An Israeli Cabinet minister has denounced a landmark deal with Hamas to free a captured Israeli soldier in exchange for Palestinian prisoners as a "huge victory for terror."
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
Gaza's Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, smiled as he threw candy to celebrating backers.
Seeming to confirm Israel's fears, Mashaal said that those who are released "will return to ... the national struggle."
Uzi Landau says the swap deal provides "incentive to kill Israelis and to carry out further abductions."
Most  Israelis support the deal but alongside celebrations there is also  concern that once freed, the Palestinian prisoners will resume militant  activities.
The Cabinet endorsed the deal early Wednesday in a 26-3 vote.
The  deal envisages bringing home Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit within days,  in exchange for some 1,000 Palestinian prisoners to be released in two  main batches.
Schalit was captured in a cross-border raid by Gaza militants more than five years ago.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
JERUSALEM (AP) — In a much-anticipated prisoner exchange that could have broad implications, Israel and Hamas on Tuesday announced that an Israeli soldier abducted to Gaza five years ago would be swapped for about 1,000 Palestinians held by Israel and accused of militant activity.
Israel's government approved the deal early Wednesday following a three-hour debate after both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal announced the agreement in televised comments.
Netanyahu  said the captured soldier, Sgt. Gilad Schalit, would return home within  days. Mashaal, portraying the agreement as a victory, said the  Palestinian prisoners would be freed in two stages over two months.
Hamas  and Israel are bitter enemies. Hamas has sent dozens of suicide bombers  into Israel, killing hundreds, and Israel blockaded Gaza after Hamas  seized power there in 2007, carrying out a large-scale invasion in 2009  to try to stop daily rocket attacks on Israel. More than 1,500 Gaza  Palestinians have been killed in Israeli raids and airstrikes since the  soldier was captured.
In the northern Gaza town of Jebaliya,  thousands of Hamas supporters flocked the streets, led by masked  militants. Cars with loudspeakers played praise for Hamas. Thousands of  other Gazans rushed to their border with Egypt, clutching Palestinian  and Egyptian flags, tossing flowers and cheering.Gaza's Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, smiled as he threw candy to celebrating backers.
The  deal maintains a decades-long tradition of lopsided exchanges that have  come under increasing criticism in Israel — and ends a period of  tortured indecision by Israeli governments torn between securing the  release of a single soldier and the risk that freed militants might  return to violence that could cost many more lives.
"There  is built-in tension between the desire to return a kidnapped soldier  ... and the need to preserve the security of the citizens of Israel,"  Netanyahu said, in comments at opening the Cabinet meeting. "I believe  we reached the best deal that we can reach at this time, a stormy time  in the Middle East."
In agreeing to go ahead with the deal, the career hard-liner made a potentially fateful choice.It gives Hamas, a militant group that rules the Gaza Strip, a victory that might strengthen its hand against the more moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Palestinian Authority runs the West Bank.
Mashaal  said 1,000 male prisoners and 27 female ones would be released, the  first 450 over the next week and the rest within two months. He said the  released would include 315 prisoners serving life sentences, suggesting  they were convicted of attacks that caused the deaths of Israelis.Seeming to confirm Israel's fears, Mashaal said that those who are released "will return to ... the national struggle."
"This  is a national achievement for the whole Palestinian people," Mashaal  said, adding that he was pained not to be able to release the thousands  of remaining prisoners held by Israel. The exact number of prisoners is  under some contention, with the Palestinians citing 8,000 and Israel  confirming about 5,000.
Yoram  Cohen, head of Israel's Shin Bet security agency, said over the course  of six secret rounds of talks in recent months, Hamas had backed down  from key demands, including the release of some top militants. He said  about 40 of the first group of prisoners would be exiled to other  countries.
News of the deal set  off wild celebrations at a protest tent erected by Schalit's family  outside Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem. Several hundred people  danced in the street and waved flags with Schalit's image on it.
The soldier's father, Noam, has become a well-known public figure by pushing for his son's freedom.
The  tiny structure is decorated with pictures of Schalit, as well as a  large sign with the number 1,934, the number of days he has been in  captivity. Schalit's parents sat in the tent, smiling as people flooded  to the area and cars honked horns in excitement.
But  typical of the criticism was a statement by Almagor, a group  representing victims of Palestinian attacks. "In the end Netanyahu has  surrendered to Hamas," the group said. "The terrorists who are released  are a danger to the citizens of Israel."
The  plight of Palestinian prisoners is equally emotional among  Palestinians. Virtually every Palestinian has a relative who has served  time in an Israeli prison, and Palestinians routinely hold large  demonstrations where they hold up posters of their imprisoned loved  ones.
The very fact of any agreement between Israel and its archenemy seemed to(...)More.
 
 
 
 
 
 10/12/2011 02:07:00 AM
10/12/2011 02:07:00 AM
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