Thursday, December 7, 2006;
Mastermind of 2002 Netanya Hotel Bombing on Hamas List for Prisoner Exchange, By Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel (Haaretz, AP)
For context, click here, here and here for this blog’s posts regarding possible prisoner releases in exchange for Gilad Shalit.
“Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has hinted recently that he would agree to the release of some prisoners who had been involved in attacks that claimed the lives of Israelis.”
Excerpts;
Hamas has recently prepared a list of leading Palestinians held in Israeli prisons that the organization will demand in a possible deal for the exchange of abducted Israel Defense Force soldier Gilad Shalit.
So far, both sides have reached agreement through Egyptian mediation, over the framework of the deal; however they have not finalized the number and identities of the prisoners to be released.
Among those whose release Hamas intends to demand is Abbas Sayed, the mastermind of the massacre at the Park Hotel in Netanya over Passover in 2002, in which 29 civilians were killed.
Early Wednesday, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak told reporters negotiations for Shalit’s freedom are “are in their final stage and waiting for Hamas approval” but added, “it seems that there other parties who are intervening against the interest of the Palestinian people.” He did not elaborate.
The deal is intended to take place in three stages: In the first, Israel is expected to release about 400 prisoners, among them women, minors and prisoners suffering from health problems. A short while later, or parallel to the initial release, Shalit would be released to Israel.
In the second stage, following the release of Shalit, another large group of Palestinian prisoner would be released. In the third stage, another group of prisoners, considered “heavy duty” figures, would be freed. These include senior members of terrorist organizations, including individuals with “blood on their hands.”
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has hinted recently that he would agree to the release of some prisoners who had been involved in attacks that claimed the lives of Israelis. Nonetheless, the identity of the prisoners who would be released is still unclear; there is some debate over the number and identity of the prisoners who would be freed.
For its part, Hamas is demanding that 400 prisoners be freed in the first part of the deal, and 500 each in the two subsequent parts of the exchange. Israel would like to limit that figure.
However, a senior Israeli source said this week that it is possible that Israel will agree to the release of as many as 1,000 Palestinians.
Palestinian sources told Haaretz yesterday that topping the list of those Hamas wants released, is Sheikh Hassan Yusef, among the leaders of the organization in the West Bank.
Yusef, a resident of Bitunia, near Ramallah, was jailed for his membership in a terrorist organization.
Next in line is Sheikh Mohammed Jamal Natshe, from Hebron. He is also among the leaders of the Hamas political wing in the West Bank.
Also high on the Hamas list is Jamal Abu Hija, who headed the group in the Jenin region.
Another whose release Hamas will demand is Yahiye Sanuar, among the founders of Hamas and its special security arm, a resident of Khan Yunis, and brother of Mohammed Sanuar, considered to be one of the heads of Izz al-Din al-Qassam, the military arm of the organization, and one of those believed to have been involved in the abduction of Gilad Shalit.
Sanuar has been in prison for nearly 20 years, having been sentenced for the murder of Palestinians suspected of collaborating with Israel. He is not considered to have “bloodied his hands” in terrorism against Israelis.
The jailed leader of Tanzim, Marwan Barghouti, is also on the list, as is the Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Ahmed Sa’adat, held for his alleged role in the assassination of former minister Rehavam Ze’evi, but sentenced for other violations.