Marwan Barghouti: Palestine's 'Nelson Mandela' Israel refuses to free
Israel views Barghouti as a terrorist leader. He is serving multiple life sentences after being convicted in 2004 in connection with attacks in Israel that killed five people.
PTI
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Some Palestinians view him as their own Nelson Mandela. (Wikimedia Commons)
Ramallah, 11 Oct
The most popular and potentially unifying Palestinian leader
— Marwan Barghouti — is not among the prisoners Israel intends to free in
exchange for hostages held by Hamas under the new Gaza ceasefire deal.
Israel has also rejected freeing other high-profile
prisoners whose release Hamas has long sought, though it was not immediately
clear if a list of around 250 prisoners issued Friday on the Israeli
government's official website was final.
Senior Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk told the Al Jazeera
TV network that the group insists on the release of Barghouti and otherhigh-profile figures and that it was in discussions with mediators.
Israel views Barghouti as a terrorist leader. He is serving
multiple life sentences after being convicted in 2004 in connection with
attacks in Israel that killed five people.
But some experts say Israel fears Barghouti for another
reason: An advocate of a two-state solution even as he backed armed resistance
to occupation, Barghouti could be a powerful rallying figure for Palestinians.
Some Palestinians view him as their own Nelson Mandela, the South African
anti-apartheid activist who became his country's first Black president.
With the ceasefire and Israeli troop pullback in Gaza that
came into effect Friday, Hamas is to release about 20 living Israeli hostages
by Monday. Israel is to free some 250 Palestinians serving prison sentences, as
well as around 1,700 people seized from Gaza the past two years and held
without charge.
The releases have powerful resonance on both sides. Israelis
see the prisoners as terrorists, some of them involved in suicide bombings.
Many Palestinians view the thousands held by Israel as political prisoners or
freedom fighters resisting decades of military occupation.
Many to be released were jailed 2 decades ago
Most of those on the Israeli prisoner list are members of
Hamas and the Fatah faction arrested in the 2000s. Many of them were convicted
of involvement in shootings, bombings or other attacks that killed or attempted
to kill Israeli civilians, settlers and soldiers. After their release, more
than half will be sent to Gaza or into exile outside the Palestinian
territories, according to the list.
The 2000s saw the eruption of the Second Intifada, a
Palestinian uprising fuelled by anger over continued occupation despite years
of peace talks. The uprising turned bloody, with Palestinian armed groups
carrying out attacks that killed hundreds of Israelis, and the Israeli military
killing several thousand Palestinians.
One prisoner who will be freed is Iyad Abu al-Rub, an
Islamic Jihad commander convicted of orchestrating suicide bombings in Israel
from 2003-2005 that killed 13 people.
The oldest and longest imprisoned to be released is
64-year-old Samir Abu Naama, a Fatah member who was arrested from the West Bank
in 1986 and convicted on charges of planting explosives. The youngest is
Mohammed Abu Qatish, who was 16 when he was arrested in 2022 and convicted of
an attempted stabbing.
Hamas has long sought Barghouti's freedom
Hamas leaders have in the past demanded that Israel release
Barghouti, a leader of the militant group's main political rival, Fatah, as
part of any deal to end the fighting in Gaza. But Israel has refused in
previous exchanges.
Israel fears history could repeat itself after it released
senior Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in a 2011 exchange. The long-serving prisoner
was one of the main architects of the 7 October 2023, attack that ignited thelatest war in Gaza, and he went on to lead the militant group before being
killed by Israeli forces last year.
One of the few consensus figures in Palestinian politics,
Barghouti, 66, is widely seen as a potential successor to President Mahmoud
Abbas, the aging and unpopular leader of the internationally recognised Palestinian
Authority that runs pockets of the West Bank. Polls consistently show Barghouti
is the most popular Palestinian leader.
Barghouti was born in the West Bank village of Kobar in
1959. While studying history and politics at Bir Zeit University, he helped
spearhead student protests against the Israeli occupation. He emerged as an
organiser in the first Palestinian uprising, which erupted in December 1987.
Israel eventually deported him to Jordan. He returned to the
West Bank in the 1990s as part of interim peace agreements that created the
Palestinian Authority and were meant to pave the way for a state.
After the Second Intifada broke out, Israel accused
Barghouti – then head of Fatah in the West Bank -- of being the leader of the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a loose collection of Fatah-linked armed groups that
carried out attacks on Israelis.
Barghouti never commented on his links to the Brigades.
While he expressed hopes for a Palestinian state and Israel side by side in
peace, he said Palestinians had a right to fight back in the face of growing
Israeli settlements and the military's violence against Palestinians.
“I am not a terrorist, but neither am I a pacifist,” he
wrote in a 2002 editorial in The Washington Post.
Soon after, he was arrested by Israel. At trial he opted not
to defend himself because he didn't recognise the court's authority. He was
convicted of murder for involvement in several Brigades' attacks and given five
life sentences, while acquitted over other attacks.
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