GAZA
CITY, July 14 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The Palestinians
sought Monday, July 14, to break an impasse with Israel over the
release of prisoners through international interference.
"The
problem has reached stalemate and needs international intervention to
force Israel to change its stance," Hisham Abdelrazeq, minister
for prisoners affairs, said during a sit-in in support of the
prisoners at the International Committee of the Red Cross headquarters
in Gaza.
"We
have rejected Israel's stance and we have called on the Quartet to
intervene," the minister added, referring to the European Union,
Russia, United Nations and United States, which together drew up the
international peace plan known as the roadmap.
"The
bottom line of the prisoners issue is to set free all prisoners,"
he said, adding that the decisions of release should be carried out by
a joint Palestinian-Israeli committee, rather than by unilateral
decisions on the Israeli part.
Israel
decided last week to release just 350 of the estimated 6,000
Palestinians held in its jails, but not a single member of the
resistance groups Hamas or Islamic Jihad was among them.
The
prisoners issue has proved to be the biggest obstacle to progress in
the roadmap to date and lies at the heart of a division between
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and his Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas.
Abdelrazeq
pointed out that the joint Palestinian Israeli committee has not
convened so far, due to the intransigence of the Israeli side, adding
that Israel should withdraw its stance of releasing some prisoners
alone.
"Prison
strikes and sit-ins and protests supporting prisoners are nothing but
a refutation," he said, calling upon mass media and Arab
communities in foreign countries to work for activating the issue of
prisoners through sit-ins and submitting memos to pressure Israel.
A
Weekly Sit-in
The
weekly sit-in of prisoners' families held Monday, July 14 witnessed
wider participation, following the declaration by Palestinian factions
in late June 2003 of suspending their military operations on condition
that all prisoners in Israeli jails be released indiscriminately.
"We
want the release of all prisoners as soon as practicable, and we hope
that God helps us to achieve this objective in light of truce
declaration," Seham Shaat, aunt of Hesham Shaat, a detainee in
Nafha prison for 16 years, told IslamOnline.net correspondent while
covering the sit-in events.
Seham
expressed her complete refusal of Israeli discrimination policy among
prisoners, elaborating, "We seek indiscriminate release of all
prisoners."
"My
son, Ramy, is a prisoner in Israeli Hadareem jail. He has not been
tried so far. Occupation forces accuse him of some charges, including
setting fire and moving packages," Umm Ramzy Salem, carrying her
son's picture, said, expressing optimism that all prisoners would be
released.
She
called upon all resistance factions to give the issue of prisoners a
priority and expressed her satisfaction that the truce is conditioned
upon the release of prisoners. She also called the Palestinians to
support those prisoners.
Martyr
Mahmoud Al-Khawaga, a leader of the Islamic Jihad movement, pointed
out that her son Yasser has been in Israeli jails for 10 years due to
his affiliation to the Islamic Jihad movement.
"I
am not allowed to visit him. I haven't seen him for five years,"
she said, hailing the stance of the government and Palestinian
factions that insist on the release of all prisoners.