Google – AFP, 30 October 2013
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Palestinian
president Mahmud Abbas (R) greets freed Palestinian prisoners at
his
headquarters in the West bank city of Ramallah on 30 October, 2013 (AFP,
Ahmad
Gharabli)
|
Ramallah
(Palestinian Territories) — Israel freed 26 veteran Palestinian prisoners early
on Wednesday in line with commitments to the US-backed peace process, but moved
in tandem to ramp up settlement in annexed east Jerusalem.
Plans to
build another 1,500 settler homes in the city's Arab eastern sector came to
light almost immediately after Israel began freeing 21 prisoners to the West
Bank and another five to the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.
The
sequence of events was almost mirror image of an earlier prisoner release on
August 13, when a first tranche of 26 prisoners were freed and Israel announced
construction of more than 2,000 new settler homes, most of them in east
Jerusalem.
"The
prime minister (Benjamin Netanyahu) and the interior minister (Gideon Saar)
agreed on four building plans in Jerusalem," a senior Israeli source told
AFP, confirming details initially reported on military radio.
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Palestinian
released prisoner Omar Massud,
hugs his mother at his family house in the
al-Shatee refugee camp in Gaza City, on
October 30, 2013 (AFP, Mohammed Abed)
|
In the West
Bank, thousands of people turned out to welcome home the 21 prisoners at a
formal ceremony at Mahmud Abbas's presidential compound in Ramallah, cheering
and waving flags, many holding cellphones aloft to capture the moment.
The
prisoners had left Ofer prison in two minibuses with blacked-out windows and
were driven to Beitunia crossing where fireworks split the night sky as they
tasted freedom for the first time in 20 years or more, an AFP correspondent
said.
After a
tearful reunion with family members, many of the now-freed inmates were carried
through the crowds on people's shoulders, their hands held aloft in victory.
"There
will be no (peace) agreement if so much as one Palestinian prisoner remains
behind bars," Abbas told the excited crowd, referring to the 5,000 or so
inmates still being held by Israel.
Israel's
move to ramp up settlement in tandem with the prisoner release was mooted last
week by a senior Israeli official who said the expected announcement on new
construction had been coordinated in advance with the Palestinians and the
Americans.
But Abbas,
speaking shortly before the Israeli announcement, flatly denied it.
"There
are some living among us who say that we have a deal (to release prisoners) in
exchange for settlement building, and I say to them, be silent," said the
Palestinian president.
In Gaza,
the five detainees were met by hundreds of relatives and well-wishers as they
emerged through the Erez crossing and entered the strip, sparking energetic
celebrations late into the night.
All 26
prisoners were convicted for killing Israelis, with most of the attacks
occurring before the 1993 Oslo accords, which granted the Palestinians limited
self-rule but failed to usher in an independent state.
Earlier
this year, Netanyahu agreed to release 104 prisoners in stages in a move which
facilitated a return to direct talks in late July, ending a three-year hiatus.
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A released
Palestinian prisoner kisses his
father's head upon his arrival in the West
Bank
City of Ramallah, on October 30,
2013 (AFP, Abbas Momani)
|
The ongoing
talks are being conducted under a US-imposed media blackout but a senior
Palestinian official said on Tuesday that Israel had adopted hardline positions
and negotiations had so far produced "no tangible progress".
"The
current Israeli negotiating position is the worst in more than 20 years,"
said Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary general of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation.
Although
Israel is engaged in direct peace talks with the Palestinians, the prisoners'
release has sparked tensions within Netanyahu's coalition, with the premier
describing the decision to free them as "one of the most difficult"
he had ever made.
Similar
sentiments were expressed by Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon.
"In
recent months we have been facing sensitive diplomatic circumstances and
weighty strategic considerations which require us to take difficult and painful
steps," he said on Tuesday in remarks communicated by his office.
"It is
not a black and white situation. It is highly complex and obliges us to be
prudent and responsible, to see also the long view," he said.



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