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WAR REPORT
Prisoners, settlements hike tension before Mideast talks
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Aug 12, 2013


Key Israel-Palestinian prisoner releases
Jerusalem (AFP) Aug 12, 2013 - Here is a timeline of key prisoner exchanges between Israel and Palestinians:

- March 1974: 65 Palestinians are exchanged for two Israelis detained in Egypt for spying.

- March 14, 1979: Israel releases 76 Palestinian militants in return for an Israeli soldier taken prisoner in April 1978 in Lebanon.

- November 23, 1983: More than 4,600 Palestinians are freed by Israel to secure the release of six soldiers captured a year earlier by the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in Lebanon.

- May 20, 1985: Israel frees 1,150 Palestinian detainees in return for three soldiers captured in 1982 by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

- October 1, 1997: Israel frees Hamas spiritual head Ahmed Yassin after eight years in captivity, as well as dozens of Palestinian and Jordanian political prisoners, in exchange for two of its Mossad secret agents.

- August 6, 2003: Israel frees 341 Palestinian detainees.

- January 29, 2004: In a German-mediated deal, Israel frees 400 Palestinians and 31 other people, including 23 Lebanese. Hezbollah hands over an Israeli reservist it has held for three years and the remains of three other soldiers.

- December 27, 2004: Israel frees 159 Palestinians.

- February 21, 2005: Israel frees 500 Palestinians.

- June 2, 2005: Israel frees 400 Palestinians.

- July 20, 2007: More than 250 Palestinians released.

- December 3, 2007: Israel frees 429 Palestinians.

- August 25, 2008: Israel frees 198 Palestinians, including two "with blood on their hands," convicted of deadly attacks. It is the first time such detainees are freed other than as part of an exchange.

- December 15, 2008: Israel frees 227 Palestinians.

- October 2, 2009: Twenty Palestinians freed in exchange for a video of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, held since his June 2006 capture by Gaza militants.

- October 18, 2011: Israel and Hamas reach a landmark deal that results in the release of Shalit, along with 1,027 Palestinian detainees in two stages.

- August 11, 2013: Israel agrees to free 26 long-term Palestinian detainees as part of a deal to get peace talks back on track. They are the first of 104 Palestinians to be released depending on progress in the talks, which are to begin on Wednesday.

Israel announced it will release 26 veteran Palestinian prisoners ahead of a resumption of peace talks on Wednesday, but at the same time angered Palestinians by approving new settlement construction.

As some Israeli ministers criticised the government's prisoner release, Palestinians slammed the settlement plan, which Washington and the EU said was illegal and detrimental to peace efforts.

A special ministerial committee announced late Sunday it had approved the 26 prisoners to be released ahead of talks, according to a statement from the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The names of the prisoners -- most of whom were arrested for killing Israelis and Palestinians suspected of collaboration with the Jewish state -- were published early Monday morning.

They are expected to be freed ahead of the start of talks Wednesday in Jerusalem between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators.

The 26 constitute the first batch of a total of 104 long-term Palestinian and Israeli Arab prisoners to be freed in four stages, depending on progress in the talks.

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat underlined the importance of the prisoner release for peace talks to continue.

"We hope to put into effect what we've agreed on... we hope for the release of 104 prisoners. Each will return to his house. This is what we've agreed on," he told Israeli Arabic-language radio.

"There is a clear understanding between us and the Americans and Israelis. Any change (in that) will mean the agreement is off the table."

The decision to free prisoners, however, has angered the families of those killed in assaults.

"This is a day of celebration for terror organisations," Meir Indor, head of Almagor, a group representing Israeli victims of Palestinian attacks, told AFP.

Most prisoners being freed were arrested for "murder", with five being "accomplices to murder" and one being guilty of "abduction and killing", Israel says.

All prisoners had been arrested before 1994 except one who was arrested in 2001.

Housing Minister Uri Ariel of the far-right Jewish Home party also reacted angrily to the impending releases.

"Terrorists belong in prison," Ariel said. "The terrorists who are being released murdered women and children, and it's not clear to me how releasing murderers can help peace."

Ariel's ministry had on Sunday announced tenders for the construction of 793 settlement housing units in annexed east Jerusalem and 394 elsewhere in the West Bank in a move that infuriated Palestinians.

Media reports have implied that the construction announcement was meant to appease Netanyahu's far-right coalition partners, who oppose the release of prisoners but fervently promote settlement construction.

"I don't know of such a deal, but look -- both were announced on the same day," Indor said.

Palestinian officials slammed the settlement announcement as a move aimed at "preventing" peace talks.

"It is clear that the Israeli government is deliberately attempting to sabotage US and international efforts to resume negotiations by approving more settlement units three days before the ... Palestinian-Israeli meeting," Palestinian negotiator Mohammed Shtayeh said.

"Israel is attempting to prevent negotiations from taking place on Wednesday."

The United States and the European Union both expressed concern over the settlement plans.

"These announcements that you're referring to certainly come at a particularly sensitive time," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters in Washington.

"We continue to engage with the Israeli government to make our serious concerns known," she said.

"Our policy has not changed," she added. "We don't accept the legitimacy of continued settlement activity."

The European Union warned that approval for the West Bank settlements threatened to torpedo the peace talks.

"Israeli settlements in the West Bank are illegal under international law and threaten to make a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict impossible," EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton's spokesman Michael Mann said.

Russia described the Israeli move as "a counterproductive step that complicates the atmosphere of the talks".

But a spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted that the new settlement units were "in areas that will remain part of Israel in any possible future peace agreement."

"It changes nothing," Mark Regev added.

Direct talks between Israelis and Palestinians resumed in Washington last month after painstaking US mediation.

The last talks in 2010 broke down on the issue of settlement building.

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