So about those detention centers…

28. Oktober 2023

So, on Octo­ber 10th a few hund­red pales­ti­ni­an workers went mis­sing in Isra­el, right around the time their work visas were revoked.

Haa­retz and Al Jaze­e­ra have a wri­te up on whats known so far.

Source for the fol­lowing infor­ma­ti­on is Al Jaze­e­ra. (click)

Lets start here:

Not clear ‘whe­re, how many, under what legal status’

We have been recei­ving hund­reds and hund­reds of pho­ne calls from fami­ly mem­bers of peop­le who were working in Isra­el pri­or to the [Octo­ber 7] attacks,” Jes­si­ca Mon­tell, exe­cu­ti­ve direc­tor of HaMo­ked, told Al Jazeera.

So far, Mon­tell says, more than 400 fami­lies and friends of mis­sing peop­le have got in touch with the orga­ni­sa­ti­on, try­ing to trace their loved ones as they simul­ta­ne­ous­ly strugg­le to sur­vi­ve Israel’s bom­bard­ments and “total” sie­ge. Tho­se calls have been dwind­ling in the past week as resi­dents of Gaza are incre­a­singly cut off from communications.

Then this surfaced:

Walid [name chan­ged by Al Jaze­e­ra], a Pales­ti­ni­an worker born in Gaza, had lived in the occu­p­ied West Bank for more than 25 years when Isra­el laun­ched its relent­less bom­bard­ment of Gaza which has so far kil­led more than 7,000 peop­le and has las­ted for three weeks. On Octo­ber 8, he was arres­ted as he hea­ded for work and detai­ned in a faci­li­ty in the Almon area, also known as Ana­tot, built on the ruins of the Pales­ti­ni­an town of Ana­ta that Isra­el con­fis­ca­ted in occu­p­ied East Jerusalem.

The faci­li­ty, human rights orga­ni­sa­ti­ons say, is among tho­se repur­po­sed by the Israe­li government to hold hund­reds of workers in arbi­tra­ry detenti­on, in bre­ach of inter­na­tio­nal law.

Walid, who­se real name and per­so­nal details are being with­held to avoid repri­sals, descri­bed being kept in a “cage” without a roof, under the sun and without food, water or access to the toi­let for three days, accord­ing to a writ­ten tes­ti­mo­ny given to the Israel-based human rights orga­ni­sa­ti­on HaMo­ked and seen by Al Jazeera.

He was then moved to an area of about 300 squa­re metres whe­re hund­reds of labou­rers shared a che­mi­cal toi­let cubicle. When he asked to con­ta­ct the Red Cross, he was cur­sed and bea­ten up by soldiers.

Walid was released after Israe­li offi­cers ascer­tai­ned that, alt­hough he was born in Gaza, he is a resi­dent of the West Bank. His tes­ti­mo­ny is among the few accounts to have so far emer­ged from the detenti­on cen­tres whe­re Gaza workers have been held incom­mu­ni­ca­do and without legal repre­sen­ta­ti­on sin­ce Octo­ber 7.

Then this happened:

As part of its work, HaMo­ked regu­lar­ly sub­mits the names of detai­nees to the Israe­li aut­ho­ri­ties to find out whe­re they may be held.

The Israe­li mili­ta­ry is sup­po­sed to inform us wit­hin 24 hours of who they are hol­ding, which loca­ti­on they are being held in,” Mon­tell said. “But for all tho­se Gazans, they told us [they]’re not the right [aut­ho­ri­ty to] address.”

Then this happened:

A group of six local orga­ni­sa­ti­ons, inclu­ding HaMo­ked, have peti­tio­ned Israel’s High Court to dis­c­lo­se the names and loca­ti­ons of the detai­nees and to ensu­re huma­ne hol­ding conditions.

Accord­ing to the peti­tio­ners, some of the Pales­ti­ni­ans have been detai­ned in the Almon area – whe­re Walid was detai­ned – as well as in Ofer, near Ramal­lah, and in Sde Tey­man, near Beer al-Sabe (Be’er She­va), in the sou­thern Naqab or Negev desert.

Then the first human rights NGOs star­ted commenting:

Unpar­al­leled’

Miri­am Mar­mur, advo­cacy direc­tor of Gisha, an Israe­li human rights orga­ni­sa­ti­on which calls for the free­dom of move­ment of Pales­ti­ni­ans, said the situa­ti­on was “unpar­al­leled”.

Of cour­se, at any given point, the­re are thousands of Pales­ti­ni­ans that are being held in admi­nis­tra­ti­ve detenti­on by Isra­el,” she told Al Jaze­e­ra. “But the­se are the first Pales­ti­ni­ans to be held en mas­se. The natu­re of their detenti­on, the revo­ca­ti­on of people’s per­mits and the fact that Isra­el is so far refu­sing to divul­ge any infor­ma­ti­on about whe­re they are … that is not some­thing I have seen befo­re,” she said.

Then this surfaced:

Accord­ing to Walid’s tes­ti­mo­ny, one of the offi­cers at a detenti­on camp told detai­nees the­re would be no chan­ce of them being released as long as the­re were Israe­li hos­ta­ges in Gaza.

This isn’t an offi­cial state­ment, but cer­tain­ly it’s an indi­ca­ti­on that, at least to some of the peop­le invol­ved in this, the­re is a kind of desi­re to use the­se workers as bar­gai­ning chips,” Mar­mur said.

Then the word camps star­ted making the rounds:

Human rights groups are con­cer­ned about fur­ther arrests amid con­ti­nuing raids in the West Bank, inclu­ding in are­as nomi­nal­ly under the full con­trol of the Pales­ti­ni­an Authority.

We never had a situa­ti­on like that, whe­re peop­le are trap­ped and can’t go home, and are put in a sort of camp,” said Hassan Jaba­reen, the direc­tor of Ada­lah, the legal cent­re for Arab mino­ri­ty rights in Isra­el. “The­se were just workers. The only com­pa­ri­son is perhaps with [undo­cu­men­ted] refugees.”

Then the num­ber grew from a few hund­red to 4500.

Mass arrests

The Minis­ter of Labour for the Pales­ti­ni­an Aut­ho­ri­ty esti­ma­ted that about 4,500 workers are unac­coun­ted for and are belie­ved to have been detai­ned by Israe­li for­ces. Israe­li media out­let N12 repor­ted that 4,000 Pales­ti­ni­ans from Gaza were being inter­ro­ga­ted in Israe­li hol­ding faci­li­ties over their pos­si­ble invol­ve­ment in the attack.

Then eight days later this happened:

On Octo­ber 18, the Israe­li par­lia­ment, known as the Knes­set, appro­ved a tem­pora­ry plan that strips Pales­ti­ni­an pri­so­ners of the right to at least 4.5 squa­re metres of space, enab­ling cells that used to hold five peop­le to hold more than twice as many.

Then this surfaced:

Accord­ing to Phy­si­ci­ans for Human Rights Isra­el (PHRI), aut­ho­ri­ties also dis­con­nec­ted access to power and water sup­plies, limi­ted the num­ber of meals per day, restric­ted pri­so­ners to their cells and pre­ven­ted access to medi­cal cli­nics and visits by legal repre­sen­ta­ti­ves and other offi­cials. At least two pri­so­ners have died while in cus­to­dy sin­ce the begin­ning of the latest round of hostilities.

We are cal­ling on the Israe­li aut­ho­ri­ties to abi­de by inter­na­tio­nal law and allow food, water and visi­ta­ti­ons,” Naji Abbas, case mana­ger at PHRI, told Al Jaze­e­ra. “And to stop taking reven­ge on Pales­ti­ni­an prisoners.”

And thats about it.

Der Stan­dard hat das zwar nicht berich­tet, aber anstatt­des­sen wie­der etwas Tol­les erfahren!

Der Israe­li­sche Armee­chef hält eine Boden­in­itia­ti­ve für unbe­dingt erforderlich!

Bildschirmfoto 2023 10 28 um 20 23 08

Ich wür­de sagen, die Wie­ner Poli­zei ver­bie­tet ab mor­gen wie­der alle pro-palestinensischen Demos, oder?

Da Öster­reich ja als einer von 14 Staa­ten für die Ableh­nung einer Waf­fen­ru­he im UN Gene­ral Assem­bly gestimmt hat.









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