Monday 11 June 2012

Like It's a Game


Starving for Life

Hey! 
Ghandi is not the only one to hunger strike for peace!
Let us not just romanticize the past, but yearn for the change of the present.



While Israeli President Shimon Peres is receiving the now B.S. "Award for Freedom" (Given to Mother Theresa, Mandela, Martin Luther King jr., etc.) from Obama, this is what is happening in the land he is occupying, colonizing, and squeezing out...

Mahmoud Al-Sarsak, Soccer player held in prison with no charges or trial since June 2009 is on day 89
 of his hunger strike against the imprisonment and ill treatment of himself and thousands of Palestinians held with no charge or representation under the guise of "Administrative Detention" for up to 5 years.The prisoner's held without reason are imprisoned for 6 month terms, and often on the very last day before released, the unspecified charge will be renewed for another 6 months also under "Administrative Detention."  This pattern of no representation, trial, or charge can and often does last for years.

...A different kind of game than Sarsak wanted to play?

A game where the one team dominates the other team by pushing them to the middle of their own field, building a wall around them, and taking over their stadium, scoring goal after goal after goal after goal. While they other team watches - imprisoned - from their own field, and international media cheers and boos from the view on their screens.



Below is a link to Amnesty's report and call for action, statement from Mahmoud and Akram (another hunger striker), as well as some pictures from today's demonstration in Nablus, Palestine.

We CAN be outraged.



"Despite the urgency of his condition, the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) has denied Mahmoud access to independent doctors from PHR-Israel until today. The IPS also refuses to transfer him to a civilian hospital for proper treatment. Following today’s visit, the PHR-Israel doctor reported that Mahmoud has experienced extreme loss of muscle tissue and drastic weight loss. He has lost 33 percent of his body weight, from an original weight of 76 kilos down to his present weight of 51 kilos. He also suffers from frequent incidents of fainting and loss of consciousness, in addition to lapses in memory. The doctor further reported that Mahmoud is in danger of pulse disruptions (arrhythmias) that are endangering his life."


Letter/Statement from Mahmoud and Akram:



"This is an urgent and final distress call from captivity, slow and programmed death inside the cells of so-called Ramle Prison hospital, that you know that your sons and brothers are still struggling against death and you pay no attention to them and do not remember their cause – as if, after the end of the general strike all the demands of the prisoners were met.
We are still here, continuing our open-ended hunger strike and that battle has not endeddespite 78 days of strike for one of us, and 59 days for the other.
Regretfully, we thought that you would support us in our hunger strike, but instead you have stood on our wounds and our pain.
At Presentation in Nablus, Palestine
From here, we cry out to you, to our brothers, to dignified people, that you bear your responsibility, for after God, we have no one but you and the freedom loving people of the world to bring victory to our cause.
Second: As the hunger strike continues to erode our bodies and sap what is left of our strength, we cry out to you to help us in our battle on every level and field, local, regional and international, especially in the media, and especially Palestinian television which represents the Palestinian people.
And also in the newspapers, radio and electronic media, so that our voices can reach the freedom loving people of the world and expose this entity, and for the victory of our cause.
We say: there is still enough time and the support that comes late is better than that which does not come at all. It is better that you receive us alive and victorious rather than as lifeless bodies in black bags.
Sarzak
Therefore we two hunger strikers remain on our strike, Mahmoud Sarsak who has endured 78 days, and Sheikh Akram Rikhawi who has endured 59 days and was already ill, having spent 8 years in Ramle Prison clinic suffering from illnesses, and who now struggles against death.
We inform you that we will remain on our strike until all our demands are met and we will not submit to the demands of the Prison Service regardless of what we suffer in restrictions, provocations, and bargaining, and we will not accept promises and half-measures despite the deterioration of our health and our entry into difficult and dangerous situations, especially since we have lost more than 25kg and 18kg.
Our people, our leaders in Gaza, in the West Bank and outside, and freedom loving people of the world, we cry out to you, and to all people in the world who believe in the justice of our cause: do not abandon us to the vindictive hands of the jailers to take what they want from our frail bodies.
You are the ones able to support us for victory in our battle.
Your brothers who remain on hunger strike until victory or martrydom,
Mahmoud Sarsak
Akram Rikhawi"
At Protest for Sarzak at Ofer Prison in Palestine
*Not my photo*




Interview with Family






Amnesty International: FOOTBALLER'S HUNGER STRIKE CONTINUES: MAHMOUD AL-SARSAK
At Presentation in Nablus, Palestine


- C

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