dinsdag 25 oktober 2011

PA wil vrijlating Barghouti voordat het met Israel onderhandelt

 

At the Knesset on Monday, MK Ahmed Tibi (United Arab List-Ta'al ) said that Israel should not be surprised if the two current conditions the Palestinians have set for restarting talks - a halt to construction in the settlements and recognition of the 1967 borders as a basis for negotiations - become three, the third being the prisoner release.

Juist ja. En Abbas moet vervolgens niet verbaasd zijn wanneer Israel op deze voorwaarden niet gaat onderhandelen, en er daardoor dus op de grond ook niks verandert. Helaas kan hij er wel op rekenen dat Israel voor deze stagnatie de schuld krijgt, dus hij zal er inderdaad wel op aansturen. Israel gaat nadat het met pijn zoveel terroristen heeft vrijgelaten natuurlijk niet nog eens honderden mensen met bloed aan hun handen vrijlaten. Als Abbas nou had gevraagd om mensen die in administratieve detentie zitten, om mensen die een groot deel van hun straf erop hebben zitten of juist de wat lichtere gevallen, dan lijkt me de kans groot dat Israel daar wel op in zou gaan, maar Saadat en Barghouti, dat kan hij schudden.

We kunnen denk ik inmiddels wel veilig concluderen dat Abbas geen vrede wil. Als hij dat wel had gewild had hij kunnen gaan onderhandelen, en tijdens die onderhandelingen de vrijlating van Fatah gevangenen kunnen eisen. De kans dat Israel daarop in zou gaan lijkt me eveneens groter.

RP

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PA to demand Barghouti release as part of renewed negotiations with Israel

Abbas tells Time Magazine that Olmert promised Israel would release prisoners to PA if deal went through for release of abducted IDF soldier Gilad Shalit.

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/pa-to-demand-barghouti-release-as-part-of-renewed-negotiations-with-israel-1.391806

 

By Avi Issacharoff

 

The Palestinian Authority is set to demand that the Quartet pressure Israel to release prisoners in fulfillment of a pledge made by former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to PA President Mahmoud Abbas, senior Palestinian sources told Haaretz on Monday.

Among the prisoners The PA wants released are Marwan Barghouti and Ahmad Saadat. The former is a member of the Fatah leadership, while Saadat is Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

Abbas told Time Magazine a few days ago that, in 2008, Olmert promised him that Israel would release prisoners to the PA if a deal went through for the release of Gilad Shalit.

Olmert confirmed to Time that he had made the pledge.

Now the PA wants to present the demand ahead of a possible renewal of negotiations with Israel.

At the Knesset on Monday, MK Ahmed Tibi (United Arab List-Ta'al ) said that Israel should not be surprised if the two current conditions the Palestinians have set for restarting talks - a halt to construction in the settlements and recognition of the 1967 borders as a basis for negotiations - become three, the third being the prisoner release.

The PA's chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat, said on Monday that during meetings between Olmert and Abbas in Jerusalem in September 2008, as well as a few months later, Olmert pledged to release Palestinian prisoners if a prisoner swap for Shalit was concluded.

Erekat said a specific number of prisoners was not mentioned, nor were specific criteria, but that Olmert had agreed at the time that the number and criteria would be the same as those for prisoners released in exchange for Shalit, "and even better."

Erekat said this was not to be a condition for restarting negotiations, "just as the freezing of construction in the settlements is not a condition." Rather, it was a matter of fulfilling obligations, he said.

According to Israeli sources, Olmert had pledged to release 550 prisoners to Abbas so that a deal with Hamas would not increase its strength at the expense of the PA. However, the deal for Shalit includes 1,027 prisoners according to understandings with Hamas, and does not include gestures to Abbas by Israel.

The PA demand centers mainly on the release of some 170 longtime prisoners, who have been in Israeli jails since before the Oslo Accords.

Some members of the inner cabinet are said to support the Palestinian demand, but senior cabinet ministers have said over the past few days that the government does not intend to make any gestures to Abbas in light of his bid for statehood in the United Nations.

On Monday, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that he vehemently opposed any such gesture, as did other inner cabinet members.

Lieberman also called for Mahmoud Abbas to resign, calling him the greatest obstacle to an agreement with the Palestinians. If Abbas would step down, negotiations might resume, Lieberman said.

On Monday, Palestinian leaders called Lieberman's remarks harsh incitement which constituted a call to harm Abbas. Also on Monday, Palestinian leaders spoke with senior American and European officials, protesting Lieberman's remarks.

Meanwhile, sources in Hamas said the head of the Hamas political bureau, Khaled Meshal, would be visiting the Jordanian capital, Amman, soon, together with a representative of the Qatari government.

Hamas representatives said the visit had been postponed for a few days, but that they believed two new Hamas bureaus would be opening soon, in Cairo and in Jordan. They also said a meeting might take place between Meshal and King Abdullah of Jordan.

 

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