Thursday, March 16, 2006

Terrorists in Jericho served their Time in Style

The Times reports:
Cigars, birds, flowers and servants — life inside Jericho jail
by Stephen Farrell
Palestinian terrorist suspects are said to have served their time in style before the bulldozers arrived

Britain made a robust defence yesterday of its decision to pull out of Jericho prison before an Israeli raid, citing fears that its monitors would be kidnapped, and painting a portrait of a jail controlled by inmates living in luxury.

Palestinian guards confirmed yesterday that Ahmed Saadat, a leading militant captured by Israeli troops in the raid, kept birds and flowers in his quarters. Western officials said that Saadat in effect used other prisoners as “domestic staff”.

An official told The Times that Fuad Shobaki, the alleged moneyman behind a 2002 weapons shipment intercepted by Israel, smoked up to five Cuban cigars a day and was known as “The Brigadier” to inmates and staff. He was also seized.

“Saadat and Shobaki were very much in charge,” one prison source said. “These guys were running the prison. They did what they wanted, when they wanted.” (…)

Mark Regev, an Israeli government spokesman, said that Israel had asked for the monitors to remain. “There was an Israeli request last week to the British and Americans that the monitors stay on. We wanted the status quo to be maintained.”

But British sources spoke of a “credible and specific” warning this year that the PFLP had planned to free its prisoners, “possibly taking the monitors hostage”. They also cited warnings last year that militant groups planned to kidnap monitors. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office has released a letter to Mr Abbas from John Jenkins, the British Consul-General, and his American counterpart giving final warning that the monitoring would end unless the Palestinian Authority ensured “full compliance” with the monitoring agreements and improved the security of the US and British personnel.

It followed reports by monitors that the six prisoners had access to computers, mobile phones and were not “locked down” at night. The monitors said that they were forbidden to search cells and that mobile phone jammers were switched off. (…)

Yesterday UN offices across the West Bank and Gaza remained closed as a precaution after the mayhem on Tuesday when offices were attacked and international staff kidnapped. But Sami Musallam, the Palestinian governor of Jericho and the Jordan Valley, dismissed concerns over the monitors’ safety as “bullshit”.

He said that in four years the six inmates had not left jail except to go to the mosque, dentist and hospital. He added that Shobaki was not allowed visits from his wife. “We have always depended on the British and Americans to be the guarantors of agreements between us and the Israelis,” he said. “We put a lot of trust in them, and now they have lost our confidence.”
And the terrorists have lost their paradise - trading it for a real jail.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home