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Hamas says members going to Cairo for prisoners talks
29 Oct 2006 18:40:37 GMT
Source: Reuters
•  Israeli-Palestinian conflict

(Releads with Meshaal not going, previous CAIRO)

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis

DAMASCUS, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Senior Hamas members, excluding the movement's leader Khaled Meshaal, will visit Cairo in the next few days to discuss a prisoner exchange deal with Israel brokered by Egypt, a Hamas official said on Sunday.

Hamas wants the deal to include the release of 1,000 named Palestinian prisoners in exchange for an Israeli soldier captured in a raid near Gaza in June involving Hamas's military wing, Izzat al-Rishq told Reuters.

"This visit is intended to maintain contacts with the brothers in Egypt, who are doing their best to mediate a deal and talk with the Israeli side," said Rishq, who is a member of the Islamic group's politburo.

"The elderly, women and children must be set free also," Rishq said.

A senior Egyptian official had said earlier on Sunday that Meshaal would be part of the Hamas delegation.

The official, who asked not to be named, said Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman had presented Meshaal with the latest version for a prisoners' exchange deal earlier this month during his visit to Damascus, where Meshaal lives.

Asked what was new in the latest Egyptian proposal, the official said: "It's only about the number of (Palestinian) prisoners being released."

Soon after the capture of Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalit on June 25, Egypt tried to arrange an exchange with Hamas, insisting that there could be no time lag between the release of the soldier and that of the Palestinians.

Rishq said Hamas was now willing to show flexibility on the timing of any proposed exchange.

"We still don't trust the Israelis. A number of the Palestinian prisoners must be released simultaneously with the Israeli soldier. We could accept an arrangement whereby the rest would be freed later," he said.

One of three Palestinian groups holding the Israeli soldier in the Gaza Strip said on Saturday it expected a solution to the crisis within days based on an Egyptian proposal, though it said any deal still depended on Israel.

Rishq, however, cautioned against expecting a deal any time soon. "I would not try to expect anything," he said.

Rishq said the Hamas delegation would discuss with Egyptian officials efforts to form a new Palestinian government that would include Hamas and President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction.

Talks on a coalition government collapsed because the two rivals could not agree on terms that might have led to an easing of Western sanctions, designed to push Hamas to recognise Israel, renounce armed struggle and accept past accords.

Hamas says the Palestinians would not gain anything by compromising without similar moves from Israel.

European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said on Sunday he hoped for news on a government of Palestinian technocrats within days. (Additional reporting By Alaa Shahine)


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