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Pro-Palestine activist from Swansea detained in West Bank

Pro-Palestine activist from Swansea detained in West Bank

BBC Newsa day ago

The son of a Pro-Palestinian activist has said he "remains in the dark" after she was detained in the occupied West Bank.Deirdre Murphy, who lives in Swansea, has been held in custody since 31 May when she was arrested in a southern part of the territory.The 70-year-old, originally from Cork, Ireland, had been volunteering with the pro-Palestinian activist group International Solidary Movement (ISM) at the time of her arrest. The Israeli government has been approached for comment.Torsten Bell, Labour MP for Swansea West, said he would do everything he can "to support a swift and just resolution" after raising concerns about Ms Murphy's access to legal representation.
The West Bank - the land between the eastern edge of Israel and the western side of the River Jordan - is home to an estimated three million Palestinians. Israel has occupied the West Bank since the Six Day War of 1967 and is continuing to build settlements which Palestinians want as part of any future state.
These are regarded as illegal under international law although Israel rejects this position.While Israel has military control of the West Bank, the Oslo Accords of 1995 gave the Palestinian Authority some administrative and security control over certain areas.Ms Murphy's son Dale Ryan told Radio Wales Breakfast his mother was "doing OK" but he remained "in the dark" about when he would see her again.She was arrested last Saturday before being taken to Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, according to her son.
He said she was then moved to Givon Prison in Ramla where she has been held since 3 June."She was detained after being accused of being in a military zone," said Mr Ryan."Her and another woman, Susanne Björk, who are there with the ISM, were being questioned by the army." According to Irish broadcaster RTÉ, the pair were complying with the order before Israeli settlers, wearing military uniforms, called the police.Mr Ryan, who lives on the Gower peninsula, said his mother was brought to a hearing on Wednesday "without any representation.""There is a lawyer acting on her behalf. Because it's not a trial, they would have been there more as a witness, but she was denied access to her lawyer." said Mr Ryan.Mr Ryan said he had not "personally" spoken to his mothers since the arrest - instead receiving updates from her lawyer and ISM.
"My mother is quite a resilient person," he said."But as the days go on, she is becoming fatigued, and probably a bit anxious about the whole situation."Mr Ryan said his mother has some chest problems, which is "concerning for us", and he is desperate to "know she is in good health."According to an ISM press release, Ms Murphy has been involved as an activist in the region for over two decades and has been based in Swansea since the 1980s."She went to Palestine in 2004 after setting up a fundraiser where we walked around the Gower in four days," according to Mr Ryan.He said she wanted to "contribute" to the aid and facilities that were being developed at the time."In the last few years she has spent a lot of time in Masafer Yatta," he added, which according to the press release, is where she got arrested.
Ms Murphy's lawyer, Noa Dagoni told the BBC that the handling of the case has been "deeply troubling"."Since her detention at Givon prison, Ms. Murphy has been unable to contact me, despite multiple requests on my part and efforts from her side – the reasons for that remain unclear," she said.She said Ms Murphy had requested legal counsel for "the detention review tribunal hearing as well as representation during the hearing itself".But Ms Dagoni said that apparently "no actual access" had been granted which would "constitute a serious and unlawful violation" of Ms Murphy's rights.
Ms Murphy's local MP Bell said "hundreds of constituents" had contacted him with their concerns."I've been in touch with Deirdre's family and am liaising with both the Irish government, who are providing consular support, and the UK Foreign Office, who have offered their assistance and stand ready to help further."He said he was "particularly concerned" that Ms Murphy may not have legal representation."We all want to see Deirdre released as soon as possible," he added.The Irish Embassy Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it was "aware of the case and is providing consular assistance."It added that "the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade does not comment on the details of individual cases."The Foreign Office said: "We have not been approached for consular assistance, but our staff stand ready to support British Nationals overseas 24/7."
Additional reporting by Shazia Ali

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Pro-Palestinian protester in two-tier police row is Islamist refugee
Pro-Palestinian protester in two-tier police row is Islamist refugee

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Pro-Palestinian protester in two-tier police row is Islamist refugee

A pro-Palestinian activist who evaded terror charges in a two-tier policing row is an Islamist propagandist granted asylum in Britain, The Telegraph can reveal. The demonstrator, who avoided prosecution after chanting ' I love the 7th of October ' at a London rally last year, can now be named as Mohammad al-Mail, a 27-year-old Kuwaiti national granted refugee status in the UK in 2017. In May, The Telegraph published footage of Mr Mail glorifying the Hamas massacre and shouting, 'I like an organisation that starts with H' through a megaphone at an anti-Israel protest in Swiss Cottage, north-west London, last September. He was later arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences but never charged. By contrast, a Jewish man who attended a counter-protest on the same day and briefly held a placard mocking Hezbollah's leader was charged after police claimed the sign could cause 'distress' to terrorist sympathisers. 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'The fact officers were apparently unaware of this open source material when they submitted the case to the Crown Prosecution Service suggests an alarming lack of rigour in their initial investigation,' he said. 'In light of this, it is vital that the police reopen the case to ensure national security can be protected.' The Jewish counter-protester, who was charged for 'causing distress', said the revelations were yet more evidence of 'two-tier policing'. The CPS dropped the case against him last month, eight months after he was first arrested. 'The police were sufficiently well-resourced to know I'd be at the counter-protest the following week and to circulate my photograph among officers on the ground so they could arrest me. Yet counter-terror police were apparently unable to carry out a basic Google search on this man before interviewing him,' he said. The CPS said it is urgently reviewing its decision not to press charges against Mr Mail. 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Owen Jones: The UK media has ignored this hugely revealing scandal
Owen Jones: The UK media has ignored this hugely revealing scandal

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

Owen Jones: The UK media has ignored this hugely revealing scandal

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Too little aid was delivered, much of it unusable given the siege on cooking materials. But in any case, the Israeli military repeatedly fired on starving Palestinians. In the words of Tory MP Kit Malthouse, the UN system had been replaced with a 'shooting range, an abattoir'. But when the Israeli military massacred dozens of starving Palestinians, they deployed their usual strategy: deceive, deflect, deny, distort. Even though the shootings happened in an Israeli military zone, and despite the overwhelming evidence of Israeli lies, the Western media indulged Israeli claims that Hamas was responsible as if they were credible. CNN belatedly published a clear rebuttal of Israeli lies, but attention had already moved on. As ever, the Western media overall fail to allow Israeli responsibility for atrocities to stick. 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Conference to recognise Palestinian state to weaken scope of its ambition, diplomats say
Conference to recognise Palestinian state to weaken scope of its ambition, diplomats say

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Conference to recognise Palestinian state to weaken scope of its ambition, diplomats say

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Israeli newspapers reported the travelling French officials as saying: 'The recognition of a Palestinian state remains on the table, but not as a product of the conference. This will remain a bilateral subject between states.' The British foreign secretary, David Lammy, who is expected to attend the conference, is under massive backbench pressure to do more to punish Israel and is, at minimum, being asked flesh out the conditions for the UK recognition of a Palestinian state. Hamish Falconer, the Middle East minister, told MPs this week the UK thinking was evolving. 'One reason that the traditional position of the UK government has been that the recognition of a Palestinian state should come at the end, or during, a two-state solution process was the hope that we would move towards a two-state solution,' he said. 'Many minds have been changed because of the rhetoric of the Israeli government – the clear statements by so many that they are no longer committed to a two-state solution.' But the British are looking for firm undertakings at the conference on the future government of Palestine, including the exclusion of Hamas from any future governance of Gaza, which is something Hamas itself has appeared to accept in the various plans drawn up by Arab states. A growing number of Conservative MPs have broken with their frontbench on the issue and now back recognition, including the former attorney general Sir Jeremy Wright. France hopes that a group of western states recognising a Palestinian state could be counter-balanced by Muslim states normalising relations with Israel. However, Saudi recognition of Israel seems impossible. The Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, the other co-host, has asserted repeatedly that Israel is committing a genocide, a view that is shared widely by Saudi public opinion.

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