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Allan to be released in November

12:00 Sep 30 2015 Ramla Prison

Allan to be released in November Allan to be released in November
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Photo: Palestinians shout slogans during a demonstration on August 16, 2015 in front of the hospital in Ashkelon where Allan was being treated. (AFP/Ahmad Gharabli/File)

Palestinian activists hold up photos of administrative detainee, Muhammad Allan, during at the entrance to the Israeli city of Ashkelon, where Allan was being treated at Barzilay Hospital, August 17, 2015. (photo: Keren Manor/Activestills.org)
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by IMEMC News & Agencies

Israeli authorities will release Palestinian prisoner Mohammad Allan on Nov. 4, a lawyer said Tuesday, alleviating fears that his administrative detention would be renewed again.

Jawad Boulos, the head of the legal unit at the Palestinian Prisoner's Society, told Ma'an News Agency that he visited Allan in Israel's Ramla jail clinic on Tuesday and said an Israeli court has ruled that he be released once his current six-month detention period ends.

Allan still requires medical treatment and suffers from nausea, Boulos said.

Allan was held without charge or trial for seven months before he began a 66-day hunger strike to protest his administrative detention, which he ended after Israeli authorities agreed to suspend his sentence.

However, the sentence was reinstated earlier this month as Allan was attempting to leave the Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon.

He immediately began another hunger strike, but suspended it two days later, on Sept. 18, following consultations with his lawyer.

Rights group Amnesty International had warned that the initial suspension of Allan's sentence was based on his medical condition alone and "took no account of the legality of his detention."

Israel's policy of administrative detention, which is almost exclusively used to detain Palestinians, has been strongly criticized by the international community as well as both Israeli and Palestinian rights activists.

According to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, the majority of prisoners who go on hunger strike are Palestinians in administrative detention.

The Knesset, Israel's parliament, approved a law in July allowing the Israeli Prison Service to force feed hunger strikers if their condition becomes life-threatening, sparking outcry from rights groups and medical experts.
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by Yael Marom for 972Mag

Israeli authorities will release Palestinian prisoner Mohammad Allan on Nov. 4, a lawyer said Tuesday, alleviating fears that his administrative detention would be renewed again.

Jawad Boulos, the head of the legal unit at the Palestinian Prisoner's Society, told Ma'an News Agency that he visited Allan in Israel's Ramla jail clinic on Tuesday and said an Israeli court has ruled that he be released once his current six-month detention period ends.

Allan still requires medical treatment and suffers from nausea, Boulos said.

Allan was held without charge or trial for seven months before he began a 66-day hunger strike to protest his administrative detention, which he ended after Israeli authorities agreed to suspend his sentence.

However, the sentence was reinstated earlier this month as Allan was attempting to leave the Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon.

He immediately began another hunger strike, but suspended it two days later, on Sept. 18, following consultations with his lawyer.

Rights group Amnesty International had warned that the initial suspension of Allan's sentence was based on his medical condition alone and "took no account of the legality of his detention."

Israel's policy of administrative detention, which is almost exclusively used to detain Palestinians, has been strongly criticized by the international community as well as both Israeli and Palestinian rights activists.

According to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, the majority of prisoners who go on hunger strike are Palestinians in administrative detention.

The Knesset, Israel's parliament, approved a law in July allowing the Israeli Prison Service to force feed hunger strikers if their condition becomes life-threatening, sparking outcry from rights groups and medical experts.
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