Summary Atzion detention centre has become a key focus for DCI concern after further harrowing reports of the systematic torture and abuse of children and adults in the centre, including the use of electric shocks and wild dogs to extract confessions. One notable case has been the arrest and torture of 16-year old Muhammad al-Sinawi, despite the fact that he is still recovering from cancer and requires regular check-ups to monitor his condition. His case is outlined below among the case studies and DCI is campaigning for his immediate release. Other children in the centre continue to report beatings and violence before and during interrogations. Furthermore, prisoners are being held in horrific living conditions where they are locked into tiny crowded cells for hours on end, denied basic hygiene, adequate sustenance and access to toilets. Elsewhere, in the permanent Israeli prisons, including Ramle women's prison, deprivation and petty bureaucratic rules continue to make life extremely difficult for child inmates. In Ramle, the administration has now stopped the girls keeping or receiving any academic books and even needles and thread for embroidery work. Girls are given very little food and are kept in overcrowded conditions with few diversions. Ofeq Hasharon criminal prison near Haifa continues to offer an exception to the general harsh living conditions of Palestinian child political prisoners. Although political prisoners are being held alongside criminal prisoners, they do have access to telephones, clean cells and leisure activities and continue to enjoy a much better standard of living than their compatriots elsewhere. Prison Life Atzion Military Detention Centre: Conditions at Atzion remain as horrific as in previous months with continuing allegations of torture and mistreatment from children and adults alike, children told the DCI lawyer on October 1. The cases of four current prisoners are laid out below in the Case Studies. Apart from ill-treatment at the hands of guards and interrogators, circumstances in the centre remain totally unacceptable. Overcrowding means that around 7 prisoners are being held in cells of 2.5 x 2.5 metres, with no distinction between children and adults. All prisoners lack toiletries, warm water and adequate nutrition. Ramle Women's Prison: On 17 September 2003, a DCI lawyer went to visit Ramle women's prison where there are 10 minors among the 68 Palestinian inmates. Deprivation and petty regulations dog the girl's lives, the latest development being a ban on academic books inside the prison and on sewing materials that help prisoners to pass the time. The lawyer said that visiting conditions have also deteriorated further. The prison administration have installed a glass window with two mesh windows either side which means that the glass is getting dirtier and dirtier and visitors find it difficult to see the prisoners. In addition, there is only a small hole to speak through, which means that the client and the lawyer have to shout at each other to be heard. As a consequence, everyone, including the prison administration, can hear the conversation and there is no chance of client-lawyer confidentiality. Meanwhile, conditions inside the prison remain extremely hard to bear. Food portions have been almost halved and the quality is also extremely bad. If prisoners give back the food, objecting to the quality at lunchtime, they are served the same food cold later on. Sometimes prisoners find insects in the food, girls said. In complete contravention of Israeli civil law and international law, the prison administration has stopped prisoners being brought academic books and other books that their families (with Jerusalem ID) used to bring. Now the administration will only allow cultural books, not academic books to enter the prison, and only via the Red Cross. There is no library in the prison or educational materials to help students taking their High School Exams (Tawjihi). Prisoners who have not been sentenced are not allowed to have any books at all. As previously mentioned, the girls at Ramle do not have any formal tuition, despite Israeli legal rulings to the contrary. The prison administration has also stopped families bringing in needles and thread for the girls to do embroidery. Prisoners are not allowed to send their previous needlework home to their families. Other problems are: - Severe overcrowding, with up to 8 women in each cell.
Individuals: There is another pregnant woman in Ramle, 28 year old Manal Ibrahim Ghali from Tulkarem who is in her ninth month of pregnancy. After check-ups at a hospital, it seems that the child will suffer from the same white blood cell disease that her other children suffer from. Doctors plan to deliver the baby by caesarean section. However, apart from hospital visits, Manal is getting no special treatment and suffers from the same overcrowding and inadequate food as the other prisoners. Ofeq Hasharon On 12/9/2003, a DCI lawyer visited Ofeq Hasharon prison near Haifa, where an increasing number of Palestinian children are being kept alongside Israeli criminal prisoners because of overcrowding elsewhere. There are currently around 5 Palestinian boys in the prison including 16-year old Ahmad Saleh and 16 year-old Umar Darraj. Boys are allowed to take classes in the prison and do sport and exercise. In addition, they are able to get paid work instead of classes if they choose. Generally conditions remain good in the prison and the children are being treated well. Case Studies Case 1 and Action Point: Muhammad al-Sinawi, aged 17 years old, from Azariya, was arrested 4/9/2003 and taken to Atzion military detention centre. His affidavit, taken on 18/9/2003, follows:
I, the undersigned, Muhammad al-Sinawi, holder of ID number 850956467 from Azariya, advised by the lawyer Muhammad al-Ghazawi to tell the truth and nothing but the truth, or face legal proceedings, state the following:
1) I declare that I am 17 years old, the only son of my mother who is 54 years old. My father is married to another woman.
Case 2: Mus'ab al-Hur, aged 16 and Sa'ed Ghunaimat, aged 18 Mus'ab and Sa'ed were arrested on 30/9/2003 at 4pm from Sureef. At their arrest they were beaten, particularly during the journey to Atzion detention centre in a military jeep. Then Israeli soldiers threatened them by putting a machine gun into one of their mouths to make them confess. They are still being held in Atzion. Case 3: Rukan Abd Ayed Nasrat, aged 13, from Jericho Rukan was arrested on 28/9/2003 at midnight at Ma'ale Adumim checkpoint. He was then taken to Ma'ale Adumim settlement and interrogated. He was beaten during the interrogation by Israeli soldiers and then moved to Atzion detention centre. For two days, Rukan was kept in solitary confinement in a cage. After that he was put into a cell packed with other prisoners. A DCI lawyer went to visit him on 30 September 2003. He said that Rukan is having a particularly tough time because of his young age and the very harsh conditions in the centre. Defence for Children International/Palestine Section is an independent, Palestinian non-governmental organization, established in 1992 to promote and protect the rights of Palestinian children as articulated in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child as well as in other international instruments. For more details see www.dci-pal.org Read More...
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