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RAMALLAH: A freed Palestinian man released in the prisoner exchange hugs a member of his family after stepping out of a bus in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah on February 8, 2025. — AFP photos
RAMALLAH: A freed Palestinian man released in the prisoner exchange hugs a member of his family after stepping out of a bus in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah on February 8, 2025. — AFP photos

Palestinians freed from Zionist jails, but not free to celebrate

RAMALLAH: Fakhri Barghouti grimaced in pain as an exultant crowd lifted him onto their shoulders next to his son Shadi, released from a Zionist entity jail on Saturday under a ceasefire deal that mostly ended 15 months of Zionist bombardment on Gaza. Though Barghouti, 71, shed tears of joy at seeing his son, he was also in physical pain.

The night before, Zionist entity forces stormed his family home in the occupied West Bank village of Kobar, warning him not to celebrate his son’s release and assaulting him, he said. “They entered after midnight, smashed everything, took me into a side room and beat me before leaving,” Barghouti told AFP. “I was taken to the hospital, where they found that I had a broken rib.”

Zionist entity forces conducted several raids on the family homes of prisoners about to be released, according to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club advocacy group. When asked by AFP about about Barghouti’s allegations and the raid in Kobar village, the military said it was “not aware of such an incident involving violence during the forces’ activity in the area overnight as claimed”.

Earlier the military had said in a statement it conveyed messages that celebrations and processions in support of the freed Palestinians are prohibited during their release. Shadi Barghouti, 47, had been imprisoned since 2003 and was serving a 27-year sentence for alleged weapons possession, membership in an “illegal organization” and complicity in murder, according to the entity’s justice ministry. In total, 183 Palestinians were released on Saturday in exchange for three Zionist entity citizens held in Gaza since October 2023.

A freed Palestinian man is embraced by a family member after stepping out of a bus in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.
A freed Palestinian man is embraced by a family member after stepping out of a bus in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.

‘Long live the resistance’

In Ramallah, a crowd of hundreds came to see the released prisoners, waving Palestinian flags, wearing keffiyeh scarves and clapping as the bus with the inmates approached. The police cordon struggled to keep the crowd away from the prisoners who stepped off the bus one by one, greeted by cheers and chants.

Further back, women and children standing on the steps of the building where the prisoners were to undergo health checks struggled to keep their composure, fighting back tears as they caught glimpses of their loved ones. At the front, a group of young men called to their friend as they recognized him.

Shadi Barghouti, at first protected from the crowd by a wall of relatives, eventually began to talk to the crowd and reporters while hoisted on his relatives’ shoulders. “We always dreamed that this would happen, that one day the prison director would be forced to open the gates,” he said, still in a grey prison tracksuit. “Long live the resistance!” he shouted as he shook hands with those around him.

His father, Fakhri Barghouti, was himself released in a similar prisoner exchange, when in 2011 the Zionist entity freed 1,027 Palestinians in exchange for the return of its soldier Gilad Shalit. Fakhri Barghouti had been serving a life sentence for participating in the killing of a Zionist entity soldier, among other charges. The Zionist entity illegally occupies the West Bank.

One prisoner was helped off the bus in the arms of a medic while another held his oxygen bottle. Abdullah Al-Zaghari, head of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, said that seven of the freed prisoners were transferred to hospital.

“All the prisoners who were released today are in need of medical care, treatment and examinations as a result of the brutality they were subjected to during the past months,” he added.

In the crowd, Abbas Al-Sharbati was waiting with relatives for his cousin Yasser Al-Sharbati’s release. Yasser, 53, was arrested in 2003 and is set to meet his grown-up children who were babies at the time of his arrest, including his 23-year-old daughter who is now married. Like most freed prisoners’ relatives, Yasser’s family was also told not to celebrate his return.

“The occupation warned us not to display any signs of celebration when welcoming the prisoner,” Abbas Al-Sharbati said. “We have informed all our family members, children, and young men that we will avoid any festivities to ensure everyone’s safety. We don’t want any problems for Yasser or for us.” Earlier, Zionist entity soldiers had distributed fliers in the villages of the released prisoners, warning in Arabic that “We will visit you at every celebration of the release of prisoners, whatever it may be. You have been warned”. — AFP

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