Ahed Tamimi, the Palestinian teenage girl turned protest symbol who was filmed hitting Israeli soldiers last year, has been released after serving an almost eight-month prison sentence.
Israeli prisons spokesman Assaf Librati said Tamimi, 17, and her mother Nariman who was also jailed over the incident, had been released and were being taken to the West Bank on Sunday.Tamimi has been touted by Palestinians as a symbol of resistance to Israel's military control of the West Bank while many Israelis accuse her of being an agitator seeking to provoke soldiers on camera.
A protester holds a placard depicting Ahed Tamimi as hundreds take part in the Women's March on January 20, 2018 in Montreal. Source: AAP
Her case sparked an outpouring of international criticism against Israel and a renewed focus on the treatment of Palestinian youths in Israeli military courts.
Tamimi is scheduled to speak at a press conference in her West Bank hometown, Nabi Saleh.
In a December 2017 video that quickly went viral the then 16-year-old Tamimi is seen slapping and kicking soldiers in the driveway of her home. She was arrested shortly after and accepted an eight-month plea bargain in May.
She was released early for administrative reasons at the discretion of the Israel Prison Service.
"I have been longing for this moment because I missed them a lot," Tamimi's father Bassem told dpa on Thursday.
Bassem said his family is seeking "to continue normal life" and has stopped the weekly anti-occupation protests in Nabi Saleh where confrontations with Israeli soldiers are common.
However, he added, sometimes "the occupation forces you to resist because there is no other way".
He said his daughter is considering what university to attend and plans to study law.