
Edinburgh man released from Israeli prison after six months
Firefly International director Jane Salmonson said that while it was a 'huge relief' he was safe, he had appeared to have aged 'years' during his detention.
El Sharif was the director of a child mental health clinic in Gaza which was bombed after the region's invasion by Israel in response to the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023.
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Despite being displaced several times, he had managed to keep contact with Firefly staff until he was picked up by the Israel Defence Force (IDF) on November 27 last year while trying to move his young family to a 'safer' part of the stricken region.
Along with other residents, they were walking westwards from Gaza City when soldiers stopped them at a checkpoint, separated the women and children on one side of the road, put the men on the other, then took all the men away.
Salmonson said the news he had been released was 'wonderful'.
'Mohammad appears from his photo to have aged years during almost six months of detention, but we at Firefly are all so pleased and relieved that he is free – that is all that matters just now,' she said.
'Team Firefly International are enjoying a moment of huge relief, feeling better than we have felt since Mohammad's arrest and detention without charge, last November. Not knowing if someone is alive or dead has been very hard for us in Scotland and will have been far worse for his family in Gaza.
'Please continue to keep us in your sights, as the carnage continues in Gaza, now compounded by starvation.'
In an Associated Press video of the release, el Sharif said his freedom was a 'new date of birth' for him because he had found his family safe and alive.
'While I was in captivity I thought I would not find any of my family members and relatives,' he said.
However he added that his 'great joy' was incomplete because of the detainees still being held in Israeli prisons.
'The captives gave us a message that everyone must work to release them peacefully and they all want to live in security, safety and peace,' he said.
Salmonson added: 'His message of peace is a very strong one, especially bearing in mind what he has suffered in almost six months of detention kept incommunicado from his family.'
Along with the release of el Sharif, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) confirmed the release of paramedic Asaad al-Nasasra, who was detained on March 23 this year while performing humanitarian duties during the Israeli massacre of medical teams in the Tel Sultan area of Rafah. The massacre resulted in the deaths of eight members of PRCS ambulance staff.
The number of people detained from Gaza acknowledged by the Israeli prison system now stands at 1747, not including those held in military camps.
A recent report issued by the Palestinian Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoner's Society (PPS) revealed severe conditions endured by Palestinian detainees in Israeli jails.
The report noted that in the 19 months since the ongoing genocide, the conditions of detention have not improved and have in fact worsened in many cases.
At one point el Sharif was being held in the notorious Sde Teiman prison which has been condemned internationally for alleged torture and gang rape of detainees, including children and health workers.
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Prisoner testimonies of widespread human rights violations have been corroborated by Israeli whistleblowers and an investigation by CNN. Leaked CCTV footage has shown one gang rape of a Palestinian by Israeli soldiers.
Gazans who have been detained since the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel have been classed as 'unlawful combatants' and kept as suspects even if there is no evidence of any involvement with Hamas.
Some have died and others have had limbs amputated as a result of injuries sustained from being shackled, according to reports.

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The National
11 hours ago
- The National
Activist arrested at Glasgow pro-Palestine protest breaks silence
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Earlier last week, 46 other protesters were arrested at a demonstration against Palestine Action being designated a proscribed terror group in central London. Despite knowing the risks that his actions could land him in jail, Clerkin decided standing up for his civil rights and showing solidarity with the people in Gaza was worth the risk. 'This is how this is,' he said. 'This is now Keir Starmer's Britain, where law-abiding citizens who show our conscience, who show that we care for our fellow human beings, are being arrested and jailed. 'That shows we're losing our civil liberties, freedom of association, freedom to protest, freedom of speech. 'These are now being eradicated, and we've got to stand up and fight for these rights.' (Image: Gordon Terris) Clerkin added that he held the sign because of his own conscience and because of his faith as a Christian. 'I believe in the sanctity of human life, and I'm a non-violent protester, always have been, but I do believe in direct action. 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Clerkin said the Scottish Government should follow the Irish government and be in 'complete unison with Palestine' and support a Palestinian state. 'Surely the SNP could have done the same instead of sitting on the sidelines,' Clerkin said. He added that the [[SNP]] MPs who abstained in the [[Palestine]] Action debate could have done more and voted with the independent MPs, like Jeremy Corbyn, against proscribing them as a terrorist organisation. (Image: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire) 'I just know that the [[SNP]] leadership at Westminster and in Edinburgh is devoid of a spine. 'They're spineless. They're spineless chickens.' A veteran activist, Clerkin is best known for being the person who made the complaint to Police Scotland which led to Operation Branchform, a probe into the finances of the [[SNP]] which led to the arrests of Peter Murrell, Nicola Sturgeon, and Colin Beattie in 2023. Clerkin believes the proscription of Palestine Action has set a dangerous precedent and thinks the UK Government could go after peaceful protest groups like Extinction Rebellion next. 'It's a slippery slope to an authoritarian British state where there is no democracy,' he said. 'That's where we're sliding to, and it's a very, very bad day when this is happening.' Speaking about how he feels about his upcoming trial, Clerkin said: 'At the current time, I'm not anxious about it, I'm more anxious about what happens to the people in Palestine.'


NBC News
17 hours ago
- NBC News
Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations
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New Statesman
21 hours ago
- New Statesman
The Palestine Action crackdown
Photo by Vuk Valcic/Getty Given the news over the weekend that more than 100 pro-Palestine protesters across the country were arrested for allegedly supporting the recently proscribed group Palestine Action, you'd be forgiven for thinking that the UK is teeming with defiant activists determined to flout the law. But on Monday (21 July) outside the Royal Courts of Justice, just a single protester stood dressed in red, white and green, her lonely Palestine flag rippling in the warm breeze. Inside, Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori was attempting to persuade a judge to allow her to challenge the group's proscription at the High Court. Founded in 2020, Palestine Action embraced direct action protests in order to disrupt the manufacturing of or sale of weapons to Israel. They have blockaded or broken into Israeli weapons factories operating in the UK, spray-painting private property and destroying equipment. Their cause, if not necessarily their methods, has broad support: a recent YouGov poll found 55 per cent of the British public think the UK Government should not approve the supply of parts for F-35 fighter jets to Israel. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper raised the prospect of proscription in June after PA campaigners sprayed paint into the engines of two Voyager aircraft at RAF Brize Norton. On 2 July, 385 MPs to 26 voted in favour of proscribing Palestine Action – the first time a non-violent direct action campaign group had ever been proscribed. On the eve of the group's official proscription two weeks ago, Ammori had argued in this same court for 'interim relief' on that decision (which was denied). Then, hundreds of protesters had furiously chanted their support for the group – as well as their opposition to Israel's war in Gaza – outside the Royal Court, a sea of anger, keffiyehs and signs declaring 'We Are All Palestine Action' spilling down the pavements of Fleet Street. But by proscribing Palestine Action, the government has made even the suggestion of support for the group a crime under the Terrorism Act 2000. Those arrested holding a sign or wearing a T-shirt with the words 'Palestine Action' can now face up to six months in prison. Those who are found guilty of belonging to the group can now be jailed for up to 14 years. Over the weekend, protests in London, Manchester, Glasgow, Cardiff, Leeds and elsewhere led to the arrests of dozens of protesters, many for simply holding signs that read 'I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action.' Among those arrested under suspicion of offences under the Terrorism Act 2000 in recent weeks: a vicar, a former government lawyer, various pensioners. On 14 July, Kent police threatened a woman with arrest under the Terrorism Act for brandishing a sign that read 'Free Gaza' yet made no reference to Palestine Action. But on Monday, there was no trace of defiant crowds outside the Royal Court of Justice. Yael Kahn, the 72-year-old lone demonstrator, told me that she was disappointed but not surprised to be the only one on the street. 'That is the aim of this proscription,' she said. 'It's not aimed just at Palestine Action. Its aim is to silence and cause us all fear.' She's not alone in that assessment. Campaigners, legal experts and politicians I have spoken to have all warned of the 'chilling effect' that the proscription of Palestine Action will have on speech opposing the war in Gaza. Khan, an Israeli Jew who now lives in London, told me that she has a long history of campaigning on behalf of Palestine. 'You know, the people who're standing today against the genocide in Gaza, I wish they were there in the Second World War when my family was exterminated. You know, that's what we need. We need that humanity. I love the people who are going out of their way and taking time off and finding lots of different ways to protest.' Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Though Kahn's sign didn't have the words 'Palestine Action' on it, it did condemn the proscription of 'PA'. Half a dozen unbothered police officers stood by as we chatted. I asked her if she was worried they would arrest her. 'Don't give them any ideas,' she joked, telling me she had been arrested several times in the past for protesting. But when I asked her if she really had no fear over possibly being charged with a terrorism offence, she turned serious. 'When I know the children are dying from starvation, babies are dying because mothers cannot breastfeed?' she asked. 'I mean, there's no way I can be silent.' [Further reading: Labour's misguided assault on Palestine Action] Related