Eighty year-old doyen of Palestinian prisoners to be freed
By Hilmi Mousa
Sheikh Sami Younis, aged 80, who has spent 29 years in prison. |
The Israel-Hamas prisoner exchange deal has forced the government of Benjamin Netanyahu to cross a number of red lines, of which one of great importance is the freeing of Palestinian prisoners who are citizens of the Zionist state. Successive Israeli governments have sought to include Palestinians from occupied East Jerusalem holding blue Israeli identity cards within the category identified as “citizens of the state” and whose future has been off the agenda, prisoners included. That has now changed as among those that Israel is now forced to release is the doyen of the Palestinian prisoners, Sheikh Sami Younis, aged 80, who has spent 29 years in prison.
The prisoner exchange deal has provoked mixed reactions in Israel,
with the media discussing the price that the government of Israel has
agreed to pay for the release of captive soldier Gilad Shalit, although a
survey conducted by Israeli television’s Channel Ten indicates that
two-thirds of Israelis support the prisoner exchange. Haaretz summarised
this price in the following way: “After [we] published the list of the
prisoners who Israel would release as part of the exchange deal it has
become clear… from the preliminary viewing that the courts convicted 477
in the first phase with 883 years of life accumulative sentences, and
4,940 years in prison.” The newspaper pointed out that 275 of those to
be released were in the middle range of terms, with an average of 3.2
life sentences, and that the remaining 198 were serving an average of
24.9 years per person.
Israel has always sought to exclude its Palestinian citizens from any
exchange deal in order to emphasise their separation from the
Palestinian people in the occupied territories and diaspora, thus
creating a sense of isolation. The agreement with the Popular
Front/General Command in 1985 (known as the Jenin Operation) was the
first to force Israel to release freedom fighters from amongst its own
citizens. Now it has been announced that among those to be released in
the latest exchange deal will be eight “Arab-Israelis”, including three
women, in addition to 14 prisoners from occupied East Jerusalem and one
detainee from the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. There are still 132
political prisoners in Israel who are Palestinian citizens of the
Zionist state.
Sheikh Sami Younis is from ‘Ar’ara village in Wadi Ara. An Israeli
court sentenced him in absentia to life imprisonment for the murder of
an Israeli soldier in 1980; he was captured in 1983 at the age of 51
years and has now spent 29 years in prison. Two other members of his
family were also convicted along with Sheikh Sami and also received life
sentences.
Sami Younis was working as a taxi driver at the time of his arrest.
Given his old age and the length of time that he has spent in prison it
is hard for his wife and family to believe that he will soon be among
them again. Halima, his wife, is also 80 years old and told Israel’s
Maariv newspaper that she will answer journalists’ questions “but I
still can’t believe that my husband will be released”. They have been
saying that he will be released for years, she added, but he always
stayed in prison.
This was echoed by Sami’s grandson, Abdur Rahman , who is 23 years
old and was born whilst his grandfather was in prison: “Ever since I was
young I have heard that he would be released, but in the end he
remained a prisoner; this makes it hard to believe that it will happen
this time.” Abdur Rahman heard the news of the deal through the media,
“but it never crossed my mind that my grandfather would be among those
to be freed”.
Speaking about her husband, Halima said, “He entered prison as a father to all, and he helped the detainees to accept their situation. Everyone loved him. Indeed the relatives whose sons were imprisoned knew him from their visits and they love him; they say that he is a good person and he helped their sons in prison.”
Speaking about her husband, Halima said, “He entered prison as a father to all, and he helped the detainees to accept their situation. Everyone loved him. Indeed the relatives whose sons were imprisoned knew him from their visits and they love him; they say that he is a good person and he helped their sons in prison.”
Among those from Israel to be released in the first phase of the deal
is Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine member Muhklis Barghal
and his comrade Muhammad Zayadah, both from the City of Lod. An Israeli
court convicted them for throwing a bomb which didn’t explode in Tel
Aviv in 1986; they were sentenced to life. The list of prisoners from
the “1948 territories” also includes Ali Umaraiyah from the village of
Ibti; he was convicted in 1988 after throwing a bomb in Haifa and was
also sentenced to life.
Israel and Hamas are finalising the preparations for what has been
described as an unprecedented exchange of prisoners. The two sides
released simultaneously the list of Palestinian prisoners to be freed,
among whom are 27 women. Israel will also release a further 550
Palestinian prisoners in two months’ time according to the deal agreed
last Tuesday following Egyptian mediation.
One of the women prisoners, Naila Barghuthi, has been in jail since
1978. The first woman in the military wing of Hamas, Ahlam al-Tamimi,
who was sentenced to 16 life sentences for her role in a bombing in
occupied Jerusalem, will also be freed.
Israeli negotiator David Midan followed the preparations in Cairo and
informed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on his return to Israel on
Monday. Netanyahu was bullish and said in a statement, “The mission will
be complete when Gilad Shalit returns alive and in good health to his
family.” According to Amos Gilad, a senior official in the Ministry of
Defence, “The agreement is final and there will be no amendment.” This
was a reference to eight female Palestinian prisoners whose names are
not on the list for release. Everything is expected to go to plan, added
the Director of the National Defence Council, Yakoc Amidror, “unless
the High Court intervenes or some party in Gaza carries out provocative
acts”.
The release of the names of the prisoners to be released cleared the
way for individuals and organisations to appeal to the Israeli High
Court; they were given 48 hours to do so. Several objections have been
raised since Friday. However, the court has never been called upon to
review appeals against the exchanges agreed by the government in the
past. The Majur Association, which is against the deal, said that the
release of the prisoners will lead to more violence and kidnap attempts;
the court will look into the association’s appeal.
Once the release takes place, only 131 of the ex-prisoners will be
allowed to return to their homes in the occupied West Bank. There will
other restrictions on movement for the rest; 203 will be expelled from
the West Bank, with 145 going to the Gaza Strip and 40 being sent to
countries not yet named. Eighteen will be obliged to remain in Gaza for
at least three years.
Israel’s Army Radio announced that preparations for the release have
begun, with the male prisoners being gathered together in Kitsion
Prison; the women have been taken to Hasharon Prison north of Tel Aviv.
Medical and identity checks will be made.
The radio report said that Shalit, 25, who has dual Israeli-French
nationality and has been in captivity since June 2006, will be taken
from Gaza to Egypt before his return to Israel by helicopter. He will be
taken to an airbase in Tel Nov in southern Israel to meet his parents,
Netanyahu, the Minister of Defence Ehud Barak and the head of the armed
forces, General Benny Gantz. Hamas has prepared a ceremony to receive
almost 300 of its heroes in Gaza; the streets have already been
decorated with Palestinian flags.
The author is a Palestinian writer. This article was
translated from the Arabic which appeared in the Lebanese newspaper As
Safir, 17 October 2011
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