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ckaihatsu
5th August 2012, 23:16
Take Action: Free imprisoned Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers



Take Action: Free Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers targeted for imprisonment

As they organize to defend their land and Palestinian farming against the onslaught of settlements and siege, Palestinian agricultural workers and organizers have been subject to an intensified arrest campaign in the occupied West Bank of Palestine. Click here to sign our petition at change.org (http://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.change.org%2Fen-CA%2Fpetitions%2Fisraeli-embassies-and-consulates-end-the-persecution-of-palestinian-farmers-and-agricultural-workers&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHQNhzQJwpP2R0Uz-TAWNRicTIeFg) or sign on here (http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fsamidoun.ca%2F2012%2F08%2Ftake-action-palestinian-farmers-agricultural-workers-targeted-for-imprisonment-and-persecution%2F%23petition&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNG7mNBeQqlEF0Z05RmoGlm9PzMzuQ) to demand an immediate end to the targeting of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees and all Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers, and the freedom of the Palestinian organizers imprisoned for defending their rights.

A number of staff of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees (Facebook), a Palestinian grassroots organization that organizes Palestinian farmers to defend their land and develop their products, have been targeted in recent days for arrest by Israeli occupation forces.


Dr. Moayad Bisharat

On July 31, Dr. Moayad Ahmad Bisharat, the coordinator of UAWC’s Jericho office was abducted at dawn from his home. The UAWC office in Jericho was then ransacked by Israeli forces, who confiscated the computers, laptops, and files of the organization.

This is the most recent in a series of arrests of UAWC activists in recent weeks, including the Director of Development and Operations, the engineer Fuad Abu Saif on July 26 in an early morning raid on his home in Hebron, in which his computer, mobile phone and other communication devices were seized. The director of the UAWC Jericho office, Mohammad Nujoom was abducted on July 16 as he re-entered Palestine from abroad. Both were taken to the Moskobiya compound for interrogation.


Engineer Fuad Abu Saif

In addition, UAWC Board Member Ahmad Soufan, held in administrative detention for one year, was recently ordered into a third term of six months in arbitrary administrative detention without charge or trial. Two other UAWC leaders, Abdel Razzak Farraj, administrative and financial director, and Board member Dr. Yousef Abdul Haq, were both finally released from administrative detention after multiple renewals of their imprisonment.

As the UAWC noted in its statement on the arrests, these arrests are part and parcel of the ongoing attacks on Palestinians’ right to the land, including massive settlement building, land confiscation, home demolitions, and the construction of the apartheid wall, as well as the siege and firing on farmers and agricultural workers in Gaza. The UAWC called on international organizers to defend Palestinian national rights and demand the freedom of the UAWC detainees and all Palestinian prisoners.

UAWC, which recently marked its 25th anniversity, has been struggling with Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers to defend and develop their land, support Palestinian agricultural projects, and support farmers’ steadfastness on the land in the face of Israeli occupation and aggression.

The attack on the UAWC is part of the overall attack on Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers, from olive farmers whose trees are set ablaze by settlers, tthose whose land was stolen for settlements, “military use,” or “buffer zones”, to the fishers of Gaza, who daily brave military attack for seeking to fish in their sea. It reflects the over 64 years of occupation, land theft, displacement and dispossession of the occupation of Palestine. Farmers and agricultural workers are on the front lines of resistance as they struggle to remain on their land – and are thus being targeted for arrest and imprisonment in an attempt to undermine the steadfastness of the farmers.

Western governments, including those of the United States and Canada, are not only silent in the face of these attacks, they are directly complicit, as they pledge expanded military support and allegiance to Israel as its occupation, apartheid and human rights violations continue and escalate. It is urgent that people make their own voices heard to challenge and break this complicity.

TAKE ACTION!

1. Click here to sign our petition at change.org, or sign on here! This petition will be presented to Israeli embassies in the US, Canada and other countries on Wednesday, August 15, demanding the release of these prisoners, justice for all prisoners, and an end to the attack on Palestinian farmers and agricultural workers. Individual and organizational signatories are welcome – we particularly urge groups and organizations to sign on to and distribute the petition. If you experience any difficulty signing on, please send your endorsement to [email protected]

2. Boycott Israeli goods and agricultural products! The Palestinian movement has called for boycott, divestment and sanctions targeting Israeli goods and institutions until it ends its violations of Palestinian rights. Israeli oranges, organic peppers, dates, and other agricultural products are the fruits of stolen land. Boycott those products and help to raise awareness in your community!

3. Support Palestinian agricultural products, including olive oil, spices, and maftoul, farmed by Palestinian farmers and not occupation settlements.

4. Join a protest or demonstration outside an Israeli consulate for Palestinian prisoners. Many groups and organizations are holding events – join one or announce your own. Organizing an event, action or forum on Palestinian prisoners on your city or campus? Use this form to contact us and we will post the event widely. If you need suggestions, materials or speakers for your event, please contact us at [email protected]

5. Help to support UAWC – here is information on how you can donate to support UAWC’s much needed work among Palestinian farmers and fishers.

Luka
5th August 2012, 23:45
If you're going to boycott all Israeli goods because of what the Israeli settlers, police or military does, then why not also boycott Palestinian goods for all the horrible things the Hamas does? As a communist if you follow that logic and boycott all goods from every state that does some things you don't agree with you'd probably starve to death.

ckaihatsu
6th August 2012, 00:27
If you're going to boycott all Israeli goods because of what the Israeli settlers, police or military does, then why not also boycott Palestinian goods for all the horrible things the Hamas does? As a communist if you follow that logic and boycott all goods from every state that does some things you don't agree with you'd probably starve to death.


Ultra-left much -- ?

Luka
6th August 2012, 00:35
Ultra-left much -- ?

I'm not really sure what that's supposed to mean. I have never heard the term "ultra-left" before.

Positivist
6th August 2012, 00:45
If you're going to boycott all Israeli goods because of what the Israeli settlers, police or military does, then why not also boycott Palestinian goods for all the horrible things the Hamas does? As a communist if you follow that logic and boycott all goods from every state that does some things you don't agree with you'd probably starve to death.

Boycotting Palestinian products (how much of these reach Europe and the United States anyway) wouldn't really cripple hamas the way it would Israel. Furthermore, while hamas' fundamentalism is reactionary, the support of self-determination is not. And I know, I know "nations don't exist, why would I support something that was imagined thousands of years ago." The thing is that the people who have inhabited the land mass known as Palestine for over a thousand years do exist, and they do have national sensitivities, and that isn't changing anytime soon so we might as well oppose the oppression that the Palestinian people are experiencing right now.

Luka
6th August 2012, 01:35
The thing is that the people who have inhabited the land mass known as Palestine for over a thousand years do exist, and they do have national sensitivities, and that isn't changing anytime soon so we might as well oppose the oppression that the Palestinian people are experiencing right now.
I do oppose the oppression of Palestinians, but I certainly won't support the existence of a Palestinian state, as long as LGBT people have to fear for their lives there. As long as we don't have communism in the area(which doesn't seem very realistic for the near future) I would prefer one Israeli state that would include Palestinian territories with equal rights for all citizens.


what in the article refers to hamas.?
these are trade unionists and farmers being arrested or even killed by settlers and the iof ,over their livelihood.
Nothing I think. But I was criticizing the general concept of boycotting all goods of a certain nation, not just that article.

ckaihatsu
6th August 2012, 02:05
---





I'm not really sure what that's supposed to mean. I have never heard the term "ultra-left" before.








Someone being 'ultraleft' (on a particular, specific political point) means that they've been deemed by someone to be *overly demanding*, by the standards of (revolutionary) leftism.

Generically it means that someone is overly dismissive of everyone else's leftist politics, in favor of their own, by subscribing to ridiculously unrealistic expectations.

So while it's certainly *not* ultraleft to demand that the workers of the world control the world's means of mass production, it *would* be ultraleft to demand that this all begin next week or else everyone else is "not genuine about their revolutionary politics".

http://www.revleft.com/vb/do-you-mean-p2176364/index.html#post2176364

Positivist
6th August 2012, 02:15
I do oppose the oppression of Palestinians, but I certainly won't support the existence of a Palestinian state, as long as LGBT people have to fear for their lives there. As long as we don't have communism in the area(which doesn't seem very realistic for the near future) I would prefer one Israeli state that would include Palestinian territories with equal rights for all citizens.

This is a fair critique of the Palestinian liberation movement, but the problem with it is that the prospect of such a state coming into existence is highly unlikely. Perhaps a more balanced solution should be to support the formation of an independent Palestinian state, contingent upon that the state will respect the "rights" of all citizens.

Luka
6th August 2012, 02:30
It's unlikely that the conflict will be resolved any time soon at all, but I would be fine with an independent Palestinian state, contingent upon that the state will respect the "rights" of all citizens too.
However I have no idea how the situation with the Israeli settlers could be (peacefully) resolved.

cynicles
7th August 2012, 03:16
How do you expect Palestinians to make any progress on lgbt rights while being ethnically cleansed? And the boycott wasn't some arbitrary event that people outside Palestine called for it was simething Palestinians asked for like black south Africans.