Hunger Strike Ends in London Prison After Prisoner Falls into Organ Failure
A British-Palestinian prisoner, 22-year-old Umer Khalid, has ended his hunger strike after being hospitalized with organ failure two days into the protest. The last action by Palestine Action-affiliated prisoners to draw attention to the Israeli government's actions was sparked by a failed attempt to award a lucrative £2 billion arms contract to the Israeli company Elbit Systems.
Khalid, who suffered from limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and was being held at Wormwood Scrubs in west London, refused food on January 10th as part of an eight-prisoner coordinated action. He paused after 12 days due to ill health but restarted his protest on January 23rd by also refusing water.
The prisoner's decision to escalate his hunger strike raised fears that he could die within days. However, Khalid has now agreed to a slow and dangerous refeeding process, allowing him to drink again and has reportedly received several concessions from the authorities.
Among these concessions are the granting of a meeting with prison governor, receipt of previously withheld post and clothes, and lifting of restrictions on prison visits that had been in place since his imprisonment awaiting trial last July. Khalid's demands for a fair trial, deproscription of Palestine Action, closure of Elbit's UK sites, and an end to censorship of communications have largely been accepted.
However, the prisoner's remarks during Tuesday's press conference underscored the harsh conditions he faced while on hunger strike. "I am too strong, too loud, too powerful – and we as a collective are the same," Khalid said in his statement. "I ask Allah to take my life when He is pleased with me, and not before."
Khalid's condition has highlighted concerns among human rights advocates about how prisoners of conscience are being treated in British prisons. Labour MP John McDonnell has called for an inquiry into the treatment of the prisoners in light of what he described as "unacceptable" conditions within the prison system.
The eight prisoners involved in the coordinated action, who were charged with offenses related to break-ins or criminal damage on behalf of Palestine Action, are all set to spend more than a year in jail before going to trial.
A British-Palestinian prisoner, 22-year-old Umer Khalid, has ended his hunger strike after being hospitalized with organ failure two days into the protest. The last action by Palestine Action-affiliated prisoners to draw attention to the Israeli government's actions was sparked by a failed attempt to award a lucrative £2 billion arms contract to the Israeli company Elbit Systems.
Khalid, who suffered from limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and was being held at Wormwood Scrubs in west London, refused food on January 10th as part of an eight-prisoner coordinated action. He paused after 12 days due to ill health but restarted his protest on January 23rd by also refusing water.
The prisoner's decision to escalate his hunger strike raised fears that he could die within days. However, Khalid has now agreed to a slow and dangerous refeeding process, allowing him to drink again and has reportedly received several concessions from the authorities.
Among these concessions are the granting of a meeting with prison governor, receipt of previously withheld post and clothes, and lifting of restrictions on prison visits that had been in place since his imprisonment awaiting trial last July. Khalid's demands for a fair trial, deproscription of Palestine Action, closure of Elbit's UK sites, and an end to censorship of communications have largely been accepted.
However, the prisoner's remarks during Tuesday's press conference underscored the harsh conditions he faced while on hunger strike. "I am too strong, too loud, too powerful – and we as a collective are the same," Khalid said in his statement. "I ask Allah to take my life when He is pleased with me, and not before."
Khalid's condition has highlighted concerns among human rights advocates about how prisoners of conscience are being treated in British prisons. Labour MP John McDonnell has called for an inquiry into the treatment of the prisoners in light of what he described as "unacceptable" conditions within the prison system.
The eight prisoners involved in the coordinated action, who were charged with offenses related to break-ins or criminal damage on behalf of Palestine Action, are all set to spend more than a year in jail before going to trial.