Conditions in Israeli prisons generally meet international standards. IPS facilities, interrogation facilities and IDF provisional detention centers are regularly monitored by the
International Committee of the Red Cross, and occasionally, by the
Israel Bar Association and
Public Defender's Office. Inmates are entitled to visits from their lawyers and family members, and security prisoners are allowed
Red Cross visits. After serving a quarter of their sentence, inmates may be given the right to furloughs from prison, in which they are temporarily released unsupervised for set periods of time of one to four days before returning to prison, subject to the approval of a committee consisting of a judge, Prison Service official, and doctor or educator. Furlough privileges may be revoked based on the inmate's behavior, but inmates may petition the courts to restore their privileges. Inmates who are married or in common-law relationships and do not receive furloughs from prison have the right to
conjugal visits. In 2011, ICRC maintained a program that enabled
Palestinians from the
West Bank to visit relatives held in Israeli prisons. A similar scheme for the
Gaza Strip was halted by the Israeli government following the
Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip in 2007. Credible allegations of inhumane conditions are duly investigated by the authorities, which documents the results publicly. In a report of the Public Defense Office based on unannounced inspections, the living conditions at the facilities, as of 2017–18, were found to be often unfit for human habitation, along with widespread cases of inmates' rights violation. On 25 March 2020, a
Palestinian prisoner in the Nafha prison of
Israel reportedly set fire to a guard room protesting against the neglect shown towards the health conditions of the prisoners by the prison administrations, amid the
coronavirus outbreak. The inmate, Ayman Sharabati, who is serving a life sentence at the prison, set fire to the guard room when he along with other prisoners was sent out for walk, according to Qadri Abu Bakr, head of the Palestinian Authority's Prisoners Affairs Commission. Reportedly, the IPS lacks the appropriate medical aid and provision necessary to prevent the outbreak of COVID-19 among the prisoners. ==Privately run prisons==