An Israeli court has revoked a deportation order against an American-French law professor arrested while protesting against the demolition of a Palestinian village in the West Bank. The 66-year-old Frank Romano was detained on Friday in the embattled village of Khan al-Ahmar, along with two Palestinian activists. Witnesses said that Romano stood in front of heavy equipment being used to clear barriers that had been set up to slow demolition. Activists said he began a hunger strike while in detention. Romano, who teaches law at the Paris Nanterre University, was released late Sunday on the orders of the Jerusalem magistrates court and spoke in a video posted on social media. He said that police had earlier handed him to immigration officials for immediate deportation without a court hearing but he refused to sign a consent form. "The judge called the immigration and said bring him back and we had the hearing," he said. In the courtroom, the judge ordered his release, he said. Supporters said he was allowed to stay in Israel until September 25, the original date of his return flight. He was ordered to lodge a surety of 1,000 shekels ($256, 240 euros) and provide a guarantor for a separate 5,000 shekel bond, they said. Upon his release, Romano returned to Khan al-Ahmar and said: "I can continue the struggle with you." The village of roughly 200 people in the Israeli-occupied West Bank is at risk of being demolished at any time, despite fierce criticism from key European nations. On September 5, Israels supreme court upheld an order to raze it on grounds it was built without the proper permits. It is extremely rare for Palestinians to be given Israeli permits to build in Area C of the West Bank, where Khan al-Ahmar is situated. The village is located in a strategic spot near Israeli settlements and along a road leading to the Dead Sea. There have been warnings that continued settlement construction in the area could eventually divide the West Bank in two and cut it off from Jerusalem, dealing a death blow to any remaining hopes of a two-state solution.
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