Mideast - AFP

Palestinian hunger strike suspended in one Israeli jail after concessions

Date: Fri, Aug 27, 2004

BETHLEHEM, West Bank (AFP) - Some 800 Palestinian detainees in Israel's Ashkelon prison have supended their 13-day-old hunger strike until Monday after some of their demands were met, the main prisoners' support group said.

The concessions made by the prison governor affect only the Ashkelon detainees, and the other 3,200 Palestinian prisoners who have been protesting for better conditions remain on hunger strike, the Bethlehem-based Palestinian prisoners' association said Friday.

The association said the prison authorities had agreed to end practices of placing in small cells those prisoners who were being disciplined, as well as of "humiliating" body searches of prisoners who had been stripped naked.

The prison would also provide better food and relax restrictions on visits by prisoners' relatives.

The suspension of the strike until Monday was to allow prisoners to pursue talks with the authorities on other demands, as well as to see whether the improved measures would be extended to other facilities, the group said.

Some 8,000 Palestinians are currently held in Israeli prisons, with up to a half thought to have been refusing food.

The Israeli government had said it would not negotiate with the prisoners, and Public Security Minister Tzahi Hanegbi has said he is prepared to watch them die.

But in a statement issued Friday, the UN's top envoy to the region urged Israel to resolve its dispute with the prisoners and guarantee their health.

Terje Roed-Larsen "called on the Israeli authorities to comply with its international obligations and to make every effort to find, with the prisoners, an appropriate resolution to the hunger strike.

"The UN agencies and offices remind Israel of its obligations under the fourth Geneva Convention and relevant international human rights instruments which provide for the protection of detainees and prisoners," he added.

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