A Palestinian policeman loyal to Hamas stands guard as spectators stand behind a fence and hold a poster depicting Palestinian prisoner Khader Adnan in Gaza City on June 7, 2015. (Reuters)
Arraba, Palestinian Territories:
Israel on Sunday released a Palestinian prisoner who staged a 56-day hunger strike that brought him near death in a protest against a controversial procedure allowing indefinite detention without charge.
Khader Adnan was greeted to a hero's welcome in his village near Jenin, in the northern West Bank, that included fireworks, songs and flags for Islamic Jihad, the militant movement to which Israel says he belongs.
Residents wore shirts donning Adnan's picture.
He went first to visit his mother, saying that prison authorities had refused his request to telephone her when she was unwell.
"They told me 'it's forbidden for security reasons,' but she was there on the day of victory and it is she who fed me and gave me a drink," he said.
The bespectacled 37-year-old, thin and with a long beard, was released before dawn in an apparent effort to limit attention to the move, initially expected at midday.
A spokeswoman for the Israeli Prison Authority confirmed the release but provided no other details.
Islamic Jihad congratulated Adnan in a statement for his "victory" and said a celebration was being organised in his village of Arraba.
Adnan had been held for a year under administrative detention, which allows imprisonment without charge for renewable periods of six months indefinitely.
Of the 5,686 Palestinian prisoners currently held by Israel, 379 are detained under the procedure.
His hunger strike, which had brought him near death by the time it concluded last month, had sparked warnings from the Palestinian government that it held Israel responsible for his fate.
Regular protests were organised in his support.
Adnan ended his hunger strike on June 28 after Israel agreed to release him, at which point he was transferred to an Israeli hospital.
Debate over force-feeding
An Israeli official said at the time that the deal was made possible after Adnan withdrew his demand that Israel undertake never again to place him under administrative detention.
The official said Adnan's deteriorating health and appeals from the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Palestinian Authority had contributed to the decision to release him.
He was detained a year ago, shortly after the kidnapping and murder of three young Israelis, which triggered the arrests of hundreds of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.
The killings were part of an upsurge in violence in the run-up to the 2014 Gaza war.
Adnan had previously gone on hunger strike for 66 days in 2012 to protest against his detention.
He was released at the end of the protest, during which he had ingested vitamins and salt.
He refused to swallow anything except water during his most recent detention.
A long list of Palestinian prisoners have gone on hunger strike, including nearly 2,000 in 2012 to protest against the administrative detention policy.
The Israeli government in mid-June renewed efforts for legislation that would allow prisoners to be force-fed when their lives are in danger, sparking criticism from health experts and rights groups.
The bill was initially approved by the government in June 2014 at the height of another mass hunger strike of Palestinian prisoners during which 80 were hospitalised.
The Palestinian leadership submitted a report to the International Criminal Court last week that included the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
Khader Adnan was greeted to a hero's welcome in his village near Jenin, in the northern West Bank, that included fireworks, songs and flags for Islamic Jihad, the militant movement to which Israel says he belongs.
Residents wore shirts donning Adnan's picture.
He went first to visit his mother, saying that prison authorities had refused his request to telephone her when she was unwell.
"They told me 'it's forbidden for security reasons,' but she was there on the day of victory and it is she who fed me and gave me a drink," he said.
The bespectacled 37-year-old, thin and with a long beard, was released before dawn in an apparent effort to limit attention to the move, initially expected at midday.
A spokeswoman for the Israeli Prison Authority confirmed the release but provided no other details.
Islamic Jihad congratulated Adnan in a statement for his "victory" and said a celebration was being organised in his village of Arraba.
Adnan had been held for a year under administrative detention, which allows imprisonment without charge for renewable periods of six months indefinitely.
Of the 5,686 Palestinian prisoners currently held by Israel, 379 are detained under the procedure.
His hunger strike, which had brought him near death by the time it concluded last month, had sparked warnings from the Palestinian government that it held Israel responsible for his fate.
Regular protests were organised in his support.
Adnan ended his hunger strike on June 28 after Israel agreed to release him, at which point he was transferred to an Israeli hospital.
Debate over force-feeding
An Israeli official said at the time that the deal was made possible after Adnan withdrew his demand that Israel undertake never again to place him under administrative detention.
The official said Adnan's deteriorating health and appeals from the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Palestinian Authority had contributed to the decision to release him.
He was detained a year ago, shortly after the kidnapping and murder of three young Israelis, which triggered the arrests of hundreds of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.
The killings were part of an upsurge in violence in the run-up to the 2014 Gaza war.
Adnan had previously gone on hunger strike for 66 days in 2012 to protest against his detention.
He was released at the end of the protest, during which he had ingested vitamins and salt.
He refused to swallow anything except water during his most recent detention.
A long list of Palestinian prisoners have gone on hunger strike, including nearly 2,000 in 2012 to protest against the administrative detention policy.
The Israeli government in mid-June renewed efforts for legislation that would allow prisoners to be force-fed when their lives are in danger, sparking criticism from health experts and rights groups.
The bill was initially approved by the government in June 2014 at the height of another mass hunger strike of Palestinian prisoners during which 80 were hospitalised.
The Palestinian leadership submitted a report to the International Criminal Court last week that included the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
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