I'm not sure if this has been posted yet.  Ruby
 
 
See www.palsolidarity.org for background

Your Action Will Make a Difference!
(see below)

Ahmed Awad has been sentenced to two months in Ketziot
prison.  His sentence can be renewed repeatedly after
that for up to 18 months.  Then he can be released and
then re-arrested for another series of renewable
sentences for another 18 months, ad infinitum.

Ahmed has no idea what his accusers, judges and
sentencers are claiming that he did.  Neither does his
lawyer.  There has been no trial, he has faced no
accuser and no evidence has been presented to him, his
lawyer or anyone else in open court.  There has only
been a hearing in which he was told that there is
secret evidence that he did something that was not
necessarily illegal and that because of that he must
go to prison.  He was also warned not to repeat the
unknown not-necessarily-illegal act.

It seems clear that Ahmed is being targeted because of
his effectiveness in building a homegrown grassroots
nonviolent movement in Budrus.  If the military really
had anything, they would have charged him and put him
on trial.

Ahmed is being targeted because he is an articulate
and respected leader, and because he refuses to
cooperate with the occupation.  We hear repeatedly
"...if only the Palestinians could produce a
Gandhi..."  The fact is that the Palestinians have
produced lots of Gandhis, but the Israeli policy is to
kill, exile or imprison such leadership before they
achieve the prominence of Hanan Ashrawi and Mustafa
Barghouti.  (Even Barghouti was not totally immune, as
witnessed by the smashing of his knee.)

Of course, this is only one of thousands of injustices
that occur every day under Israeli rule, but an
international effort to free Ahmed tells Israel that
we will not be silent.

Please call, fax and e-mail your elected
representatives in your home country and tell them to
take action.  Call Amnesty International.  Call the
diplomatic mission of Israel in your country.  Call
Brigadeer General Amihai Mandelblit who now holds the
office of Judge Advocate General Moshe Tirosh who
overruled the cancellation of Ahmed's sentence for
lack of evidence by the honest judge Military Judge
Adrian Agassi.

----------------------------

Points to make:

Right to a fair trial
Right to confront one's accuser
Right to know charges
Right to view evidence
 
Ahmed's I.D.: 929915684.
 
Here is some contact info:

Judge Advocate General Amihai Mandelblit.  Tel.
972-3-5692911 and FAX 972-3-5694370.  From Israel: 03
followed by the last seven digits.
 
Amnesty International in London:
Tel. 44-20-74135500  FAX 44-20-79561157 or, from Great
Britain Tel. 020-74135500 FAX 020-79561157

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
The Office of the Prime Minister
Kiryat Ben-Gurion, Jerusalem, Israel
Office Fax: +972-2-566-4838   0r +972 2 670 5415;

Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz [EMAIL PROTECTED] (am not
sure this works)
Fax: +972 2 649 6545

Minister of Foreign Affairs & Deputy Prime Minister
Silvan Shalom
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   Fax: +972 2 675 3792

To write the White House and Congress quickly and
easily  visit:
http://www.cflweb.org/   [it has good links]
You can call the Capital switchboard toll-free:
1-800-839-5276 and ask to be connected to your member
of Congress.

** For address and complaint form of US Commission of
Human Rights go to
http://193.194.138.190/html/hchr/contact.htm
------------------------------------------------------
 
This is an important case. It concerns the attempt
to break the project of non violent resistance in Bank. The village Budrus has been waging a long and successful
struggle, together with hundreds of Israelis, to defend its lands
and against the fence. The people of Budrus became the model of
nonviolent struggle for many communities in the West Bank, and their
achievements were crucial both for debates within Israel and for
Palestinian discussions about their political strategy.
 
This is why Budrus has to pay. During the past few months, it has
been occupied again and again by military units. Demonstrations were
suppressed with unprecedented violence. And leaders of this
struggle -- committed to nonviolent struggle, able to stand on their
own, to articulate clearly their rejection of the occupation, while
reaching a hand to Israelis for a peaceful future, based on mutual
respect and recognition of each others' rights -- have repeatedly
been detained without trial. Last year, two of them were detained
without trial and released after a public campaign. Now it's Ahmad
Awad's turn (please read his portrait below).

In times like these, we fear that Sharon's disengagement plan,
coupled with an atmosphere of uncertainty in the wake of Yasser
Arafat's death and widespread speculations concerning the results of
the elections to the Palestinian Authority, some of the basic issues
may go unnoticed. For the past few months, Sharon has invested
considerable effort in 'normalizing' the situation in the West Bank
(while intensifying the pressure on Gaza), wishing to prove, in the
wake of widespread protest against the Wall, that the Palestinians
can live with [it].  With Bush back in office, and with the
expectations and confusion created by Sharon's disengagement plan (
winning passive assent, if not active approval, for the fence;
intensifying internal divisions among the Palestinians; 'exporting'
one of the main humanitarian disasters created by the occupation
while maintaining complete control of the Gaza Strip ), we approach
the next round of the struggle over the fence, and your help will be
needed. Do whatever you can to urge his release and support the
people of Budrus.

Yours
Gadi Algazi,
Tel Aviv

Non-violence frightens the army
By Amira Hass, HaAretz (Tel Aviv),
10 November 2004
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/499602.html

 
Ahmed Awad is dangerous for public security. That's what the Shin
Bet thinks, that's what Col. Yossi Adiri thinks, that's what
military prosecutor Itai Pollak thinks. The three are responsible
for the issue of an administrative arrest order against him at the
end of October, meaning an arrest without trial, without any way to
respond to the accusations against him.

Military Judge Adrian Agassi, on the other hand, does not think Awad
is dangerous to public security. He ordered a cancellation of the
administrative arrest order. But the military judge in the military
appeals court, Moshe Tirosh, agrees that Awad is dangerous to the
public. On November 3, he ordered a cancellation of the cancellation
of the administrative arrest order.

The Shin Bet thought the danger from Awad was worth three months in
administrative detention. Adiri thought that he should be jailed for
four months, and the order he signed designated the dates as from
October 28 to February 27.

But Tirosh had the impression that two months' administrative
detention is appropriate, considering the amount of information and
its severity that he found in the request for the arrest. To the
decision to cancel the cancellation of the administrative order but
to shorten the time Awad spends under arrest, he added, "I hope that
the respondent will note that the current arrest is a warning of
what the future holds and turns away from the bad road with its
unhappy ending. He should pay attention to where he comes from and
where he is going, and that there is someone before whom he will
have to give an accounting."

But Awad doesn't have a clue what he must beware of and what is the
bad road to which Judge Tirosh was referring. Tirosh, after all, was
basing his decision on secret material on which the Shin Bet
grounded the request for an administrative detention: the exact same
secret material in which Agassi found no evidentiary basis for an
arrest.

Awad's lawyer, Tamar Peleg, from Moked, the Center for the Defense
of the Individual,(http://www.HaMoked.org.il/)also has no way to
advise him how to "turn away from the bad road with its unhappy
ending." She also is not allowed to see the classified material
against her client.
 
Awad, 42, is a high school teacher, father of six and one of the
leaders of the Committee for the Popular Struggle against the
Separation Fence, which went up in the village of Budrus. The
activity by the residents of that village a year ago signaled the
start of a grass-roots, non-violent Palestinian struggle against the
route of the fence and its accompanying bulldozers, guards, military
jeeps and soldiers.

Tear gas, beatings and shootings did not deter them. Quite a few
Israelis joined their struggle, and ties of friendship and trust
have been formed between them and the residents of the village.
 
The struggle bore fruit. A spectacular olive grove that sprawls over
a few hundred dunam was saved. The defense establishment decided to
move the route of the fence westward, so as not to harm the trees.
About 100 dunam of farmland remained that the fence was going to
swallow up. The village decided to show self-restraint, to concede.
They understood their victory was impressive. But then it turned out
that the bulldozers deviated from the route that was agreed upon in
the compromise between the army and the court. So the villagers
resumed their demonstrations.

To prevent their demonstrations, the army and Border Police have
been operating in the last three months with considerable aggression
and violence against all the residents of the village. The
demonstrations have been dispersed with more violence than usual.
For 15 days the army imposed a de facto curfew on the village. The
minute the children reached their schools, the troops fanned out in
the village, took up positions, and did not allow people to leave
their homes. The children were too frightened to leave school on
their own.

That's when Awad was arrested. As opposed to the other members of
the committee who belong to Fatah, Awad, as he admits, spent a year
in prison in 1997 for belonging to Hamas. Last year he was actively
involved in developing the non-violent approach to the struggle.
 
"Instead of the fence, my friends and I managed to establish bridges
of trust between us and the Jews," he said to Judge Agassi. "We let
the world understand that there can be coexistence between us and
the Jews."

According to the Shin Bet, military prosecution and Judge Tirosh,
the danger referred to in the classified material does not refer to
his activity against the fence but to "other activity." Peleg was
only allowed to cast doubt upon the severity of the secret, "other
activity." The open activity, the grass roots activity, she said,
contributes to security and public order; it persuades young
Palestinians that there is another way to fight for their rights,
without going to the Carmel Market to blow up. The hope for change
through non-violent struggle provides a counterweight to the despair
that sends people to acts of personal vengeance.

But now the despair has been reinforced. Awad will sit in
administrative detention until the end of the year. It is difficult
not to think that the "good way" he and his colleagues chose in the
popular committee is what bothers some elements in the army so much:
fraternization with the Israelis, the recognition of a joint
Palestinian-Israeli struggle against the occupation, the popular
struggle's success at changing the military decisions, the refusal
to be dragged into violence compared to the violence of the army and
occupation.

END










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