Israel and Hamas ink landmark prisoner swap deal to secure Shalit release

Young soldier has become a national icon in Israel since his capture by Gaza-based militants in June 2006.


Afp October 12, 2011
Israel and Hamas ink landmark prisoner swap deal to secure Shalit release

JERUSALEM: Israel and Hamas have agreed a landmark deal to secure the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian detainees, officials on both sides said on Tuesday.

If the deal is implemented, it will end an ordeal that has lasted more than five years for the young soldier, who has become a national icon in Israel since his capture by Gaza-based militants in June 2006.

It will also be a major political coup for Gaza's Hamas rulers.

(Read: Year after Gaza flotilla, Israel faces new storms)

The deal came out of the blue, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announcing the details in a live address shortly after presenting it to his government during an emergency session on Tuesday night.

"We have concluded arduous negotiations with Hamas to release Gilad Shalit. He will be coming home in the next few days," he said.

"I believe we reached the best possible agreement at this time," Netanyahu added.

"It is very possible that this window of opportunity that has been created at this time... would have closed once and for all, and we wouldn't have been able to bring Gilad back at all."

Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal confirmed the deal in his own televised speech in Damascus, saying the agreement, which was mediated by Egypt, would see 1,027 Palestinian detainees -- 27 of them women -- freed in exchange for Shalit.

"Hamas and Israel have reached an agreement under which 1,027 Palestinians, of whom 27 are women, will be freed in two phases," he said at a news conference broadcast on Arabic-language news channels.

He said the first phase of the deal would see 450 prisoners freed "in one week," with another 550 Palestinians to be freed "in two months."

However, a top Israeli intelligence official ruled out the release of two key prisoners, telling reporters that influential Palestinian leader Marwan Barghuti and top PFLP militant Ahmed Saadat were not on the list of those to be released.

His remarks contradicted an earlier report from a senior Palestinian official who told AFP the two were among those slated to be freed.

In Israel, the news brought excited crowds to the protest tent set up by Shalit's parents outside Netanyahu's Jerusalem home.

Noam and Aviva Shalit could be seen smiling and laughing as well-wishers crowded into the makeshift structure emblazoned with messages of support.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas "warmly" welcomed the deal, negotiator Saeb Erakat told AFP in a phone call from Venezuela, describing it as a "Palestinian national achievement."

And in the Gaza Strip, Hamas said "tens of thousands" of Palestinians had flooded streets in the northern part of the territory to celebrate the expected release of Palestinian detainees.

"Crowds of tens of thousands are heading towards the Khulafa Mosque in Jabaliya camp at the beginning of the human floods of joy for the victory of the resistance and the completion of the prisoner exchange," Hamas said.

The deal, which was reached on Thursday and signed on Tuesday, comes after years of failed attempts to agree a prisoner exchange, despite the efforts of Egyptian and German mediators.

Shalit was captured in a deadly cross-border raid on June 25, 2006 by militants from three Gaza-based groups including Hamas, the Popular Resistance Committees and a Salafi group called the Army of Islam.

The deal has repeatedly stalled over the issue of which prisoners would be released and where they would be allowed to go, with Israel insisting that some go to Gaza or be exiled overseas, and not return to their homes in the West Bank.

It was not immediately clear how the two sides had resolved the issue.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ