Monday, April 26, 2010

Hamas terrorist killed in Hebron-Hamas hopes cartoon will press Israel on prisoners

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People look at an installation with a cardboard cut-out of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in Tel Aviv during Israel's 62nd Independence Day April 20, 2010.

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Wanted Palestinian barricades himself, exchanges fire with IDF.

Wanted Hamas member Ali Ahmed Sweiti was killed on Monday morning in an exchange of fire with security forces in the village of Beit Awa, near Hebron.

Sweiti, who killed 20-year-old Border Policeman Yaniv Mashiach and wounded two others in an ambush in the southern Hebron Hills on Remembrance Day in 2004, had been on Israel's wanted list for six years.

He was killed in a joint operation by the IDF, Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) and Border Police.

Earlier that morning, IDF troops and a special police force had surrounded Sweiti's house in an attempt to coerce him to come out and turn himself in.

Sweiti, however, barricaded himself inside the house and shot at the troops outside. The troops shot back and used explosives to destroy a part of the house. Sweiti was killed in the exchange.

Following the incident, security forces demolished the house using bulldozers.



No casualties were reported among the troops.

Mashiach's family was notified of the terrorist's demise.

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Wielding art instead of arms, Hamas issued an animated video on Sunday aimed at pressuring Israel into trading hundreds of jailed Palestinians for Gilad Shalit, a soldier held captive in Gaza for almost four years.

The 3-minute cartoon shows Shalit's father, Noam, pacing a dreamscape of empty streets under billboards bearing the vows of Israeli leaders to recover his son. Grown stooped and bearded, he finally receives the soldier in a flag-draped coffin.

"There is still hope," reads a closing caption in Hebrew.

The cartoon, which first appeared on the website of the Islamist group's armed wing (www.alqassam.ps), was also distributed to Israeli television stations.

It marked a departure from Hamas's habitually fiery denunciations of the Jewish state.

Hamas said it wanted to reach "the wide Israeli public" and end the months-long stalemate in German- and Egyptian-mediated talks on a prisoner swap.

Israel has balked at demands from Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip and refuses to accept a permanent peace accord, that Palestinian militants go free as part of any deal.

"Our message is clear, and that is that Shalit's case must end with the release of our prisoners. Otherwise, he may end up like the missing Ron Arad," a Hamas source said.

He was referring to an Israeli airman widely presumed to have died in captivity after he bailed out over Lebanon in 1986 and was seized by guerrillas.

At least one Israeli station said it would not broadcast the Hamas cartoon, which was spurned by Noam Shalit as the latest Hamas bid to wage "psychological warfare."

After hinting that the soldier had been killed in Israel's Gaza offensive, Hamas released a first video of him as a goodwill gesture in October.

"The leaders of Hamas would do better if, instead of producing films and exhibits, they would attend to the real interests of Palestinian prisoners and the ordinary residents of Gaza," Shalit said in a statement, alluding to an embargo on the territory which Israel has linked to the soldier's plight.

Shalit's family and supporters are conducting their own pressure campaign on the Israeli government. This has included a television spot showing the soldier's face morphing into Arad's.












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