shortly after their release. "The wave of arrests reveals that the exchange deal has not deterred Israel's policy of detention," the group said. Hundreds of other Palestinians who were not involved with the swap were arrested in the months during the phased release, campaigners said.

  In total, Addameer believes the number of Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons as of January 2013 is 4,743, including the 178 who are in administrative detention and are being held without charge or trial.

  ‘Beaten severely’

  Issawi’s sister said she last saw her brother during a court appearance in December. "He weighed only 47kg… he was just skin and bones, he could barely even speak."

  Because of the length of his hunger strike, Issawi suffers from a loss of vision, dizziness and loss of consciousness. He has lost control over his limbs and suffers severe pain all over his body - especially in his abdomen and kidneys, his sister said.

  Issawi also suffers from fractured ribs that Shireen said were caused by an attack perpetrated by Israeli soldiers while he was handcuffed to his wheelchair at a December 2012 court hearing. "They beat him and they beat us. Then we were not allowed to see him at all," his sister said.

  Issawi’s family say they have been subjected to collective punishment at the hands of Israeli authorities for drawing attention to the plight of their brother.

  Shireen and another one of her brothers have been arrested, and Israeli soldiers regularly raid their neighborhood in what their family believes is an attempt to intimidate them.

  Elshaer told Al Jazeera that the day Samer Issawi was beaten in court in front of his family, his sister was detained for 24 hours: "She was put on house arrest after that and her license to practice law was confiscated."

  "The Israelis cut off the water to his parent's house, claiming they hadn't paid the bill," Elshaer said, adding that Israeli security forces demolished the home of Samer's brother Raafat in early January.

  International attention

  Danny Danon, a right-wing member of Israel’s Knesset, told the Jerusalem Post that officials should not listen to protests about the treatment of hunger strikers. "We do not need to listen to these efforts because they are terrorists," he said.

  Palestinian activists, unsurprisingly, disagree. "The Israelis must charge him with a crime or set him free," Elshaer said.

  "If he dies, there will be a big reaction… just the other day someone started a rumor online that Samer had died and Facebook and Twitter were going crazy. The reaction was quick. I think the public all over the world, not just Palestinians, will react to his death."

  Malaka Mohammed, the Gaza Strip coordinator for the "Free Samer Issawi" campaign said she is being told that Samer could die at any moment, and that Israeli forces are on standby.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Israeli Arab and Palestinian activists hold placards during a protest outside an Israeli prison in Ramle near Tel Aviv calling for the release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails, February 4, 2013.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Israeli airstrikes continue to haunt Gaza children
  Steve Matthews, an aid worker with World Vision Canada, has been to some of the world's most violent and troubled regions, including Darfur, Afghanistan, and Iraq.   But even after years in the field, Matthews still has difficulty comprehending the devastating affects of war on children. In February, he returned from...
Final figures of Israeli attacks on Gaza, 1434 killed
  Confirmed figures reveal the true extent of the destruction inflicted upon the Gaza Strip by Israel’s offensive: 1,434 dead, including 960 civilians, 239 police officers, and 235 fighters.   The Israeli offensive launched on the Gaza Strip between 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009 resulted in extensive death, injury and...
'Go back and die in Gaza'
  Since Israel's closure of the Gaza Strip in 2007, only severely sick Palestinians have been allowed to seek medical attention elsewhere provided they receive authorization and security clearances from the Israeli authorities.   However, getting the special permit that allows patients to leave Gaza for medical treatment is a bureaucratic hassle...
Pakistan's long march to stability
  Massive shipping containers are being hoisted into place to prevent a popular procession that is travelling from all over Pakistan to Islamabad, the capital, in support of Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the sacked chief justice.   These corrugated steel structures, often used in the high seas, are now part of a number...
'Witness for Jesus' in Afghanistan
  US soldiers have been encouraged to spread the message of their Christian faith among Afghanistan's predominantly Muslim population, video footage obtained by Al Jazeera appears to show.   Military chaplains stationed in the US air base at Bagram were also filmed with bibles printed in the country's main Pashto and Dari...
'Fallujah never leaves my mind'
   By Laith Mushtaq (a cameraman for Al Jazeera)   Laith Mushtaq was one of only two non-embedded cameramen working throughout the April 2004 'battle for Fallujah' in which 600 civilians died.   Five years on, he recounts the events he witnessed and filmed.   "What you saw on your TV sets at...
Israeli police conduct 'ID card raids' inside Israel, arrest 208 Palestinians
  Over the weekend, Israeli border police conducted a number of raids on living quarters and workplaces inside Israel, checking ID cards and looking for Palestinians from the West Bank who were in "Israel" without a permit. 208 Palestinians were arrested in the raids, and sent back to the West Bank....
The hidden agenda – disintegrating Pakistan
  When common people use to say that, “America’s hidden agenda is to counter the nuclear program of Pakistan and take it under their control,” it was termed as the height of fanaticism & slogans of religious fanatics.   Since when US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has said, “Pakistan’s government had...
Poor face economic 'calamity'
  The global economic crisis is becoming a "human and development calamity" and is threatening to derail international efforts to reduce poverty, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank have said.   The two financial institutions urged rich countries to step up aid to developing nations, as they completed their spring...
UN blames Israel for Gaza attacks
  A United Nations inquiry into the war in Gaza has found that Israel was to blame for at least seven direct attacks on UN operations - including schools and medical centers.   The UN report, commissioned by Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, said the Israeli military intentionally fired at UN facilities...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved