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Thursday, June 20 2013
Tackling Poverty
IT is tempting to wonder how much of an appetite Barack Obama will have for dinner on Thursday evening (17May). That afternoon, ahead of the two-day meeting of the G8 at Camp David, which kicks off on Friday, he will announce what is currently being called "the new alliance to increase food security and nutrition"...
A MARKET SOCIETY
PORING through Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel's new book, What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets, I found myself over and over again turning pages and saying, "I had no idea." I had no idea that in the year 2000, as Sandel notes, "a Russian ...
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
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Abbas warns of disaster over hunger strikers

AFP

RAMALLAH PALESTINIAN president Mahmoud Abbas warned on Sunday of a “national disaster” if any of the 1,550 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli jails were to die.

Abbas spoke as two of the hunger strikers, Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla, entered their 75th day without eating, and after international rights groups and governments said they were concerned that prisoners could die if they continued to refuse food.

“The situation of the prisoners is extremely dangerous,” Abbas told a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s executive committee.

“Some of them face real harm, and that would be a national disaster that no one can tolerate. I hope and pray to God that no one gets hurt because it would be a major disaster.” Diab and Halahla are specifically protesting their jailing by Israeli authorities without charge under a procedure known as administrative detention.

The broader hunger strike by around 1,550 Palestinian prisoners is intended to pressure Israeli prison authorities to end the use of solitary confinement and ease a wide range of restrictions, including on family visits and prisoner education.

The protest has attracted widespread support throughout the Palestinian territories, and Abbas said he had raised the issue in discussions with Israeli negotiator Yitzhak Molcho and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

“These prisoners have a right to justice, and we are talking about the conditions of detention and the prison conditions that Israel is trying to ignore,” Abbas said.

“The issue of the prisoners is the most important issue we’re working on these days.” Palestinian sources say negotiations are under way with Israeli representatives on a package of measures to ease conditions for the 4,700 Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

The measures would include restarting family visits for prisoners with relatives in Gaza, allowing detainees to resume studies and moving some inmates out of solitary confinement.

A Palestinian official said a key meeting of Israeli officials was taking place Sunday with representatives of the Israel Prisons Service, Israel’s domestic intelligence service Shin Bet and the Israeli government.

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