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News, May 2008

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Red Cross urges Israel to reinstate family visits for Gazan detainees

Date: 26 / 05 / 2008  Time:  12:00
Jerusalem – Ma'an –

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) called on Israel to immediately allow Palestinian families from the Gaza Strip to visit their relatives detained in Israeli occupation prisons and detention camps.

The family visits organized by the ICRC since 1967 had to be suspended on 6 June 2007 following a decision by the Israeli authorities. As a result, the parents, wives, husbands, sisters, brothers and children of more than 900 detainees have been deprived of direct contact with their detained relatives for almost one year. The ICRC says that detainees depend on these visits "not only for psychological support but also for material assistance such as clothes and blankets."

"This measure is depriving both detainees and their relatives of an essential life line," said Christoph Harnisch, head of the ICRC's delegation in Israel and the Occupied Territories. "It further exacerbates the daily hardship faced by the Palestinian population trapped in the Gaza Strip. The ICRC has facilitated family visits for decades, always in line with Israeli security measures. While we acknowledge Israel's security concerns, we strongly believe that they alone cannot justify the all-out suspension of family visits to detainees."

Because of the suspension of the visits, detainees and their families in Gaza can only communicate through Red Cross messages (brief personal messages to relatives made unreachable by armed conflict). As a result, the number of messages has increased from a monthly average of 10 before the suspension to 300 today.

"People continue to come to our office every day to sign up for family visits in the hope that the suspension will be lifted," Mr Harnisch said. "The lack of direct contact with their detained relatives is becoming unbearable."


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