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Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
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Ayman Sharawneh, one of the Palestinian prisoners freed in exchange for Gilad Shalit in 2011, has been on a hunger strike for seven months in protest of his re-arrest. On Sunday, Sharawneh signed a deal with the security services to be deported to the Gaza Strip for 10 years.

He signed the deal while hospitalized in serious condition at Soroka Medical Center in Be'er Sheva, where he has been for a month. Sharawneh rejected the initial offer he had been presented with of being deported to Egypt. His brother, Jihad Sharawneh, confirmed to Haaretz that the lawyer and the director of the legal department of the Palestinian Prisoners' Club, Jawad Bulous, had acted as the liaison between his brother and the security services. Haaretz couldn't obtain a response from Bulous regarding his role in negotiations and the details of the deal. The Palestinian Prisoners' Club's role in the negotiations is expected to cause severe internal disagreements amongst the Palestinians.

The prolonged hunger strikes by Sharawneh and Samer Issawi, another former prisoner who was rearrested, sparked a wave of solidarity demonstrations in the West Bank last month. There were some who thought that this wave would develop into a "third intifada." Sharawneh's consensual deportation to Gaza reduces the likeliness of the flare-ups in the West Bank that would have been expected if his condition had continued to deteriorate, or if, as expected, a decision had been made to make him serve his original 28-year sentence.

Throughout his hunger strike, Sharawneh has not permitted to receive visits from family members. When not hospitalized in the prison services' clinics or in hospital, he was kept in solitary confinement.

On Monday the military appeals committee was scheduled to give a decision on the military advocate general's request to return Sharawneh to prison. The committee has delayed making a decision for several months, and last month postponed two meetings. Last week the prison service asked for the meeting to be held at the hospital.

"Transporting him to the [Ofer] court and returning him to the hospital is liable to endanger his health, the request was sent to the military court commander reached Haaretz read."In addition to his well-being and the national and political implications."

The wording confirms that the Israeli authorities are concerned with the repercussions of any deterioration in his condition.

Sharawneh, who was released in October 2011, was arrested again in late January 2012, the first of 14 prisoners released in the prisoner exchange and subsequently rearrested last year, including five who had been sentenced to lengthy prison terms. The military advocate general claimed he had violated the terms of his release. As is usually the cases with administrative detention, the claims were based on secret evidence that neither he nor his lawyers were premited to see and address. With Sharawneh's arrest it became apparent that in parallel to the negotiations over Shalit's release, the military advocate general had made amendments to clauses regarding prisoners on parole. These amendments were deliberately designed to make it easier to return prisoners involved in the Shalit deal to prison to serve the remainder of their sentences.

Over the last year the lawyer Ahlam Haddad represented Sharawneh before the military appeals committee, and together with lawyer Neri Ramati petitioned the High Court to annul clauses in Israel's military order that permit freed prisoners to be returned to prison even if the evidence against them is secret and is not heard by a panel of military judges. Haddad and Ramati argued that the clauses were contrary to the principles of a fair trial. The High Court declined to hear the petition.

Haddad and Ramati told Haaretz Sunday that they were not involved in the negotiations over the deportation and took no part in it. They intend to attend the committee's meeting on Monday in order to continue the legal process and their fight to change the clauses.

An official statement from the Palestinian Prisoner's Club on Sunday afternoon said that the transfer of Sharawneh to Gaza was expected in the coming hours. The deportation – even if it is to Gaza – has caused internal disagreements and tension among the various Palestinian organizations representing prisoners. The Palestinian Authority's Minister for Prisoner Affairs, Issa Karaka, told the press that he opposes the expulsion, and that it is tantamount to political blackmail. He said that Israel had offered to deport Sharawneh and Issawi back in January, but that the PA refused the offer. Sharawneh's family said on Sunday that they support his move as they fear for his life and that ultimately the decision was in his hands.

Issawi's sister, a resident of East Jerusalem, said last week that Issawi had declined the offer of deportation. The Shin Bet and Israel Prison Service did not respond to Haaretz's query whether the deal that was offered to Sharawneh and Issawi was also offered to prisoners who had been rearrested but were not on hunger strike.

Last year the administrative detainee Khader Adnan succeeded in securing his release following a prolonged hunger strike. Consequently other prisoners also tried to adopt this method. The administrative detainee Hana Shalabi was deported to Gaza for three years in March 2011, after 44 days on hunger strike. Prisoner support organizations blamed the Palestinian Prisoner's Club and Bulous for pushing her to agree to the deportation, but they rejected this argument and said that Shalabi decided to move to Gaza of her own free will.

 
 
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