Khader Adnan's food strike has obliged Israel to release him
by FalastinNews Staff
By Yael Marom
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Adnan has been on hunger strike for over 50 days in protest of being held without charge, trial or being convicted of a crime.
Palestinian
administrative detainee Khader Adnan will end his 50-plus-day hunger
strike after reaching a deal with Israeli authorities that will see him
released on July 12, according to members of Knesset who were privy to the negotiations late Sunday night.
The deal was expected to be signed in the early morning hours on Monday,
according to Balad MK Jamal Zahalka. “The strike will be over the
moment the deal is signed,” and Adnan will agree to receive medical
treatment, MK Zahalka added.
Zahalka
and other members of Knesset from the Joint List went to the hospital
Sunday night at the behest of Adnan’s family, who were holding a vigil.
Adnan’s
health seriously deteriorated in recent days and his family feared he
might die at any moment. His father, mother and children arrived at the
hospital Sunday evening and declared that they would not leave until an
agreement for Adnan’s release was signed.
Adan’s wife was permitted to see him Sunday night in the hospital bed to which he has been shackled for weeks.
Dozens of activists joined the Joint List MKs at the hospital to support the family.
“This
is not only a victory for Khader Adnan, the administrative detainee, it
is a victory of human spirit up against forces of oppression,” MK
Haneen Zoabi said of the agreement.
Under
British Mandate-era emergency regulations kept on the books by Israel,
authorities can hold Palestinians in administrative detention without
charge, trial or conviction—indefinitely.
This
was Adnan’s second extended hunger strike against his administrative
detention. In 2012, Adnan won his release in a similar deal that ended a
hunger strike.
He
was re-arrested by Israeli authorities last summer in a massive arrest
raid conducted in the aftermath of a deadly kidnapping of three Israeli
teens in the West Bank. Authorities accuse him of being an active member
of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, but have not charged him with any related
crime.
According
to Palestinian prisoner support organization Addameer, Israeli
authorities were holding 414 Palestinians in administrative detention as
of April 1, 2015, including a number of elected members of the
Palestinian parliament.
The
Israeli government made a number of concessions to end a mass hunger
strike of Palestinian prisoners in 2012, including promises to reduce
Israel’s use of administrative detention. By admitting that its use
could be reduced, Israel’s public security minister seemingly admitted
that it was being used unnecessarily.
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