In one of the interviews we carried out, a former prisoner speaking under the pseudonym Talib Hasan asked us to "Please tell the company [G4S] to come and see the prisons with their eyes to see exactly what they are supporting." When G4S first came under scrutiny for its activities in the West Bank, the company sent Professor Hjalte Rasmussen to Israel and the West Bank to provide a legal opinion on its operations there. As Adri Nieuwhof has reported, the Professor's advice - that “G4S did not violate any national or international law” - has been seen as deeply flawed by campaigners. During his three-day trip, Rasmussen did not visit any Israeli prisons. We decided that, after talking to numerous ex-prisoners, we would attempt to see the prisons from the inside.
With the help of the prisoner support and human rights organisation Addameer, Corporate Watch sent in a request to visit Ofer, Ktziot, Damon, Megido, Kishon or Migrash Harusim prisons and to speak to a prison representative about the conditions in these facilities, all which have contracts with G4S. This request was refused, the response stating that "prisons are closed domains which are not open to all comers, and entry to them is only allowed to authorized agents as specified, and all according to the law...For example, the law regulates the entrance of 'official visitors' to detention facilities for the specified ends, including checking the detention condition, caring for the needs of prisoners etc". (view the letter at http://corporateoccupation.org/g4s-hidden-business-in-israels-prisons/) This result was of course expected. It is clear that Israel wants to control who sees their prisons from the inside and what they see. According to Addameer lawyer Sahar Francis, EU politicians have been refused visits to the prisons. Even UK lawyers, who were representing prisoners in other cases in the UK, were refused entry and unable to see their clients. Prisoners are often held incommunicado during their initial interrogation. If they are not allowed to see a lawyer they are also denied a Red Cross representative -presumably one of the 'official visitors' who are allowed access. While it is understandable that Israeli government institutions and companies such as SodaStream will want to refuse Corporate Watch access to their facilities, it is clear that service providers such as G4S do not face the same restrictions. The company is fully aware of what its operations in Israel entail, and it should therefore continue to be one of the primary targets for BDS action. Providing services to Israeli prisons is only one of the ways in which G4S is profiting from the occupation. For the full case against the company, read Who Profit's case study The Case of G4S: Private Security Companies and the Israeli Occupation. There is also a Corporate Watch G4S company profile, which highlights the growing number of reasons to campaign against the company. Demo in support of defendants in G4S rooftop occupation trialJoin the demo outside Horsham magistrates on Friday 16 August in support of the two people who occupied the roof of G4S’ offices last July, during the Palestinian hunger strikes. For more information see http://www.boycottisraelnetwork.net/?p=2456
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