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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!psuvax1!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Hank Roth <odin@world.std.com>
- Subject: Israel: Massarwa's Struggle
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.074113.12681@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 07:41:13 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- <<< via P_news >>>
- {Excerpt from: The Other Israel, no.50/Jan.Feb-92}
-
- MASSARWA'S ONGOING STRUGGLE
-
- Trade-unionist and political activist Mahmoud Massarwa, a
- Palestinian with Israeli citizenship, has been in prison since
- June 1988*. A ten-year sentence was imposed upon him for
- espionage, after the court rejected his plea that a confession
- had been extracted from him by force. There was much
- international attention for this case of a man apparently
- victimised for his political ideas. Moreover, Massarwa's alleged
- act of espionage consisted of an attempt to send to a British
- newspaper a classified document regarding the Israeli police
- involvement in the killing of Palestinian prisoners.
-
- >From the start the prison authorities severely curtailed his
- rights as a prisoner. In May 1991, Massarwa lodged an appeal
- regarding his prison conditions. The court postponed hearings on
- his request to have the right to home leave, and phone calls -
- rights granted to other prisoners. The judge did order the prison
- authorities to stop interfering with Massarwa's right to receive
- books and to send and receive letters. However, this order was
- not implemented in practice, and the prison authorities continue
- to prevent visitors from giving him books, cloths etc.
-
- In June 1991, Massarwa was moved to Ashmoret Prison. There, he is
- kept locked up for 22 hours a day, with a Russian cellmate who
- speaks no Hebrew. When allowed out, Massarwa is forbidden to
- speak to other prisoners, and they are forbidden to speak to him.
- Massarwa protested by wearing a gag when on his daily exercise
- hour. The prison authorities responded by placing him in solitary
- confinement for a week, the first two days without a mattress.
-
- After many delays, the case of the home leave and phone calls
- came back to the Tel-Aviv District Court on January 8, 1992.
- Judge Ben Shlomo rejected the appeal. Giving these rights to
- Massarwa, so the state claimed, would constitute a danger to
- state security . Asked by Adv. Avigdor Feldman, Massarwa's
- attorney, the state representative stated that it would be
- dangerous to let Massarwa telephone, even if his calls would be
- monitored and taped. To substantiate these claims, secret
- evidence was produced which even Massarwa and his lawyer were not
- allowed to see. We therefore can only guess what it is about.
- Could it be that Mahmoud Massarwa's voice is of such a pitch as
- would damage the whole system of Israel's telephone network?
-
- (Subscriptions: Institutions $50; Individuals $30;
- Students/Unemployed $15. N.B.: Sample issue free, on request.
- (Checks should be made payable to the ICIPP, P.O.B. 956, Tel-Aviv 61008.)
-
- Newsletter of the Israeli Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace
- Phone/fax: (03) 5565804 Editor: Adam Keller Assistant editor:
- Beate Zilversmidt Editorial Board: Uri Avnery, Matti Peled,
- Yaakov Arnon, Haim Bar'am, Yael Lotan, Yossi Amitay
-
- ---------------------------------------
- Send comments for P_news or p.news to:
- odin@world.std.com <Hank Roth>
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