Mahmoud Sarsak, Palestine soccer player, freed from Israeli prison

GAZA – Israel released a member of the Palestinian national soccer team on Tuesday after holding him in jail without trial for three years, during which he staged an intermittent four-month hunger strike in protest, Palestinian officials said.

Mahmoud Sarsak, 25, alleged by Israel to have been active in the Islamic Jihad militant group, received a hero's welcome on his return home to Islamist-ruled Gaza.

Soccer legend Eric Cantona and other international figures had signed a letter drawing attention to Sarsak's plight. Sepp Blatter, president of world soccer's governing body FIFA, also wrote to the Israeli soccer authorities to seek their help.

Islamic Jihad gunmen fired into the air and fellow athletes crowded around – thrusting a soccer ball into his hands – as Sarsak was admitted to hospital in Gaza.

"I thank God and all the athletes of the world," Sarsak said, between sips from a bottle of water.

Israel had detained Sarsak in 2009 when he left Gaza to play soccer in the occupied West Bank.

Israel said he belonged to Islamic Jihad, a group involved in lethal attacks against it, but he denied the allegation.

Sarsak was never charged but was jailed as an unlawful combatant. Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip in 2005 but still controls most of the territory's borders.

Islamic Jihad issued a statement proclaiming Sarsak's freedom as "a victory of will, determination and steadfastness."

Sarsak was the latest of several Palestinian prisoners freed by Israel in the past three months after intermittent hunger strikes protesting against their detention without trial and demanding better prison conditions.

An Israeli official confirmed Sarsak was being released on Tuesday but had no other details.

Israel struck a deal last month with representatives of 1,600 Palestinian prisoners under which they stopped hunger strikes of up to 27 days in exchange for Israel ending their solitary confinement, permitting family visits and making other improvements in prison conditions.

Another Gaza man, Akram al-Rekhawi, a member of the Islamist Hamas group who has served eight years of a nine-year sentence in Israel, has been on an intermittent hunger strike for 90 days seeking an early release due to illness, Palestinian officials said.

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan, editing by Tim Pearce)

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