Palestine: Marwan Barghouti’s health declining as prisoner hunger-strike continues

Palestine: Marwan Barghouti’s health declining as prisoner hunger-strike continues
Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti’s health has declined seriously over the past week after he joined a hunger strike with more than 1,000 other prisoners in Israel, an NGO said Monday.

3 min read
25 April, 2017
Marwan Barghouti has been compared to South Africa's Nelson Mandela [AFP file photo]

Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti’s health has declined seriously over the past week after he joined a hunger strike with more than 1,000 other prisoners in Israel, an NGO said on Monday.

Barghouti, 57 and serving five life sentences over his role in the second Palestinian intifada, is refusing medical treatment, according to Amani Sarahneh of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club NGO.

He told AFP this was causing his health to decline seriously.

The hunger strike began on April 17, with those taking part ingesting only water and salt. They have issued demands ranging from better medical care to phone access.

Asked about Barghouti, however, an Israeli Prisons Service spokesman said that “no decline in his health condition has been observed.”

“If Barghouti feels bad, all he has to do is eat,” the spokesman told AFP.

According to the NGO, authorities at the Jalame prison, where Barghouti was transferred and placed in solitary confinement after the strike began, have pressured him to accept medical treatment, and have also urged other prisoners to try to convince him.

Some 6,500 Palestinians are currently detained by Israel for a range of offences and alleged crimes.

Around 500 are being held under Israel’s system of administrative detention, which allows for imprisonment without charge.

Palestinian prisoners have mounted repeated hunger strikes, but rarely on such a scale.

Palestinian prisoners have mounted repeated hunger strikes, but rarely on such a scale.

Barghouti is popular among Palestinians, with polls suggesting he could win the Palestinian presidency.

While many Palestinians view him as a hero, Israelis point to the bloody suicide attacks of the second intifada of 2000-2005 and his role in the uprising.

He was convicted of attacks that killed five people, though declined to defend himself and did not recognise the court’s legitimacy.

For Palestinians, the prisons have become a stark symbol of Israel’s occupation.

For Palestinians, the prisons have become a stark symbol of Israel’s occupation.

Nearly 1 million Palestinians have been incarcerated since the start of Israel’s occupation 50 years ago, Palestinian leaders say.

Palestinian leaders have denounced Israel’s refusal to negotiate with the hunger strikers, warning of a “new intifada” if any of them die.Demonstrations have been held in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip to support the prisoners, occasionally resulting in clashes with Israeli forces, though they have been limited in number.

Hamas member Wasfi Kabha, a former minister who was released on the fourth day of the hunger strike, said on Facebook that Barghouti had told him “the strike aims to achieve more humane, fairer and more dignified prison conditions.”

In other developments, a Palestinian woman stabbed an Israeli guard at a key crossing between the West Bank and Jerusalem Monday before being arrested, police said. A police statement said Asia Kaabneh, a 39-year-old mother of nine from the West Bank, stabbed a guard at the Qalandia checkpoint, injuring her lightly. The guard was taken to hospital while Kaabneh was arrested by other guards.

A separate statement from the Shin Bet Israeli domestic security service said Kaabneh had admitted under interrogation to planning the attack after her husband threatened to divorce her.

A wave of unrest that erupted in October 2015 has claimed the lives of 261 Palestinians, 41 Israelis, two Americans, one Jordanian, an Eritrean, a Sudanese and a Briton, according to an AFP count.