Israel high court hears hunger striker appeals (AFP) AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE) 05/03/12)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-high-court-hears-hunger-striker-appeals-153553325.html;_ylt=AiMCIQa.rKe0qRn_VpaHkmq1qHQA;_ylu=X3oDMTQ5OGRjODAyBG1pdANUb3BTdG9yeSBXb3JsZFNGIE1pZGRsZUVhc3RTU0YEcGtnA2QwYTc3YmU5LTQwN2UtMzcxNi04NzNmLWVmMGQwZjMxNjc0ZgRwb3MDMTQEc2Vj
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Two Palestinians who have been on hunger strike for 65 days appeared
before Israel´s Supreme Court on Thursday to appeal their detention
without charge, their lawyer told AFP.
Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla are protesting Israel´s use of
administrative detention, which allows military courts to order
individuals held without charge for periods of up to six months,
renewable indefinitely.
Jamil Khatib, who is representing both men, said his address to the
court focused on what he called the "illegality" of administrative
detention.
"The appeal focused on two sides, the illegality of administrative
detention in general, in terms of why they are being held, and
secondly why Thaer and Bilal took this step to shed light on
administrative detention," Khatib said.
He said Halahla addressed the session, speaking "about his arrest and
the violations that were committed against him and why he decided to
go through with his hunger strike."
"He spoke about his right to a good life and his right to see his
daughter, who was born while he was in administrative detention,"
Khatib added.
It was unclear when the court would issue a ruling on the appeal.
Judge Amnon Rubenstein "announced that the panel of judges would make
a decision after reviewing the ´secret file,´" prisoner rights group
Ad-Dameer said in a statement.
"But after the review (he) stated that the parties would be informed
at a later time, without specifying when."
Halahla, 34, was arrested on June 28, 2010 and has been held under
administrative detention orders ever since. Diab has been held since
August 17, 2011 and both men began refusing food on February 29.
Officials from the Physicians for Human Rights-Israel group have
warned that both men are in danger of dying, and expressed particular
concern about Diab, who was transferred from a prison infirmary to a
civilian hospital on Tuesday.
Khatib told AFP that Diab had fainted during the session and was
treated by Arab-Israeli lawmaker Ahmed Tibi, a doctor, who was
attending the hearing.
The two men have been joined on hunger strike by at least 1,550
Palestinian prisoners, the bulk of whom began refusing food on April
17.
They are calling for improved conditions, including increased access
to lawyers and family visits, an end to solitary confinement and an
end to administrative detention.
Palestinians across the West Bank and Gaza have staged demonstrations
in solidarity with the hunger strikers, and a group of 11 Palestinian
NGOs issued a statement on Thursday criticising what they
called "collective and punitive measures" taken against those on
hunger strike.
"These measures include solitary confinement, daily fines...,
confiscation of salt for water, the denial of electricity supply and
random cell and body searches," the statement said.
Israel Prison Services spokeswoman Sivan Weizman denied that
prisoners were being fined but acknowledged that certain "privileges"
including "television, or the right to see their family," had been
rescinded.
"It´s not punishment. If someone´s going on hunger strike, they´re
saying something against the prison and they don´t get a reward," she
told AFP.
"If someone is on hunger strike, so it means they don´t eat, so why
do they need salt?" (Copyright © 2012 Agence France Presse. 05/03/12)
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