Egypt Frees Israeli Spy after Eight Years
06/12/2004| IslamWeb
Egypt sent a convicted Israeli spy home after eight years in jail and Israel released six Egyptian infiltrators yesterday in a sign that relations strained by the Palestinian uprising were warming.
Both cases had elements of the bizarre. Azzam Azzam, an Israeli Arab textile worker, was alleged to have passed messages in women's underwear using invisible ink. Israel said the Egyptians detained in August had planned to hijack a tank.
Israel said it would consider freeing some Palestinian prisoners, a move that could strengthen moderate Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in his bid to replace the late Yasser Arafat as president in a January 9 election.
Shouting "I am born again", Azzam, a member of the Druze sect, crossed into Israel from Egypt's Sinai peninsula hours after the six Egyptian students were returned home.
Azzam was detained in 1996 in Egypt, where he worked in an Israeli-Egyptian textile venture, and sentenced a year later to a 15-year term after being found guilty of spying for Israeli intelligence.
Azzam and Israel denied the charges, which included allegations that he had used the invisible ink to communicate with a purported Egyptian co-conspirator.
Sharon's office called Azzam's release a "personal gesture" by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, reciprocated by Israel's agreement to free the infiltrators.
Egypt's state news agency Mena said Azzam had been freed for health reasons.
Sharon said that he had thanked Mubarak in a telephone conversation in which they discussed improving relations and expanding co-operation.
Israel's Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced that the countries would sign a free trade deal on December 14 that he said could foreshadow "far reaching changes in the Middle East".
The dual release, which scored points at home for Sharon as he battles to put together a new governing coalition, also appeared to hold out an olive branch to the Palestinians.
"As a gesture to Mubarak, Sharon instructed the security authorities to examine the possibility of shortening the jail terms of Palestinian prisoners," the Israeli prime minister's office said.
Mena said Israel had already agreed to free some Palestinian prisoners, and that Sharon had agreed to let several Palestinian security men go to Egypt for training, a move that could help his plan to pull soldiers and settlers out of Gaza next year.
Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz told the cabinet that Israel would pursue a plan to gradually ease procedures for issuing travel permits to Palestinians, to help Palestinian leaders create a "new reality" after Arafat.
The Azzam case had cast a deep shadow over what Israelis call a "cold peace" with Egypt, which in 1979 became the first Arab country to sign a peace treaty with the Jewish state.
The six Egyptian students, aged between 21 and 25, had been arrested near the desert border for entering Israel illegally armed with an airgun and 14 knives.
Prosecutors said they planned to hijack a tank, kill its crew and then rob a bank to finance more attacks.
But some of the students' parents had said in interviews that their sons had no political views and had gone to Israel merely to find work.
**PHOTO CAPTION***
Ariel Sharon, right, talks with Azzam Azzam, an Israeli Arab accused of spying in Egypt for Israel, during their meeting in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Dec. 5, 2004. (AP)
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