About 1,200 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails began an open-ended hunger strike today, according to Haaretz. The strikers are protesting what they call "humiliating" measures and conditions inside the prisons.
More from GlobalPost: Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails plan mass hunger strike
The Guardian reported that the strikes are to "draw attention to imprisonment without charge and solitary confinement." Previous hunger strikes, with at least 11 prisoners currently refusing food and one also refusing fluids, led to the release of prisoners.
Khader Adnan refused food for 67 days and ended his fast in February after securing a release deal with Israeli prisoner officials. Adnan was protesting the country's "administrative detention policy," which allows prisoners to be held without trial on undeclared charges. Adnan will be freed Monday.
About 300 of the estimated 4,600 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons are held under administrative detention. Haaretz wrote that three of those striking before today's mass strike have refused food for over 40 days.
Hana Shalabi, a hunger striker from Gaza who was released, told the paper the strikes are "a good and effective tool, and the only way prisoners can achieve something."
Israel Prison Services says it will not bargain with the protesters, according to the BBC, though strikers say it will be the most "determined" in "decades."
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