116 Days to boycott the occupation courts

116 Days to boycott the occupation courts

About 500 administrative prisoners continue to boycott the occupation courts for the 116th consecutive day, to demand an end to the administrative detention policy.

 The boycott of the occupation courts constitutes confusion for the prison administration, as there is a disconnection between it and the prisoners, in addition to informing foreign delegations that visit prisons every period of the issue of administrative detention and thus circulating and highlighting it and conveying it to the world.

 The occupation authorities usually take punitive measures against prisoners who boycott their courts, such as depriving them of visits and renewing their administrative detention.

The administrative prisoners had taken a collective position represented in declaring a total and final boycott of all judicial procedures related to administrative detention (judicial review, appeal, supreme).

The prisoners´ movement in the occupation prisons announced its full support and support for the administrative prisoners´ decision to comprehensively boycott the military courts, explaining that its regulatory bodies will follow up on the decision.

She called on all administrative prisoners in various detention centers to fully abide by this step and to be patient and long-suffering, in order to achieve the desired goals of abolishing the administrative detention policy.

Administrative detention is detention without charge or trial, and without allowing the detainee or his lawyer to inspect the evidence materials, in clear and explicit violation of the provisions of international humanitarian law, so that Israel is the only party in the world that practices this policy.

The occupation authorities and prison administrations claim that administrative detainees have secret files that can never be revealed, so the detainee does not know the length of his sentence or the charges against him.

The administrative detainee is often subjected to the renewal of the detention period more than once for a period of three months, six months or eight, and sometimes it may reach a full year, and in some cases it has reached seven years, as happened with the fighter Ali Al-Jammal.