Israel approves release of second batch of Palestinian prisoners


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JERUSALEM // Israel on Sunday approved the release of 26 Palestinian prisoners, the second batch to be freed since August under the terms of renewed US-brokered peace talks.

“The release of 26 prisoners has been validated this evening,” the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said.

It said all the prisoners had committed their offences before the signing of the 1993 Oslo accords and had served from 19 to 28 years in prison, with 21 hailing from the West Bank and the remainder from the Gaza Strip.

A list of the prisoners was to be posted on the website of the Israeli prison authority late on Sunday or early Monday after families of Israelis killed in the attacks blamed on the prisoners had been notified, the prime minister’s office said.

“The release of the prisoners will take place at least 48 hours after the publication of the list,” it said.

Mr Netanyahu had said he would free 104 Palestinians in stages following the start of negotiations on July 30, and released the first group of 26 prisoners in August.

An Israeli official said last week that the release of prisoners was linked to continued construction of Jewish settlements in the occupied territories in the West Bank, according to “understandings” reached with the Palestinians.

But the Palestinians adamantly denied that there was any connection between the two issues and have repeatedly condemned the continuing construction of settlements, saying it threatened the peace talks.

In August, Israel approved the construction of more than 2,000 settlement units in east Jerusalem and the West Bank just days before a round of bilateral talks, leading the Palestinians to warn the fledgling process was in danger of collapse.

Direct peace talks aimed at resolving the decades-old conflict resumed in July after a hiatus of nearly three years.

The talks had last broken down in 2010 over Mr Netanyahu’s refusal to extend a moratorium on construction of new settler housing in the West Bank and predominantly Arab east Jerusalem.

Few details have emerged about the latest talks, with both sides having adhered to a US-imposed media blackout on the substance of their discussions.

* Agence France-Presse