Israeli soldier, Palestinians free in captive swap

GAZA/JERUSALEM  (Reuters) – Israeli soldier Gilad  Shalit and hundreds of Palestinians crossed Israel’s borders in  opposite directions today as a thousand-for-one prisoner  exchange brought joy to families but did little to ease decades  of conflict.
Sergeant Shalit, 25, returned home to a national outpouring  of emotion in Israel after five years in captivity in the Gaza  Strip, while the first few hundred of over a thousand  Palestinians being freed in stages from Israeli jails were  greeted with kisses and flags in Gaza and the West Bank.
“I missed my family,” a gaunt Shalit, his breathing laboured  at times, said in an interview with Egyptian TV conducted before  he was transferred to Israel and broadcast after he went free.
“I hope this deal will promote peace between Israel and the  Palestinians,” he said.
Shalit, 25, was taken across the frontier from the Gaza  Strip into Egypt’s Sinai peninsula and driven to Israel’s  Vineyard of Peace border crossing, where a helicopter awaited to  fly him to an Israeli air base for a reunion with his parents.
Simultaneously Israel freed 477 Palestinian prisoners, most  of them to the Gaza Strip, where Hamas leaders greeted former  prisoners piling off buses bearing Red Cross insignia.
Palestinians, awaiting the release of prisoners at a West  Bank checkpoint, hurled rocks at Israeli soldiers, who responded  with tear gas, after the military announced to the crowd over a  loudspeaker that the group had been taken to another crossing.
In the television interview, Shalit said he found out a week  ago that he was to be released. The soldier, who had not been  seen since a 2009 video, said he had feared he would be held  “for many more years”.
Political commentators said it appeared unlikely the  prisoner exchange agreed by the two bitter enemies would have  any immediate impact on Israeli-Palestinian negotiations that  broke down last year.
The mood in Israel was one of elation, with “welcome home”  signs on street corners and morning commuters watching live  broadcasts of the swap on cellular telephones.
Shalit has been popularly portrayed as “everyone’s son” and  opinion polls showed that an overwhelming majority of Israeli  backed the thousand-for-one deal, although many of the prisoners  going free were convicted of deadly attacks.
For Palestinians, it was a time to celebrate what Hamas  hailed as a victory, and a heroes’ welcome awaited the released  prisoners. Palestinians see brethren jailed by Israel as  prisoners of war in a struggle for statehood.
“This is the greatest joy for the Palestinian people,” said  Azzia al-Qawasmeh, who waited at a West Bank checkpoint for her  son Amer, whom she said had been in prison for 24 years.
The deal received a green light from Israel’s Supreme Court  late on Monday after it rejected petitions from the public to  prevent the mass release of prisoners, many serving life  sentences imposed by Israeli courts for deadly attacks.
Shalit was abducted in June 2006 by militants who tunnelled  into Israel from the Gaza Strip and surprised his tank crew,  killing two of his comrades. He was whisked back into Gaza and  has since been held incommunicado.
Israel, which withdrew troops and settlers from Gaza in  2005, tightened its blockade of the small coastal enclave after  Shalit’s disappearance.