17 Aug 2020; MEMO: After two years under house arrest, Palestinian resistance icon Raed Salah yesterday began a 17-month jail term on incitement charges, Anadolu reported.
The sentence was scheduled to start in March, but was postponed due to the coronavirus outbreak.
Salah, the leader of the northern branch of the Islamic Movement in Israel, was detained by Israeli forces in August 2017 and indicted for incitement following his criticism of the erection of metal detectors at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.
He was sentenced to 28 months in prison by an Israeli court. He served 11 months, half of which was spent in solitary confinement, before he was moved to house arrest.
Speaking to the Anadolu Agency, Salah’s lawyer Kaled Zabraqa accused the Israeli authorities of violating the Palestinian icon’s basic rights.
“Salah was deprived of the right to pray in mosques since August 2017,” Zabraqa said. “Israeli authorities imposed many tight restrictions against Salah, including the deprivation of telephone calls.”
In a statement, Salah’s defence team warned that the Palestinian leader’s health would be at risk due to the spread of coronavirus inside Israeli prisons.
Israeli prison authorities have not provided clear data about the number of coronavirus cases inside prisons.
Hundreds of Palestinians from Arab towns in Israel gathered outside AlJalmah Jail near Haifa to show support for the iconic leader.
“Salah’s prison sentence coincides with an unprecedented attack against Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque,” Sheikh Kamal Al-Khateeb, the deputy head of the Islamic Movement in Israel, said.
He said the sentence begins days after the announcement of a peace deal between the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Israel.
Palestinian groups have denounced the UAE-Israel deal, saying it does nothing to serve the Palestinian cause and ignores the rights of the Palestinian people. The UAE’s peace deal with Israel is a “treacherous stab in the back of the Palestinian people,” Hamas said in a statement.
Born in 1958, Sheikh Salah is a poet and father of eight children. He started his public work as mayor of Umm Al-Fahm, an Arab city in Israel, where he also became the leader of the northern branch of the Islamic Movement in Israel.
As his activities expanded and his anti-occupation speeches were disseminated widely among the Palestinian minorities in Israel, he was subject to arrests by the Israeli authorities several times.
In 2003, he was arrested on suspicion of funding Palestinian resistance group Hamas, while in 2005, he was banned from travel.
In 2010, he was sentenced to five months in prison for allegedly assaulting Israeli police.
A strong defender of the Palestinian people, he has staged a number of protests against Israeli policies and campaigned against the expansion of Israeli settlements in the occupied territories.