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Monday, 8 July. 2024
 
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After a 66-day hunger strike, a Palestinian hero, a baker called Khader Adnan, forced Israel to bow before the power of peaceful resistance.

The 33-year-old Palestinian activist, a member of Islamic Jihad, on Tuesday agreed to end his fast after his Israeli prosecutors promised not to extend his prison term which theoretically expires on April 17.

Adnan was arrested on the night of December 17 from his home in the West Bank village of Araba, near the town of Jenin, where he lived with his wife and two daughters. Adnan was detained without charge. Following brutal and humiliating treatment in the course of his arrest, he went on a hunger strike the next day.

Israeli policy permits the indefinite detention of suspected Palestinian activists without having to reveal the charges.

Before Adnan, another Palestinian to wage a long hunger strike was a woman. Itaf Alayan, also a detainee, rejected food for 43 days before she was released in 1997.

It is now reportedly guaranteed that there will not be an extension to Adnan's prison term after April 17 unless his Israeli prosecutors can come up with new allegations, which is doubtful Ultimately, Adnan, who participated in three shorter hunger strikes previously, set a record for the longest hunger strike by a Palestinian and earned the much deserved title of hero.

The reasons for the Israelis deciding to backtrack are many. For one, the Israelis have been reprimanded worldwide, though not by governments. Secondly, Adnan's deteriorating health prompted a doctor from Physicians for Human Rights-Israel to say publicly that the prisoner was "in immediate danger" since he had lost over 60 pounds, his hair was falling out, his skin had turned yellow and he faced the risk of a heart attack".

This contrasts sharply with the decision of an Israeli military judge, who just a week ago, had said that his review of the undisclosed evidence against Adnan found his detention to be fair.

Since Adnan's case made headlines worldwide, what has been appalling is the revelation that there are 307 Palestinians under Israeli administrative detention, according to B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights group. That is a 40 per cent increase in detentions compared to a year earlier, the group reported. Palestinians in Israeli jails also number over 4,200.

Last Saturday, the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, said the bloc was following Adnan's case with "great concern", stressing the point that "the EU's long-standing concern about the extensive use by Israel of detention without formal charge [as well as] or a fair trial".

But the Israeli reaction to the deal that Adnan received from Israeli prosecutors has been shocking as evidenced by the comments of Israeli right-wing leaders including Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman and Deputy Knesset Speaker Danny Danon.

Lieberman, who is the leader of the Yisrael Beiteinu (Israel our home) party, criticised Arab members of the Knesset for their support of Adnan. The deputy speaker of the Israeli parliament also warned that the deal set a dangerous precedent and called for an immediate Knesset debate over the matter.

Rallying cry

Adnan's hunger strike, reported CNN, has meanwhile become a rallying cry for Palestinians, who have staged multiple protests in the West Bank and Gaza. But Palestinian legislator and human rights activist Mustafa Barghouthi said during a recent West Bank rally that the treatment of Palestinians by Israelis has been "a violation of every aspect of human rights".

Zoe Lawlor, a Palestine solidarity activist based in Ireland, was quoted by The Electronic Intifada as saying that "Adnan's humanity shines so brightly, especially in the face of Israel's utter inhumanity," adding, "Your soul is beautiful and free; your struggle is an inspiration".

Richard Falk, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Palestinian Human Rights, wrote in a column earlier this week:

"Have we not reached a stage in our appreciation of human rights that we should outlaw such state barbarism? Let us hope that the awful experience of Khader Adnan does not end with his death, and let us hope further that it sparks a worldwide protest against both administrative detention and poisoner abuse. The Palestinian people have suffered more than enough already."

Since Adnan is being portrayed as the Palestinian Bobby Sands, the Irish republican prisoner who died in 1981 following his hunger strike — the two spent the same number of days without food — 66, it is hoped that Palestinians will sooner, rather than later, follow the footsteps of the Irish in gaining full independence.

 
 
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