JERUSALEM — A lawyer of a hunger striking Palestinian prisoner says he's filed an appeal against his sentence in Israel's Supreme Court.
Lawyer Mahmoud Hassan said Saturday that the court hasn't yet set a date to hear the appeal. The appeal was filed last week.
Hassan's client, Khader Adnan, is on his 63rd day of a hunger strike to protest Israel's military justice system. His doctors warn his death is imminent.
Adnan is serving four months of an "administrative detention" sentence, under which an Israeli military judge can imprison Palestinians for six-month periods without charge.
The prisoners and their lawyers do not see the evidence against them.
The 33-year-old is a member of the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad. It's unclear if Adnan participated in any attacks.
Several thousand Palestinians rallied in Gaza and the West Bank Friday in support of Adnan.
"We are all Khader Adnan," chanted crowds gathered in the Gaza Strip, with activists from the main political parties joining forces in a rare display of Palestinian unity.
Adnan has been refusing to eat since mid-December following his arrest in the occupied West Bank.
The Islamic Jihad group, which advocates the destruction of the state of Israel, has said it will escalate violence if Adnan dies.
"We will pursue our Jihad and resistance. We will sail in the sea of blood and martyrdom until we land on the shore of pride and dignity," top Islamic Jihad leader Nafez Azzam said during a Friday sermon at Gaza's oldest al-Omari mosque.
The Physicians for Human Rights group in Israel (PHR), which has been monitoring Adnan's condition in an Israeli hospital, said Friday he was "in immediate danger of death," adding that he had suffered "significant muscular atrophy."
The Israeli army has said in a statement that Adnan was arrested "for activities that threaten regional security." It has not given further details.
Adnan owns a bakery and a fruit and vegetable shop in his West Bank village, Arabeh. He has served as a spokesman for the Islamic Jihad, which describes him as a local leader.
More hunger strikers
At least 5,000 people took to the streets of Gaza, waving a mix of black Jihad flags, the green flags of Islamist group Hamas and the yellow flags of the secular Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Witnesses said hundreds had also demonstrated in the northern West Bank city of Jenin.
Palestinian officials said many other prisoners in Israeli jails had started hunger strikes to support Adnan, including Hassan Salama, a senior armed commander of Hamas who is serving life terms for masterminding suicide bombings against Israelis.
Palestinian prisoners have regularly staged hunger strikes in the past to try to gain better conditions or to denounce the Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territories.
However, such protests usually end quickly and officials said no-one had persisted for as long as Adnan, who is married with two children and whose wife is expecting a third infant.
The Islamic Jihad's Azzam accused Arab states and Western powers of ignoring Adnan's protest. "Shame on the nations of hundreds of millions (of Muslims) for the fact that Khader Adnan is still in prison," he said in his Friday sermon.
Hamas, which governs Gaza, said it was pushing the Arab League and Egypt to press for the release of Adnan.
"The Palestinian people, with all its components and its factions, will never abandon the hero prisoners, especially those who lead this hunger strike battle," said Hamas's top authority in the Mediterranean territory, Ismail Haniyeh.
The PHR rights group said Adnan could die even if he broke his fast. "There is a risk to his health even if he starts eating now because his system has got used to not having any food at all," a spokesman said.