Moment of reflection as list of Palestinian prisoners reveals ‘inconvenient truths’

Published November 27, 2023
Palestinian prisoners (wearing grey jumpers) cheer as they are carried by supporters in Ramallah after being released on Sunday.—AFP
Palestinian prisoners (wearing grey jumpers) cheer as they are carried by supporters in Ramallah after being released on Sunday.—AFP

Reading through the list of Palestinian prisoners slated for release, the first thing that strikes you is their ages. The vast majority of them — 287 — are aged 18 or under, including five as young as 14, which begs the question: how does a 14-year-old boy become a “security prisoner”?

This question was posed by Iranian-Israeli political activist Orly Noy in a piece for the +972 Magazine, which argues that the list is a dizzying testament to just how central detention and imprisonment are to Israel’s occupation and control over Palestinians.

The names on the list include alleged members of Palestinian political factions like Hamas, Fatah, Islamic Jihad, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), as well as many who are not affiliated with any group. None were convicted of murder. Some were convicted of attempted murder, while the majority were charged with less significant offences, including a large number who were arrested for throwing stones.

One of them, a 17-year-old, has been behind bars for two years for throwing stones at an Israeli police vehicle in Jerusalem — the same city where Jewish settlers can carry out riots against Palestinians that rarely end in investigations, let alone arrests.

 A Palestinian prisoner hugs his mother after being released from an Israeli jail in exchange for Israeli hostages released by Hamas from Gaza Strip, in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank on Nov 26, 2023. — AFP
A Palestinian prisoner hugs his mother after being released from an Israeli jail in exchange for Israeli hostages released by Hamas from Gaza Strip, in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank on Nov 26, 2023. — AFP

According to data from the Israeli human rights group HaMoked, as of November 2023, Israel holds 6,809 “security prisoners.” Of these, 2,313 are serving a prison sentence; 2,321 have not yet been convicted in court; 2,070 are being held under administrative detention (indefinitely imprisoned without trial or due process); and 105 are “illegal combatants” who were arrested during Hamas’ October 7 attacks in southern Israel.

Ms Noy writes that almost all of the 300 Palestinians being considered for release are relatively new prisoners, arrested in the last year or two. The exceptions are 10 women from Jerusalem and the West Bank who have been imprisoned since 2015-17, most of them on charges of attempting or committing stabbing attacks against Israeli security forces — some of which ended without any harm, while others caused minor to moderate injuries.

All of this, it should be recalled, is overseen by the same judicial system that, among countless other examples, decided to close the case against an Israeli settler who stabbed a young Palestinian to death in May 2022 because “it was not possible to rule out [the suspect’s] version that he acted in self-defense.”

It is the same system that, in July of this year, acquitted an Israeli police officer who shot dead Iyad al-Hallaq, an autistic Palestinian man, despite clear testimonies and video evidence proving he was unarmed and made no threat of any kind.

This is in addition to the fact that Palestinian “security prisoners” are judged in a separate military court system that boasts a conviction rate of between 95 to 99 per cent. Lenience, in the eyes of the Israeli apartheid regime, is a right reserved for Jews only.

 Palestinian prisoner Khalil Zama’ (R) hugs a relative after being released from an Israeli jail, at his home in Halhul village north Hebron in the occupied West Bank on Nov 27, 2023.  — AFP
Palestinian prisoner Khalil Zama’ (R) hugs a relative after being released from an Israeli jail, at his home in Halhul village north Hebron in the occupied West Bank on Nov 27, 2023. — AFP

While Jews who riot, attack, and even kill Palestinians are immune from prosecution, the prisoners list reminds us that Palestinians can be arrested wholesale based solely on the “intention” to carry out a violent act.

One of those on the list, a 45-year-old woman from Jerusalem, has been in prison for more than two years because “she was caught in the Old City with a knife in her hand,” and “said that she intended to carry out an attack.”

Meanwhile, Israel’s Kahanist national security minister is urging Jews to arm themselves while handing out weapons like candy, and many right-wing Israelis are writing countless messages, in public and private, gleefully announcing their intention to “murder as many Arabs as possible.”

Sometimes “intent” doesn’t even appear on the list of charges. An 18-year-old from Jerusalem was “arrested along with others because he cried out ‘Allahu Akbar’.”

An 18-year-old woman from the West Bank has been imprisoned for months for “incitement on Instagram”. Among the Israeli public in contrast, explicit calls for genocide are considered a legitimate way to raise the national morale, while Palestinians with Israeli citizenship may be arrested for posting something as simple as a photo of shakshuka next to the Palestinian flag.

Published in Dawn, November 27th, 2023

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