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Student political groups face crackdown in West Bank

The Palestinian Authority’s security forces have targeted student movements in West Bank universities.
A Palestinian student supporting the Hamas movement holds a Hamas flag as she takes part in an election campaign for the student council at the Birzeit University in the West Bank city of Ramallah  May 6, 2014. 
The political parties are competing for the student council's 51 seats in an election that will take place on Wednesday.
  REUTERS/Mohamad Torokman (WEST BANK - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION) - RTR3O04M
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The student groups affiliated with Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) at Birzeit University organized a series of events to protest the Dec. 8 arrests of a number of their members. Both movements issued statements Dec. 8 describing the arrests as “a continuation of the security coordination policy and a flagrant violation of our people’s rights.” The next morning, each student group signed the “Honor Document,” in which they announced the formation of a committee to follow up on the situation of the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

After the formation of the national consensus government in June, the Palestinian security services have maintained a steady campaign to stifle student political movements in the West Bank, including raids and arrests of members of Hamas and its student wing, the Islamic Bloc. The crackdown also targeted the leftist Progressive Student Action Front, the student wing of the PFLP. The student blocs affiliated with Hamas and the PFLP responded in early December with a protest at Al-Quds University. The Progressive Student Action Front posted Nov. 24 on its Facebook page that the security apparatus extended the detention period of its member Ayman Mahareik by 15 additional days before his trial, and that he is charged with incitement via Facebook.

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