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Palestinian
prisoners step into freedom
Middle East Desk Report
BEITUNIYA CHECKPOINT (West Bank)—Dozens of freed Palestinian prisoners
kissed the ground at this West Bank checkpoint after Israel released
them in a gesture to President Mahmoud Abbas ahead of a U.S.-sponsored
Mideast peace conference.
As the 57 prisoners headed home, Israel said it was moving forward with
plans to open a new West Bank police headquarters, despite U.S. concerns
that development in the area harms prospects for establishing a viable
Palestinian state. The Palestinians accused Israel of undermining new
peace efforts.
The prisoners arrived at the army’s Beituniya checkpoint, near the West
Bank city of Ramallah, after a two-hour journey from the Ketziot prison
in southern Israel. They got off Israeli buses, kissed the asphalt, and
then boarded a Palestinian bus. An ecstatic crowd of waiting relatives
clapped and waved Palestinian flags.
Israel was expected to free 30 other prisoners in the Gaza Strip on
Monday, but the release was delayed without explanation.
Most of the prisoners slated for release Monday are from the West Bank,
which is controlled by Abbas and his government of moderates. The others
are residents of Gaza, which has been ruled by Hamas since June, when
they defeated the forces of Abbas’ Fatah movement and took control of
the coastal territory.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced the release — the second
since July — as part of his strategy to support Abbas in his power
struggle with Hamas. The prisoners are mostly members of Fatah, along
with several who belong to smaller Palestinian factions. None belong to
Hamas.
Israel is holding around 11,000 Palestinian prisoners, and their release
is a central Palestinian demand. While many of those freed Monday were
serving time for militant activity, none was convicted of killing or
injuring Israelis.
Among those released was 66-year-old Rakad Salim, who served five years
of an eight-year sentence for distributing millions of dollars from the
late Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to Palestinian militants and their
families. His relatives and supporters held up pictures of Saddam and
kissed and hugged him after he got off the bus.
“I feel that I am a new man, enjoying my freedom,” said a smiling Salim.
“This release is not enough, but we hope it is the beginning of emptying
all the (Israeli) prisons.” The prisoners later traveled to a security
compound in Ramallah, where they laid a wreath at the tomb of
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
In Gaza, Israeli troops shot and wounded a 14-year-old who was waiting
with hundreds of Palestinians at the Erez crossing for their relatives
to be released, medics and witnesses said.
The Israeli troops began firing from watchtowers when the Palestinians
began approaching a no man’s zone separating Gaza from Israel, the
witnesses said. The military said troops opened fire at Palestinians who
approached army positions at Erez and ignored warning shots.
Hamas called Monday’s prisoner release insignificant. “We congratulate
the prisoners,” said Mohammed al-Mudhoun a senior aid to Ismail Haniyeh,
the leader of the Hamas government in Gaza. “We consider this ... a
humiliation for the leadership in Ramallah that considers this humble
number a great achievement.”
Palestinians with relatives in Israeli prisons gathered at the Red Cross
offices in Gaza City, holding photographs of their loved ones. One
mother, Fatima Kaisi, said her 24-year-old son, Mohammed, is serving a
250-year sentence for involvement in the radical militant group Islamic
Jihad.
“I’m happy for the mothers who are getting their sons back today, but
the leaders have to know that there are hundreds of mothers and families
still waiting to meet with their loved ones,” Kaisi said. Israeli troops
killed two Hamas militants in Gaza on Monday in a gunbattle, Hamas said.
The Israeli military said troops shot two armed Palestinian militants
who attacked soldiers just inside Gaza. One soldier was slightly wounded
by gunfire, the military said.
Olmert and Abbas are slated to meet Wednesday. The two leaders are
trying to draft a joint vision of a peace deal to be presented at a
peace conference expected to be held in November in Annapolis, Md. The
Palestinians want a detailed framework agreement, while Israel wants a
statement that is shorter and more vague.
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