End in sight for hunger strike
BY AP15 May 2012 12:05 PM IST
AP15 May 2012 12:05 PM IST
Egyptian and Palestinian officials have said they are close to reaching a deal with Israel that would end a mass hunger strike by Palestinians in Israeli jails.
Some 1,600 Palestinian prisoners are on strike, most for a month, but three have refused food two for more than 70 days. They launched the strike to press their demands for better conditions and an end to detention without trial.
An Egyptian-drafted proposal calls for Israel to move prisoners currently held in solitary confinement to regular cells, and allow families from Hamas-ruled Gaza to leave the seaside strip to visit imprisoned relatives, an Egyptian official said on Sunday on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the discussions.
It also calls for Israel to ease a policy called ‘administrative detention’ under which some prisoners deemed a security risk can be held indefinitely without charge.
Under the draft agreement, that policy would be changed and prisoners will be either charged or released after they are detained. Palestinian prisoners have yet to review the proposal, and Israeli officials refused comment.
A Palestinian lawyer representing the prisoners confirmed the details of the proposal, and said Egyptian officials had presented it to the Israelis. Taher Nunu, the spokesman for the Hamas government in Gaza, said Egyptian mediation efforts were under way, and that he hoped ‘for an answer within hours’ from the prisoners to the proposal.
Some 1,600 Palestinian prisoners are on strike, most for a month, but three have refused food two for more than 70 days. They launched the strike to press their demands for better conditions and an end to detention without trial.
An Egyptian-drafted proposal calls for Israel to move prisoners currently held in solitary confinement to regular cells, and allow families from Hamas-ruled Gaza to leave the seaside strip to visit imprisoned relatives, an Egyptian official said on Sunday on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the discussions.
It also calls for Israel to ease a policy called ‘administrative detention’ under which some prisoners deemed a security risk can be held indefinitely without charge.
Under the draft agreement, that policy would be changed and prisoners will be either charged or released after they are detained. Palestinian prisoners have yet to review the proposal, and Israeli officials refused comment.
A Palestinian lawyer representing the prisoners confirmed the details of the proposal, and said Egyptian officials had presented it to the Israelis. Taher Nunu, the spokesman for the Hamas government in Gaza, said Egyptian mediation efforts were under way, and that he hoped ‘for an answer within hours’ from the prisoners to the proposal.
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