The prisoners arrive in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to boisterous celebrations. The release comes hours before a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
One of the 26 Palestinian
prisoners released by Israel is greeted by relatives and friends at the
headquarters of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the
West Bank city of Ramallah.
(Atef Safadi, European Pressphoto Agency / August 14, 2013)
|
JERUSALEM — Hours before a
second round of peace talks was set to resume, Israel early Wednesday
released the first 26 of 104 Palestinian prisoners it agreed to set free
to draw Palestinians back to the negotiating table.
The prisoners were transferred to the West Bank and Gaza
Strip shortly after 1 a.m., a move widely seen as timed to minimize
media coverage and damp Palestinian homecoming ceremonies.
Despite the timing, thousands of Palestinians greeted the men like returning war heroes, with fireworks and boisterous celebrations in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where 11 prisoners returned, and in Gaza City, where the remaining 15 were delivered.
Israel had agreed to release the 26 sometime before direct negotiations were scheduled to resume in Jerusalem later Wednesday. Although U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry succeeded in bringing the two sides back together for the first time since 2010, expectations for progress remained low.
Any goodwill that might have been generated among Palestinians by Israel's prisoner release was largely overshadowed by a flurry of announcements of new Jewish settlement construction. The issue led Palestinians to quit the last direct talks in 2010.
Over the last week, Israel approved or advanced nearly 3,200 units of housing on land it seized during the 1967 Middle East War, in the Jerusalem area and in isolated West Bank settlements.
Israel's Housing Ministry quietly gave final planning approval Monday to 900 units in the Gilo development in the Jerusalem area. A day earlier Israel approved nearly 1,200 units, and on Thursday it advanced an additional 1,100 units.
Most of the international community considers Israel's settlement construction illegal. The United States and Europe have asked Israel to refrain from building during peace talks.
Israeli officials defended their right to build on land it has occupied for 46 years.
As prisoners arrived at the Palestinian Authority headquarters in Ramallah early Wednesday, supporters and emotional family members waved Palestinian flags, threw flowers and hoisted the men they had not seen in years on their shoulders. The freed men were greeted by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and then placed a wreath at the tomb of late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat before disappearing into a sea of jubilant well-wishers.
"I can't express how happy we are to have them home," said Nafez Nasser, 67, from the West Bank city of Nablus, who was greeting two nephews, Mohamed Sawalha, 40, and Hosni Sawalha, 39, who were convicted of murder in the stabbing death of Israeli bus passenger Baruch Heisler in 1990.
One released prisoner called on Israel to release the rest of the detainees.
"There will never be peace until Israel releases all the prisoners," said Taher Zayod, 42, who was serving a 21-year sentence for a 1992 shooting attack and an attempted killing of an Israeli police officer.
"He's a hero to me and to our whole village," said Zayod's nephew, Imad Abuzaytoun, 36.
Most of the men had been in jail 20 years or more. Eight were scheduled for release within the next three years.
To Palestinians, the men are freedom fighters and national heroes who were imprisoned for waging attacks against the Israeli occupation of their homeland.
To most Israelis, the prisoners are terrorists or criminals who killed civilians, including women, children and, in one case, an aging Holocaust survivor. Most of the prisoners were serving life sentences for killing Israelis.
"It is inconceivable to me that my husband's killer is being released," Bella Beker told Israel Radio on Tuesday. She is the widow of Moshe Beker, a citrus farmer from Rishon LeZion who was stabbed in 1994 by Barbakh Faiz Rajab Madhat of the Gaza Strip. Madhat, who was sentenced to life in jail, was released Wednesday.
"They will go home," she said. "They will dance and celebrate while we will be here, crying for our loss."
Despite the timing, thousands of Palestinians greeted the men like returning war heroes, with fireworks and boisterous celebrations in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where 11 prisoners returned, and in Gaza City, where the remaining 15 were delivered.
Israel had agreed to release the 26 sometime before direct negotiations were scheduled to resume in Jerusalem later Wednesday. Although U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry succeeded in bringing the two sides back together for the first time since 2010, expectations for progress remained low.
Any goodwill that might have been generated among Palestinians by Israel's prisoner release was largely overshadowed by a flurry of announcements of new Jewish settlement construction. The issue led Palestinians to quit the last direct talks in 2010.
Over the last week, Israel approved or advanced nearly 3,200 units of housing on land it seized during the 1967 Middle East War, in the Jerusalem area and in isolated West Bank settlements.
Israel's Housing Ministry quietly gave final planning approval Monday to 900 units in the Gilo development in the Jerusalem area. A day earlier Israel approved nearly 1,200 units, and on Thursday it advanced an additional 1,100 units.
Most of the international community considers Israel's settlement construction illegal. The United States and Europe have asked Israel to refrain from building during peace talks.
Israeli officials defended their right to build on land it has occupied for 46 years.
As prisoners arrived at the Palestinian Authority headquarters in Ramallah early Wednesday, supporters and emotional family members waved Palestinian flags, threw flowers and hoisted the men they had not seen in years on their shoulders. The freed men were greeted by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and then placed a wreath at the tomb of late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat before disappearing into a sea of jubilant well-wishers.
"I can't express how happy we are to have them home," said Nafez Nasser, 67, from the West Bank city of Nablus, who was greeting two nephews, Mohamed Sawalha, 40, and Hosni Sawalha, 39, who were convicted of murder in the stabbing death of Israeli bus passenger Baruch Heisler in 1990.
One released prisoner called on Israel to release the rest of the detainees.
"There will never be peace until Israel releases all the prisoners," said Taher Zayod, 42, who was serving a 21-year sentence for a 1992 shooting attack and an attempted killing of an Israeli police officer.
"He's a hero to me and to our whole village," said Zayod's nephew, Imad Abuzaytoun, 36.
Most of the men had been in jail 20 years or more. Eight were scheduled for release within the next three years.
To Palestinians, the men are freedom fighters and national heroes who were imprisoned for waging attacks against the Israeli occupation of their homeland.
To most Israelis, the prisoners are terrorists or criminals who killed civilians, including women, children and, in one case, an aging Holocaust survivor. Most of the prisoners were serving life sentences for killing Israelis.
"It is inconceivable to me that my husband's killer is being released," Bella Beker told Israel Radio on Tuesday. She is the widow of Moshe Beker, a citrus farmer from Rishon LeZion who was stabbed in 1994 by Barbakh Faiz Rajab Madhat of the Gaza Strip. Madhat, who was sentenced to life in jail, was released Wednesday.
"They will go home," she said. "They will dance and celebrate while we will be here, crying for our loss."
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