Mahmoud Al-Sharaan-Amman

The Israeli Central Military Court in Haifa sentenced the Jordanian prisoner Muhammad Abdel-Fattah Musleh (21 years) to five years in prison for trying to carry out an appeal.

The Israeli occupation forces arrested the prisoner, Musleh, on June 23, in the town of Hadera in the occupied territories, after he was hit with two bullets in the left foot, after accusing him of trying to stab, according to the relatives of the prisoner.

Abdel-Fattah Mosleh, the prisoner’s father, states that his son was leaving Jordan to the occupied territories to work for his relatives, and that he fled on the run when he was being audited by the occupation forces for his lack of proficiency in the Hebrew language, and he was shot, which resulted in an injury to his leg.

False charge
Father Abdel-Fattah says in his interview with Al-Jazeera Net that his son did not have intentions to carry out a stabbing, describing the charge against him as a lie.

He demanded his release and the death sentence imposed on him in Jordanian prisons in the most extreme cases, adding that the family received the news of the verdict with great shock due to the absence of sufficient evidence for the Israeli allegations, and said that they are awaiting the Jordanian foreign procedures to follow up on the case of their son.

The National Committee of Jordanian Prisoners in the Occupation Prisons considered that the ruling of the prisoner Muhammad Musleh was invalid and violated international laws due to the lack of sufficient evidence, and said that the decision was arbitrary and unjust.

In its interview with Al-Jazeera Net, the committee called on the Jordanian government to stand before its responsibility to put an end to the prejudicial Israeli decisions against the Jordanians.

The number of Jordanian prisoners in Israeli jails is 24, most of whom are imprisoned for many years, while six others are sentenced to life imprisonment.

Claims
A number of Jordanians called on social media to exchange a prisoner, Muhammad Musleh, for an Israeli who was detained by the Jordanian authorities after he infiltrated the kingdom and entered the country illegally.

The Jordanian State Security (Military) Court ruled that Israeli infiltrator Constantine Kotov be imprisoned for four months and fined him one thousand Jordanian dinars (1,410 dollars) after criminalizing him on charges of illegally entering the Kingdom and possession of an anesthetic substance for the purpose of abuse.

The court had sentenced the infiltrator to three months in prison for possession of an anesthetic substance for the purpose of abuse, and four months for the charge of illegally entering the territory of the Kingdom, and then adopted the most severe punishment that ends on February 29.