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Israel force-treats hunger-striking Palestinian journalist: Rights group

This file photo shows Palestinian hunger-striking journalist Muhammad al-Qiq.

A medical rights group says Israeli authorities are force-treating Palestinian hunger striker Muhammad al-Qiq in defiance of international law that considers the practice a violation of human rights.

In a statement released on Tuesday, Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-Israel) called upon doctors and medics at HaEmek Hospital in the northern Israeli city of Afula to stop force-treating the 33-year-old journalist, and instead pressure him into putting an end to his strike.

It added that the hunger striker has been hooked up against his will to an infusion of salts and vitamins.

"Al-Qiq was tied to the bed and forcefully held down by prison wardens, while a member of the medical staff made the infusion. For four days, al-Qiq remained tied to the bed, hooked up to the IV (intravenous) drip, while pleading for its removal, but to no avail,” the group said.

It further noted that the actions contradict the World Medical Association's declarations on hunger strikers, including the Malta Declaration which “forbids applying pressure to end a hunger strike and forced medical treatment.”

It also cited the Tokyo Declaration, which it said "forbids physicians' participation in torture, including the forced feeding or treatment of hunger strikers."

This file photo shows Palestinian prisoners at Israeli Megiddo Prison.

The World Medical Association, the Red Cross, and the United Nations, consider force-feeding a cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment or punishment, and a flagrant violation of international law.

Al-Qiq has been on hunger strike for the past 55 days to protest his administrative detention, a policy under which Palestinian inmates are kept in Israeli detention facilities without trial or charge. Some Palestinian prisoners have been held in administrative detention for up to eight, ten and eleven years.

PHR-Israel also censured Israel's use of administrative detention, describing it as “the basis of al-Qiq’s and previous hunger strikes.” The medical rights group also called for immediate release of the hunger-striking Palestinian journalist.

More than 7,000 Palestinians are reportedly incarcerated in 17 Israeli prisons and detention centers.


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