Arab Parliament Calls for Pressuring Israel to Halt Administrative Detentions

A march in the center of Nablus in solidarity with administrative prisoners in mid-2021. (Wafa)
A march in the center of Nablus in solidarity with administrative prisoners in mid-2021. (Wafa)
TT

Arab Parliament Calls for Pressuring Israel to Halt Administrative Detentions

A march in the center of Nablus in solidarity with administrative prisoners in mid-2021. (Wafa)
A march in the center of Nablus in solidarity with administrative prisoners in mid-2021. (Wafa)

Arab Parliament Speaker Adel al-Asoumi has called for forcing Israel to halt its administrative detentions against Palestinians.

This came in letters he sent to the United Nations Secretary-General, President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, regional parliament speakers and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Asoumi denounced Israel’s systematic violations against Palestinians through arbitrary detentions since the incidents of Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in the occupied East Jerusalem and the land grab in the Palestinian Negev region.

He called for compelling the Israeli occupying authorities to respect and apply the international law, especially the Fourth Geneva Convention, halt arbitrary detention policies, put an end to the suffering of Palestinian administrative detainees and release them immediately.

He further urged them to expose the occupation forces’ judicial and military practices, noting that the number of administrative detention orders amounted to 1,600 out of nearly 8,000 arrested Palestinians in 2021.

The Arab Parliament strongly condemns and rejects these practices and considers them a blatant violation of the international law, relevant UN resolutions and international conventions.

“It considers them war crimes that fall within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court,” the letter read.

Meanwhile, Palestinian detainees held without trial or charge in Israeli jails continued on Tuesday their boycott of Israel’s military courts for the 25th consecutive day, protesting Israel’s administrative detention policy.

In early January, the Palestinian administrative detainees took a unanimous stance to fully boycott all judicial procedures related to administrative detention, including the hearings to approve or renew the administrative detention order, as well as appeal hearings and later sessions at the Supreme Court.

The administrative law is based on the British Emergency Law of 1945, which Israel used to arrest Palestinians and imprison them without trials for various periods automatically renewed.

The administrative imprisonment relies on a file that the Israeli security services claim is confidential.



Sudan’s Ruling Council Reshuffles Cabinet amid Brutal Conflict

A damaged building in Omdurman, Sudan, 01 November 2024 (issued 04 November 2024). (EPA)
A damaged building in Omdurman, Sudan, 01 November 2024 (issued 04 November 2024). (EPA)
TT

Sudan’s Ruling Council Reshuffles Cabinet amid Brutal Conflict

A damaged building in Omdurman, Sudan, 01 November 2024 (issued 04 November 2024). (EPA)
A damaged building in Omdurman, Sudan, 01 November 2024 (issued 04 November 2024). (EPA)

Sudan's army leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, at war with paramilitaries, has announced a cabinet reshuffle that replaces four ministers including those for foreign affairs and the media.

The late Sunday announcement comes with the northeast African country gripped by the world's worst displacement crisis, threatened by famine and desperate for aid, according to the UN.

In a post on its official Facebook page, Sudan's ruling sovereignty council said Burhan had approved replacement of the ministers of foreign affairs, the media, religious affairs and trade.

The civil war that began in April 2023 pits Burhan's military against the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries under the command of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

Since then, the army-aligned Sudanese government has been operating from the eastern city of Port Sudan, which has largely remained shielded from the violence.

But the Sudanese state "is completely absent from the scene" in all sectors, economist Haitham Fathy told AFP earlier this year.

The council did not disclose reasons behind the reshuffle but it coincides with rising violence in al-Gezira, south of the capital Khartoum, and North Darfur in Sudan's far west bordering Chad.

On Friday the spokesman for United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said he condemned attacks by the RSF on Gezira, after the United States made a similar call over the violence against civilians.

Among the key government changes, Ambassador Ali Youssef al-Sharif, a retired diplomat who previously served as Sudan's ambassador to China and South Africa, was appointed foreign minister.

He replaces Hussein Awad Ali who had held the role for seven months.

Journalist and TV presenter Khalid Ali Aleisir, based in London, was named minister of culture and media.

The reshuffle also saw Omar Banfir assigned to the trade ministry and Omar Bakhit appointed to the ministry of religious affairs.

Over the past two weeks, the RSF increased attacks on civilians in Gezira following the army's announcement that an RSF commander had defected.

According to an AFP tally based on medical and activist sources, at least 200 people were killed in Gezira last month alone. The UN reports that the violence has forced around 120,000 people from their homes.

In total, Sudan hosts more than 11 million displaced people, while another 3.1 million are now sheltering beyond its borders, according to the International Organization for Migration.