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Israel may release 800 Palestinians for
soldier
JERUSALEM—Under secret talks being mediated by Egypt, Israel could
release up to 800 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for a soldier
captured by Gaza militants in early June, a report said.
Quoting unnamed security officials, Israel's mass-selling Yediot
Aharonot said Israel would release the prisoners in three stages and
that the negotiations were being held up over the timetable of the
prisoner release.
Israel has refused as part of the deal to release Marwan Barghuti, a
leader of the Palestinian uprising and a top official of president
Mahmud Abbas's Fatah faction, it said.
Gaza militants seized Corporal Gilad Shalit in a June 25 cross-border
raid that left two other soldiers dead, sparking a widescale Israeli
offensive in the costal strip to recover the serviceman and prevent
rocket fire.
The continuing offensive has killed more than 200 Palestinians.
The three groups that claimed responsibility for the raid, including the
armed wing of the ruling Islamist Hamas movement, have demanded that
Israel release prisoners in exchange for the soldier.
The Jewish state has officially demanded an unconditional release, but
local media have reported that talks have been underway for some time.
On Saturday, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak told the state-owned Al-Ahram
newspaper that talks were under way to release the Israeli soldier in
exchange for Palestinian women and underage prisoners.
The Cairo weekly Akhbar Al-Yom quoted Egypt's foreign minister as saying
that Egypt was trying to secure the release of 1,000 Palestinian
prisoners in exchange for Shalit.—Agencies
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