Press statement
The following press statement was issued
by Defense Children International - Palestine section on
2 December 2004
Palestinian female prisoners in
Telmond start hunger strike to protest against inhumane
treatment
On 30 November 2004, a DCI/PS lawyer visited
the women’s section of Telmond prison where he was
able to talk to one Palestinian detainee, Samah Abdallah.
Samah informed him that on Sunday 28 November, the female
Palestinian prisoners in Telmond went out to the exercise
yard as normal. However, before the end of their allotted
time outdoors, the prison administration ordered the Palestinian
women and girls to return to their cells. The representative
of the Palestinian female detainees, Amna Mouna, complained
to the guards that it was too soon for the women to go back
inside. As she did so, she was severely beaten by a group
of prison guards after which she was taken to the punishment
cells, which are cold bare rooms with no bedding, no heating
and no natural light.
To protest against the manner in which
the prison administration deals with female Palestinian
prisoners and in particular against the beating of their
spokeswoman and her subsequent isolation, the remaining
Palestinian female detainees began screaming and shouting.
The guards responded by bringing in other troops, armed
with batons, water hoses and tear gas, who began to beat
the women and spray them with water and gas.
As a result of the brutal attack, one
prisoner, Sana Amer, suffered probable fractures to an arm
and a leg, while two other Palestinian prisoners, Suad Ghazal
and Asma’ Hussain both sustained probable arm fractures.
Many other prisoners were also injured by the guards. The
prison administration did not provide medical or first aid
treatment to the injured detainees. Instead, they placed
a further 13 prisoners in the punishment cells.
There were further reprisals awaiting
those who returned to their normal cells. The administration
confiscated all electrical appliances in the rooms, and
the personal supplies of food and cigarettes which the women
had bought with their own money from the canteena. In a
deliberate effort to make the miserable living conditions
even worse, guards sprayed cold water all over the prisoners’
belongings, soaking their mattresses and clothes. Given
that it is winter, the women were not able to dry the bedding,
so were forced to sleep in cold damp beds. The prison administration
cut the prisoners’ electricity and water supplies,
and the smell of the tear gas continues to cling to the
walls of the cells.
The person who has suffered the most is
Nor, the 1-year old son of Manal Ghanem. He was born in
prison on 10 October 2003 and has never been outside the
Telmond compound. After being sprayed by water and gas,
Nor developed a serious cold. He was not provided with any
medication.
Samah also informed the DCI/PS lawyer
that during the last week of November 2004, 30 female Palestinian
prisoners were transferred from Ramle (Neve-Tertze) women’s
prison to the female section of the Telmond Compound. Lack
of space was already a problem in Telmond when there were
only 56 women prisoners there. Now the number has risen
to 86, overcrowding has become a serious issue – with
as many as five detainees confined to cells which are designed
to house only two prisoners.
The Palestinian female detainees in Telmond,
among whom there are at least five aged under-18, have embarked
on a hunger strike to protest against the maltreatment they
have suffered at the hands of the prison administration
and the appalling conditions in which they are held.
DCI/PS will continue to monitor the situation
and will send out further briefings as soon as it receives
any additional information on the welfare and condition
of the Palestinian female prisoners in Telmond.
For more information, please call +972
(0)2 240 7530 and ask for the Research & International
Advocacy Unit or go to http://www.dci-pal.org
or mail info@dci-pal.org
Copyright © 2004 DCI/PS. All rights
reserved.
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