Saturday, November 05, 2011

‘We Defeated The Israelis’


Freed Palestinian prisoners wave to people during a rally celebrating their release in Gaza City.


Latest Update: Wednesday19/10/2011 October, 2011, 01:32 AM Doha Time
Courtesy Of "The Gulf-Times"

Reuters/Gaza/Ramallah

Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and West Bank gave jubilant welcomes yesterday to hundreds of prisoners freed by Israel in exchange for the release of Gilad Shalit, the soldier held for five years by the Gaza’s Islamist rulers, Hamas. 

Delirious crowds in the blockaded Gaza enclave hailed the thousand-to-one swap as a victory for Hamas over Israel. 


“We want a new Gilad,” they chanted, backing Hamas vows to capture more Israeli hostages to trade. 


Newly released prisoners, laughing and smiling, reached out of bus windows to shake hundreds of hands as their convoy—headed by Hamas leader Ismail Haniya sitting on the roof of a saloon car—crawled north to Gaza City along the 40km route from Egypt, where they were set free. 


“Negotiation based on power forces the enemy to pay the price,” said Hamas supreme leader Khalid Mishal in a speech broadcast from Cairo. “We defeated the Israelis.” 


Masked and heavily armed men of the Ezzedine Al Qassam militia provided an escort through thousands of cheering, flag-waving Palestinians lining both sides of the road. 


Bursts of celebratory gunfire rattled over Gaza rooftops into the evening, and cavalcades of klaxoning cars paraded in the streets. 


In the West Bank, split from the Gaza enclave by Israeli territory, thousands including supporters of Hamas and its rival Fatah packed the compound of President Mahmoud Abbas for an official welcome ceremony. 


“You will see the results of your struggle in the independent state with its capital Jerusalem,” said Abbas, leader of Fatah whose militants were driven out of Gaza by Hamas in a brief civil war in 2007. 


In a rare display of national unity, he and Hassan Youssef, a senior member of Hamas, spoke at the same podium. 


Of 477 prisoners set free, 27 were women. More than twice as many went to Gaza as to the West Bank, while 41 were flown from Cairo to exile in Turkey, Syria or Qatar. Under the deal, a further 550 will be liberated in the coming months. 


Some 5,000 Palestinians remain behind bars in Israel, most convicted of violent acts over years of armed resistance to Israel. But Hamas said the swap should give them hope of freedom as well. 


“I think the deal represents something great for the Palestinian people. Those who are still in jail are happy for those who have been released,” said Hamas deputy leader in exile Moussa Abu Marzouk. 


A spokesman for Hamas armed wing made the threat to capture more hostages explicit: “We say to the people of the enemy: Your leadership has brought upon you a new battle by refusing to grant freedom to the other prisoners.” 


Patriotic songs blared from loudspeakers as prisoners arrived to a heroes’ welcome at the Egyptian border crossing. Some kissed the soil of Gaza, some were lifted onto the shoulders of happy relatives. 


In Gaza City, a densely packed sprawl of low-rise concrete on the Mediterranean coast in sight of Israel, tens of thousands rallied before a stage decorated by a mural bearing portraits of top militants who were not released. 


“We will not forget you,” said the slogan. 


Yehya al-Sinwar, a top Hamas security strategist who spent 23 years in jail and is now tipped for a senior post in the Hamas leadership, was cheered by the rally and mobbed on stage. 


“I call on all the leaders of the Palestinian resistance factions and foremost the Ezzedine Al Qassam to shoulder the responsibility for liberating the remaining prisoners in the shortest time possible,” he said. 


“This must be turned immediately into a practical plan.” 


The pledge to free the rest of the prisoners was endorsed by supreme leader Mishal, who said happiness would not be complete until they were liberated. 


The web of electricity cables over Gaza’s main streets was festooned with the green flags of Hamas for the day. 


A wall painting lampooned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, depicting him with his face ground into the dirt by the boot of a gunman, signing a paper with words “Swap deal”. 


Hamas gunmen seized Shalit in a border raid in 2006. It has declared the prisoner exchange a vindication of its policy of armed resistance over the peace-seeking policy of Abbas. 


Israel is setting free 1,027 Palestinians in return for the liberty of Shalit. Some have spent 30 years and more in jail.

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