AL-JALAZUN REFUGEE CAMP: Palestinian teenager Amal Nakhleh’s first name means "hope” in Arabic, but his parents are in despair because he is chronically ill and one of the few minors held without charge by the Zionist entity. "Since his arrest last year I have only seen him twice, including last week when he told me he wanted to go on hunger strike,” journalist Moammar Nakhleh said of his 17-year-old son. "This scares me because he is already very weak,” from myasthenia, a rare neuromuscular disease, and underwent surgery in 2020 to have a tumor removed from his rib cage, Nakhleh said.
Zionist authorities accuse Amal of throwing stones at soldiers and have held him for a year in administrative detention. The practice allows for suspects to be detained without charge for renewable six-month terms while investigations are ongoing. Amal faces a new hearing today, and his father is worried that his detention could be renewed.
Administrative detention has been criticized by the Palestinians, human rights groups and foreign governments, who charge that the Zionist entity abuses it. Leading Zionist newspaper Haaretz joined the fray days ago with an editorial entitled "Enough with administrative detentions”. "It’s time for (the Zionist entity) to learn to forgo this undemocratic, corrupt practice of unlimited administrative detention, without evidence or charges that can be refuted,” Haaretz said.
The editorial highlighted the case of Hisham Abu Hawash, one of more than 450 Palestinians held for more than a year in administrative detention by the Zionist entity. Six teenagers are among these prisoners, according to the Zionist human rights group Hamoked. Tuesday’s editorial came as Abu Hawash, a 40-year-old member of the Islamic Jihad movement, ended a 141-day hunger strike after Israel agreed to his eventual release.
The deal proposed to Abu Hawash, a father of five, stipulates that his detention will not be extended beyond Feb 26, in return for his ending his fast. "If the state had evidence against Abu Hawash, it should have charged him. If not, it had to release him immediately,” Haaretz said. According to the paper, military prosecutors "had no unclassified evidence on which to draft an indictment to present to a military court” in the Abu Hawash case.
But for the Shin Bet domestic security agency, "’confidential material’ is enough for a military commander to sign an order for six months of administrative detention, and an additional one six months later, repeat ad infinitum”. So why was Amal arrested? The Shin Bet declined to comment when asked by AFP but the agency has previously been quoted as saying that he was "suspected of having taken part in terrorist activity”.
Amal’s predicament dates back to Nov 2020 when he was arrested by Zionist authorities in the occupied West Bank. A football fan, he was out with friends after recovering from his cancer surgery, his family said. Accused of throwing stones at soldiers, Amal was held for 40 days but then set free by a Zionist judge.
"At the hearing, a representative of the security forces said they had a ‘file’ against him and would seek administrative detention,” Amal’s father recalled. "The judge asked them to provide him with the incriminating file,” which they failed to, prompting the judge to free Amal. But in January last year, he was re-arrested and placed in administrative detention, which has since been twice renewed.
The UN refugee agency UNRWA has taken up Amal’s case with the Zionist authorities. "We are demanding his immediate release from administrative detention for two reasons: His medical condition which is incredibly serious... and he is a minor,” UNRWA’s West Bank chief, Gwyn Lewis, told AFP. "We have written several times and followed up but there has never been any information on why he was arrested.”
Moammar Nakhleh fears that Amal’s detention will be renewed again today. "I am scared that if his detention is renewed, I will not see him for a long time,” he said at the family home in Al-Jalazun refugee camp. "I’m bracing for the worst.” – AFP