RAMALLAH (Palestinian Territories), May 12: Palestinian officials said on Saturday they expected a breakthrough soon on efforts to end a mass hunger strike by Palestinian prisoners in Israel, some of them close to death.
But Amin Shoman, head of a monitoring group of Palestinian political factions, said that if Israel gave a negative response, prisoners would intensify their fast and break off further talks with prison authorities.
“The prisoners will stop taking vitamins and water and stop negotiations with the Israel Prisons Service if they get a negative answer,” he said.
Shoman, and an official of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, which tracks the well-being of Palestinians in Israeli jails, said they expected Israel to announce “within hours” its decision on demands by what Israel says are currently 1,550 hunger strikers.
They are protesting against solitary confinement, detention without charge and restrictions on family visits, education and various privileges.
He said the Israeli Prisons Service was expected to facilitate visits to prisoners by relatives from Gaza, who are not normally allowed to leave the coastal strip and travel through Israeli-held territory, to resume prisoner studies and to make concessions on solitary confinement.
He said two prisoners were moved from isolation cells on Friday, leaving 17, whose transfer is still a main Palestinian demand.
Prisons service spokeswoman Sivan Weizman said it had been decided to move two prisoners from solitary confinement but could not say on Saturday if the decision had been implemented yet.
Gaza’s Hamas prime minister said intervention by Egypt had brought the issue closer to a solution.
“There was progress in talks between Egypt and Israel,” Ismail Haniya said in a statement. “This is an important development concerning the demands of the prisoners.”
Egypt helped broker a deal in which Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit was freed in October after more than five years of being held by Gaza militants in exchange for the release of 1,027 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli prisons.—AFP






























