Arab News
Compiled by Daily Star staff
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Israel and Lebanon were making final preparations on Monday for a high-profile prisoner swap, with Hizbullah ready to celebrate a major victory over its Israeli foes. Israel is to free five Lebanese prisoners on Wednesday in exchange for two soldiers captured by Hizbullah in a deadly cross-border raid two years ago that caused the Zionist state to launch a devastating war against Lebanon. It is also set to transfer to Lebanon the bodies of almost 200 Palestinian and Lebanese fighters, some from Hizbullah, as well as release a number of Palestinians under the swap mediated by a UN-appointed German diplomat. Hizbullah plans a hero's welcome for its fighters, with celebratory banners and flags lining the main highway from the Israeli border at Naqoura to the southern port city of Sidon.
"We are a people who will not abandon our detainees in prison," reads one banner, taken from a pledge by Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. "Thanks to the weapons of the resistance, we will free our prisoners," says another.
The swap, which still requires final approval from the Israeli Cabinet, is expected to take place with Red Cross supervision at around 0600 GMT at the Naqoura crossing point.
The Lebanese daily As-Safir, considered close to the opposition, said: "In a few days, spring will come back ... changing the cycle of the seasons." Al-Akhbar, another pro-opposition daily, said the released prisoners were to appear in public in combat gear.
In contrast to Hizbullah's celebrations, the mood in Israel ahead of the swap is somber, reflecting the government's belief that the two captured servicemen - Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev - are dead.
An Israeli official said the exchange will take place after military authorities identify Regev and Goldwasser, either dead or alive. Israeli ministers are expected to give final approval to the deal on Tuesday after being briefed by security officials on a Hizbullah report on the fate of Israeli airman Ron Arad, who went missing after his plane was shot down over Lebanon in 1986 during the Civil War.
In its report, Hizbullah said Arad had died, but Israel remains skeptical.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday that the report was "absolutely unsatisfactory," an Olmert aide said. It was not immediately clear whether the as-sessment would influence the Israeli Cabinet's decision.
"The prime minister made clear to the secretary general that he considers the report to be absolutely unsatisfactory," the Olmert aide told reporters at the end of the prime minister's visit to Paris. Asked whether Israel was happy enough with the report to push forward with the prisoner swap, the aide said: "I don't know. We are working on clarifications."
On Monday, Israel transferred four Lebanese detainees - Khaled Zidan, Maher Kurani, Mohammed Sarur and Hussein Suleiman - to another prison where they joined Samir Kontar, who is serving multiple life sentences for conducting a deadly raid in northern Israel in 1979.
A spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross said the ICRC was preparing to oversee the prisoner exchange.
Lebanon is planning a welcome ceremony in Naqoura, and President Michel Sleiman, Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Fouad Siniora will later greet the prisoners at Beirut's airport. Hizbullah is staging its own ceremony in its stronghold in the southern suburbs of Beirut, where a speech by Nasrallah is to be broadcast on a giant television screen.
In June, Hizbullah held celebrations when Israel freed and then deported to Lebanon a convicted Hizbullah spy, Nessim Nisr, who had served six years in prison. At the time, the group handed over the remains of Israeli soldiers in what was seen as a confidence-building measure. - AFP, Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment