Palestinian Hunger Striker Moved to Hospital as Health Worsens
WEST BANK (Al Jazeera) – Palestinian prisoner Khalil Awawdeh, on hunger strike for more than 150 days in protest at his so-called administrative detention without charge or trial, was transferred to a clinic on Thursday, following a deterioration in his health.
According to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, Awawdeh was transferred by Zionist regime authorities to the Shamir Medical Center, southeast of Tel Aviv, over fears he could suffer permanent neurological damage.
The head of the group, Qadura Fares, said he “could die at any moment”.
On Sunday evening, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) chief, Ziyad Al-Nakhalah, said during a news conference that the occupying regime had accepted the release of Awawdeh as part of the ceasefire agreement brokered by Egypt following the regime’s offensive against Gaza over the weekend, which killed 48 Palestinians, including 17 children.
Earlier on Thursday, Doctors Without Borders confirmed that the health of Awawdeh, 40, had seriously deteriorated through a report it submitted to the occupying regime’s military court of appeal, according to news website Arab48.
Awadeh’s lawyer, Ahlam Haddad, said his client, who was detained in December 2021, has recently began using a wheelchair and was showing signs of memory loss and speech difficulties, Ynet news said.
A father of four, Awadeh is from the occupied West Bank village of Idna, near Al-Khalil. He studied economics at Al-Quds Open University but has not graduated.
The Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, which represents former and current inmates, said Awadeh faces “the danger of death due to his difficult health condition which worsens with the passage of time”. It added that dozens of other prisoners had gone on hunger strike in solidarity with his plight.
The club said Awawdeh halted his strike two months ago, when he allegedly received a promise of a release, but resumed it allegedly having suspected be was being lied to.
Awadeh’s wife, Dalal, told Ynet her husband had spent a total of six years in ‘administrative detention’ and she has been allowed to visit him only once.
There are 4,450 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, 560 of them serving ‘administrative detention’.
The highly controversial policy, used almost exclusively against Palestinians, allows for detention without charge or trial for renewable periods of three to six months, without the possibility of appeal or knowing what accusations are being leveled against the detainees.
Many Palestinian prisoners have resorted to hunger strikes to protest against the policy in the past and force their release.