Israel yesterday issued a list of 477 Palestinian prisoners to be released as part of the deal to secure Gilad Shalit’s freedom, among them bombers, kidnappers and killers.

Hundreds of those on the list are serving life terms after being convicted of involvement in attacks, including the 2001 bombing of a Tel Aviv nightclub that killed 21 people and the so-called Passover bombing of a hotel in the coastal town of Netanya where 29 people died a year later.

Also among those to be freed are members of Hamas’s armed wing convicted of kidnapping and killing Israeli soldiers. Under the agreement signed last Tuesday, Israel is to free a total of 1,027 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the release of the 25-year-old soldier, who has been in captivity in Gaza for more than five years.

If the deal goes through, it will be the largest number of Palestinian prisoners ever freed by the Jewish state to secure the release of just one person. It will also be the first time in 26 years that a captured soldier has been returned to Israel alive.

The list of 450 Palestinian men and 27 women was released early yesterday on the website of the Israeli Prisons Service, in a move which gives the public 48 hours to lodge any legal appeals against the names.

The remaining 550 prisoners are to be freed within two months. The prisons service said 131 inmates would return to their homes in Gaza and 55 to homes in the West Bank. Another 55 would be permitted to return to their families in the West Bank but with certain restrictions.

Six Arab-Israelis will also be sent home.

But 203 prisoners from the West Bank were to be exiled, with 145 to be transferred to Gaza and 40 to be sent abroad. Another 18 were to be sent to Gaza for three years before being allowed to return to the West Bank.

Israeli President Shimon Peres received the files of the prisoners on Saturday evening to begin working on their official pardons, which must be signed before the exchange expected tomorrow.

Yesterday night, Gilad’s mother Aviva Shalit appealed to the bereaved families filing petitions against the deal, in her first address to the media since the government approved the deal last week.

Speaking from her home in Mitzpe Hila, the northern Israeli village where Gilad is to spend his first night after his release tomorrow, Aviva said her family understood the pain of the bereaved families, but stressed that “any delay, any change, any postponement in the deal could risk Gilad’s life.”

Meanwhile, the High Court yesterday gave Noam Shalit, father of Gilad, permission to join the state and represent his family as a respondent in the appeals against the deal, filed by bereaved families and organisations representing terror victims.

The mechanics of the exchange were still being hammered out. Israel’s chief negotiator David Meidan returned home from final talks in Cairo yesterday in the afternoon and briefed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but no details were made public.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.