 This week's planned Mideast prisoner swap is unleashing deep anguish in Israel and widespread elation in the Palestinian territories, laying bare the chasm of perspective dividing the two sides.
This week's planned Mideast prisoner swap is unleashing deep anguish in Israel and widespread elation in the Palestinian territories, laying bare the chasm of perspective dividing the two sides.In  Israel, the public is aghast at having to release convicted  perpetrators of suicide bombings, deadly shootings and grisly  kidnappings, although most understand that's what it takes to win  freedom for a soldier captured during a routine patrol inside Israel at  age 19.
The Palestinians,  with equal vehemence, see the returnees as heroes who fought an  occupier at a time of violence and argue moral equivalence between their  actions and those of Israel's army.
 These diverging narratives have been reflected in reactions to the deal, in which Israel will free some 1,027 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Sgt. Gilad Schalit, captured by Gaza militants in a cross-border raid in June 2006.
These diverging narratives have been reflected in reactions to the deal, in which Israel will free some 1,027 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Sgt. Gilad Schalit, captured by Gaza militants in a cross-border raid in June 2006.Shalom  Rahum, whose 16-year-old son Ofir was lured over the Internet to the  West Bank by a woman and killed, said her release was reopening a  painful episode.
"Our little  consolation was our bit of justice," he said. "If there were a peace  treaty, I'd say ... release all the prisoners because we are opening a  new page. But we are not signing a peace treaty," he told Israel TV.
Following  initial joy over the deal, Israelis have begun to ask questions about  the lopsided price their government is paying. Many argue that militants  who killed Israelis could return to armed activity and that releasing  so many prisoners, including many implicated in deadly attacks, bolsters  groups like Hamas at the expense of more moderate Palestinians.
To  address Israeli security concerns, Hamas agreed to have more than 200  West Bank-based prisoners deported to either the penned-in Gaza Strip or  to a third country, where it would be much harder to carry out attacks.
Of  the 477 prisoners to be freed in the first of two groups, 285 were  serving life in prison. The inmate with the longest sentence was serving  36 life terms.While Israel has  a long history of lopsided prisoner swaps, the Schalit deal has touched  a nerve because memories of the attacks are so vivid. The list of  prisoners who are being released reads like a who's who of perpetrators  of some of the grisliest attacks of the second Palestinian uprising,  which began in 2000 and lasted roughly five years.
They  include the woman who directed a suicide bomber to a crowded Jerusalem  pizzeria where he killed 16 people in 2001. The woman, Ahlam Tamimi, has  said in a television interview that she has no regrets.
Others  on the list are Abdel Aziz Salha, who raised his bloody hands to a  cheering crowd after killing two Israeli soldiers who accidentally drove  into the West Bank city of Ramallah in 2000; Nasser Yateima, a  mastermind of a hotel bombing that killed 30 people celebrating the  Passover holiday in 2002; Ibrahim Younis, who planned a 2003 suicide  bombing in Jerusalem that killed seven people, including an  American-born doctor and his daughter who were celebrating on the eve of  the young woman's wedding; and Fadi Ibrahim, the mastermind of a bus  bombing in 2003 in the northern city of Haifa that killed 17 people.
Several families have filed court appeals against the prisoner swap, though that is not expected to halt the deal.Ron  Kehrman, whose daughter was among the victims in the Haifa attack,  criticized the planned swap, saying it could result in more Israeli  deaths. "Is the blood of the next captured soldier or citizen less red  than the blood of Gilad Schalit?" he asked.
Other  bereaved relatives were more accepting, acknowledging that Israel at  least has a chance to bring back Schalit alive. Schalit's fate has  become a national obsession, in part because military service is  mandatory for Israeli Jews.
Among  Palestinians, there is ongoing disagreement over whether the use of  violence has been counterproductive in the quest for statehood. Recent  polls indicate that support for attacks on Israelis has dropped since  the uprising ended.
But even  those opposed to violence on tactical grounds argue that the prisoners  sacrificed for a common cause, and the Palestinians have the right to  resist Israel's 44-year military occupation, even with what many  elsewhere consider terrorist attacks.
Palestinians  are quick to note that hundreds of Palestinian civilians have been  killed in fighting with Israel as well, usually the result of  "collateral damage" during military operations, such as targeted  killings of militant leaders. Although Israel says it never  intentionally targets civilians, Palestinians say civilian deaths are  almost inevitable given the nature and locations of targets.
"It's  a debate that will never end," said Kadura Fares, a Palestinian  prisoners' rights advocate who himself spent 14 years in Israeli prisons  for belonging to an armed group before emerging as an outspoken  proponent of coexistence.
"An Israeli army officer, from our point of view, he is a terrorist if he gives orders to kill people or(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/16/2011 02:06:00 PM
10/16/2011 02:06:00 PM
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