Terror Victims’ Families to Obama: Let Pollard Go

Lazar Berman; AP; Times of Israel staff

Terror Victims’ Families to Obama: Let Pollard Go

In emotional letter, relatives of victims of freed Palestinian prisoners call for release of Israeli spy

The Times of Israel

2014-04-06


Israelis demonstrate at the Western Wall for the release of Jonathan Pollard in 2005. (photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)

Families of victims of terrorists released by Israel in the context of peace talks with the Palestinians called on US President Barack Obama Sunday to release convicted spy Jonathan Pollard from his imprisonment in the United States.

“Mr. President, with a broken heart we are turning to you and asking you—please release Pollard, in the name of justice, compassion and humanity,” read the emotional letter, signed by 22 relatives of victims of Palestinian prisoners already released over the past nine months. The letter was publicized by Almagor, a terror victims’ advocacy organization.

Calling the release of terrorists “an absurd nightmare” for the families, the letter emphasizes the pain the relatives feel every day as a result of the loss of their loved ones and the failure of their campaign to prevent the release of the terrorists.

“Sadly, we did not succeed in our struggle. Close to 80 cold-blooded murderers were freed in the last three releases, and were received with massive celebrations by Abu Mazen [PA President Mahmoud Abbas] while being portrayed as heroes. We felt our hearts explode at the sight of killers of children being carried on peoples’ shoulders, we trembled seeing them sitting in television studios, dressed for a celebration and explaining with pride how they slaughtered our relatives, inciting the young generation to follow in their footsteps…”

“Mr. President,” the letter continued, “the entire Jewish nation, and we perhaps more than anyone else, felt in the past week that one good thing was about to happen here. After close to 30 years, the open wound of the Pollard episode stood ready to conclude.”

The letter concluded with a very personal plea from the victims’ families. “If all the requests and considerations weren’t enough, please do this as a gesture to the families who lost those most dear to them, who were forced to see the murderers of their precious ones freed, so that the end of the Pollard tragedy will offer them at least a tiny sliver of consolation.”


Palestinians celebrate the third installment of the prisoner release by Israel at the presidential compound in Ramallah, December 31, 2013. (photo credit: Issam Rimawi/Flash90)

Last week, Israeli officials asserted that Jerusalem had been ready to approve a complex, three-way deal under which Israel would have freed a fourth and final batch of 26-30 long-term Palestinian terror convicts and also released 400 more Palestinian security prisoners not guilty of violent crimes. Peace talks would have extended beyond the current April 29 deadline, and the US would have released Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard.

Israeli officials accused Abbas of torpedoing the deal.

While the PA says Israel breached its commitments by failing to free the fourth and final group of 26 long-term terrorist convicts last week, Israeli officials say that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government was on the verge of approving a more far-reaching prisoner deal—which would also have provided for Pollard’s release—when Abbas shocked Netanyahu by signing on live TV applications for the PA to join 15 UN and other international treaties.

The US-born Pollard, 59, has spent 28 years behind bars, and is up for parole next year.

The former naval intelligence analyst who turned over suitcases stuffed with US Cold War-era secrets to the Israelis in the mid-1980s is a cause celebre among some segments of the Jewish community worldwide.

The American intelligence and defense community for years dug in its heels over keeping Pollard imprisoned, on the grounds that he was a US native son who took foreign cash to betray his country.
The letter from the victims’ families will be passed to the White House through US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro.

Families of Israeli Terror Victims Call for Pollard Release

JTA

Families of Israeli Terror Victims Call for Pollard Release

As “Consolation” For Watching Palestinian Prisoners Go Free

The Forward

2014-04-06

Family members of terror victims killed by Palestinian prisoners released in connection with the current Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations called on President Obama to free Jonathan Pollard.

The letter, signed by 22 terror victim relatives, was delivered Sunday to U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro to be passed on to the U.S. president, according to the Times of Israel. The letter was circulated by the Almagor Terror Victims Association.

“Mr. President, with a broken heart we are turning to you and asking you—please release Pollard, in the name of justice, compassion and humanity,” read the letter, which detailed their pain and suffering, and their failed attempt to prevent the release of the prisoners over the last eight months.

“Sadly, we did not succeed in our struggle. Close to 80 cold-blooded murderers were freed in the last three releases, and were received with massive celebrations by Abu Mazen while being portrayed as heroes,” read the letter.

Israel released the 80 Palestinian prisoners over the last eight months as part of an agreement made last August to jump-start the peace process. Some 28 other prisoners were set to go free at the end of last month, but Israel postponed their release pending progress in the peace process, or an agreement by the Palestinians to extend the time of the negotiations, which currently are scheduled to end on April 29.

In an effort to convince Israel to release the latest batch of prisoners, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry offered to release Pollard, the convicted American spy for Israel, currently in his 29th year of a life sentence in a U.S. prison. Many U.S. intelligence officials object to freeing Pollard.

“If all the requests and considerations weren’t enough, please do this as a gesture to the families who lost those most dear to them, who were forced to see the murderers of their precious ones freed, so that the end of the Pollard tragedy will offer them at least a tiny sliver of consolation,” said the letter.

“Return the 78 Freed Terrorists to Jail”

Hezki Ezra; Ari Yashar

“Return the 78 Freed Terrorists to Jail”

Bereaved families take down protest tent in front of Prime Minister’s Residence following release cancellation; “a weight has been lifted.”

Israel National News

2014-04-04

The bereaved families of terror victims packed away the protest tent from in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem on Thursday night, after the announcement that the fourth and final batch of 26 terrorist prisoners promised as a “gesture” was cancelled.

Justice Minister Tzipi Livni made the announcement earlier in the night, given that the Palestinian Authority (PA) breached the terms of the peace talks by making a unilateral request to join 15 United Nations agencies on Tuesday.

Ya’akov Tovol, the father of Lior HYD, who was murdered in the 1990s by an Arab terrorist that was supposed to be part of the final batch of terrorist releases, noted that the announcement was a very welcome development.

“A weight has been lifted from my heart, I hope that (Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu) will hold on and not give in again to some kind of trick by (PA Chairman) Mahmoud Abbas,” remarked Tovol.

Lt. Col. (res.) Meir Indor, chairman of the Almagor organization that aids families of terror victims, and a leader of the protest movement, praised the success of the struggle. He further called for the 78 terrorists who had already been released to be returned to jail.

“We receive the government’s announcement with satisfaction but also concern,” Indor told Arutz Sheva. “Together with the joy on the success of the struggle, I call on the government to do what is demanded and gather all 78 Palestinians that were released, and return them to jail.”

Indor added that “the Palestinians didn’t stand by their conditions, and there is no reason to pay them with murderers with blood on their hands.”

Chairperson of the grassroots My Israel movement, Sarah Haetzni–Cohen, remarked “we are happy that the struggle succeeded, we are happy that the public spoke up. We’ll continue to follow developments and update regarding the coming activities.”

Bereaved Families Welcome Israel’s Decision to Cancel 4th Palestinian Prisoner Release

Bereaved Families Welcome Israel’s Decision to Cancel 4th Palestinian Prisoner Release

The Jerusalem Post

2014-04-04

Bereaved family members of terror attack victims welcomed on Thursday night Israel’s announcement that it would not release a fourth group of Palestinian prisoners as was planned to advance peace talks.

Activists from the Almagor Terror Victims Association dismantled a tent protest against the release, staged outside the residency of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

“This is not a celebration as we see it because Israel has already unnecessarily paid back [to the Palestinians] 85 murderous terrorist who were released and roam freely,” said Almagor director Lt.-Col. (res.) Meir Indor.

Expert: Terrorists Likely to Go Free, but Not Pollard

Moshe Cohen

Expert: Terrorists Likely to Go Free, but Not Pollard

Dr. Aryeh Bachrach believes Israel is likely to end up releasing terrorists, while Jonathan Pollard remains in prison in the U.S.

Israel National News

2014-04-03


Jonathan Pollard (Yehuda Glick)

In a worst-case scenario, Israel is likely to end up releasing Palestinian terrorists—and Jonathan Pollard will remain in prison in the U.S. That is the scenario Dr. Aryeh Bachrach, whose son was killed in a terror attack in 1995, sees taking place in the coming days. While Israel has so far held out and refused to release a fourth batch of terrorists promised last year, but given the history of these releases—including Israel’s willingness to comply and the Palestinian Authority’s refusal to back down—Bachrach sees the mass release of terrorists in the coming days as almost inevitable.

This would be the fourth time Israel is set to release terrorists in the latest “round” of releases, which began last year. Israel committed to releasing over 100 terrorists, many responsible for the deaths of multiple Israelis, as a “gesture” to tempt PA chief Mahmoud Abbas to restart talks with Israel after a three year hiatus. So far, Israel has released more than 75 terrorists.

Another 26 were set to be released last weekend, but the government held up the release at the last moment. In response, PA threatened to cut off talks with Israel altogether, and sent documents to 15 UN committees and commissions demanding recognition as a full member state, in violation of a commitment they gave not to do so to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

In an attempt to keep the talks going, a deal was proposed whereby Israel would release even more terrorists—as many as 400—in exchange for Pollard and a PA commitment to keep talking.

While that deal is apparently off the table after the PA demanded no fewer than 1,000 terrorists be released, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is still trying to convince ministers to agree to a mass release, and is dangling the prospect of Pollard’s release before them—even though the U.S. has said that they are not promising anything.

Speaking to Arutz Sheva, Bachrach, head of the Almagor Bereaved Parents’ Forum, said that the Americans know who they are dealing with, and probably figure they can “save” Pollard for yet more Israeli concessions. This is not, after all, the Americans promised to release Pollard, and in fact not the first time they promised Netanyahu himself they would do so.

“In the Wye River agreements in 1998, in which Netanyahu was a partner, then President Bill Clinton promised Pollard’s release if Netanyahu would agree to surrender part of Hevron,” said Bachrach. “Netanyahu agreed, but Clinton did not pardon Pollard. We gained nothing, while the Palestinians ‘conceded’ that they no longer had to turn terrorist murders over to Israel, as the Oslo Accords required.

“Abbas has been threatening for a long time to seek recognition at the UN, regardless of our release of terrorists. And he will continue to do so, regardless of the release. We should tell him to do so and deal with the consequences himself,” Bachrach added.

Israelis Protest Possible U.S.-Brokered Release of Arab Prisoners

Israelis Protest Possible U.S.-Brokered Release of Arab Prisoners

JNS

2014-04-03


Secretary of State John Kerry pictured with Israeli peace negotiator Tzipi Livni and Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat (credit: State Department)

Some 200 Israelis marched in Jerusalem on Wednesday to protest the possible U.S.-brokered release of Arab prisoners, Israel Hayom reported. The demonstrators held pictures of some 300 Israelis killed by prisoners who were released or were about to be released as part of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Meir Indor, director of the Almagor Terror Victims Association, called on the Israeli government to stand firm and not give in to “U.S. extortion” in the negotiations.

The march originated from the intersection of King George Street and Jaffa Road, the site of a major 2001 suicide bombing. Some of the perpetrators of that attack, which took place at a now-defunct Sbarro pizza parlor, were released by Israel.

Protesters started the demonstration by reciting Psalms. Then, Rabbi Yehuda Ben-Yishai, whose daughter Ruth Fogel was killed in Itamar three years ago along with her husband and three of her children, recited the Mourner’s Kaddish. Demonstrators then marched to the U.S. Consulate on Agron Street to protest the reported American offer to release imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard alongside the Palestinian prisoners. They chanted, “Do not release terrorists,” “Don’t let Jewish blood be spilled,” and “Don’t release murderers.”

“Do Not Cave in to US Extortion,” Bereaved Families Lament

Efrat Forsher

“Do Not Cave in to US Extortion,” Bereaved Families Lament

Israelis picket U.S. Consulate to protest proposed offer to release Pollard in exchange for Palestinian prisoners • “It is very sad to see the U.S. employing Hamas-style tactics,” says head of Almagor Terror Victims Association.

Israel Hayom

2014-04-03


Protesters rally in front of the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, Wednesday (photo credit: Yonatan Zindel)

Some 200 Israelis marched in Jerusalem on Wednesday to protest the possible release of Arab prisoners. The demonstrators held pictures of some 300 Israelis who had been killed by prisoners who were released or were about to be released as part of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

The march originated from the intersection of King George Street and Jaffa Road, the site of a major 2001 suicide bombing. Some of the perpetrators of that attack, which took place at a now-defunct Sbarro pizza parlor, were released by Israel.

Protesters started the demonstration by reciting psalms. Then, Rabbi Yehuda Ben-Yishai, whose daughter Ruth Fogel was killed in Itamar three years ago together with her husband and three of her children, recited the Mourner’s Kaddish. Demonstrators then marched to the U.S. Consulate on Agron Street to protest the reported American offer to release imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard alongside the Palestinian prisoners. “Bibi, wake-up,” they chanted, referring to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. They also chanted, “Do not release terrorists,” “Don’t let Jewish blood be spilled,” and “Don’t release murders.”

“They are going to walk out of prison and get another opportunity to kill more Jews,” lamented one demonstrator. “Why are they going to release them?” she asked. “For more blood?”

The son of Haim Smadar, who was killed when a terrorist blew herself up in a Jerusalem supermarket, said, “Three weeks ago the government gave the Palestinians the remains of the bomber who killed my father; the government of Israel did not notify me, and did not ask for my opinion on this matter.”

Meir Indor, the director of the Almagor Terror Victims Association, spoke before the demonstrators, saying, “The U.S. is essentially blackmailing us like Hamas; Hamas kidnapped Gilad Schalit to have murderers released; the U.S. is holding Pollard to get Israel to release murderers, too. It is very sad to see the U.S. employing Hamas-style tactics.” Indor called on the Israeli government to stand firm and not give up to the “U.S. extortion,” stressing that “[the predominantly national religious party] Habayit Hayehudi must leave the government over this deal.”

Protesters ended their protest in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence, where they assembled a makeshift collage using the pictures they were carrying.

Watch: Bereaved Families Protest Prisoner Release in Jerusalem

Watch: Bereaved Families Protest Prisoner Release in Jerusalem

Around 150 people, including families of terror victims, marched through the streets of Jerusalem protesting the release of Palestinian prisoners.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-04-02

Video by Eli Mandelbaum

Bereaved families of terror attack victims protested Wednesday night in Jerusalem against Israeli-American spy Jonathan Pollard’s release as part of a deal to encourage Israel to release Palestinian prisoners and extend peace talk.

Members of the Almagor Terror Victims Organization, around 150 people, marched outside the US Consulate in Jerusalem in opposition of America’s possible release of Pollard, who has served nearly 30 years in a US prison for spying for Israel.

Fresh Protests Against Terrorist Releases in Jerusalem

Yishai Karov; Baruch Gordon

Fresh Protests Against Terrorist Releases in Jerusalem

Bereaved families raise outcry over terrorist releases, “end to Israel’s sovereignty” proposed in possible deal with US and PA.

Israel National News

2014-04-02


Bereaved families protest last terrorist release (Flash 90)

Bereaved families, along with the Almagor Terror Victims’ Association and the ‘My Israel’ grassroots organization, are staging a march against the fourth batch of terrorist releases in Jerusalem Wednesday evening.

The families say that the concept of releasing Palestinian Arab terrorists is “intolerable” and unworthy of “being exchanged” even with “compensation” from the US or Palestinian Authority – e.g. the release of longtime captive Jonathan Pollard.

The march will commence at 6:00 pm from the corner of King George and Yafo streets in Jerusalem – the site of the deadly Sbarro suicide bombing thirteen years ago, which killed 15 people including seven children and a pregnant woman. Marchers will pass the site of the “Cafe Moment” bombing in 2002, in which 11 civilians were murdered, and will end at the Prime Minister’s Residence.

Elihai Ben Yishai, the brother of Ruth Fogel, who was murdered in cold blood along with her husband and three of their infant children by Arab terrorists in 2011, stated to Arutz Sheva that the demonstration is not just politics; it’s principles.

“We are crying out forcefully against the release of murderers,” Yishai stated. “Releasing these terrorists is a step toward proclaiming the end of our sovereignty in this country, as well as our moral values and basic sense of justice.”

“Enough with this madness,” he continued. “Releasing these terrorists constitutes an unjust an un-Jewish act, and we have to return to who we are. This evening, we march to regain our resilience.”

The fourth batch of terrorist releases has sparked considerable controversy, as MKs point out that the previous releases have done nothing to further talks, and that several of the released terrorists have contributed to the increase in terror attacks over the past year.

Bereaved families have continued to protest over the releases, which are now on the table in exchange for the release of Jonathan Pollard and the continuance of peace talks. More than just releasing hundreds of Palestinian Arab terrorists and criminals, Israel would also be forced to freeze construction in Judea and Samaria, according to the terms of the proposal.

Families: “Do Not Use Pollard as a Bargaining Chip”

At a press conference held at the protest tent outside Netanyahu’s house on Tuesday, bereaved families and the Algamor Terror Victims Association called upon the Prime Minister and the Israeli Cabinet to reject the brewing deal which is intended to save the peace talks.

Meir Indor, head of the Almagor organization, insisted that while Jonathan Pollard must be freed, he must not be used as “a poker chip in a flagrantly immoral scheme to win concessions out of Israel.”/p>

“Instead of fighting terror, this latest round of immoral and dangerous American pressure would be a clear victory for terror, freeing murderers who are likely to return to killing Jews,” Indor stated. Citing a statistic that 180 Israelis have been killed by terrorists freed from prison in previous mass releases, Indor emphasized that “opening our prison gates also makes heroes out of criminals, and encourages other Arabs to follow in their murderous ways, knowing that if they are caught and imprisoned, they will be set free in the next prisoner exchange.”

Yaakov Tubul, father of 17 year-old, Lior Tubul, who was stabbed 24 times and murdered by a terrorist in Ramot, told the large gathering of TV crews and reporters, “This despicable use of Pollard shows that America is clearly on the side of the Palestinians and can longer serve as a fair go-between in the peace talks. Pollard has nothing to do with the peace talks. America just wants more concessions from Israel, that’s all.”

Rabbi Yehuda Ben Yishai, Ruth Fogel’s father, said that until now the State of Israel had been a great moral voice in the war against terror – but that if it gave in to the Palestinian demand to release more terrorists, it would lose all of its moral stature in the eyes of the world, and pave the way for more and more concessions.

“When you abandon your highest morals and values,” he said, “then nothing has absolute importance, and you can end up giving away everything which is dear to you, including our mission as a light to the world, and our rightful claim to our homeland. If we abandon the most basic things we believe in, we make a mockery of our independence, and our celebrations of Pesach, Israel Memorial Day, and Israel Independence Day, no longer have any true meaning.”

Elihai, a former soldier, added that in addition to the personal pain his family suffered, and still feels every day, he and his army unit risked their lives in dangerous missions to capture terrorists. When they are set free, he said, it shatters the moral of the army, while strengthening the resolve of the enemy to continue their attempts to kill Jews.

Tzvi Fishman, a spokesman for Almagor, called on more victimized families, and the Israeli public, to join the round-the-clock vigil outside the home of the Prime Minister – saying it was the voice of the families, and their untiring appeals, which had awakened a majority of Israelis to oppose the release of Arab terrorists from prison. He also urged members of the government to speak out strongly against the current scheme, intended to extend the dying peace negotiations and strengthen the Arab position.

“While no one likes America’s cynical use of Pollard as a pressure tactic on Israel,” he said, “If he is freed, in a very real way it’s because of the battle these victimized families have been waging to prevent the immoral freeing of murderers. It’s their moral stand that has given the Israeli government the backbone to finally say no to setting killers free, which in turn has forced America to make this long, overdue offer to release Jonathan Pollard.”

Rabbi Fogel called on Prime Minister Netanyahu to “raise the banner of morality and justice, by not caving in to the political terror which America is waging against you, your government, and the people of Israel, by forcing Israel to surrender to Arab demands. By saying no, Israel will be much stronger, and the world will be better for it.”

Bereaved Families to Protest Pollard Release in Jerusalem

Bereaved Families to Protest Pollard Release in Jerusalem

The Jerusalem Post

2014-04-02

Bereaved families of terror attack victims were due to protest Wednesday night in Jerusalem against Israeli-American spy Jonathan Pollard’s release as part of a deal to encourage Israel to release Palestinian prisoners and extend peace talks.

Members of the Almagor Terror Victims Organization were set to march outside the US Consulate in Jerusalem in opposition of America’s possible release of Pollard, who has served nearly 30 years in a US prison.

Will the Pollard Deal Go Ahead?

Daniel Siryoti; Shlomo Cesana; Mati Tuchfeld; Yoni Hirsch; Israel Hayom staff; news agencies

Will the Pollard Deal Go Ahead?

Fate of deal to extend peace talks unclear after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas resumes unilateral campaign for further international recognition of a Palestinian state • U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry cancels plans to visit region.

Israel Hayom

2014-04-02


Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah on Tuesday (Photo credit: AFP)

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday night threw a last-minute hitch into a potential U.S.-brokered deal that would extend the Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations to early 2015.

At the end of a Palestinian Authority leadership meeting in Ramallah on Tuesday, Abbas took the unilateral step of signing 15 international treaties and conventions, resuming a campaign for further international recognition of a Palestinian state, despite a previous promise to suspend such efforts during the nine-month window of negotiations with Israel. The documents will apparently be submitted on April 29, when that window closes.

“This is our fundamental right and we will not give it up,” Abbas said. “The Israeli government was supposed to meet tonight to discuss the fourth stage [of the prisoner release] and we were informed that the meeting had been canceled and no discussion will be held.

“We are interested in peace and in an independent Palestinian state that will be established in peace beside Israel, but we keep facing delays—more and more delays. So the Palestinian leadership unanimously decided to join international organizations and institutions. We are not closing the door and we have hope for the peace process. This is not a move against the United States. We will stick to our commitments and we will take advantage of every moment until April 29 to try to save the negotiations.”

A senior Palestinian official told Israel Hayom on Tuesday that this was not the end of the negotiations, but he pointed an accusatory finger at Israel, saying that the new conditions Israel set had shuffled the deck.

“In the early hours of the morning, it seemed we would have a deal, [but] the terms have changed,” the official said.

“Israel refused to include Israeli Arabs in the fourth stage, aggressively demanded to be the ones to put together the next list of those to be released, cut the list of prisoners almost in half, and insisted that the settlement freeze will not include sites that have already been publicly announced or construction in east Jerusalem. We did not agree to that because it is extortion.”


Imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard (Photo credit: AP)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry canceled plans to travel to the region again on Wednesday. He had been supposed to meet with Abbas in Ramallah. Despite the Palestinian move, Kerry said it was “completely premature” to write off the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

“We are continuing, even now … to be engaged with both parties,” Kerry said in Brussels, where he was attending a meeting of NATO foreign ministers. “We urge both sides to show restraint while we work with them. President Abbas has given me his word that he will continue to negotiate until the end of April.”

Kerry said he was unsure he would travel to the region.

Given the Palestinian move, the fate of the potential deal to extend the peace talks is unclear. The deal would include the U.S. freeing imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard. If the deal goes ahead, Pollard could celebrate Passover as a free man after languishing for more than 28 years in an American prison.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could present the deal to his government for approval as soon as Wednesday. Yet, the deal faces opposition on four different fronts—within Likud, from other coalition members, from the Palestinians, and from the U.S.

Members of the coalition held discussions on Tuesday on preventing a government collapse if the deal is approved.

The diplomatic fluster began late Monday night, when Kerry and Netanyahu agreed that the U.S. would release Pollard before the first night of Passover, and deport him to Israel. In return, Israeli-Palestinian negotiations would be extended until January 2015; the Palestinians would agree not to apply to U.N. institutions for statehood recognition until the peace talks end; Israel would limit construction in Judea and Samaria to development projects already underway, with construction continuing in private housing, public institutions and in Jerusalem; and Israel would release 26 terrorists with blood on their hands, including 12 Israeli Arab terrorists, as well as 400 Palestinian security prisoners who were convicted for terrorist activities but are not considered to have blood on their hands.

Netanyahu briefed his ministers on the matter, and as of Wednesday, analysts believed he would secure a majority to approve the deal, although it remains to be seen at what cost.

Deputy ministers in Likud have threatened to resign if the deal goes through, and Habayit Hayehudi is said to be considering a similar move. Deputy Foreign Minister Ze’ev Elkin tried to facilitate an agreement between settlement heads and Habayit Hayehudi to stave off a last-minute political crisis, while warning Netanyahu that the deal could spell the coalition’s end. Elkin told Netanyahu he would probably resign if the construction freeze in Judea and Samaria proved too extensive for settlement leaders, while Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon (Likud) called on Habayit Hayehudi Chairman Naftali Bennett to join him in quitting the government if the prisoner release is approved.

If the coalition survives, the deal with the Palestinians is expected to win the support of Yesh Atid and Hatnuah, as well as several Likud ministers.

Bennett held a session with party leaders to determine how Habayit Hayehudi ministers should react to the deal. While agreeing that all Habayit Hayehudi’s ministers would vote against the deal, the party went just short of saying it would quite the coalition in the event that the deal is approved.

The general perspective in Jerusalem is that Netanyahu is standing at a point of no return in his commitment to the U.S. over the deal, and threats by Habayit Hayehudi are unlikely to persuade him otherwise. On the other hand, calling off further negotiations with the Palestinians could trigger Hatnuah’s departure from the coalition, which could end up precipitating Yesh Atid’s resignation as well.

Meanwhile, U.S. officials were also playing down the deal for Pollard’s release. White House press secretary Jay Carney said: “Obviously a lot of things [are] happening in that arena … the president has not made a decision to release Jonathan Pollard.”

Mounting reports of Pollard’s imminent release raised eyebrows in Washington as well. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) told MSNBC that releasing Pollard would be a “serious mistake.”

“It tells me that the administration is at its wits’ end here and believes that Netanyahu is the sole person in this equation. I think this is a horrible idea. I think it sends a horrible message,” Rogers said.

Aaron David Miller, a former U.S. peace negotiator, said even considering such a move smacked of desperation over the crumbling peace process. Miller said an early release for Pollard in the “age of [whistle-blower Edward] Snowden” would send the wrong signal about the consequences of spying on American soil.

Meanwhile, a member of the U.S. Parole Commission said that Pollard had waived a planned parole hearing. Commissioner Patricia Smoot said the hearing had been scheduled for Tuesday.

Also on Tuesday, bereaved relatives of terror victims lashed out at the Israeli government over its talks with the U.S., fearing that the terrorists who murdered their loved ones could be released. Meir Indor, the director of the Almagor Terror Victims Association, said, “This proposal, to release Pollard for murderers, is morally bankrupt.”

Pollard Would Not Reject Release in Political Deal

Gill Hoffman; Michael Wilner

Pollard Would Not Reject Release in Political Deal

Deal expected to pass without coalition crisis; parole hearing postponed due to pending litigation, not Pollard’s rejection of peace deal.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-04-01


Jonathan Pollard (Photo: Courtesy of Justice for Jonathan Pollard)

Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard would not turn down an opportunity to receive US presidential commutation of his life sentence as part of an agreement in which Palestinian and Israeli prisoners are released, well-placed sources told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday.

Pollard’s release would be presented as a gesture to Israel by US President Barack Obama, who has made similar gestures to Russia. Commuting Pollard’s life sentence to the 28-and-a-half years he has served may not be considered an official part of the agreement.

The sources said that Pollard, whose health continues to deteriorate, understood that the only way for him to be released from prison alive was via such an agreement. They vigorously denied reports that he had rejected a parole hearing due to opposition to being included in a swap that freed Palestinian terrorists.

Sources knowledgeable about the legal initiatives to secure Pollard’s release said his lawyers had merely asked to postpone the hearing due to pending litigation. Pollard’s attorneys have been fighting for access to classified information in his sentencing file that the US government intends to use against him in the hearing.

The file includes classified portions of a memorandum written by the late American defense secretary Caspar Weinberger that was used to incriminate Pollard but has since been discredited by top American security officials who worked closely with Weinberger at the time. The officials, who have read the classified documents, said they contained grave factual errors.

The second reason Pollard asked to delay the hearing was due to his failing health. While the ongoing political efforts to bring about his release were not connected to the request to delay the hearing, presidential clemency would be much more beneficial to Pollard than parole.

Rather than set Pollard completely free, parole would merely “release him to community supervision.” His sentence would continue for another 15 years, during which he could be rearrested or at least prevented from leaving the US.

Pollard’s release is not expected to be blocked by either Israeli or Palestinian politicians. Statements by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas against a swap were dismissed as posturing in an effort to sweeten the payoff.

The only cabinet ministers who have openly said they would oppose a prisoner exchange that includes Pollard are Uzi Landau and Yair Shamir of Yisrael Beytenu and Israel Katz of the Likud. Katz said such a deal would be unethical as well as unfair to Pollard.

Construction and Housing Minister Uri Ariel of Bayit Yehudi condemned the United States for not releasing Pollard due to the merits of his case. But officials in his party were careful on Tuesday not to say that they would leave Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s coalition over such an agreement.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon of the Likud said he would quit his post over the release of terrorists even if Pollard was included.

He called upon Bayit Yehudi chairman Naftali Bennett to follow suit.

“This is a cynical attempt by [US Secretary of State John] Kerry and Netanyahu to add Pollard in order to justify releasing murderers who will return to terror,” Danon said.

Similar statements were made at a rally of the Almagor organization of terror victims outside Netanyahu’s residence in the capital. At the rally, Yaakov Tubul, whose son Lior’s murderer would be released in the swap, read a letter from Pollard from several years ago opposing a trade for Fatah leader and convicted murderer Marwan Barghouti. The rally was also attended by relatives of the Fogel and Applebaum families, whose members were killed in high-profile terrorist attacks.

“America is holding Pollard hostage to be used as a bargaining chip to bring about the release of murderers,” Almagor head Meir Indor said. “It harms Pollard to be equated with murderers by making such a deal.”

Sources: Coalition Crisis Brewing over Prisoner Release Deal to Save Peace Talks

Lahav Harkov; Jerusalem Post staff; Reuters

Sources: Coalition Crisis Brewing over Prisoner Release Deal to Save Peace Talks

Majority of Bayit Yehudi MKs reportedly think party should leave coalition if 400 Palestinian prisoners freed, despite release of Pollard.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-04-01


“Stop the release of terrorists,” activists’ signs say at vigil outside PM’s residence in Jerusalem, March 23 (Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

A possible coalition crisis was brewing on Tuesday over the emerging deal to save peace talks, which includes an Israeli obligation to release 400 more Palestinian prisoners.

Officials involved in the talks between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State John Kerry to ensure negotiations continue said that the additional prisoner release was part of the deal, as well as a partial settlement freeze and the release of Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard from a US prison prior to the start of Passover on April 14.

A Bayit Yehudi party source said Tuesday that seven of the party’s 12 MKs think the faction should leave the coalition if the government agrees to free 400 prisoners, even if Pollard is also freed as party of the deal.

A right-wing senior minister who was supposed to meet with Almagor Terror Victims Organization chief Meir Indor on Tuesday canceled the meeting citing a coalition crisis over the deal as the reason.

Construction and Housing Minister Uri Ariel of Bayit Yehudi said on Tuesday he would oppose any such accord that would see Pollard go free in exchange for the release of more Palestinian prisoners, telling Army Radio that Pollard himself was against being part of a prisoner exchange.

“I was personally told he is against being released in such a disgraceful deal,” said Ariel, arguing that Pollard deserved unconditional freedom and not to be swapped for Palestinian “murderers.”

US officials have said that a deal allowing negotiations to continue could include the release of Jonathan Pollard, who has spent more than 25 years in an American jail after being convicted of spying for Israel.

US intelligence agencies have long opposed any early release of Pollard, who pleaded guilty in 1987 to charges of spying for Israel and US officials said no decision on his release has yet been made.

Including Pollard in the deal is apparently part of a US effort to give Netanyahu the leeway he may need to convince coalition hardliners who object to the release of more Palestinian prisoners.

Protest Tent Against Terrorist Releases Won’t Be Shut Down

Tova Dvorin

Protest Tent Against Terrorist Releases Won’t Be Shut Down

Jerusalem municipality allows protest tent outside Prime Minister’s Residence to continue, despite shutting it down in the past.

Israel National News

2014-03-30


Protest outside the Prime Minister’s Residence (Flash 90)

The Jerusalem Municipality has allowed the protest tent outside the Prime Minister’s Residence to remain open, it was revealed Sunday afternoon, as long as the bereaved families involved organize the protests ahead of the fourth batch of terrorist releases.

Bereaved families have continued to protest over Israel’s release of 104 Palestinian Arab terrorists, 78 of which so far have been released. The protest tent outside the Prime Minister’s House, in particular, has received a slew of publicity over the past several months, as leading politicians and representatives for terror victims have used the site as a rallying point against the widely unpopular precondition to peace talks.


Protesting against a fourth batch of terrorist releases (Flash 90)

The municipality has threatened to shutter the protest tent in the past, causing a media uproar. But this time – amid a general public outcry against the fourth batch of releases and a chance that the release will be canceled – the municipality made clear to Arutz Sheva that there are no plans to oust bereaved families from the site. Rather, a municipality representative said, the permit for the tent to stay outside the residence is simply due to be extended.

​”We are helping families in their struggle for justice,” Meir Indor, the head of the Almagor association for bereaved families, stated Sunday. “We hope that the city will show generosity, as it did when the [Gilad] Shalit tent stood for over two years outside the residence.”


Protesting against a fourth batch of terrorist releases (Flash 90)

The fourth batch of terrorist releases has sparked considerable controversy, as MKs point out that the previous releases have done nothing to further talks, and that several of the released terrorists have contributed to the increase in terror attacks over the past year.

​Palestinian Authority chief negotiator Saeb Erekat stated earlier this month that Chairman Mahmoud Abbas was staying in talks solely for the sake of the terrorist releases, prompting Israeli officials to reconsider completing the deal – which has always been contingent on real progress in the talks.

Over the weekend, Israel told PA officials that the deal was postponed, after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said the release would “topple the government” due to public and political backlash.


Protesting against a fourth batch of terrorist releases (Flash 90)

PM: No Deal to Free Prisoners Without Clear Benefit in Return

Shlomo Cesana; Daniel Siryoti; Efrat Forsher; Shlomo Diaz; Israel Hayom staff

PM: No Deal to Free Prisoners Without Clear Benefit in Return

Israel refrains from conducting fourth stage of prisoner release on Saturday as originally scheduled • Palestinian official to Israel Hayom: U.S. and Israel holding intensive discussions on release, which is still likely to take place sometime this week.

Israel Hayom

2014-03-30


Bereaved families of terror victims demonstrate outside the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem on Saturday night (Photo credit: Yonatan Zindel)

Israel did not conduct the fourth stage of the prisoner release on Saturday night, prompting anger among Palestinians.

Some 26 imprisoned terrorists were supposed to have been released in the fourth and final stage of the release that was agreed to as part of the renewal of Israeli–Palestinian peace negotiations last July. However, Israel decided to refrain from carrying out the fourth stage until it becomes clear whether the Palestinians intend to agree to a one-year extension of the negotiations, currently set to end next month.

During a meeting with Likud ministers on Sunday morning, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that discussions about the release could continue for several more days. Netanyahu stated that there would be no deal to free prisoners “without a clear benefit [for Israel] in return.” The prime minister also said that negotiations to reach such a deal could potentially “blow up.”

On Saturday, Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud) said, “the place for murderers of Jews is in the crosshairs of a gun, and if not there, then in prison.”

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon (Likud) said, “It’s good the Palestinians understand that Israel won’t give them anything if it doesn’t receive something in return.”

A Palestinian official told Israel Hayom that the Palestinian Authority has acquiesced to an American request for the release to be delayed a few days, and said that the release would still likely take place sometime this week. He said the U.S. and Israel were holding intensive discussions on the issue and he declined to elaborate on whether Israeli Arab prisoners would be included in the release.

Palestinian Authority Prisoners Affairs Minister Issa Qaraqe said the Palestinians were waiting for Israel and the U.S. to finish deliberating on the fourth stage of the prisoner release.

The Palestinian Authority did not comment on a report that Israel had offered to release 400 more prisoners in exchange for an extension of the peace talks.

Meanwhile, the London-based pan-Arab newspaper Al-Hayat reported that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had delivered a message from Netanyahu to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The message reportedly said that there was a chance Netanyahu’s government would collapse if Israeli Arab prisoners were released.

The report also said that Kerry was proposing a new formula to the Palestinians that would not demand implicit Palestinian recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. The new wording defines Israel as the “national homeland of the Jewish people,” the report said. The proposal also includes the establishment of a Palestinian capital in an east Jerusalem suburb, rather than in east Jerusalem itself.

The Palestinians reportedly rejected this proposal and refused to discuss it.

The Washington Post reported that Kerry and his staff have warned Israeli officials that if the negotiations fail, the U.S. would be unable to prevent unilateral Palestinian efforts to seek statehood recognition from U.N. institutions.

Meanwhile in Jerusalem on Saturday, the Almagor Terror Victims Association—which has been at the forefront of protests against releasing terrorists—organized a demonstration of some 70 people outside the Prime Minister’s Residence. Protesters carried signs with the faces of relatives who died in terrorist attacks and slogans such as, “Stop being suckers! Don’t release terrorists.”

Also over the weekend, the Israel Defense Forces bolstered its presence throughout Judea and Samaria, due to concerns about potential unrest on Land Day on Sunday.

“A Terrorist’s Place Is in the Crosshairs of a Gun”

Gil Ronen; Uzi Baruch

“A Terrorist’s Place Is in the Crosshairs of a Gun”

Min. Yisrael Katz (Likud) notes date set for release has passed, says terrorists should be killed or jailed, not freed.

Israel National News

2014-03-29


Yisrael Katz (Flash 90)

Minister of Transport Yisrael Katz (Likud-Beytenu) noted with satisfaction Saturday night that the date set for freeing the fourth and final tranche of Palestinian Arab terrorist prisoners has passed without them having been released.

“We passed the set date yesterday and no terrorist was freed,” he said. “Not [Marwan] Bargouti, not the Israeli terrorists and not the rest of the terrorist murderers.

“Jew-killers belong between the crosshairs of a gun, and if not that—then in jail,” he stated.

Terror victims’ organization Almagor held a rally of identification with the bereaved families protesting outside the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem Saturday evening. The families demand that the murderers of their loved ones remain in jail.

Following the rally, students and members of youth movements were planning to sing old Zionist songs with the families.

Participants in the rally include Rabbi Yehuda Ben Yishai, father and grandfather of the Fogel family martyrs from Itamar, and Dr. Aryeh Bachrach, head of the bereaved parent’s forum in Almagor, who his due to report about the planned demonstrations against the possible fourth tranche of releases.

“We are not calm, despite the reports by ministers, that there will not be another stage in the release of terrorists,” said Meir Indor, head of Almagor. “In the end, everything hinges on public opinion and the intensity of the counter-pressure that the public will exert.”

Protests Against Terrorist Release to Continue

Protests Against Terrorist Release to Continue

Israel National News

2014-03-28

The Almagor terror victims’ organization announced on Thursday evening that it intends to continue next week its protests outside the Prime Minister’s residence against the planned release of terrorists as a “gesture” to the Palestinian Authority.

“So long as Kerry is hanging around the region, we are uncomfortable,” said Almagor chairman Meir Indor. He added that the next protest rally against the release is scheduled for Saturday night and will be attended by bereaved family members of terrorist victims, as well as by members of youth movements.

Hundreds Protest Final Round of Palestinian Terrorist Releases

Daniel K. Eisenbud

Hundreds Protest Final Round of Palestinian Terrorist Releases

“We are teaching our children that Jewish blood is not sacred,” says sister of murder victim whose three killers were freed in previous deals.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-03-27


A mass protest takes place in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence to denounce the planned release of 104 Palestinian terrorists Photo: Marc Israel Sellem

Amid enraged chants of “Shame on you!” hundreds of Israelis gathered in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence Wednesday evening to denounce this coming Saturday’s fourth and final release of 104 convicted Palestinians terrorists.

Standing before a phalanx of protesters hoisting dozens of poster-sized images of murdered loved ones, Gila Molcho, whose brother’s three killers were freed during the 2011 exchange for soldier Gilad Shalit and first and second rounds of the latest releases, could not contain her rage.

“People of Israel, wake up!” she screamed while holding a photo of her brother, Ian Feinberg, killed in Gaza in 1993 after his murderers beat him and slit his throat. “I feel like someone has taken my brother’s body and just thrown it away.”

Molcho warned of the self-defeating nature of the releases, which she said sends a clear message to young Palestinians that murdering Jews will result in celebrity status and a better life.

“We’re increasing terrorism by saying: ‘Don’t worry, you can kill Jews and get out of prison in a few years, get a college degree, have children, get money, and still have your lives ahead of you,” she said. “And we’re left with nothing! We’re left shattered.”

Molcho continued, “On a national level, we are teaching our children that Jewish blood is not sacred.”

As she watched passersby walk past the protest, she excoriated them for their apparent apathy.

“I feel like I want to take every person walking past us and shake them!” she said. “It’s my problem today, but it might be your problem tomorrow!” Indeed, Ornit Gesundheit said she attended the demonstration to protect future victims of terrorism.

“The most important reason I’m here is to save the lives of the people who will be killed if those terrorists are released,” she said.

Her friend, Leora Cohn, expressed disillusionment over the final release.

“I’m really stressed because it’s so hard knowing everything we’ve been through and knowing how much blood has been shed,” she said. “I lived here during the second intifada, when shops and buses were blowing up, because I strongly believe in being here, because we value life, strength, courage, and Zionism.”

Cohn continued: “By releasing terrorists, it’s like spitting in the face of all these values and makes you ask ‘why?’ It hurts to see the government we support—and we do support it—giving away all these values for nothing, because there is no real peace on the way.”

Michael Grossman, a former paratrooper, expressed outraged incredulity that Israel is held to a standard not enforced anywhere else in the globe.

“There’s no way in a normal world that [governments] would release murderers like this—it’s outrageous!” he said. “When I was in the army we captured these terrorists, who were trying to kill little kids—or any other innocent person they could—and now we’re supposed to let them go?” David Jacobs, whose 19-year-old son is serving in the IDF, similarly asked, “Why should he risk his life every day to catch terrorists, if the government is going to release them?” Jonathan Benedek condemned US Secretary of State John Kerry and the Obama administration for pressuring Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu into agreeing to the releases.

“I think it’s absolutely a disgrace that with this batch we’ll have released more than 100 terrorists over the last nine months,” he said. “It’s simply us bending to pressure from Kerry and the White House to get a framework done as soon as possible.”

Moreover, Benedek contended that setting such a precedent of acquiescence will set a dangerous standard for future negotiations.

“The worst part about this is it is putting us in a hole, because the more terrorists we release, the harder it becomes to argue against another ridiculous concession in the future,” he said. “The longer we bend to Kerry and Obama, the harder it will be to say no to similar demands later on.”

Meanwhile, with respect to speculation that the Obama administration may free Jonathan Pollard as a concession for the released terrorists, Meir Indor, chairman of Almagor Terror Victims Association, said Pollard would rather stay imprisoned than be used to release killers.

“Pollard himself said he wouldn’t want that—that he’d agree to more time in prison instead of this deal, because he doesn’t want blood on his hands,” Indor said.

Arab League Backs Palestinian Rejectionism of Peace

Daniel Siryoti; Shlomo Cesana; Efrat Forsher; News Agencies; Israel Hayom Staff

Arab League Backs Palestinian Rejectionism of Peace

Arab League expresses support for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state • Israeli official: Fourth stage of prisoner release to take place only if Palestinians agree to extension of peace talks.

Israel Hayom

2014-03-27


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry meets with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Amman, Jordan on Wednesday (Photo credit: AP)

Just a day after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas reiterated his refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, the Arab League backed his rejectionism on Wednesday, declaring an “absolute rejection” of any recognition of a Jewish state.

“We hold Israel entirely responsible for the lack of progress in the peace process and continuing tension in the Middle East,” said a communique issued at the end of a two-day Arab League summit in Kuwait. “We express our absolute and decisive rejection to recognizing Israel as a Jewish state.”

Abbas—who spoke at the start of the summit and declared that “the peace process is on the verge of collapse”—met on Wednesday in Amman with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who interrupted a trip to Italy to fly to the Middle East to try to salvage the faltering Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.

Kerry arrived in Jordan to ask Abbas to commit to an extension of the peace talks. Kerry and Abbas spoke for more than four hours over a working dinner in Amman that U.S. officials said was “constructive.” No other details of the meeting were released.

Kerry also spoke by telephone with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the three-hour flight from Italy to Jordan, U.S. officials said; the two were due to speak again after Kerry dined with Abbas.

While in Amman, Kerry also meet with Jordan’s King Abdullah II, back from the Arab League summit in Kuwait.

There, Abdullah had said his country would continue to protect Muslim and Christian holy places in Jerusalem. He called on the international community to pressure Israel to “desist from the steps it’s been taking.”

“The path to a just peace goes through the establishment of the State of Palestine,” Abdullah said.

Meanwhile, Palestinian officials refused to say whether or not the fourth stage of the prisoner release would take place on Saturday night, as originally planned. One senior Palestinian official told Israel Hayom he believed that “as of now, it appears the release will not happen, because of the opposition of the Israeli government.”

An Israeli official, however, said Israel would go ahead with the release, and is ready to “restrain construction” outside the settlement blocs (without an official government decision on the matter), if Abbas agrees to a one-year extension of the peace talks.

Netanyahu has refrained from publicly commenting on the prisoner release, and the decision on whether to go ahead with it or not, with or without Palestinian agreement to an extension of the peace talks, will likely be made only at the start of next week.

Interior Minister Gideon Sa’ar (Likud) on Wednesday expressed vehement opposition to any sort of constriction freeze.

“We’ve reached a stage where, in order to prolong the negotiations, the Palestinians are demanding more and more unilateral concessions,” Sa’ar said. “There’s no room for additional concessions simply so [the Palestinians] agree to continue negotiating with us.”

Meanwhile, about 150 people demonstrated outside the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem on Wednesday against the release of terrorists. The demonstrators included bereaved family members of terror attack victims and activists from the Almagor Terror Victims Association. Demonstrators carried signs with images of relatives who were killed in terrorist attacks, and chanted slogans such as, “Don’t free murderers.”

Will US Free Pollard in Effort to Keep Peace Talks Alive?

Will US Free Pollard in Effort to Keep Peace Talks Alive?

U.S. denies Army Radio report that it has agreed to release Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard as part of a deal to prevent a collapse of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks • U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry meets with PA President Mahmoud Abbas in Amman.

Israel Hayom

2014-03-26


Imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard (photo credit: AP)

As part of an effort to prevent a collapse of the current Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, the U.S. has agreed to release imprisoned Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard, Army Radio reported on Wednesday.

According to the report, which was later denied by the U.S., the American move is meant to try and buy time for the faltering negotiations, in light of extreme statements made Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who refuses to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, and the reluctance of Israel to go ahead with the fourth stage of the release of imprisoned Palestinian terrorists at the end of this week.

The Army Radio report suggested that should Abbas agree to extend the peace talks until the end of the year, and Israel agrees to proceed with the fourth stage of the prisoner release, including 20 Israeli Arab prisoners, the U.S. would free Pollard.

Army Radio quoted Israeli officials as saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would likely be able to secure his government’s support for such a deal, as the Israeli public would likely support a move that results in Pollard’s release.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry flew from Italy to Jordan on Wednesday to meet with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas (photo credit: AP)

However, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki on Wednesday refuted the Army Radio report, saying there are no plans to free Pollard “at the moment.”

“Jonathan Pollard was convicted of espionage against the United States—a very serious crime,” Psaki said. “He was sentenced to life and is currently serving his sentence.”

Pollard, now 59, was arrested in Washington in November 1985. He was later convicted of spying for Israel and sentenced to life in prison.

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry cut an official visit to Italy short on Wednesday to fly to Jordan to meet with Abbas.

A senior Jordanian official told Israel Hayom that the meeting in Amman would include a video conference with Netanyahu, and that King Abdullah II would also participate in the meeting.

“The meeting will focus on Israel’s obligation to free [Palestinian] prisoners at the end of the month and it will be crucial to the future of the peace talks,” the official said.

The fourth stage of the prisoner release, which remains uncertain at this point, has been touted as the Palestinian leadership’s top priority. Both Jordanian and Palestinian officials have expressed pessimism regarding the release.

“Right now it doesn’t look like the fourth [prisoner] release will take place because Israel is against it,” a Palestinian official told Israel Hayom.

Speaking before an Arab League summit in Kuwait on Tuesday, Abbas accused Israel of “trying to avoid fulfilling the commitments it made to the Americans to release prisoners. The Israeli government is trying to thwart the prisoners’ release and it only goes to show that they are not serious,” he said, referring to the peace talks.

Israeli government ministers are pressuring Netanyahu to delay the release by at least a month, until Abbas clarifies whether or not he is willing to extend talks by a year.

The Knesset Interior Committee was set to discuss on Wednesday the criteria for the potential four stage of the prisoner release.

Committee head MK Miri Regev (Likud) invited representatives from the Israel Prison Service and from the Prime Minister’s Office to discuss the release. Also invited to the meeting were representatives from the Attorney-General’s Office, from the Public Security Ministry, from the Foreign Ministry and from Almagor Terror Victims Association, which strongly opposes the prisoner release.

Regev said, “I am against the release of terrorists because, up to this point, we have released a fair number of terrorists and we have seen no progress from [Abbas]. If they want to release terrorists, they also have to release Jewish prisoners sitting in jail, convicted of security crimes.”

Almagor head Meir Indor echoed Regev’s statements.

Habayit Hayehudi Chairman MK Naftali Bennett commented on the report saying. “I’m not sure that this plan will come to fruition. In any case, we have to stop begging Abbas to agree to the negotiations. I’m skeptical because I have yet to hear the prime minister or the U.S. make any statement about Pollard.”

Terror Victims Group Holds Vigil Against Pending Prisoner Release

Daniel K. Eisenbud

Terror Victims Group Holds Vigil Against Pending Prisoner Release

“I feel like not only have we betrayed our own values, but we’ve betrayed our country,” says demonstrator at vigil in front of PM’s Residence.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-03-23


“Stop the release of terrorists,” activists’ signs say at vigil outside PM’s residence in Jerusalem, March 23 (photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

“We are here to send a very simple message: Those who have murdered shouldn’t see the light of day,” said Elichai Ben-Yishai, the brother of Ruth Fogel, who was brutally murdered in her home with her husband and three children in 2011’s so-called “Itamar massacre.”

“This should be acceptable and understandable logic to any reasonable person,” he added, with rage and sorrow inflaming his eyes.

Ben-Yishai was joined by dozens of other demonstrators Sunday afternoon at a vigil in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem to condemn Saturday’s fourth and final round of releases of convicted Palestinian terrorists.

To date, approximately 75 of the 100 convicts have been released as a precondition for ongoing peace negotiations, resulting in three previous emotionally fraught vigils arranged by the Almagor Terror Victims Association, headed by chairman Meir Indor.

However, at Sunday’s fourth gathering, Indor expressed hope that overwhelming public opposition to the final release may gain enough traction to prevent it from coming to pass.

“We have a feeling that this time we might see a change because polls are showing that 80 percent of Israelis are against releasing terrorists,” he said, a few meters from makeshift tent scheduled to be manned until Thursday night.

Indor added that the egregiously insensitive celebrations among Palestinians for the previously released terrorists, compounded by their monetary compensation by the Palestinian Authority, should serve as irrefutable evidence that the releases are counterproductive.

“We’re seeing that it doesn’t pay to release terrorists because they are getting the reception of heroes and large sums of money, so the lesson to young Arabs is: ‘Join the terror group, kill a Jew and you’ll be celebrated and receive money.’” Even if those released don’t kill again with their own hands, Indor said they become alluring “spiritual leaders” who attract “fresh blood” to murder in their stead.

“The killers are interviewed on television and giving lectures, which gives them higher status that the younger Palestinians want to emulate by becoming killers themselves,” he said. “They are treated like royalty.”

Noting the uptick in terrorist attacks in the West bank and Gaza Strip following the preceding prisoner releases, Indor said the Israeli government is ostensibly perpetuating a cycle of violence by agreeing to the terms.

“This is only creating more terrorism. [The releases] are teaching a big lesson: In the end, when you go by the system of law and not diplomacy you succeed for the benefit of society. That’s why the justice system was established—to ensure that people who have killed innocent people and are found guilty shouldn’t be released and celebrated because of [international] pressure.”

Asked what he would say to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu if given the opportunity, Indor said he would restate the prime minister’s own words cautioning about the profound dangers of releasing terrorists.

“I would quote everything he wrote in his brilliant book A Place Under the Sun, about why it is dangerous to release terrorists,” he said. “He was right when he wrote it, and its message is still right.”

Acknowledging the acute pressure and hypocrisy Netanyahu is facing by the US government, Indor implored him to not yield to the duress.

“Be brave against the pressure from [US Secretary of State] John Kerry and the American government,” he said. “Tell them: ‘You don’t do this in your country, so don’t force us to do it in ours. American justice would not accept this, why should Israeli justice? Because Jewish blood is cheap?’” Observing the close-knit nature of Israeli society, Ortal Kramer, a 22-year-old college student, said she missed class to attend Sunday’s vigil to show solidarity with all Israelis who have been afflicted by terrorism.

“I think every person in our country knows someone personally who has lost a loved one to terrorism,” she said.

“My friend’s sister and father were killed at Café Hillel on Emek Rafaim [in 2003], and I know many more families who have suffered great loss.”

Echoing Indor’s sentiments, Kramer expressed incredulity over the government’s agreement to release convicted killers.

“I can’t believe this is the situation we are in,” she said.

“Every kid knows that we can’t bring peace by freeing murderers. This is a universal truth, not just in Israel.”

Moreover, Kramer contended that the releases are driving young Israelis away from the country by draining them of hope.

“We gave all we have to our country—our bodies, our loved ones—and the government keeps asking us for more without giving anything back,” she said. “A lot of people are saying that if the situation stays like this they won’t live here anymore.”

Kramer added that the releases are antithetical to Zionist ideology.

“It was our grandparents dream for us to live here and they wouldn’t have wanted us to leave because of this,” she said.

Indeed, Ortal Tamam, whose uncle was murdered by terrorists in 1984, said the prisoner releases not only negate Jewish values, but are robbing Israelis of hope.

“Right now it feels like there is no hope for anything in return—even for a better future,” she said. “I feel like not only have we betrayed our own values, but we’ve betrayed our country. We are teaching that it’s worthwhile to be a terrorist and kill people.”

Kramer continued, “I just don’t feel like this government represents me and I call on them to reverse their decision.”

Victim Families to PM: We’re Across the Street, Don’t Pass Us By

Moshe Cohen

Victim Families to PM: We’re Across the Street, Don’t Pass Us By

Families with members who were terror attack victims hope to speak with Prime Minister Netanyahu before he releases more terrorists.

Israel National News

2014-03-23


Almagor head Meir Indor (Yoni Kempinski)

Families who have members that were killed in terror attacks have set up a protest tent outside the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem—and they are inviting Binyamin Netanyahu to come into the tent and discuss his plan to release yet more Palestinian terrorists.

Next week, Israel is set to release a fourth batch of terrorists from prison. As a “concession” to persuade Abbas to resume the talks after a three year hiatus, Israel agreed last summer to release some 100 terrorists from its prisons, in four batches. The last batch is set to be released at the end of March, but Netanyahu is under pressure from his ministers to cancel that release.

Netanyahu is under great pressure from US President Barack Obama to go through with the release; the White House is very concerned that the PA could end talks at any moment, and has made it clear that if the terrorists are not released, all talks will cease.

The tent is being sponsored by the Almagor terror victim families’ association, and the group has tried to set up a meeting between Netanyahu and the families—so far, to no avail. “Now that we are across the street from his house he may find time to drop in and speak to us for a few minutes,” said one of the tent protesters. “We are very concerned that the government will go through with this release, considering the pressure being imposed.”

Almagor head Meir Indor bristled at the notion that it was the PA that was setting the tone for negotiations—and terrorist releases. “What if they promise to continue talks only if we release even more terrorists? This is exactly what we are fighting to prevent,” Indor said. “And this release will include arch-terrorists who are responsible for many Israeli deaths, as well as Israeli-Arab terrorists. The government must meet and declare that it is against these releases.”

According to Indor, 80% of Israelis are against an additional release of terrorists. “We are protesting to impress upon Netanyahu our opposition to further releases, and to support those of his ministers who are against it as well,” Indor added.

Bereaved Families Ask Lapid and Perry: Don’t Release Terrorists

Uzi Baruch

Bereaved Families Ask Lapid and Perry: Don’t Release Terrorists

Members of the Almagor terror victims organization meet Ministers Lapid and Perry, ask them to reconsider upcoming terrorist release.

Israel National News

2014-03-21


Perry and Lapid (Flash 90)

Members of the Almagor terror victims organization, who lost their relatives in terror attacks, met on Thursday in Tel Aviv with Ministers Yair Lapid and Yaakov Perry of Yesh Atid.

The bereaved families asked the two ministers to reconsider the planned release of the fourth batch of terrorists from Israeli prisons. Israel agreed to release 104 terrorists in four batches as a “gesture” to Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas so he would hold peace talks with Israel. Three releases have already gone through.

During Thursday’s meeting, Lapid told the families that the Cabinet had yet to vote on the release of the fourth tranche. Perry, formerly the head of the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet), told the families that are in any case, terrorists with Israeli citizenship will not be released.

A senior diplomatic source said this week that if it turns out that talks with PA have reached a dead end, Israel will reconsider the fourth terrorist release.

There have been growing calls on the Israeli government to cancel the upcoming release, especially given the fact that several senior PA sources have openly said their only motivation in the talks was to release the 104 prisoners, not to reach an agreement with Israel.

Justice Minister and chief Israeli negotiator Tzipi Livni said that the PA would need to prove its commitment to talks to secure the final batch.

Meir Indor, the chairman of Almagor, told Arutz Sheva following Thursday’s meeting with Lapid and Perry that the meeting was a difficult one due to the pain of the bereaved families.

“Our feeling is that the next release will be determined by public opinion and protest,” he said. “Several government ministers have expressed strong opposition for the next release and we support them in their efforts to block it. There is a majority in the Cabinet against the release of Israeli Arab terrorists and we have asked the government ministers to reconsider the expected release.”

The bereaved families will march on Monday near the Park Hotel in Netanya, where a Hamas suicide bomber, who had served time in an Israeli prison and was released, carried out in 2002 one of the biggest terror attacks in history during a Seder which took place at the hotel. 30 Jews were killed in the massacre.

Next Wednesday, the families plan to protest outside the prime minister’s home, Indor said.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon this week declared that he would resign his post if the government went ahead with yet another round of releasing terrorists.

Sources close to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu responded to Danon’s threat by saying that even if he does not resign, Netanyahu intends to fire him.

Activist: Everyone Knows Releasing Terrorists Won’t Bring Peace

David Lev

Activist: Everyone Knows Releasing Terrorists Won’t Bring Peace

If releasing terrorists will bring peace, then that is what must be done, says Dr. Aryeh Bachrach of Almagor. But everyone knows it won’t.

Israel National News

2014-03-20


Protest against terrorist release, December 28 (Flash 90)

In an interview with Arutz Sheva Thursday, Dr. Aryeh Bachrach, whose son was killed in a terror attack in 1995, sent a plea to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu: Do not release more Arab terrorists at the end of the month, as the Palestinian Authority is demanding, and as Netanyahu committed to do last year.

This will be the fourth time Israel is set to release terrorists in the latest “round” of releases, which began last year. Israel committed to releasing over 100 terrorists, many responsible for the deaths of multiple Israelis, as a “gesture” to tempt PA chief Mahmoud Abbas to restart talks with Israel after a three year hiatus. So far, Israel has released more than 75 terrorists, and another 26 are set to be released within a few weeks.

Over the years, said Bachrach, head of the Almagor Bereaved Parents’ Forum, precious little attention has been paid to the feelings of parents who have lost children to terrorist attacks. It’s time for that to change, he said.

“My message to the Prime Minister is that if, sir, you are convinced that releasing terrorists will bring true peace, then it certainly should be done. Obviously you must act in accordance with what is best for all Israelis. In such a case you must ignore the feelings of people like me.

“But you know as well as I do, as 99% of the people I come into contact with from all political points of view, that the only thing releasing terrorists will do is provide you with another opportunity to sit at the same table with the Holocaust denier Mahmoud Abbas,” said Bachrach. “We are paying with precious Jewish blood for this ‘opportunity.’ I call on you to prevent another travesty of releasing terrorists,” he said.

Bachrach’s son Ohad, along with friend Ori Shahor, were killed in 1995 when they were hiking in Wadi Qelt east of Jerusalem. The PLO’s Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine faction claimed responsibility for the murders. Bachrach, of Beit El, was 18 when he was killed, and Shahor, of Ra’anana, was 20.

On Wednesday, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon’s declared that he would resign his post if the government went ahead with yet another round of releasing terrorists. The only reason talks with the Palestinian Authority were still going on, Danon said, was so that PA chief Mahmoud Abbas could secure the release of another group of terrorists, one of the “gestures” Israel made last year to encourage Abbas to restart the talks after a three year hiatus. “I will not sit in a government that releases terrorists in exchange for Tzipi Livni’s fantasies,” Danon said Wednesday. “There is a limit to how much we can pay like suckers, in return for the smiles of [Tzipi] Livni and [chief PA negotiator Saeb] Erekat.”

In response, said sources close to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Danon can expect to lose his job if he actively tries to oppose the release. Responding to Danon’s threats, sources close to Netanyahu told Channel 2 News that “enough was enough.”

“We’re tired of his cheap politics,” the sources said, adding, “You do not threaten the prime minister. Danon is threatening to resign because he has already received information about the letter of dismissal that the prime minister is preparing for him.”

Danon’s associates, unfazed by Netanyahu’s threats, said in response, “This is not the first time that we have been threatened with dismissal over the past year.”

Fourth Stage of Palestinian Prisoner Release May Be Nixed

Shlomo Cesana; Mati Tuchfeld; Efrat Forsher; Daniel Siryoti; Yoni Hirsch

Fourth Stage of Palestinian Prisoner Release May Be Nixed

Opposition to fourth stage of prisoner release growing within government • Palestinians publish a list of prisoners to be released at the end of March, including 14 Israeli Arabs • Netanyahu: World starting to understand that Abbas is not ready for peace.

Israel Hayom

2014-03-19


The third stage of the prisoner release in December 2013 [Archive] (photo credit: Uri Lenz)

Following the meeting of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas with U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington earlier this week, Israel is warning it may cancel the fourth stage of the prisoner release if Abbas refuses to commit to a year-long extension of the current peace negotiations.

The fourth stage of the prisoner release is scheduled for the end of the month, and it is still unclear if Israel has plans to release Israel Arab prisoners, which U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry promised to the Palestinians.

Credit: Reuters, Roy Castro

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said about Abbas on Tuesday that “it is clear who is the one refusing. We proved that we are interested in moving forward with the process, and now, it is clear who is not ready. This is also beginning to be acknowledged among important officials in the international community.”

The Palestinians have already published a list of the prisoners to be released at the end of the month. According to the list, 14 Israeli Arabs from cities including Ramla, Kafr Qasim and Umm al-Fahm are set to be released.

Among those on the list published by the Palestinian Authority are Muhammad Jabarin, Yahya Agbaria and Ibrahim Agbaria, arrested in 1992 for taking part in the “Night of the Pitchforks,” during which they murdered three Israeli soldiers. Also listed is Karim Younis, who murdered Israeli soldier Avraham Bromberg in 1981.


Former Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, currently in Israeli prison for his role in numerous deadly terrorist attacks against Israelis (photo credit: Reuters)

In Israel, no official list has been published, and any list will be reviewed by the government before it is released to the public.

Opposition to the fourth stage of the prisoner release is growing within the Israeli government. Habayit Hayehudi ministers have expressed a strong stance against the release, and several ministers from the Likud are echoing the sentiment.

Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon (Likud) threatened to quit if the fourth stage of the release is carried out. “If they are released, I will resign from my position,” he said.

Danon met with representatives of bereaved families on Wednesday in a final effort to prevent the prisoner release. “Today we see that nothing has happened,” he said after the meeting. “We are suckers. Israel is releasing murderers and getting nothing in return. The bereaved families’ representatives spoke very clearly.”

Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud) also opposes the release. “It is moral bankruptcy to release [former Fatah leader] Marwan Barghouti and his friends in order to continue the talks,” he said.

Meanwhile, an official from the Palestinian Authority’s Prisoners’ Affairs Ministry told Israel Hayom that “if Israel delays the fourth stage [of the prisoner release], at that instant, the negotiations will end.”

In Washington, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that Israel and the Palestinians are at “a tough period, a pivotal period of the negotiations.” When asked if the U.S. shared Abbas’ hope that the prisoner release will take place, she said yes, “because it’s part of what was agreed to between the parties.”

Representatives of bereaved families and the Almagor Terror Victims Association met on Tuesday with Justice Minister Tzipi Livni. Almagor head Meir Indor responded to the prisoner list published by the Palestinians, saying, “If what they published is true, it is a scandal, because we were promised by the High Court attorney that before the fourth stage happens, there would be an additional government meeting. By our count, there is no majority in favor of releasing [Israeli Arab] murderers.”

Palestinian Report: 14 Arab Israelis among Those Being Freed in Final Prisoner Release

Yasser Okbi; Ben Hartman

Palestinian Report: 14 Arab Israelis among Those Being Freed in Final Prisoner Release

Israel Prison Service responds that Palestinian report not official; terror victims group requests clarification from Livni.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-03-18


Celebrations in Ramallah as Palestinian prisoners released (Photo: Reuters/Ammar Awad)

The Palestinian Authority published on Tuesday a list of 30 terrorists it expected Israel to free in a fourth and final prisoner release at the end of the month. The list reportedly included 14 Arab Israelis and four Palestinians from east Jerusalem.

Jerusalem has until now adamantly refused to free Arab Israelis as part of the releases, which Israel committed to as a goodwill gesture for resuming the current round of peace negotiations.

Of the long-serving prisoners on the list of convicted murderers were the Israeli-Arab cousins Kareem and Maher Younis who received life sentences in 1983 for stabbing to death two years earlier the IDF soldier Avraham Bromberg.

Also among the listed Arab-Israeli prisoners with “blood on their hands,” was a resident of the Wadi Ara village of Baka al-Gharbiya who was sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted for the abduction and murder of an Israeli soldier in 1984.

The last batch of convicted Palestinian murderers was expected for release by March 29.

“The fourth [release] is a test of Israel’s preparedness for a just peace with the Palestinian people,” said PA Prisoner Affairs Minister Issa Karaka, adding a warning that “any attempt to evade [the move] will lead to an explosion within the prisons.”

The Israel Prison Service responded that the Palestinian report was not official and that they could not confirm that those on the list were indeed being released.

Meir Indor, the head of the Almagor Terror Victims Association, said that “if the report is true, it is a scandal, because the state promised us at the High Court there would be an additional cabinet meeting prior to the release of the fourth batch of prisoners.”

Indor said that Almagor believes there is not a majority in the government to release Arab-Israeli murderers. He said that he was meeting with Justice Minister Tzipi Livni on Tuesday to see if the Palestinian claims are true.

Livni to Meet with Terror Victims’ Families

Livni to Meet with Terror Victims’ Families

Israel National News

2014-03-18

Justice Minister Tzipi Livni will meet on Tuesday with representatives of the Almagor terror victims’ organization. The meeting comes ahead of the next scheduled release of terrorists as a “gesture” the Palestinian Authority (PA).

Lt. Col. (ret.) Oren Tamam, brother of Moshe Tamam who was kidnapped and murdered by terrorists, said on Monday that the meeting was finally scheduled after months of repeated requests.

“We’re going with a broken heart and hopefully she will listen to us willingly,” said Tamam, adding, “The past few months have created among us a distrust in the justice system for which she is responsible, and we hope that she will be able to restore our trust by changing direction: Murderers are not a payment method for peace talks.”

Arab MKs Accused of “Hazing” Airport Security Representatives

Ari Yashar

Arab MKs Accused of “Hazing” Airport Security Representatives

Terror victims group slams Arab MK attacks in Knesset debate on airport security, warns that groups are weakening security.

Israel National News

2014-03-05


Arab MK Ahmed Tibi in committee debate (file; Flash 90)

Meir Indor, Chairman of the Almagor organization representing terror victims, described a Knesset committee debate Tuesday as “a hazing of security force members by Arab MKs.”

The “hazing” occurred during the discussion of the Public Complaints Committee, chaired by MK Adi Kol (Yesh Atid), which centered on the topic of security checks at airports. Arab MKs claimed Arab citizens of Israel are disproportionately targeted for security checks.

Indor told Arutz Sheva that the debate, which bordered on verbal violence at several junctures, was punctuated by Arab MKs shouting and attacking representatives of the security forces, preventing them from responding.

When the legal adviser of the Airport Authority managed to get a word in, in the process raising his voice slightly, he was threatened that a complaint would be submitted against him, reports Indor, emphasizing “it was a hazing.”

At the end of the discussion, Kol decided the Arab MKs would hold a demonstration for airport security guards to “demonstrate the feelings” of those undergoing focused checks. Indor mentioned that during the discussion, airport representatives reported that such lectures are already being conducted.

Reasons for “Discrimination”

Indor himself got involved in the debate, speaking out for the security forces specifically as someone not associated with them, and therefore able to freely express his opinion. For example, he argued that there is certainly a need to target Arab passengers at airport security checks, in contrast to the tone of the debate.

Historical truth teaches there have been numerous attacks and attempted attacks by Israeli-Arabs on public transportation, thereby justifying heightened security alertness concerning them, whereas Jewish passengers have not been behind such attacks, according to Indor.

Indeed, a survey last June found 58% of Israeli-Arabs support an intifada violent uprising against Israel, while 70% do not accept Israel’s right to maintain a Jewish majority.

Indor argued that leftist organizations and lawyers have been revealed as using Knesset committees to push the rights of the individual in an attempt to weaken the security needs of Israelis.

“There is a web of organizations whose role is to melt Israel’s ability to defend itself,” said Indor at the debate. When asked by Kol if he intended to accuse the leftist groups of supporting terror, Indor responded that even if that wasn’t their goal, the result of their actions is certainly support for terror.

Indor noted “when you unjustly criticize security sources, in the end that allows the smuggling of weapons and bombs. The awareness of those guarding the entrance (to the country) goes down from this endless pressure.”

Fighting Back, Volunteering to Turn the Tide of Committee Debates

The discussion also revealed that a group of “VIP” Arabs are not subject to the intense security checks, reports Indor. This group of Arab passengers includes journalists and others. Indor noted that former Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Yasser Arafat was also given the VIP status, which he used to smuggle weapons and terrorists. Indor made clear he was not accusing the Arab journalists of similar intentions.

“While the Jewish MKs are quarreling over the (hareidi) enlistment law, they’re doing things here to harm the security of the country,” warned Indor.

He called on all those interested in joining the effort to expose the damaging discussions to contact his group Almagor, where they would be directed by legal experts and politicians to prepare them for taking part in committee discussions.

Not the First Case of Arab MK Misbehavior

The debate on Wednesday was not the first example of Arab MKs turning a committee discussion into a circus. Arab MK Jamal Zahalka (Balad) was let off with a warning for his antics last November, when he verbally attacked other MKs and even tried to push them out of a committee discussion.

The accusations against the state are also not new; just this week MK Hanin Zoabi (Balad) accused Akko of not renovating a destroyed house as part of a plan to expel the city’s Arab residents.

A Struggle over Arab-Israeli Terrorists, as Final Release Looms

Elhanan Miller

A Struggle over Arab-Israeli Terrorists, as Final Release Looms

Opponents and proponents of freeing 14 pre-Oslo prisoners agree that the US is exerting massive pressure on Netanyahu

The Times of Israel

2014-03-05


Israelis wearing keffiyehs hold up hands covered in fake blood to protest the release of Palestinian prisoners near the prime minister’s office, July 28, 2013 (photo credit: Flash 90)

Cpl. Avraham Bromberg was heading back from his army base in the Golan Heights to his home in Zichron Yaakov on November 26, 1980, when a number of men jumped him. Bromberg struggled with his attackers, but was overpowered and shot in the head, his weapon stolen. He was found on the roadside and died in hospital two days later.

Sentenced to life in prison in early 1983, Karim Younis from the Arab town of ‘Aara in central Israel is now the longest serving security prisoner in an Israeli jail. He carried out the attack on Bromberg as a member of the Fatah movement.

Younis is one of 14 Arab Israelis convicted of terrorism before the signing of the Oslo Accords in September 1993. According to an understanding reached between the Palestinians and Israel and brokered by the United States ahead of the current round of negotiations, all 104 pre-Oslo security prisoners still held in Israeli jails are to be released by the end of March, when the last of four release phases is to be realized.

Though the date for the release is quickly approaching, officials said this week that lawmakers are still far from holding a needed vote to approve the measure, which carries more weight than previous phases because it involves the release of Israeli citizens.

Israel has held the Israeli prisoners coveted by the Palestinians for the last of the planned releases, remaining vague as to whether it would indeed let them go.

Israel has always been reluctant to include its own citizens in prisoner exchange deals with the Palestinians, claiming that while the PA represented Palestinians living in its own territory, it could not speak for Palestinians living inside Israel.


A Palestinian woman waits in the northern Gaza Strip for released prisoners to come through the Erez Crossing, December 31, 2013 (photo credit: AP/Hatem Moussa)

But that principle was broken in the prisoner swap over abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in October 2011. The deal saw 1,027 Palestinians freed from Israeli jails, including six Israelis and 14 residents of East Jerusalem.

With peace talks set to kick off last summer, the Israeli cabinet approved the prisoner releases on July 28, 2013, with 13 in favor, seven in opposition, and two abstentions. In return, the Palestinian leadership vowed not to appeal for membership in international organizations for the duration of negotiations.

Netanyahu appointed a small team of ministers, including Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, Minister of Internal Security Yitzhak Aharonovitch and Science Minister Yaakov Peri — all of whom supported the deal — to determine the identity of the prisoners to be released in each of the four phases.

To ease the blow, Netanyahu told his cabinet in July that any freeing of Arab Israelis will be brought to a second vote in the government. The last release is scheduled to take place on March 28.

The Times of Israel spoke this week with media advisers for three Israeli ministers, all of whom did not know if or when a cabinet vote on the final release is scheduled to take place.

Kobi Ellenbogen, a spokesman for Communications Minister Gilad Erdan, while unaware of a new vote, noted that Erdan was one of two Likud members who voted against the measure back in July.

Nisan Zeevi, a spokesman for Science Minister Yaakov Peri, said such a vote is still “ages away,” noting that Peri had voted in favor of releasing 104 Palestinian prisoners even though “he was responsible for putting 95 of them behind bars” as head of the Shin Bet between 1988 and 1995.

Zeevi said that he has so far not been approached by any Israeli lobbyists trying to change Peri’s vote next time around.


John Kerry speaking to the press Thursday, February 27, 2014 (photo credit: AP/Jose Luis Magana)

But one such organization has already begun trying to convince cabinet ministers to oppose the final prisoner release. Almagor, an Israeli organization which advocates for families of terror victims, has unsuccessfully appealed to the Supreme Court to halt every previous round of releases. Today, it is trying to convince ministers who supported the move last July to oppose it over the Israeli terrorists expected to be included.

Meir Indor, CEO of Almagor, said that according to his organization’s calculations, Netanyahu no longer has a majority in government for a fourth prisoner release.

“It’s a very dangerous symbolic move which must be prevented in every way possible,” Indor told The Times of Israel.

In his bid to convince Israeli ministers to oppose the measure, Indor characterizes it as not only immoral, but also ineffective in fostering Palestinian goodwill. Just Monday, Mahmoud Abbas told Israeli MK Zahava Gal-On that Palestinians will demand further prisoner releases as talks continue.


Almagor CEO Meir Indor (photo credit: courtesy/Meir Indor)

“What have we gained? You [the Israeli ministers] wanted to avoid extortion, but he [Abbas] is already starting to extort. So there’s no point in continuing the process and it should be stopped now,” he said.

Indor added that the remaining prisoners are the worst offenders yet, citing an Israeli poll showing that 80 percent Israelis oppose the move.

Releasing Israeli terrorists — while understandable as part of a hostage predicament like Shalit’s — is inexcusable as an incentive for peace talks, he argued.

“We have established a separation barrier, a [border] line, yet here we are placing the Arab Israeli population under the auspices of a different entity, under the protection of the Palestinian Authority.”

The US is behind the massive pressure placed on the Netanyahu government to complete the freeing of pre-Oslo prisoners, Indor is convinced, noting that he has heard as much from Israeli ministers whom he would not name.

Indor has asked US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro to arrange a meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry in order to explain the position of bereaved Israeli families.

“The Americans are employing a double standard,” Indor said. “They condemned the Afghan government for releasing terrorists who killed American and British soldiers, yet they want us to release terrorists.”

“We have a problem with John Kerry,” he added. “What Ya’alon said is true, the guy is obsessive.”

Meanwhile, on the other side of the equation, MK Ibrahim Sarsur (Ra’am-Ta’al) was confident on Tuesday that the release would go forward on March 28, since Netanyahu will not be able to withstand the American pressure exerted on him. He said that Israel is expected to free 32 prisoners on that date, since during the previous installment on December 31 Israel decided to free six prisoners who were not on the original list of pre-Oslo detainees submitted by the PA.


MK Ibrahim Sarsur at his Knesset office, April 4, 2014 (photo credit: Elhanan Miller/Times of Israel)

“For Kerry and for us, the important thing is that Israel implements what it has agreed upon,” Sarsur said. “I believe that the vast majority of Israeli ministers agree, but however they decide — whether by government vote or otherwise — that’s just an internal Israeli issue, a technical issue Netanyahu will have to figure out.”

The US is adamant about the prisoner release because it realizes that it is the only means of safeguarding Mahmoud Abbas’s credibility on the Palestinian street.

“As long as the Americans push this issue and don’t back down, Netanyahu will have to obey. He has no other choice,” Sarsur said.

Last month, Sarsur became the first and only Arab MK to stand on the Knesset podium and call on Obama to release convicted Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard.

“I say honestly, a person who served 27 or 28 years in jail should serve no longer,” Sarsur told The Times of Israel. “But I dismiss out of hand the linkage Netanyahu is trying to make between the release of Arab Israeli prisoners and Pollard’s release.”

Ministers to Vote on Taking away Benefits from Terrorists with Israeli Citizenship

Gil Hoffman

Ministers to Vote on Taking away Benefits from Terrorists with Israeli Citizenship

The benefits removed would include unemployment payments and other stipends from the National Insurance Institute.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-02-16


Yariv Levin (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

The ministerial committee on legislation is to vote Sunday on a bill that would take away benefits from terrorists with Israeli citizenship who leave prison early.

The legislation, sponsored by coalition chairman Yariv Levin (Likud), is timely because Israeli- Arabs are expected to be included at the end of next month in final round of prisoners being released by Israel to the Palestinian Authority as a gesture in the diplomatic process.

The benefits removed would include unemployment payments and other stipends from the National Insurance Institute.

“We should not tolerate the absurd situation in which terrorists who are released before their sentence is completed receive benefits from the state,” Levin said. “This includes terrorists set free in deals and diplomatic agreements.”

The Almagor organization, which represents terror victims and their families, is to meet with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in an attempt to persuade him to refuse to release terrorists who are Israeli citizens. The organization also wrote US Secretary of State John Kerry.

In an attempt to reach out to Israelis, Kerry’s Jewish brother Cameron penned a column that was translated into Hebrew and printed in Yediot Aharonot on Friday in which he explained the secretary of state’s commitment to Israel’s security.

Cameron Kerry recalled his brother’s first trip to Israel 30 years ago along with Jewish leaders from Boston. He remembered his brother’s amazement at how small the country is.

“His determination to reach peace in the Middle East was impacted by his deep understanding of the need to guarantee the security of Israel as the home of the Jewish people,” Kerry wrote. “That was what led him to understand that Israel’s long-term security requires a two-state solution.

Due to security, demographic and geographic realities, Israel cannot continue the occupation of the West Bank and remain both Jewish and Democratic.”

Kerry Expected to Meet Victims of Terrorism

Gil Hoffman; Andreas Berggren

Kerry Expected to Meet Victims of Terrorism

US Secretary of State will meet with terror victims on next trip to Israel; NGO Almagor head wants Kerry to understand the victims’ plight.

The Jerusalem Post

2014-02-14


US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro and US Secretary of State John Kerry. Photo: Reuters)

In an apparent attempt to reach out to Israelis who are opposed to the US-brokered talks between Israel and the Palestinians, US Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to meet with victims of Arab terrorism from the Almagor organization on one of his upcoming trips to Israel.

According to Almagor head Meir Indor, US officials this week promised the meeting would take place. Indor said he wanted Kerry to see the victims of terrorism and their families so he would understand their plight.

US officials have also been meeting with right-wing MKs and leaders of organizations over the past two weeks. For instance, US Ambassador Dan Shapiro has met family members of terrorism victims from Almagor and with coalition chairman MK Yariv Levin (Likud).

At Shapiro’s request, he will meet in two weeks with the Knesset’s Land of Israel Caucus, which is headed by Levin and Bayit Yehudi MK Orit Struck. Struck was the first MK to heckle European Parliament President Martin Schultz during his address to the Knesset on Wednesday.

Bayit Yehudi chairman Naftali Bennett defended his faction on Thursday for walking out of the speech, saying that now world leaders would be more careful with what they say in Israel. But Labor faction chairman Eitan Cabel warned that world leaders would stop coming to the Knesset due to the way Bennett’s MKs treated Schulz.

During his speech, Schulz criticized the blockade of the Gaza Strip and Jewish settlements in the West Bank. His remarks regarding the consumption of water allowed to Palestinians was what set off the angry responses by some Knesset members.

Schulz defended his speech in interviews with the German media on Thursday.

“At the Knesset I was required to explain the stance of the European Parliament,” he told De Welt. “Obviously I can’t just say things that please everybody. I’m also obliged to express contested matters. I was surprised and affected by the harsh reaction I received after giving a pro-Israel speech. The people who interfered with my speech belong to the hard-liners who criticize and respond in this fashion to every critical word that bothers them.”

Israel Transfers 36 Terrorist Bodies to the PA

Elad Benari

Israel Transfers 36 Terrorist Bodies to the PA

Israel begins transferring the bodies of 36 terrorists for reburial in the PA, in accordance with a Supreme Court ruling.

Israel National News

2014-01-20


Terrorists (illustration) (Flash 90)

Israel on Sunday began transferring bodies of Palestinian Arab terrorists killed by Israeli forces to the Palestinian Authority-assigned areas of Judea and Samaria for reburial, sources on both sides told AFP.

According to Fatma Abdallah, media coordinator for the “Palestinian national committee to return the bodies of martyrs”, Israel handed over the body of Majdi Khanfar, originally from Silat al-Zaher near Jenin, via a border crossing.

Israeli public radio said Khanfar was killed 10 years ago.

Abdallah told AFP another two bodies out of the 36 Israel had committed to returning would be handed over on Tuesday, as part of a court ruling.

The IDF told AFP that “in accordance with a Supreme Court decision and following the instruction of the government of Israel, the IDF has begun the return of bodies of terrorists to their respective families in the Palestinian Authority.”

“The IDF is attending this assignment with the utmost professionalism and the required sensitivity,” it said in a statement.

The Supreme Court ordered that Israel release the terrorists’ bodies after their families, assisted by Israeli leftist groups, appealed to the court, demanding the bodies be transferred for burial in the PA.

The Supreme Court accepted the appeal and ordered that the bodies be transferred to the PA, after DNA tests to prove that they are indeed the terrorists in question are held.

The transfer of the bodies comes shortly after the third batch of terrorist prisoners were released by Israel, as part of ongoing peace talks between the sides.

Before the terrorist release in December, the Supreme Court rejected a last minute petition filed by activists and families whose loved ones were killed in the terror attacks perpetrated by the prisoners set to be released.

As in previous appeals before terrorist releases, the Court said that “there is no cause for us to intervene in such processes, as they are political decisions.” The appeal also asked the Court to consider the fact that five of the terrorists were to be released to their homes in Jerusalem, but said that this was not sufficient grounds to prevent the releases.

The Almagor terror victims association has in the past appealed to the Supreme Court against the Israeli policy of transferring bodies of terrorists to the PA.

The appeal was filed after Almagor discovered that the government of Israel, in a deal with the PA, intended to return most of the bodies of terrorists buried in Israel.

Did a Hunger Strike Free Samer Issawi, a Palestinian Terrorist to Israelis and Heir to Gandhi to Arabs?

Kate Shuttleworth

Did a Hunger Strike Free Samer Issawi, a Palestinian Terrorist to Israelis and Heir to Gandhi to Arabs?

International Business Times

2014-01-03


Samer Issawi (r.), with his parents, Tariq and Laila, at their home in Jerusalem (Kate Shuttleworth)

Everyone in the small East Jerusalem suburb of Al-Issawiya knows where Samer Issawi’s house is. Ask any driver of the Arab-run buses that weave down the narrow streets of Mount Scopus, past Hadassah Hospital, to the community of just 35 families that looks out over the separation wall toward the West Bank. The drivers drop people right outside the front door of his family home.

On this particular morning, trays laden with elaborate coffee carafes and Arabic sweets await guests in a large sunroom at the back of the family’s nicely furnished house. Visitors begin to fill the sunroom by midmorning, then gradually overflow into the lounge. By lunchtime they have spread onto the rooftop terrace.


A woman pours coffee for a group of Palestinian women gather at the family home of Samer Issawi to celebrate his release from Israeli imprisonment. (Kate Shuttleworth)

Issawi isn’t a celebrity in the conventional sense—he’s not a wealthy benefactor or a famous actor or musician. He’s a man who not long ago ended a nine-month hunger strike. To the Israelis, he’s a terrorist and an inveterate criminal. To the Palestinians, he’s a political dissident, the spiritual scion of civil disobedience activists like India’s Mahatma Gandhi and Bobby Sands of the Provisional Irish Republican Army, who died as a result of a hunger strike in 1981.

In Issawi’s case, the lowly status of Palestinians in Israel was the larger issue he hoped to call attention to via his actions, but his view that he had been imprisoned without a fair trial was his specific complaint. Issawi is free now, so the narrative among Palestinians is that the hunger strike worked. And though the Israeli police warned Issawi’s family not to celebrate his release from prison, their daily festivities have gone on without interruption.

“By the end of the day, there will be people dancing in the lounge and on the roof,” Issawi’s sister Shireen says. “Some people have even jumped the separation wall from the West Bank to come to the house because they can’t get permission from Israelis to come.”

The Issawi home has been visited by sympathizers from as far away as South Africa, Germany and Korea, and the constant stream of traffic since he was discharged a week ago shows no signs of slowing. The house itself is warm and homey, making an unlikely stage for a family that Israel has characterized as one of the most notorious in the Palestinian world, with family members having been repeatedly arrested. Issawi’s parents, Tariq and Laila, and their seven children have all spent time in jail.

Three of the sons, Ra’fat, Firas and Shadi, served a combined total of 25 years in Israeli prisons; Samer—the fifth son, who is 34—was imprisoned for nearly 10 years of his 30-year sentence after being arrested in Ramallah in 2002 during the second intifada for his alleged involvement in a series of shooting attacks against Israelis. He was discharged in 2011 along with 1,027 other Palestinian prisoners as a result of an Egypt-brokered deal between Hamas and the Israeli government for the return of Israeli Defense Force soldier Gilad Shalit, who was held captive in Gaza. A year later, Issawi was arrested again for violating the terms of his release by leaving Jerusalem and entering the West Bank. He was sent to Shita prison in northern Israel in July 2012, and faced the possibility of 20 years there; he began his nine-month hunger strike a month later, surviving solely on water fortified with vitamins and electrolytes.

Issawi is affiliated with the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine and was originally imprisoned for membership in an illegal organization, possession of explosives and firing guns at Israeli vehicles, which the Israeli courts termed attempted murder. He is banned from entering the West Bank as an administrative prisoner, which means he can be arrested and detained without trial; the Israeli government usually assigns such status to those it considers a threat to state security.

“I had no choice but to starve myself in protest of the imprisonment and wider conditions of the prisoners in Israel,” Issawi says. He adds that he reached a critical point in April 2013 when he had lost half of his body weight and doctors became worried that he would die.

“My heartbeat reached 24–28 beats per minute,” he says. “After a medical examination, the doctor told me it was getting dangerous as my heart could stop beating at any moment and I had the option of either going back to Jerusalem or dying.”

He began eating again after Israeli and Palestinian officials brokered a deal in April 2013 that allowed Issawi to serve another eight months and then be released to his home in Al-Issawiya.

Today, Issawi looks healthy, his eyes brighter than photos of him eight months ago when he was hospitalized on the brink of death. But looks are deceptive: He can still barely stomach solid food and his prolonged hunger strike caused long-term damage to his body—he tires easily and must have regular checkups on his kidneys and heart.

“My story is really nothing. There are Palestinians in Israeli prisons suffering from cancer, paralysis and many of them are dying due to the medical ignorance of the Israeli prison staff,” Issawi says.

It’s impossible to consider Issawi’s story without placing it into the context of self-starvation as a political tool. Most of the time, it’s a form of protest that garners significant publicity for a cause, although it doesn’t always speed up the resolution of a dispute. Gandhi staged prison hunger strikes in 1922, 1930, 1933 and 1942 to protest British control over India and to convince warring Hindus and Muslims to reconcile. British authorities were loath to allow him to die in their custody and they often negotiated with him during these actions. But it wasn’t until 1947 that India gained its independence.

IRA hunger striker Sands was protesting a decision in March 1976 by the British government in Northern Ireland to remove the special status of IRA prisoners. Under this change, jailed IRA members would no longer be treated like political activists but would have to wear prison garb and do prison work like common criminals. Their extra visits and food parcels would also be eliminated. Although Sands was elected to the British Parliament during his 66-day hunger strike and his death brought protests throughout the world supporting the Irish republican movement, conditions at Maze Prison didn’t change.

Issawi’s hunger strike lasted longer than most. Whether he intended to follow through is open for debate—his consumption of fortified water could be seen as a way to avoid death or to lengthen his strike. In any event, he is lucky to be alive. A person can die of malnutrition in six to eight weeks, or two weeks without water. After a month of fasting, the risk of organ failure rapidly increases.

Issawi says he drew inspiration from Nelson Mandela and was intent on ensuring the release of Palestinians who have been imprisoned for as long as 34 years. “Leaders from around the world attended Nelson Mandela’s funeral because they recognized the rights of the people in South Africa,” Issawi says. “There should be a recognition of our rights, the rights of over 5,000 prisoners, many who are children, women and the elderly.”

His sister Shireen says it was difficult for her family to see Samer slowly starve himself, but ultimately, “We were very proud of his hunger strike, because his demands were not just for him; it was for all the prisoners—many of the prisoners who were released as part of the Gilad Shalit deal were imprisoned again,” she says. “But we were very worried about his life. International law says it’s our right to oppose this occupation. We hope that one day we will live in peace.”

Issawi got out of prison a week ahead of 26 other Palestinian prisoners, among a total of 104 who are being released as part of an agreement brokered by the United States in the hopes of reinvigorating peace talks between Palestine and Israel (the final group of five prisoners is expected to be let out at the end of March 2014; on Monday night the Israeli High Court rejected a petition to block their release). All prisoners were charged and imprisoned prior to the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993 and were serving sentences of between 19 and 28 years. Though Issawi was not one of the 26 whose release was negotiated, pro-Israel groups—and Samer’s sister, for that matter—have lumped the two together.

At a protest that coincided with the Issawi household celebration, Lizi Hameira, 38, of Tel Aviv, told IBTimes she opposes the release of all Palestinian prisoners. “The story of Issawi is the climax of absurd,” she said. “He was released during the Shalit deal and he returned to terror. He was arrested again and because of a hunger strike a judge allowed him to be released last week. The first thing Issawi did was be filmed being released saying at his welcome reception that Israeli soldiers should be kidnapped.”


Israeli protestors opposed to the release of Palestinian prisoners at their tent outside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence in Rehavia, Jerusalem. (Kate Shuttleworth)

Families of the victims killed by the 26 men released in the early hours of Dec. 31 marched from outside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence to the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem. Some of the Palestinians were convicted of torturing, strangling or stabbing Israeli civilians to death.

Meir Indor, head of the Almagor Terror Victims Association, who opposes the release of the 26 prisoners, told IBTimes that if Israel wants peace, it needs the backing of the public, and releasing Palestinian prisoners is not the way to achieve it.

“Who is more suited to speak on the issue of Palestinian prisoner release than the victims of terror, who feel they’ve sacrificed so much, and the justice system has collapsed around them?” Indor asked. “When you’re dealing with terrorism, you need the voice of the nation. The voice of the nation is today the voice of the victim, because the nation identifies with the victims, the families.”

Almagor members have been protesting outside Netanyahu’s residence in Jerusalem for more than a week and have erected a tent occupied by up to 50 people who arrive in shifts to hand out fliers and hold placards.


Protester Meir Indor with Yakov Tuboul, whose son Lior was murdered by one of the Palestinian prisoners due for release under a deal brokered between Israel and Palestine as part of ongoing peace talks. (Kate Shuttleworth)

When IBT visited the protest site, Netanyahu’s car pulled up along a back street flanked by two police cars. The small group of protesters snapped into action at the guarded barrier before the residence, chanting, “Titbayesh,” which means “Shame on you” in Hebrew, and waving placards with hands dyed blood-red.

Netanyahu did not speak with the protestors or get out of his car in their sight.

One of the Almagor members, Ortal Tamam, 25, was specifically protesting the release of four men convicted of the murder of her uncle, Moshe Tamam, in 1984. “These men are cold-blooded murderers and they have blood on their hands,” she said. “The public do not support their release.”

Washington has hailed the release as a “positive step” in the peace process between Israel and Palestine. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was in Israel on Jan. 2 to further set out the framework for the fragile peace talks between Israel and Palestine.

Of the 26 Palestinian prisoners, 18 left Ofer prison for Ramallah early Tuesday morning. Three others were taken to the Gaza Strip. The remaining five were driven from Ofer to Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem, arriving by 2:30 a.m. on Tuesday.

The 18 who reached Ramallah were welcomed by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in his presidential compound, before flowers were laid on the grave of the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Despite his personal success, Issawi says he has little hope for the resumption of peace negotiations brought about by the releases, which coincided with expanding Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

“The negotiations are useless; they aren’t doing anything,” he says. “They are demolishing houses, taking out Palestinian trees and building continuous settlements. This is a sign there will not be peace between them in the near future. The occupation does not want peace.”

He acknowledged, however, that his hunger strike did result in his early release, if nothing else. And on this particular morning, an elderly Palestinian woman whom the family did not know arrived to congratulate him, saying, “All the birds in the sky are happy for you.”

Jubilation in Palestine, Anger in Israel as Prisoners Freed

Jubilation in Palestine, Anger in Israel as Prisoners Freed

RT

2013-12-31


Israeli bereaved families march through Jerusalem in protest as Israel prepares to free 26 Palestinians jailed before the signing of the 1993 Oslo Accords on December 30, 2013. (AFP Photo/Gali Tibbon)

Israel has freed 26 Palestinian prisoners convicted in deadly attacks against Israelis after a court rejected an appeal by the victims’ families to halt the move. The prisoner release is the third of four planned as part of US-brokered peace efforts.

Most of the 26 inmates set free Tuesday were convicted of killing Israelis and spent between 19 and 28 years in prison. Almost all were jailed before the Oslo Accords, when the first Israeli-Palestinian interim peace deals were signed in 1993. Three of the prisoners were released to the Gaza Strip, 18 to West Bank and 5 to East Jerusalem.

Ahead of the release, several hundred protesters marched late Monday from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Residence in Jerusalem to the home of one of the terrorists, shouting: “Don’t release the murderers!” and “Death to terrorists!”

A number of streets were closed off due to the rally, organized by the chairman of the Almagor terror victims association, Meir Indor.

Passions ran high when the protesters passed by the US Consulate to rail against President Barack Obama and US Secretary of State John Kerry, whose efforts helped resume peace negotiations in July after a three-year break. One man shouted: “Release terrorists in your own country!” while another added: “You have no right to put our people in danger!”

“At the end of the day, the release of these terrorists is a result of the pressure being imposed on Israel by Obama and Kerry,” one of the protesters, Jonathan Benedek, told The Jerusalem Post. “I don’t believe that any prime minister in his right mind would willingly release these terrorists or believe this is a good thing for Israel strategically.”

Despite mass protests, the release of the prisoners was carried out overnight. Their relatives and supporters gave a heroes’ welcome to the men, celebrating with fireworks.

51-year-old Ahmed Shihadeh, from the Qalandia refugee camp in the West Bank, spent nearly three decades in prison after being convicted of the murder of an alleged collaborator with Israel. For the past two years his mother was unable to visit her son in prison because she could no longer walk.

“I’ve visited him in 14 jails. I would leave my kids screaming and go for a visit,” Haseba Shihadeh told AP.

In total, Israel said 104 prisoners would be set free; 52 have been released prior to those 26 released on Tuesday. The fourth round of releases is due to take place in April.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas pledged not to sign a final peace deal with Israel “before all the prisoners are released.”


Rami Barbakh, a released Palestinian prisoner, (C), is reunited with his mother upon arriving at his home in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on December 31, 2013. (AFP Photo/Said Khatib)

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has come under fire for his decision to balance out the series of controversial releases with plans to build 1,400 new homes in both the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

While supporters of peace talks say the construction will ruin the goodwill gesture created by the prisoner release, many others slammed Prime Minister Netanyahu for connecting the Jewish settlement issue with the release of those they call “murderers.”

Settler leader Dani Dayan said the timing of a new settlement announcement was wrong. “The linkage between the release of convicted terrorists and the construction in Jerusalem and in Judea and Samaria puts an unnecessary stain on the construction.”

Palestinians see the settlements (which most countries regard as illegal), as an obstacle to a viable state they seek in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Israel took possession of those territories in the 1967 war and pulled out of the Gaza Strip.

The Palestinians have appealed to the US to block the expected announcement, saying such construction threatens peace efforts. Both the US and the EU have spoken against settlement plans. Netanyahu pledged he would not back down, however. “In these negotiations we are faced with our essential interests, including guaranteeing the settlements in the land of Israel,” he said.

“Leadership is judged by the ability to implement decisions, difficult as they may be,” Netanyahu told members of his Likud Party on Monday. “We were not elected to make easy decisions.”

In another move that could also hamper peace efforts, an Israeli Cabinet ministers committee on Sunday backed a bill that would annex a section of the West Bank near the Jordanian border to Israel. Netanyahu insists that Israel must maintain a presence in the area for security reasons. Abbas rejected the move. “This is Palestinian land and we will not let them do it,” he said in Ramallah.

The chances are small that the bill will receive parliamentary approval, however. Israel’s chief negotiator, centrist Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, said she would use all her political influence to block the legislation from being voted on in Parliament.

Israel Frees 26 More Palestinian Prisoners

Israel Frees 26 More Palestinian Prisoners

UPI

2013-12-31


An American-Israeli holds a poster reading ‘Ashamed To Be An American” during a protest march against the 3rd Palestinian prisoners release in Jerusalem, Israel, December 30, 2013. Twenty-six Palestinian prisoners are set to be released from Israeli prison late tonight in an agreement brokered by America in the renewal of Israeli and Palestinian peace talks. (UPI/Debbie Hill)

Twenty-six more Palestinian prisoners were released to the West Bank and Gaza by Israel Monday night as part of the effort to get peace talks rolling.

The release was the third of four tranches totaling 104 prisoners scheduled to take place over a period of months under the U.S.-brokered agreement.

The BBC reported the freed inmates were greeted by cheering crowds when they arrived home. Eight of them were driven to checkpoints leading into Gaza and East Jerusalem, while the other 18 were taken to Ramallah in the West Bank, the British network said.

The Palestinian prisoners had been convicted of crimes committed before the 1993 Oslo Accords, a set of agreements between the Israelis and Palestinians.

The Almagor terror victims association had unsuccessfully appealed to the High Court of Justice against their release, arguing the government reneged on a decision not to release “terrorists,” Ynetnews.com reported.


Photos of Jewish victims of Palestinian terrorists set on a table before a protest march against the 3rd Palestinian prisoners release in Jerusalem, Israel, December 30, 2013. (UPI/Debbie Hill)

Most of the prisoners were convicted of murdering Israeli civilians and soldiers. Others were convicted of killing Palestinians they suspected were collaborating with Israel.

“One of the things we knew when we captured these detainees is that they needed to stay in prison for the maximum period,” Meir Indor of the victims’ association told the Jerusalem Post.

“These men are time-bombs. Wherever they go they kill, because that’s the purpose of their lives.”

The Washington Post reported a few hundred people spent three days protesting in front of Netanyahu’s official residence.

“The U.S. government would not release convicted murderers, so why is it pressuring Israel to release terrorists and murderers?” one of the protesters, Ben Ishai, said.

At a meeting of his Likud Party Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the decision to free the inmates, the BBC said.

“Leadership is judged by the ability to implement decisions, difficult as they may be,” he said. “We were not elected to make easy decisions.”

The Washington Post said Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was to welcome the prisoners and Palestinian Prisoner Affairs Minister Issa Karak said the freed men would “participate in a special torch-lighting to celebrate the beginning of the new year.”


Israelis carry black umbrellas and a sign reading ‘ No Moral Country Releases Terrorists’ at a protest march against the 3rd prisoner release of Palestinian terrorists, in Jerusalem, Israel, December 30, 2013. (UPI/Debbie Hill)

Israel Frees 26 Palestinian Terrorists

Efrat Forsher; Edna Adato; Itzik Saban; Daniel Siryoti; news agencies

Israel Frees 26 Palestinian Terrorists

Israel completes third scheduled prisoner release • Bereaved families: Terrorists’ release is a “slap in the face” • Prisoners receive heroes’ welcome in Ramallah, Gaza • PM: Peace will be possible only if we can defend ourselves against any threat.

Israel Hayom

2013-12-31


Sadness and anger in Jerusalem (Photo credit: Lior Mizrahi)

Israel freed 26 Palestinian prisoners late Monday night in the third of four agreed-upon releases. Israel pledged to release a total of 104 prisoners as part of the deal last July to renew peace talks with the Palestinians.

All of the security prisoners included in the third release were jailed prior to the 1993 Oslo Accords. They were all convicted of murdering Israelis and had served between 19 and 28 years in prison.

Some 18 inmates released from Ofer Prison were bused to Ramallah through the Bitunia checkpoint; three prisoners were transported to the Gaza Strip via Erez crossing, and five others were released to their homes in east Jerusalem.


Elation in Ramallah (Photo credit: AP)

The third stage of the prisoner release, like the two previous ones, met with fierce opposition from terror victims’ families. The Almagor Terror Victims Association filed a High Court of Justice petition seeking an injunction against the move, saying that including five terrorists who resided in east Jerusalem and carried Israeli IDs merely added insult to injury.

“Releasing residents of Jerusalem by claiming that they are only ‘Israeli residents’ and not ‘Israeli citizens’ is a wisecrack move,” the petition said.

The court denied the petition saying such matters were at the sole discretion of the government: “I see no legal grounds for the court to interfere in the [government’s] decision to go ahead with the third prisoners’ release,” Justice Zvi Zylbertal wrote in the ruling.

Justice Elyakim Rubinstein, who opposed the release, noted in a minority opinion that the court could have issued in injunction concerning the five prisoners meant to be released to east Jerusalem, pending another government review of their case.

Some 150 people, friends and relatives of terror victims, staged a protest rally on Monday night, marching from the Prime Minister’s Residence to the Old City and carrying black umbrellas and photos of some of the victims.

The march was approved only after a short legal battle: The bereaved families sought to march from the Prime Minister’s Residence to the Muslim Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old City, where they wanted to stage a protest across from the home of one of the released terrorists. The Jerusalem Police denied the requests citing security concerns, which prompted representatives of the bereaved families to file a High Court petition.

The families and the police were eventually able to reach a compromise by which the protesters were allowed to march up to the Western Wall plaza and from there only 15 people were allowed to approach the terrorist’s home, where they staged a short protest rally.

“We feel that releasing terrorists, especially those from east Jerusalem, is a slap in the face,” Ortal Tamam, whose uncle Moshe Tamam was abducted and murdered in 1984, told reporters. “We will fight it tooth and nail, and if it happens we will fight to have any rights they might have as residents of east Jerusalem revoked.”

Another protester remarked: “This is a dark day for the State of Israel. I’m ashamed of my country today, for abandoning the bereaved families and the public’s security.”

According to Army Radio, dozens of right-wing activists joined the rally. “This is a national disgrace,” one of them was quoted as saying. “These terrorists are killing Jews. Putting them in jail means nothing if all we do is release them.”

Prisoners Receive Heroes’ Welcome

“This day is a happy day for all of us, for our people, for our families, and for our hero prisoners who were freed today to live free. They were also free in the prisons,” Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said Monday night, in a special reception held for the freed prisoners in Ramallah.

Abbas greeted each of the prisoners released to the West Bank personally. “We will not sign a final peace deal with Israel before all the prisoners are released,” he said.

The release coincided with Palestinian Authority celebrations marking the 49th anniversary of the founding of Fatah, and PA officials, as well as family members and thousands of supporters, jubilantly welcomed the return those they regard as national heroes.

Smaller celebrations were also held in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu commented Tuesday on the prisoners’ release, saying: “The essence of the difference between us and out neighbors can be seen in one image. While we are willing to take very painful steps in an attempt to reach a peace deal that would end the conflict, they—along with their senior leadershipmdash;are celebrating.

“Murderers are not heroes. That is no way to educate for peace. That is no way to strike peace. Peace can be achieved only after the education promoting incitement and the destruction of Israel will cease.”

Netanyahu stressed that, “Peace will be possible only when we ensure our own security and settlement interests. There will be peace only if we can defend ourselves, by ourselves, against any threat.”

Protesters March to Released Terrorist’s Jerusalem Home to Express Outrage

Daniel K. Eisenbud

Protesters March to Released Terrorist’s Jerusalem Home to Express Outrage

“This is not about politics, it’s a matter of our lives,” says demonstrator. “Have Jews not shed enough blood?”

The Jerusalem Post

2013-12-30

Amid a heavy downpour and a cacophony of shouts condemning Binyamin Netanyahu, the US and 26 terrorists due to be freed in another few hours, some 250 protesters marched Monday night from the Prime Minister’s Residence to the home of one of the terrorists.

Cries of “Shame on you!” “Don’t release the murderers!” “Death to terrorists!” “Revenge!” and “Free Jonathan Pollard!” accompanied the slow procession of men, women and children as they made their way down Jerusalem’s Agron Street accompanied by dozens of police officers armed with assault rifles.

Traffic came to a halt as the march paused at the US Consulate to decry US Secretary of State John Kerry.

“Release terrorists in your own country!” shouted one man. “You have no right to put our people in danger!” exclaimed another.

Although the vitriol was initially directed at Netanyahu’s gated residence, numerous protesters emphasized that their rage was primarily directed at Kerry and US President Barack Obama.

“At the end of the day the release of these terrorists is a result of the pressure being imposed on Israel by Obama and Kerry,” said Jonathan Benedek as he stood under an umbrella beside his mother. “I don’t believe that any prime minister in his right mind would willingly release these terrorists or believe this is a good thing for Israel strategically.

That’s why it’s incumbent on Israeli society to understand and recognize that it’s not Netanyahu releasing them; it’s Kerry and Obama.”

While Benedek conceded that the prime minister’s acquiescence to US pressure did not absolve Netanyahu from responsibility for the release, he asked that Israelis denounce the US government instead of attacking Israel’s leadership.

“We should be venting our anger at Obama and Kerry, not Netanyahu,” he said.

Benedek’s mother, Carol, a US citizen visiting her son from Maryland, derided the US government as well.

“I’d like John Kerry to release terrorists who killed Americans,” she said. “It’s do as I say, not as I do.”

The march, organized by Meir Indor, chairman of the Almagor terror victims association, started hours after the High Court of Justice rejected a petition from the organization not to let the terrorists go.

“People convicted of murdering women, children and babies are being freed for nothing?” asked Tzvia Vodda rhetorically as the procession reached the Old City. “What? Is Jewish blood cheap? Have we not shed enough of it?” Vodda’s friend, Shoshanah Osterbach, said no peace deal was worth releasing convicted killers.

“It’s a disgrace that the Israeli government even considered the idea of releasing murderers,” she said. “There is no excuse for releasing murderers ever! This is not politics. It’s a matter of our lives.”

Osterbach went on.

“In America, have they ever done something like this? Who gives them the right to tell us what to do? We live here, not them!” Upon approaching the Old City home of Khalef Juma’a Mustafa Ahmad, police allowed only 15 of the demonstrators to come within 10 meters.

“When we have the next Israeli victim, the High Court judges will not be able to say their hands did not shed this blood,” said Indor. “Shame on the Israeli government!” Rabbi Yehuda Ben-Yishai, the father of Ruth Fogel, who was brutally murdered in her settlement home along with her husband and three children in the 2011 attack that has come to be known as the “Itamar Massacre,” was among the 15 allowed near Ahmad’s residence.

“This is a black day for the Israeli nation,” said the bereaved father. “We should turn this date into a day of mourning and fasting. They are celebrating now while we are in pain and agony.”

Indeed, Palestinian fireworks could be heard in the distance, while Ahmad’s home was strewn with colorful lights.

“Look at these lights,” said one woman. “These are not Christmas lights – they’re lights to celebrate the release of a terrorist!” Appalled by the fireworks and lights, Lizi Hameiri, another protester permitted near the home, scolded Ahmad’s mother.

“You are celebrating your son, but you have nothing to be proud of!” shouted Hameiri.

“You raised a cold-blooded murderer! What did you nourish him with as a child? Hatred and death? Shame on you!” Despite the rage surrounding the protest, 12-year-old Zev Moore, who made aliya with his family from New Jersey last summer, said he was still proud to be an Israeli citizen and expressed both pride and hope.

“Israel will never give up no matter what,” he said. “We will always be strong.”

Third Phase of Prisoner Release Begins After Court Rejects Appeal

Times of Israel staff; AP

Third Phase of Prisoner Release Begins After Court Rejects Appeal

Gazans and East Jerusalemites transferred from Ofer prison en route to freedom; families of terror victims protest at prisoner’s Old City home

The Times of Israel

2013-12-30


Anti-prisoner release protesters marching in Jerusalem Monday night. (Photo credit: Hadas Parush/Flash90)

Israel began the process of releasing 26 Palestinian prisoners late Monday night, after the High Court rejected an appeal to stop the discharge.

In Jerusalem, dozens of people, including family members of terror victims, protested the move, the third in a series of releases as part of ongoing peace negotiations.

Three prisoners who were to be released to Gaza were loaded into vans to make their way to the Erez crossing, and five more began the short journey from Ofer prison in the West Bank to East Jerusalem, where they live. The full complement of prisoners were to be released after midnight.

The five are the first East Jerusalemites to be released as part of the four-stage deal, which will see 104 prisoners go free. They will be released to an undisclosed location, and the rest will be transferred to the West Bank, where they are expected to be greeted with fanfare.

The High Court rejected the petition by the Almagor Terror Victims Association to stop the release, as it has done twice before since August.

Almagor had claimed that allowing the release of convicted terrorists into East Jerusalem would give the Palestinian Authority a claim over the city.

Despite criticism from the right and left, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the release as a necessary, albeit tough, move for peace.

“Leadership is judged by the ability to implement decisions, difficult as they may be,” Netanyahu told members of his Likud party. “We were not elected to make easy decisions.”

Protests in Israel have intensified in the run-up to the planned release, with grieving families and others holding demonstrations in the capital against the move.

On Monday night, dozens of people armed with black umbrellas marched from the Prime Minister’s Residence to the Old City of Jerusalem, where 15 of them demonstrated outside the home of Ahmed Halaf, one of the 26 prisoners slated to be released.

The organizers had originally gone to court to be allowed to protest, but eventually came to a deal with police that only a limited amount of people would approach the home of Halaf.

Earlier in the day, dozens of people protested at the entrance to Jerusalem, attempting to burn tires and block the main road into the city before being stopped by police.

Two people were arrested just after midnight Sunday during a protest in front of the Prime Minister’s Residence in Jerusalem against the release of the 26 Palestinian prisoners.

The protesters tried to run past the security guards at the entrance to Netanyahu’s home, banging on pots and yelling out slogans against the government’s decision to release the inmates.

It was the mirror image in the West Bank, as the coming releases generated excitement throughout Palestinian society, where prisoners held by Israel are revered as heroes and freedom fighters. Families decorated their homes and neighborhoods with posters of their loved ones who were returning home and planned large feasts.

The family of Ahmed Shihadeh was busy preparing a welcoming celebration in the Qalandiya refugee camp in the West Bank. Shihadeh, 51, has spent nearly 29 years in prison after being convicted in the murder of an alleged collaborator with Israel.

His mother, Haseba, 75, said she has “spent my life” visiting her son, but hasn’t been able to make the trip for the past two years because she can no longer walk. “I’ve visited him in 14 jails. I would leave my kids screaming and go for a visit,” she said.

In the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Jabal Mukaber, the sound of kettle drums and ululating women filled the air as residents braced for the return of Jamal Abu Jamal, who has spent nearly 20 years in prison for a stabbing attack.

Women holding Abu Jamal’s picture sang and danced in circles and praised Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for securing his release. His mother, Rayouf, 77, who is unable to speak after suffering two strokes, sat in a chair with tears in her eyes.

“Since she heard the news, she’s getting better,” said Abu Jamal’s sister Huda. “I can’t express how happy she is.”

In an apparent attempt to blunt domestic criticism of such releases, Netanyahu is expected to approve plans to build 1,400 new homes in both the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the coming days.

Netanyahu’s decision to press forward with settlement construction at such a sensitive time has drawn criticism from all directions.

Amir Peretz, a Cabinet minister with the dovish Hatnua party, said the painful sight of watching convicted killers walk free could have been avoided had Netanyahu agreed to freeze settlement construction.

“I would have preferred to freeze settlement building rather than releasing (Palestinian) prisoners, but at this point we must allow this stage to move forward, we must not do anything to prevent it,” he said.

Settler leader Dani Dayan, on the other hand, said the timing of a new settlement announcement looked bad. “The linkage between the release of convicted terrorists and the construction in Jerusalem and in Judea and Samaria puts an unnecessary stain on the construction,” he said.

The “original sin,” he added, was agreeing to release any prisoners in the first place. “Israel should have rejected the notion that it has to pay a price for negotiations,” he said.

On Sunday night, left-wing Meretz MK Nitzan Horowitz, a staunch supporter of peace talks with the Palestinians, said he surprised observers by coming out against the release during an interview with Channel 10′s Dan Margalit.

“He asked me again and again if he had heard correctly, that I object to the release of terrorists now,” Horowitz wrote in a statement posted to his Facebook page. ”So I say it here again, in the clearest way possible: It is folly to release terrorists at such a stage of the negotiations, and certainly when [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu links the release to settlement construction. And what do we get at the end of the day? Wounds, bruises, a scourge. We are releasing murderers and also building in places where it is clear that we will not remain” under a permanent peace deal with the Palestinians.

On Saturday night, a panel of Israeli Cabinet ministers approved the list of 26 Palestinian prisoners to be released on Monday.

All of the prisoners on the list, save three, were convicted of murdering Israeli civilians or soldiers, or are Palestinians suspected of collaborating with Israel. In a press release Saturday night, the Prime Minister’s Office said all of the inmates had been convicted of offenses committed prior to the signing of the Oslo Accords in mid-1990s.

Almost all of them were given life sentences, although a few would have been up for release in the next decade. They have all served between 19 and 28 years of their terms.

Israel Sanctions Palestinian Terror Coordinated by Prisoners

Meir Indor

Lt.-Col. (ret.) Meir Indor is CEO of Almagor Terror Victims Association. In his extended career of public service, he has worked as a journalist, founded the Libi Fund, Sar-El, Habaita, among many other initiatives, and continues to lend his support to other pressing causes of the day.

Israel Sanctions Palestinian Terror Coordinated by Prisoners

Instead of being treated as common criminals, Palestinian terrorists receive an exceptional degree of autonomy within the prison walls.

The Jewish Press

2013-12-01


Photo by Moshe Shai/FLASH90

At the Bat Yam restaurant where Nidal Amar worked, they claimed not to have known that their employee, who ultimately abducted and murdered IDF soldier Tomer Hazan, was an illegal migrant. That defense, though, wasn’t enough to spare them some angry demonstrations.

Yet those demonstrations should have targeted Yitzhak Aharonovich, the minister in charge of the Israel Prison Service, or else Prime Minister Netanyahu, who oversees the ISA.

Nidal, you see, had paid a visit to his brother Nur a-Din in jail. There, speaking freely, the brothers coordinated the abduction. According to the indictment, Nur al-Din Amar, who in 2003 was imprisoned in Hadarim Prison for planning and participating in terrorist attacks, told his brother during that meeting: “I want Gilad Schalit II. Kidnap an IDF soldier, and if you need to, kill him—just get me out.”

Why didn’t the IPS monitor that conversation?

How is it possible that such a friendly meet-up—resulting in the briefing and dispatch of terrorists on a mission to murder—took place in the middle of a prison? And why didn’t the IPS pick up on the message sent via Best Wishes and a Song, a PA television program dedicated to terrorists in jail? It’s no secret that a good part of those “best wishes” are actually coded references to illicit activity. In this instance, the chilling news was delivered with the words, “The family is fine, and the calf will soon be caged.”

A Scandalous Document

This week, while studying the website of the ISA, Almagor researcher Eliyahu Nissim unearthed a scandalous document: an official agreement between the state and imprisoned terrorist leaders, signed at the conclusion of a brief, system-wide hunger strike.

To be clear: this is an official document on a government website in which terrorists—“security prisoners”—receive official recognition from the State of Israel. No longer are they murderers and criminals to be prevented from forming organized groups. Now they are a group of POWs from an enemy army, led by their commanders, to be treated in accordance with the Geneva Convention. Instead of being treated as common criminals (or worse), they receive autonomy within the prison walls and easements that those imprisoned on criminal charges do not enjoy.

True, the agreement includes an absolute commitment by the prisoners to cease any and all terrorist activity occurring within Israeli jails. But that commitment didn’t help Tomer Hazan when he was strangled to death.

The agreement goes on to stipulate clearly that it would be null and void were any terrorist attacks to be directed from jail. Yet despite the murder of Tomer Hazan, the easements stand: visitation, time spent in the company of other terrorists, social and cultural activities.

Clearly the Netanyahu government, which specializes in freeing terrorists from jail, simply gave in to the imprisoned terrorists instead of breaking their hunger strike.

It Doesn’t Need to Be This Way

Israel didn’t always fold and surrender when confronted by jailed terrorists. In August 2004, terrorists in Israeli jails, including famous ones such as Barghouti, initiated a comprehensive hunger strike. They understood from experience that they could defeat Israeli decision-makers by staging such a strike and manipulating public opinion and the media. Two times prior to that, in 1987 and 1992, hunger strikes had ended with improved conditions and far-reaching easements.

What the terrorists did not understand is that there now were different officials in charge, first and foremost Yaakov Ganot, a man of action and himself a terror victim, who had begun to impose order.

The new arrangements he had put in place didn’t suit the terrorists. They demanded, for instance, that their confiscated cell phones be returned to them. (The IPS and ISA, which knew precisely what they did with those phones, opposed the demand.) Ganot also began restricting the access of the lawyers who would come for daily visits with their imprisoned clients, with many serving as couriers to the terrorist organizations outside the prison walls.

Against that backdrop, Dr. Aryeh Bachrach, a bereaved father and Almagor activist, was invited to attend a secret meeting with senior security officers. They asked him to pressure officials in the administration and the Knesset, and to mount a media campaign.

By the next day, we had been granted a meeting with IPS Commissioner Ganot. We arrived at the meeting accompanied by a number of bereaved mothers, and presented our demand: not to give in to the terrorists. Ganot teared up and, with obvious emotion, summoned to the meeting all the senior officers on the floor. As a commander, he understood that they needed the bereaved parents’ support, a shot of motivation to hold fast against their adversaries.

The IPS proceeded to go about its work with decisiveness and daring, coming up with new, creative ideas to solve problems. Hidden cameras caught Barghouti voraciously breaking his hunger strike in his cell. Other security prisoners, who had worked hard to convince their friends to do without food, also gave in to hunger and had what to eat.

The strike came to an end. The terrorists gained nothing.

Today, though, when the Palestinians shrewdly manipulate the media and the legal system in the best tradition of their terrorist organizations, Israeli officialdom prefers simply to surrender.

Court: Protest Outside Terrorist’s House Can Proceed

David Lev

Court: Protest Outside Terrorist’s House Can Proceed

Protesters can demonstrate outside the home of Ahmed Khalaf, who is set to be released as a “gesture” to the Palestinian Authority

Israel National News

2013-12-30


Protest against terrorist release, December 28 (Flash90)

Protesters can demonstrate outside the home of Ahmed Khalaf, who is set to be released Monday night as a “gesture” to the Palestinian Authority, the High Court said Monday. He is one of 26 terrorists to be released in the third round of terrorists releases Israel promised to undertake last summer, as the price for the return of the PA to the negotiating table.

Activists planned the protest for Monday night, but the police refused to supply them with a permit. Khalaf is an Arab resident of Jerusalem who holds Israeli citizenship, who was arrested in 1992 for his role in attempting to carry out a terror attack with two other terrorists. His family lives in the Old City of Jerusalem. Protesters had planned to meet at the protest tent outside the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem and from there march to the American Consulate, where they would then proceed to the home of Khalaf.

Citing unnamed “security concerns,” police barred the protesters – and in response, activist groups, including the Yisrael Sheli organization and the Almagor terror victims’ group appealed to the High Court, demanding that the court order police to authorize the protest.

Police told the Court that they did not wish to issue the permit because of concerns that fights and confrontations could break out between protesters and Arab residents. However, the Court decided, police fears of confrontation was not a sufficient reason to deny the group its right of protest. However, the Court limited the group that could protest directly outside the terrorist’s house to 15 members of families whose loved ones were killed in terror attacks organized by Khalaf.

Khalaf, along with 25 other terrorists, is set to be released late Monday. Activists in the area of the Old City said that his family has already festively decorated their street to celebrate his release. Khalaf has been in prison since 1992 on charges of conspiring and carrying out a terror attack.