that UN speech of netanyahu’s

i had no idea that the speech with the cartoon-bomb was given to the UN general assembly (not that it matters – in (significant) part due to israeli and US-politics, the UN has lost any hope of credibility,, so why not introduce cartoons to UN-addressed diplomacy?). and like the author of the post i’m going to share below, i wouldn’t have taken notice of the whole thing, hadn’t my social media account suddenly gotten full of images of cartoon-bombs and variations. i’ll just assume you didn’t pay attention to the speech itself either.

if you are in any doubt about what unabashedly supremacist and racist ideologies and propaganda make the current (and past) israeli state policy, do read this post by one assaf oron (apparently an israeli/US-american activist living in the US and perhaps therefore one i never heard about or from before)

yes yes, he’s visualizing the threat of ahmadinejad’s secret atomic bombs to UN/kindergarden-folks (pic somewhere of the net)

i liked this one (there’s many others tho)

(and to anyone who thinks that this whole warmongering might be about actual fears of an iranian nuclear attack – or anyone who just wants to understand what this is really about – or anyone interested in understanding some basic power dynamics and policies in this region – and for everyone else, i can only strongly recommend this book by jonathan cook (probably the best western journalist on palestine and zionist policies in general that i know, so if ur not up to reading the book, start reading his articles)).

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here assaf oron’s post

Wed Oct 03, 2012 at 06:15 AM PDT

Netanyahu’s UN Speech also had REALLY-NOT-FUNNY parts…

by Assaf for Adalah — A Just Middle East

 …but they were completely upstaged by his Wile E. Coyote climax.

These parts are highly worth revisiting. Bibi’s brazen, out-and-out racism and lunatic brand of nationalist-supremacy, were expressed in no uncertain terms upon the United Nations stage. The man’s true colors were there for all to see.

I owe the discovery of the lesser-known first half of Bibi’s speech, to Palestinian-American comedian Amer Zahr, a.k.a. The Civil Arab. Myself, I was probably going to ignore the Bibi speech altogether – had the Web not suddenly exploded with images of Acme bombs.

But Zahr, as he says, must listen:

As a Palestinian, I tuned in.  It’s my duty.  Plus, I say the guy’s name at least 3-4 times a day (I won’t tell you how), so the least I could do was to listen to his speech.

And here’s the speech itself. Some gems (with my comments), starting from the very first sentence (below the fold):

 

Ladies and Gentlemen,Three thousand years ago, King David reigned over the Jewish state in our eternal capital, Jerusalem.

Leave aside the universal consensus among archaeologists and historians (except far-right Zionist ones) that the David-Solomon kingdom’s extent, and possibly even existence, was dramatically overblown by the Old Testament writers who lived several centuries later.

There is one fact that is beyond dispute. That kingdom, or city-state, or chieftainship or whatever David presided over (if he really existed), was Israelite. Not Jewish. As even the Biblical record grudgingly admits, the Israelites happily worshipped multiple gods, including regular human sacrifice right there in our eternal Jerusalem, in a ravine we call Gei Ben Hinom and the English transliterated as Gehenna. So much for “Jewish State.”

The Jewish religion in any form recognizable to us today, was still about 500 years in the future, to be born upon the ashes of the Israelite period, and bearing a very distinctive Diasporic character. In fact, the only period of full Jewish sovereignty between the religion’s true birth and modern times was the Hasmonean kingdom, a short-lived, corruption-ridden little operation that eventually succumbed to its incessant internal strife.

Considering Bibi’s bragging later in his speech, and his attempt to pose as the all-knowing teacher lecturing a willfully ignorant world, it is ridiculously ironic for him to begin with such a piece of blatant, crappy, ignorant antiquity-worship in his first sentence. And he’s just getting warmed up:

Yesterday was Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year. Every year, for over three millennia, we have come together on this day of reflection and atonement. We take stock of our past. We pray for our future. We remember the sorrows of our persecution; we remember the great travails of our dispersion; we mourn the extermination of a third of our people, six million, in the Holocaust.But at the end of Yom Kippur, we celebrate. We celebrate the rebirth of Israel. We celebrate the heroism of our young men and women who have defended our people with the indomitable courage of Joshua, David, and the Maccabees of old. We celebrate the marvel of the flourishing modern Jewish state.

I know Yom Kippur. Dammit, I’ve fasted every Yom Kippur for the past 30 years. This junk of Bibi’s has almost nothing to do with Yom Kippur. And please, let other Jewish (or Judaism-knowledgeable) readers correct me if I’m wrong. Yom Kippur is mostly for atoning for one’s personal sins, and for the community’s sins. Not for reaffirming our collective sense of external persecution and its myth of supremacy. For that, we have plenty of otherholidays, thank you very much.

And the central figures of Judaism, surely during Yom Kippur, are not Joshua-David-Maccabees who flexed the Jewish Muscle (the latter are rarely mentioned outside of Hanuka), but the prophets who spoke truth to power and pointed to the community its own sins.

But the speech is just about to get much, much worse:

In Israel, the past and the future find common ground. Unfortunately, that is not the case in many other countries. For today, a great battle is being waged between the modern and the medieval.The forces of modernity seek a bright future in which the rights of all are protected, in which an ever-expanding digital library is available in the palm of every child, in which every life is sacred. The forces of medievalism seek a world in which women and minorities are subjugated, in which knowledge is suppressed, in which not life but death is glorified.

These forces clash around the globe, but nowhere more starkly than in the Middle East.

Israel stands proudly with the forces of modernity. We protect the rights of all our citizens:  men and women, Jews and Arabs, Muslims and Christians – all are equal before the law.

Clash of Civilizations? Really? In 2012?!? Has this guy stepped out of a time machine? And in whose books is the idealization of Medieval times bad, but the idealization of an imagined 3000-year-old past good? Of course, in a hypocritical racist bigot’s books: “my ancient history good, your ancient history bad”.

Regarding the great treatment of non-Jewish citizens, forgive me, dear Smug Prime Minister, but I prefer the direct testimony of their own legal-advocacy NGO Adalah (yes! same name as our DKos group!) over your childish self-congratulations. Their current headline reads “NCPB (National Committee for Planning and Building) reaffirms plans to build Jewish town on ruins of Bedouin village.” Par for the course of the Enlightened Jewish State.

Where were we? Oh, yes, explaining how great we are. And modest.

Israel is also making the world a better place: our scientists win Nobel Prizes. Our know-how is in every cell-phone and computer that you’re using. We prevent hunger by irrigating arid lands in Africa and Asia.

…And gratuitously induce hunger by strangling the West Bank and Gaza. Let us not forget that if it was not for a certain 2010 Flotilla, to this very day your government would have still rationed the food allowed into Gaza, to make sure those medievalists don’t get too fat and lazy.

And Israel’s exceptional creativity is matched by our people’s remarkable compassion. When disaster strikes anywhere in the world – in Haiti, Japan, India, Turkey Indonesia and elsewhere – Israeli doctors are among the first on the scene, performing life-saving surgeries.

Like they did just a few weeks ago… oops. no. A few weeks ago, Israel deliberately let a group of Eritrean refugees almost die of thirst and hunger inside its own territory,stranded between border fences in plain view of its soldiers who were under strict orders not to offer any assistance, only limited amounts of water. And this was not an isolated incident: Bibi government has set a disgusting precedent, inciting against this recent wave of African refugees, and building massive concentration, sorry, “internment” camps for them.

Should we laugh or cry? I say laugh:

President Abbas just spoke here. I say to him and I say to you: We won’t solve our conflict with libelous speeches at the UN. That’s not the way to solve it.

Says the guy who just slandered the entire Middle East except his own country.

We have to sit together, negotiate together, and reach a mutual compromise, in which a demilitarized Palestinian state recognizes the one and only Jewish State.

Because that is what negotiations are all about: me dictating to you a-priori how they must end.

Ok, enough about us good guys. Let’s go back to some bad-guy classics that never get old:

Israel wants to see a Middle East of progress and peace. We want to see the three great religions that sprang forth from our region – Judaism, Christianity and Islam – coexist in peace and in mutual respect.Yet the medieval forces of radical Islam, whom you just saw storming the American embassies throughout the Middle East, they oppose this. They seek supremacy over all Muslims. They are bent on world conquest. They want to destroy Israel, Europe, America. They want to extinguish freedom. They want to end the modern world.

Where’s Jon Stewart when we need him?

They want to drag humanity back to an age of unquestioning dogma and unrelenting conflict. I am sure of one thing. Ultimately they will fail. Ultimately, light will penetrate the darkness.We’ve seen that happen before. Some five hundred years ago, the printing press helped pry a cloistered Europe out of a dark age. Eventually, ignorance gave way to enlightenment.

So too, a cloistered Middle East will eventually yield to the irresistible power of freedom and technology. When this happens, our region will be guided not by fanaticism and conspiracy, but by reason and curiosity.

Because hey, nothing even remotely resembling that, has really happened around us over the past two years, right?

In last year’s UN speech, at least, Bibi was careful to pay a completely phony lip-service to the Arab Spring, despite being the most notoriously anti-Arab-Spring world leader from day one. Now all pretenses are gone. He made a boastful “I told you so” Knesset speech in late 2011 (Haaretz summarized, “Netanyahu: Arab Spring pushing Mideast backward, not forward”). By September 2012, Bibi is sure that his anti-Arab-Spring view has been scientifically proven correct, a closed case. He was right and everyone else was wrong, and it’s not even worth deliberating upon.

So what is worth mentioning at length?

Some 70 years ago, the world saw another fanatic ideology bent on world conquest. It went down in flames. But not before it took millions of people with it. Those who opposed that fanaticism waited too long to act. In the end they triumphed, but at an horrific cost. My friends, we cannot let that happen again.At stake is not merely the future of my own country. At stake is the future of the world. Nothing could imperil our common future more than the arming of Iran with nuclear weapons.

Oh yessssssss, now it’s nearing perfection. To juxtapose Nazism and Iran within two sentences, in one “Islamo-Fascist” fell rhetorical swoop – and to top if off with a modest 70 spoons or so of personal and nationalist megalomania. mmmmmm…

From here, the road is open to an escalating tirade against Iran and its nukes – right up to the Wile E. Coyote bomb that everyone saw.

What I find most amazing, is that among Israelis – this bunch of supposedly savvy, world-weary political cynics – Bibi is considered a great speaker. Haaretz even ran an article, claiming that after the speech Republicans were wishing Bibi could run for President instead of their own batch of clowns.

It has been a while since I’ve read such a bad speech. The cartoon-bomb skit turns out to have been the least douche-baggy part of it!

 

 

 

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occupying army arrested yet another brother of mustafa tamimi together with three others


yesterday morning, i read some weird messages about omar (25)  getting arrested later at night after he got shot in the stomach. the messages said that the army stopped the ambulance outside of the village and arrested both omar and another young man who was accompanying him. apparently the occupying army had once again raided the village after i went to bed.

at 6.30 mustafa‘s sister dalal, who lives in the US, wrote me asking for news about omar as his family in the US was very worried.

zeyad (25), the oldest son in the family after mustafa, was online. i knew he was at work in ramallah (where he stays the entire week, including nights) but i thought he might know. i asked him about omar. i also read something about the army having arrested him (zeyad) as well as mohammad from inside their respective homes but since zeyad was at work – and apparently online as well – i didn’t take that seriously. dalal wasn’t worried about him either. i did ask zeyad what that message was about, but before he even answered, i told dalal that her brother was alright. it was omar we worried about.

as usual zeyad didn’t answer, and as usual i got annoyed (i’ve been pretty irritated with lately). i wrote him some angry message and left to buy credit and call whichever of his brothers i’d find awake.

their father answered one of my calls.

and yes, the army did come into their home once again in the middle of the night (at 2.30) asking right away for zeyad. and yes, zeyad was actually at home, he hadn’t been able to go to ramallah that day because of the general strike in the west bank (and so, of course, it wasn’t him that i saw online).

the army once again invaded their home with their super-guns drawn. one soldier stood in front of a picture of mustafa and umm mustafa asked him how they even dared to set foot (or combat boots) in their home after everything they did. the soldier answered that he was sorry, that it wasn’t him who killed mustafa. “you’re all the occupying army”, umm mustafa said (in response the soldier told her to shut up, said that he knew everything about the family and about what happened).

they took zeyad, closed the door in the face of the rest of the family and forbade them to go out. they also arrested mohammad from his house. (watch video of the raid – images of omar getting taken into ambulance at the end)

zeyad, relative/friend anan and loai a few nights ago

i feel so so angry that they had the nerve to go into that house once again, that they dared to harass this family once more. its not even been a month since they released loai (20) from ofer military prison – and already when they had arrested him, in the middle of the night, from inside their home, barely two months after they had shot dead mustafa in cold blood in their own village, i (like so many others) could almost not believe it, felt so so enraged that they would enter their home again with their guns. it still makes me furious that they actually imprisoned loai – FROM INSIDE THEIR HOME – only two months after he saw his eldest brother bleed into the street in their village, before friends carried him into a car and away from him forever. (watch this video: loai, wearing a grey/black checkered jacket, can be first seen at 0:22). i still feel a mixture of rage and pain and i struggle to grasp that they not only murdered mustafa in the way they did, but that they stormed the house of the bereft family so shortly after and violently arrested the brother who actually saw mustafa dying, when they had only released his twin odai from military jail the day of mustafa’s funeral – AFTER the funeral. i still can’t grasp that odai heard in jail that someone in his village was severely injured, heard in jail that the injured young man was his eldest brother, heard in jail that it was a serious injury and that he might lose his eye, heard in jail that he might be fine after all, and heard in jail the next day that his brother was martyred. and that he was denied the right to spend that terrible day with his family and friends, with his twin brother.

loai and odai a few weeks ago, right after loai’s release

last night, i got again choked up thinking about it, it felt unbearable, i chatted up loai again, and again, something about his reply (which made me laugh at myself) was typical, perhaps the reason why i keep feeling draw to them, and yet something i struggle to describe. something about how does one LIVE after such things happen? they do (and loai, for one, does so joking), and i keep needing to see that.

mustafa is mentioned every day in all kinds of conversations in the house. and i often talk about just this with umm mustafa, about how this is all TOO MUCH, how i really can almost not accept that this all happened to them. i often end up crying at the outrage and injustice of it. and i usually end up saying that hopefully, this is IT though, that surely they have had more than several lifetimes of a family’s share of potential suffering caused by this army, that hopefully from now on, they WILL be able to just live. only two weeks ago, loai found work, only a month ago, ola (19) came back from jordan, where she spend six months trying to get back some sense of life after the murder of her brother, only some days ago dalal (26) – who had joined her husband in the US nine years ago after her wedding and who has not seen her family since – finally got her US passport and is now booking a flight to come together with her eldest daughter in october.

but they just arrested yet another brother. yesterday, dalal said she just realized that she will probably not see zeyad when she comes. i didn’t know what to say. but then i said that as bad as it sounded, she could visit him in jail. she said that wasn’t enough for her. not enough especially knowing how much zeyad in particular loves children, not enough he might be denied his first chance to play with his niece. at one point, dalal said that sometimes she thinks god doesn’t want them to be all together. how terrible to live through things that can even make you think that. 

zeyad with cousin(?) nour earlier this year

zeyad and mohammad were brought to ofer military prison right away. for a while, it was not clear where or how omar was. eventually, eyas, who was arrested with him, was released and we received the news that omar was at ofer as well. the three were visited by their lawyer late in the afternoon. later, the lawyer said that omar was obviously in pain, but apparently not in serious condition. he was reportedly shot with eight rubber-coated steel bullets.

as i’m writing this, the three are hopefully having their court hearing. for zeyad, his relative nida’a (whose husband tarek is still at ofer as well) went. his mother and father have a permit for today only allowing them to go to an israeli hospital. abu mustafa needs a new kidney and it’s been months that we’ve been trying to find out details about his condition.

i think to many who don’t know them and even more to those who don’t know other families in palestine, mustafa’s family appears to live in a different world where the set of rules and standards that define our lives do not apply, where all the shit that the army keeps doing to them seems certainly terrible, but to be expected. perhaps they or you think of them as a family in war. in the palestine-activism world, on the other hand, they are maybe almost idealized, they are imagined as symbolic, strong, whatever else one comes up with.

mustafa, saddam, loai and odai in the back and their parents in the front

i am trying to say that most of the time, whenever the army (with the support of our media and governments) doesn’t decide otherwise, they are JUST A FAMILY – period. when they are not shot at, tear-gassed, prevented from receiving urgently needed medical care, when their home isn’t invaded, when the boys aren’t arrested or beaten, when their relatives are not prevented from visiting them in palestine, they worry about getting the laptop repaired, someone complains about what’s again for dinner, someone tries to win an argument about taking the car after 10 pm to go to a wedding in jalazon refugee camp, someone picks cactus-fruit for someone else, someone can’t find the red football shirt and gets upset, someone brings warm bread in time for dinner, umm mustafa worries even about me when i want to walk down the road to bilal and manal’s house after dark, everyone works together on expanding the house, they try to make anyone passing by feel welcome, etc.

whenever they can be, they are a close-knit family, living in an amazing community with bonds so strong that i feel envious.

 

 

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more airstrikes on gaza last night

* originally posted on 10.9.2012

last night, for the second time in less than a week, gaza was again attacked by the over-equipped zionist airforces. unlike last week, no one was immediately murdered in the attack, but five people, including two children, were severely injured. 

photo: Abed Rahim Khatib-Paldf

photo: REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa

again, i think of mohammad and ibrahim who were injured in one of the airstrikes on the gaza strip last ramadan (august 2011). mohammad wasn’t even mentioned in any report, ibrahim was only mentioned as a child who had lost a hand in the attack. they were only two of of the four children that were murdered and six children that were injured during the airstrikes in the last two weeks of ramadan. i think of ibrahim who died in an israeli hospital, isolated from his family, at the age of 12. i think of all the treatment that mohammad has been receiving and is STILL receiving in order to heal as best as possible from his many severe injuries, and i think of how he has been healing this well only because a handful of people has been massively supporting his recovery, who have fundraised, persuaded hospitals to take him on, brought food, clothes, books etc. to mohammad and his father every day while they where not allowed to leave the israeli hospital, got permits for his mother to come and see him, etc etc etc.

i would be surprised if the two children that were injured last night received any similar support. i can’t imagine how long their healing will take. certainly longer than the period until the next airstrike and the next injury or murder of some other child.

last week, on sept 6, six people were murdered during another series of airstrikes on the people of the gaza strip.

(see this overview of attacks on gaza last month and their consequences or see this timeline of reported attacks on gaza in general)

i meant to write a summary of the major things that have happened these past few days, but when I think about all of it, I feel so overwhelmed and want to go to bed. just know that we’ve had more children violently arrested, more people displaced as their homes were demolished, many many more attacks by settler colonists -including with guns – on palestinian civilians, including children. more night raids. more incursions. more expansion of illegal colonies. etc etc etc

meanwhile three hunger strikers are breaking records and dying


one thing that i feel ashamed of not having written before: there are currently three prisoners on extended hunger strike and at immediate risk of death.
samer al barq is on the 112 consecutive day of renewed hunger strike!! and hassan safadi is on the 82nd day of renewed hunger strike. hassan’s mother is in critical condition in hospital herself. ayman sharawna is on his 72nd day of hunger strike.

we are getting used to record lengths of hunger strike, i know i am getting used to it. thankfully, there are people out there who are protesting, some of whom are striking in solidarity (for instance at a university campus in the US) to help draw attention to the struggle of the hunger strikers and help increase pressure.

please read about the prisoners and do what you can

 

 

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a lot has happened since mid-june

i’ve been low on energy, so its been a while since i last posted. i send out a few more emails to personal email list of mine (since that’s kinda easier to do), but turns out almost no one got them – they didn’t even end up in people’s spam (interesting that one).

an overwhelming lot  happened in the meantime (the cases and links below are only selective examples of more such incidents):

  • arbitrary murder (at least 14 palestinians were murdered directly by zionist soldiers or settler colonists since june 19, including four minors), severe beatings, harassment (night raids, lengthy searches, temporary detention, etc.) and humiliation of palestinians by zionist soldiers (at times apparently just because they can’t think of something else to do with their time);
  • deals agreed to with prisoners who had been on hunger strike have again and again been broken;
  • current prisoners on extended hunger strike ayman sharawna and samer al-issawi, hassan safadi and samer al-barq were/are being denied rights, severely ill-treated and  physically assaulted;
  • former long-term hunger strikers bilal thiab (deal reached after 77/78 days on hunger strike) and mohammad al sarsak (deal reached after 92 days of hunger strike) finally released and akram rikhawi agreed to end his hunger strike after 102 days following an agreement that promises to see him released in january 2013 ;
  • the twins loai (l.) and odai (r.) during a night out with friends the weekend after loai’s release from military prison

    closer to home, loai tamimi – who had been arrested in a violent night raid of his home on february 6; who, only two months earlier, ran to a body lying on the ground amid a growing pool of blood in his village nabi saleh last december only to see that it was his eldest brother mustafa as he was already being carried into a car in an attempt to get him to hospital in spite of the closure of the village; whose twin brother odai only learned of mustafa’s murder while in military prison and who was released the day of his brother’s funeral AFTER the funeral – was finally released last wednesday and able to spend the holidays with his family and friends;

  • countless attacks by settler colonists on palestinian civilians – such as a molotov cocktail attack by a settler colonist on a palestinian car near bethlehem (very close to where i live) last week that left the ghayatha family from nahalin, including their four year old daughter iman and their six year old son mohammad, their uncle hassan (27) and their driver bassem with severe burns and in hospital – as of thursday, bassem was still in intensive care in critical condition;

or the near-fatal assault by an aggressive mob of zionists who reportedly attempted to beat three palestinian youths to death in one of jerusalem’s main squares on 17.8.2012 while hundreds of onlookers did nothing to stop them – one of the youth was beaten so badly that he had to be  revived in hospital and was being treated in intensive care (pic from 972mag);

or the intentional torching of mosques, palestinian homes and sheds; assaults on civilians using stones, arms, gas, etc.; regular burning or cutting down of crops and trees; killing of animals, etc. (see here for more examples);

  • increasing attacks by zionist fascists on asylum seekers, refugees and “black” foreigners, including rampages of huge mobs chasing individuals;

  • many more arrests without charges or trial, including of children under the age of 14, and more reports of torture and abuse in prison, including of children (according to “defence for children international”, 221 palestinian children were in israeli prisons in june)

  • the usual denial of right to movement and travel, including right to access adequate hospitals or educational facilities;

  • preparation and approval of yet more racist laws (such as the laws would prevent palestinians without israeli citizenship and migrant workers from submitting cases;

  • more demolition of homes and housing structures and displacement of families or entire communities;

  • more abuse, harassment, humiliation and even killing at the almost 100 permanent checkpoints and the increasing number of spontaneous “flying” checkpoints that dot the 5600 sq km that is the west bank – an area that is less than a fifth the size of belgium;

  • invasions and closures of villages, expansion the colonies as yet another act of war crime, blackmailing patients with deadly illnesses to spy on their communities if they hope to receive permission to get treatment in the much better equipped israeli hospitals (that are not stripped by the crippling siege of gaza), etc. etc. etc.

i’m going to skip all this and get to stuff happening now

 

 

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mahmoud sarsak is apparently eating since yesterday after a deal was reached that will see him released in july

don’t have time to comment, so reposting this. i hope it’s true

Israel to free footballer Mahmoud Sarsak after epic 3-month hunger strike, lawyer says

Submitted by Ali Abunimah on Mon, 06/18/2012 – 18:11

 

Mahmoud Sarsak, the Palestinian national footballer player who gathered worldwide attention with a three-month hunger strike that brought him to the brink of death, is to be freed by Israel on 10 July, the Associated Press quoted his lawyer as saying today:

RAMALLAH, West Bank—A lawyer for an imprisoned Palestinian soccer player who has been on a hunger strike for more than three months says his client has agreed to resume eating and will be released July 10 in a deal with Israel.

The attorney, Mohammed Jabareen, spoke Monday after the deal was struck at an Israeli prison clinic. Israeli prison officials could not be reached for comment.

The soccer player, Mahmoud Sarsak, has been held by Israel for nearly three years without charges or trial. Israel claims he was active in the violent group Islamic Jihad. Sarsak denies the allegations.

Ma’an news agency added that after the deal was signed, Sarsak broke his strike with a piece of chocolate:

Mohammad Jaberein said al-Sarsak signed the agreement during his visit to the prisoner on Monday. Israeli prison authorities asked al-Sarsak to eat something in their presence to ratify the deal, after which he took a piece of chocolate from the lawyer, Jaberein said.

Last week, Sarsak, who was critically ill and near death, had agreed to take milk for a few days to allow time for Israel to reconsider his demands.

Reasons for caution

If the reported deal is implemented, it would mark a major victory for Sarsak, who despite never being charged with any crime, has been maligned in the media as a “terrorist” by Israeli officials.

There are reasons for caution, however. Even if a deal has been struck, Israel has been reneging on an agreement ended a month-long mass Palestinian hunger strike in May.

Over 1 month has passed since mass hunger strike ended & family visits to Gaza prisoners have not resumed, in contravention to agreement.

Moreover, there is no word on Akram Rikhawi who is on his 68th day of hunger strike, and who was already in poor health.

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