Dignity triumphs over tyranny
By JAMAL KANJ
, Posted on » Thursday, February 23, 2012
On Tuesday, Sheikh Khader Adnan broke his 66-day hunger strike
following a promise by Israeli authorities not to renew his
administrative detention and to release him on April 17.
The 33-year-old Master's student in economics who works as a baker in
the village of Arrabe, near the City of Jenin in the West Bank, was
held without charge in "administrative detention" since December 17.
After raiding his home at 3.30am, Sheik Adnan was blindfolded and his
hands were tied behind his back before he was thrown in the back of a
military jeep.
During the ride to the nearby "Jewish-only" settlement of Dutan,
Israeli soldiers slapped his face, beat him on the head and kicked him.
He was not stranger to Israel's rotating door of administrative detention. He has been held at least eight times since 1999.
Under Israel's system of "Jewish democracy", administrative detention
allows the occupying power to arbitrarily hold any Palestinian civilian
for up to six months, which can be renewed indefinitely, without trial
or charge.
Following his arrest, Sheik Adnan released a letter through his
lawyers where he said: "I have been humiliated, beaten and harassed by
interrogators for no reason, and thus I swore to God I would fight the
policy of administrative detention to which I and hundreds of my fellow
prisoners fell prey... The only thing I can do is offer my soul to God,
as I believe righteousness and justice will eventually triumph over
tyranny and oppression."
There are more than 300 Palestinians, including elected
parliamentarians and community leaders, in Israeli jails under extended,
renewable administrative detention sentences.
The Israeli administration's detention policies were decried this
week by international organisations and human rights groups such as
Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Israeli human rights group
B'tselem.
Richard Falk, the UN special rapporteur on Palestinian human rights,
criticised "authority figures, from the UN Secretary-General on
down,"for expressing empathy for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was
imprisoned by Hamas, while remaining "notably silent in the much more
compelling ordeal" in Israeli jails.
In a 2010 report, the US State Department criticised China's "lack of
due process in judicial proceedings" and "the use of administrative
detention." It went further to assert that "arbitrary arrest and
detention remained serious problems.
"The law grants police broad administrative detention powers and the
ability to detain individuals for extended periods without formal arrest
or criminal charges."
This description could apply to Israel, yet the US State Department
turns a blind eye, while such practices are applied in occupied
Palestine.
Ironically, when Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev was asked by
CNN why Sheikh Adnan could not be put on trial if there was "so much
evidence proving he's guilty", he said Israel was acting "like other
democracies, like the US".
On Monday, following a visit from his father, wife, children and
ailing mother, and after holding tight his two-year-old daughter, Sheikh
Adnan declared: "My dignity was more important than food."
Today, his dignity has triumphed over Israel's malevolent tyranny.
Let's hope his 66-day fast will shed more light on the plight of more
than 300 Palestinian leaders jailed without charge under the same cruel
Israeli laws.
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