RAMALLAH (WAFA) – Staggering
800,000 Palestinians have been arrested by Israeli forces since 1967. 5224
remain incarcerated today, including administrative, sick, female and children
detainees. These numbers reflect one of the worst experiences of imprisonment
in contemporary history, designed to break the will of an entire nation seeking
freedom.
A statement by Palestine Liberation
Organization Negotiations Affairs Department stated that Israel must choose
between the pursuit of occupation and the pursuit of peace. Each settlement,
each arrest, each violation, each refusal to abide by its commitments and
obligations, shows that Israel is heading in the wrong direction. But history
teaches us that justice prevails. We follow the example of Nelson Mandela and
the people of South Africa. No oppression, no denial of rights can continue
forever.
For Palestinians, having loved ones
in prison is not the exception: it is something which has affected every
Palestinian family. In the context of prolonged occupation, Israel- a foreign
military power- has unlawfully imposed itself on the land of another people and
has oppressed millions, in many varying ways. The plight of the prisoners
reflects the plight of the Palestinian people as a whole, said the statement.
The statement said that Israel has criminalized
all forms of resistance, both armed and peaceful, and even political and civic
engagement. The Palestinian leadership has chosen to resist through diplomatic
and peaceful means, in order to achieve the Palestinian people's inalienable
rights, as enshrined in international law. We now need to demonstrate to our
people that this path leads to freedom and justice in an independent and
democratic State of Palestine. Exist so that we can coexist.
The release of the Palestinian prisoners will
be the first signal that freedom is on the way, said the statement.
Now, we await the release of the remaining 30
Pre-Oslo prisoners still captive in occupation prisons. These are people who
have been incarcerated for over 20 years. Karim Younes, the longest serving of
these prisoners, has spent over 32 years of his life in Israeli jails.
Israel committed to releasing these prisoners
as part of the Oslo Agreement in 1993, again in 1999 through the Sharm
el-Sheikh agreement, and a third time in July 2013. In July last year, we agreed
to postpone our accession to multilateral treaties and conventions for nine
months in order to finally release the 104 Pre-Oslo prisoners. We fulfilled our
commitment. Israel, yet again, did not.
Where else in the world could a State imprison
the elected representatives of another country with such impunity? The national
leader Marwan Barghouthi was the first Member of Parliament to be detained.
April 15th 2014 marked the 12th anniversary of his abduction.
There has been a total of 50
Palestinian parliamentarians in Israeli jails at one time or another,
equivalent to over one third of the Palestinian Parliament. Eleven remain
detained today, including the Secretary General of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine Ahmed Saadat.
The level of support gathered by the
International campaign for the freedom of Marwan Barghouthi and all Palestinian
prisoners, and the signing of the Robben Island Declaration by prominent
international figures, including six Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, church
leaders, artists, parliamentarians, human rights figures, trade unions, and
thousands of citizens, sends a clear message that must be heard: “freedom of
the Palestinian prisoners and freedom of the Palestinian people will pave the
way to peace.”
T.R.
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