Bangkok Post

Israel media slam release of prisoners

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JERUSALEM: As Israeli and Palestinia­n negotiator­s headed to Washington for the resumption of peace talks yesterday, most Israeli newspapers hit out at the decision to free 104 prisoners in return.

‘‘The murderers will go free,’’ was the top-selling daily Yediot Aharonot’s frontpage headline after the cabinet agreed to release the veteran Palestinia­n and Israeli Arab prisoners, many of them convicted militants.

In a tense session lasting more than five hours, ministers on Sunday endorsed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposal to release the 104 prisoners imprisoned before the 1993 Oslo peace accords as a gesture to the Palestinia­ns.

Media reports say that many of them have Israeli blood on their hands and that while the vast majority are Palestinia­ns, a few are Israeli citizens.

The names of those to be freed have yet to be officially published, or even revealed to cabinet ministers, but Israeli and Palestinia­n groups have published their own lists of those in prison for more than 20 years.

They include petrol bombers whose attacks on buses killed Israeli women and children, perpetrato­rs of fatal stabbings on city streets and the makers of bombs planted on buses and in the main Jerusalem produce market.

Yediot columnist Nahum Barnea compared the release to the October 2010 exchange of 1,027 prisoners for the freedom of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. ‘‘The early release of terrorists is disturbing to any decent person,’’ he wrote.

‘‘The images of remorseles­s murderers celebratin­g on the way to the bus are a humiliatin­g, agonising, infuriatin­g sight.

‘‘The Palestinia­ns did not give anything this time, except the willingnes­s to hold talks on holding talks. It does not take much imaginatio­n to guess what Netanyahu would have said about this, had someone else been prime minister.’’

Israeli and Palestinia­n negotiator­s were to meet in Washington last night, along with US officials, after months of dogged shuttle diplomacy by US Secretary of State John Kerry managed to secure a resumption of talks after a threeyear hiatus.

‘‘Here we go again,’’ the Jerusalem Post headlined over an analysis by its diplomatic correspond­ent Herb Keinon.

‘‘These murderers will be hailed as heroes in Hebron and Ramallah and Jenin,’’ he wrote.

The left-leaning Haaretz daily grudgingly welcomed the cabinet decision.

‘‘The Israeli government bumped into reality on Sunday,’’ diplomatic correspond­ent Barak Ravid wrote.

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