More than 1,200 administrative detainees in the occupation prisons announced a comprehensive and open confrontation program in rejection of administrative detention in the Zionist occupation prisons.
The administrative prisoners called on all loyal and free people, forces, institutions and activists to support them in their battle to confront the occupation and its arbitrary measures, leading to its legal prosecution in the International Criminal Court.
The administrative prisoners confirmed that they are subjected to the most heinous forms of ongoing injustice through the arbitrary administrative detention procedures that are being practiced against them and that are causing the greatest harm to us and their families, like fangs that are repeatedly gnawing at their bodies over the past decades.
They stressed, in a statement issued by the Administrative Prisoners Committee in the occupation prisons, that they are exposed to the most heinous types of attacks on freedom, life and humanity.
The committee continued in its statement, saying: “There are many of us who have spent more than ten years in this detention, including more than 20 cubs, women, the sick, and the elderly, in addition to the revolving door policy that allows them to innovate in torturing us.”
The statement added: “We breathe freedom for several weeks only to be arrested again. What is striking recently is that many of us have been transferred from the judicial track to administrative detention, and some of us are being pursued in both tracks with the aim of subjugating and subjugating us. All of this is being done on the orders of the security services, the “Shabak,” with flimsy pretexts and justifications and false, hypothetical accusations.”
The prisoners decided on a program of national and general protest steps that began to be implemented at the beginning of this month, adopted and supported by the Supreme National Emergency Committee of the National Prisoner Movement. It consists of three groups of prisoners heading to the cells, as well as being late and holding a sit-in in the courtyards, returning meals, stopping dealing with the clinic, stopping taking medication, and reaching disobedience and rebellion.”
The committee pointed out that the disobedience will be accompanied in the coming period by groups of prisoners participating in a limited hunger strike, which will eventually lead to an open collective strike for all administrative prisoners when the appropriate conditions are available for that.
All of this coincides with the opening of the door to renewing and expanding the boycott movement of the courts, which was started by more than “100” detainees last September after the last mass hunger strike, knowing that the state of congestion and turmoil that prevails among us has pushed some of us to go on an open hunger strike as an expression of rejection and a demand for freedom.