reposted from Ezzedeen Al-Qassam Brigades Information Office

Jerusalem – [Monday December 23, 2013] Samer Issawi, iconic Palestinian political prisoner and hunger strike organizer, was released today, following over 17 months in Shatta Prison.

DBAFD2E276Family members said that Israeli forces raided his house, on Monday, and prohibited them from organizing any celebrations,local agencies reported.

Israeli intelligence, accompanied by soldiers, raided Issawi’s family home near Jerusalem, a day after raiding the house to issue orders for his father and brother to report for interrogation by Israeli intelligence officers.

Furthermore, the soldiers reportedly added that no marching in celebration of his release would be tolerated at any hour of the day, their intention being to prevent neighbors and friends from welcoming Issawi home in the traditional way.

He was originally kidnapped by Israeli forces during the Second Intifada, but was among hundreds of prisoners released, in 2011, as part of a bargain for the release of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

He subsequently launched a hunger strike against the renewed detention, ending the strike only after Israeli occupation agreed to release him.

Samer Issawi’s hunger strike was one of the longest, ever in history, and brought him close to death.

According to the Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Prisoners’ Affairs, 5,200 Palestinians were being held in Israeli jails as of October, 2013.

Since 1967, more than 650,000 Palestinians have been detained by Israeli occupation.

Under international law, it is illegal to transfer prisoners outside of the occupied territory in which they are detained, and families face many obstacles in obtaining visting rights within the Israeli prison system.

The internationally recognized Palestinian territories, of which the West Bank and Jerusalem form a part, have been occupied by Israeli forces since 1967, with increasing violations and attacks by settlers in the region.