Israeli checkpoints at Jerusalem’s Old City gates obstruct access of Christians to the Holy Sepulcher to attend Holy Light event

Israeli police checkpoints at the gates leading to Jerusalem’s Old City this morning obstructed access of Palestinian Christians and other pilgrims to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher to take part in the Holy Fire ceremony of the Orthodox churches as part of the Easter holiday. The police decided last week to limit the number of people who can be at the church to around 2000, including police officers, a decision strongly rejected by the Orthodox churches and the Palestinian Christian community in general who say that the number of visitors of the Holy Sepulcher every year is normally ten times this number and demanded freedom of access to the religious sites to all who want to be there. Large crowds were seen since the morning hours waiting outside the New Gate, one of the gates leading to the Old City, hoping to be able to cross the police checkpoints and take part in the Holy Light ceremony when the light comes out of the Holy Sepulcher in the early afternoon and is taken to churches around the occupied territories and the world in general. Palestinian Christians in the West Bank and Gaza have difficulty reaching Jerusalem without a permit issued by the Israeli military government, which is rarely issued primarily for the young.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

After 70 days of hunger strike demanding his freedom, detainee Khader Adnan’s health is deteriorating – PPS

Palestinian detainee in Israel, Khader Adnan, 44, has been on hunger strike for 70 consecutive days and his health is gradually deteriorating, today said the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society (PPS). This is the longest time in the six hunger strikes Adnan has observed during his incarceration, it said. Adnan, from the town of Arrabeh, in the northern West Bank district of Jenin, was detained on February 5 and immediately went on hunger strike in protest against his illegal detention, the sixth and so far the longest among his strikes during his presence in jail.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

As Palestinians mark Prisoner’s Day, groups say around 4900 Palestinians are currently incarcerated in Israel

As Palestinians prepare to mark Prisoner’s Day, which coincides on April 17 of every year, prisoners’ advocacy groups today said an estimated 4900 Palestinians are currently incarcerated in Israel, including 31 women, 160 minors, one of them is a girl, and more than 1000 are held in administrative detention without charge or trial, including six minors and two women. The Commission for Prisoners and Ex-Detainees Affairs, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society, Addameer Association for Prisoner Support and Human Rights, and Wadi Hilweh Information Center – Jerusalem, said in their joint report that 23 of the freedom fighters have been held since before the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, the oldest is Mohammad al-Tous, held since 1985, in addition to 11 who were released in a prisoners’ exchange in 2011 and then re-arrested in 2014 and their sentences reinstated, most notably is Nael Barghouti, considered the longest serving freedom fighter with 43 years behind bars, 34 of them were continuous. They said some 400 freedom fighters have been in jail for over 20 years and that 554 are serving multiple life terms, one of them, Abdullah Barghouti, was sentenced to 67 life sentences. In addition, the Israeli occupation authorities are still holding the bodies of 12 Palestinians who died while in prison, one of them held since 1980, and 700 prisoners are ill, including 24 suffering from various degrees of cancer, the most difficult case among them is that of Walid Daqqa, held for 37 years.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

Foreign Ministry: Israeli attack on Christians on Holy Saturday is an attack on freedom of worship

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates has strongly condemned the Israeli occupation forces’ attack earlier today on Christians celebrating Holy Saturday in the Old City of occupied Jerusalem, describing the attack a blatant attack on the freedom of worship. In a press statement today, the Foreign Ministry confirmed the attack is strong evidence of the oppression practiced by the occupation forces against the Palestinian people and against faithful who came to worship in Jerusalem, regardless of their nationality. It also described the attack as a flagrant attack on the existing political, historical and legal status quo in occupied Jerusalem, as well as of Israel’s obligations as an occupying regime in Jerusalem. “The Israeli occupation’s measures are null and illegitimate, and will not establish a right for [Israel] in Jerusalem and other occupied Palestinian territories. These measures violate international law, international humanitarian law and signed agreements,” the statement said.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

Giving her imprisoned son a hug is all what this mother is dreaming about

Thirty-one years have passed since Diaa al-Agha, Gaza’s longest-serving prisoner in Israeli jails, was imprisoned by the Israeli occupation authorities. During all that long time ever since, his mother has only been dreaming of having a chance to hug him. “For 31 years, he has been detained in the Israeli occupation prisons. We miss him at iftar during Ramadan, and we miss him in all our events and holidays. I fear that I will die without being be able to hug him,” says Najat Al-Agha, Diaa’s mother. As a matter of fact, although families of Palestinian prisoners are allowed sometimes to visit their imprisoned relatives in Israeli jails, the prisoners are only allowed to talk to their visiting relatives through a telephone with a heavy glass bar separating them from the visitors, making it impossible to have physical contact. Diaa Zakaria Al-Agha, 48 year old, is sentenced to life in prison, and is one of the Palestinian prisoners who were arrested before the signing of the Oslo Accord in 1993 and who are still in prison until now. His mother explains, “Since his arrest, I have not been able to sleep or live normally. I miss him in every detail of my life. When Diaa was arrested, I was 42 years old, and now I am 73. I am afraid that I will not see him. All holidays are meaningless now.” “I am preoccupied by suffering, grief, and pain, and I only think about Diaa. He was a youngster when he was arrested. Every night, I wish to stay alive and see him. I wish to hug him like every mother who hugs her son,” adds the 73-year-old mother. She continues, “Diaa is different from his brothers. He loves children, he’s very social, and loves his companions. All the prisoners know him and love him.” The mother says her last visit to her son in prison coincided with the Mother’s Day on March 21. She recalls the moment when she arrived for the visit, saying, “It was as if I was visiting him for the first timeā€¦ When I saw him, he was sitting and he got up quickly. He put his cheek on the glass separating the prisoner from his/her family and I kissed him [the glass] for a while. Some of the prisoners looked at me and said: God willing, you will kiss him without glass soon.’ The mother sobs, “I have been to Switzerland, France, Morocco, Egypt, the Arab League, Algeria, Iraq and other countries. I did not miss an institution concerned with human rights. I explained to them the concerns of the families and children of the prisoners in Israeli occupation prisons, the fatigue associated with family visitation to prisons. I told them about the mothers who fathers who died while their children were inside prison.” “The idea of a mother or father calling the name of their captive son while they are taking their last breath in life is painful and heartbreaking. There are mothers who are deprived of visitation,” Al-Agha says in pain. Al-Agha points out: “We leave at three o’clock in the morning towards the gate [of the prison]. We arrive after an hours-long journey. As soon as the bus carrying the prisoners’ families enters the yards of the prison, the Israeli occupation searches us and forces us to take off our clothes in the extreme cold while we are barefoot.” The mother says she was prevented from visiting her son Diaa multiple times for several years, as is the case with many of the prisoners’ families under flimsy pretexts by the Israeli occupation authorities.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

Palestinian injured in a stoning attack by settlers near Bethlehem

A Palestinian man sustained injuries today after extremist Israeli settlers hurled stones at his vehicle while he was driving near the village of Al-Jaba’a, near the city of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank, according to local sources. Diab Mashaaleh, the mayor of the village, told WAFA that a group of Israeli settlers from the colonial settlement of Bayt Ayin, nearby, attacked Palestinian vehicles with stones near the village, smashing the windshields of at least one vehicle and injuring its driver by a stone in his head. The driver was rushed to a nearby hospital for medical treatment. Over the past four weeks, there has been a noticeable rise in Israeli settler violence against Palestinians and their properties across the occupied West Bank over the past week. The Israeli occupation army has been turning a blind eye to most of these terror acts.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

Church Committee denounces Israeli attack on Christian worshipers in Jerusalem

The Higher Presidential Committee for Church Affairs condemned today the attack by the Israeli occupation forces on monks, clerics and Christian worshipers participating in the Holy Saturday celebrations in occupied Jerusalem. “For days, the Israeli police has been threatening to impose a closure on the Holy City, and asked churches to reduce the number of participants and those allowed to enter the Church of the Holy Sepulcher,” Ramzi Khoury, the Head of the Committee, said in a statement. He added, “Since this morning, the Israeli police has been transforming the city into a military barracks, and barriers have been deployed at all entrances and around the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.” Khoury stressed that Israel does not care about international laws that guarantee the freedom of worship and the unimpeded practice of religious rituals, adding that “the attacks against Christians today are the same attacks against Muslim worshipers in the Al-Aqsa Mosque”. “It has become clear that the Israeli occupation government is not concerned with achieving calm, but is rather interested in escalation and violence, working with all its means to provoke the sentiments of Muslim and Christian worshipers,” he added. Khoury urged the international community and human rights institutions to take immediate action against Israel’s violation of the sanctity of the holy sites, and to put an end to the Israeli crimes against the Palestinian people.

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)

Jerusalem’s Islamic and Christian holy sites are a red line: President Abbas

President Mahmoud Abbas affirmed today that Jerusalem and its Islamic and Christian holy sites are a red line, and that the Palestinian people and leadership will not tolerate Israel’s attacks on worshipers in Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. “The attacks that we saw today on our people celebrating Holy Saturday in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in occupied Jerusalem, as well as the preceding attacks on worshipers in the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the desecration of its courtyards, are condemned and rejected,” said the President during a Ramadan Iftar banquet at the presidential headquarters in Ramallah. He said these Israeli attacks “reveal the dishonesty of the [Israeli] occupation, which claims to allow freedom of worship in the holy places.” Meantime, President Abbas affirmed the firm Palestinian position adhering to international legitimacy as a basis for resolving the Palestinian issue and ending the Israeli occupation of the land of the State of Palestine, with East Jerusalem as its capital. He pointed out that on upcoming May 15, the United Nations will celebrate for the first time the 75th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba, and what Palestinians everywhere are required to do is to commemorate this tragedy, “because it is the first time that the global community does not deny our Nakba.” “Commemorating the Nakba must be at the top of our priorities in order to preserve our narrative, which we must adhere to and convey to the whole world,” said the President, who urged all the Palestinians to commemorate the Palestinian tragedy of 1948 in order “to confront all lies and false narratives that attempt to distort history and facts.” The President continued, “On these blessed days, we call on all our people to stand together to face the challenges facing our cause, our land and our sanctities, and to focus our compass towards confronting the occupation and getting rid of it.”

Source: Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA)