Monday, December 29, 2025 - One of the prisoners on hunger strike for Palestine is now said to be in "critical danger" as she enters her 57th day without food.
Heba Muraisi is struggling to follow a conversation, she
said in a statement released through her support group.
She is among a group of eight prisoners detained on remand
for their alleged roles in "direct action" protests for Palestine
Action, who went on hunger strike from November.
Three of them are said to still be continuing, with Heba now
the prisoner who has gone the longest.
In a phone call recorded on Day 53 of her strike,
released by Prisoners for Palestine, she tells how a month and a half without
food is taking a heavy physical toll.
She feels "weaker as each day passes" and said she
has a "constant body ache" as well as bruising on her arms, hands,
and fingers from blood tests, dizziness, headaches and nausea.
"Even though I’m immensely proud of my body’s
resilience and capability, I can feel myself get weaker as each day
passes," she said.
"When I lay down at night now I can’t lay on my side
because it hurts my face."
In a recording punctuated by long pauses, she continued:
"Sometimes I struggle to construct sentences, sometimes I struggle to
maintain conversation."
Four other prisoners have now ended their hunger strikes due
to health concerns, while another, who has Type 1 Diabetes, is
continuing but on alternate days.
Heba said: "Other than the physical effects of it,
mentally I’m still doing well, still headstrong, willpower is still there, it
hasn’t shifted in the slightest."
She is now being held in HMP New Hall having been
transferred from HMP Bronzefield, which campaigners say is unfair as it puts
her too far away for her family in Brent to visit her.
Her arrest in November 2024 was over her alleged role in the
raid on Elbit Systems in Bristol, an Israeli weapons manufacturer, which
it is alleged caused over £1 million in damage.
A trial date is not set until June next year, meaning she
will have spent close to two years in jail without conviction, one factor which
the activists are protesting in their hunger strikes.
In an earlier statement released through Prisoners for
Palestine, Muraisi said: "I want to make it abundantly clear
that this is not about dy!ng, because unlike the enemy I love life, and my love
for life, for people, is the reason why I have been incarcerated for 349
days now."
James Smith, an A&E doctor and epidemiologist with UCL,
who has been supporting those on strike, told Metro that the
prisoners on hunger strike are now in a critical and unpredictable period
for their health.
They risk long-term damage to their health, even if they
ultimately survived: "You can do damage to the kidneys, the liver, the
pancreas, the heart, and of course, to the entirety of the musculature, and
there’s no guarantee that all of those things are reversible."
It is now possible for something "tragic" to
happen at any time, he said, based on how other patients with acute
malnutrition have progressed, where there can be "very sudden and rapid
changes that can be fatal".
The other prisoners still said to be on hunger strike are
Teuta Hoxha (Day 51), Kamran Ahmed (Day 50) and Lewie Chiaramello (who is
fasting every other day for health reasons, currently on Day 36).
Amu Gib, Jon Cink, Umer Khalid and Qesser
Zuhrah have "paused" their participation.
The protest is thought to be the largest action of its kind
since 1981, when 10 people di£d, including IRA prison leader Bobby Sands.

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