A Palestinian prisoner has ended his 10-week hunger strike after Israel's high court set a date for his release.
Doctors said Khader Adnan, 33, was close to death after he refused food for 66 days in protest against his imprisonment under Israel's controversial system of "administrative detention".
The military system allows suspects to be held for long periods without being charged or facing trial.
Palestinian prisoner affairs minister Issa Qaraqaa said the court had said he would be released on April 17, "and based on that he ended his hunger strike".
Adnan's case had prompted mass protests across the West Bank and Gaza along with a wave of "solidarity" hunger strikes by other Palestinian prisoners, raising fears that his death in custody could spark serious unrest.
The father-of-two began his hunger strike on December 18 - a day after he was arrested by Israeli forces in his small village, in the northern West Bank.
He was issued a four-month detention order because of his links to Islamic Jihad, a group which has carried out suicide bombings in Israel.
Judges at the high court have ruled that he should be freed when that original order expires.
Under Israel's military system of "administration detentions" he has not been permitted to hear the charges or the evidence against him.
His lawyers said that made it impossible for them to launch a proper defence.
Adnan is just one of an estimated 310 Palestinians being held in Israeli jails under "administrative detention", using laws which date back to the period of the British Mandate.
Some of the prisoners have been held without trial for years.
Both Israeli and Palestinian human rights campaigners oppose the system as arbitrary and unjust.
Israel says it is necessary to address the security risks faced by the Jewish State while protecting its secret network of Palestinian informants.
The Israeli military says Adnan has been involved in "actions that threaten regional security".


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