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Father of Israeli soldier held in Gaza sends condolences to Hamas leader whose son was killed
CORRECTION MIDEAST 5068811
his is an undated handout photo released by the Schalit family of Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Schalit, 19, in an unknown location in Israel. Gilad has been held captive in the Gaza Strip since June of 2006. Gilad's father told the Associated Press Thursday, Jan. 17, 2008, that he sent a letter of condolence to the territory's Hamas strongman after his son was killed in an Israeli raid. - photo by Associated Press
    JERUSALEM — The father of an Israeli soldier held captive in the Gaza Strip said Thursday that he sent a letter of condolence to the territory’s Hamas strongman after the Palestinian’s son was killed in an Israeli raid.
    Mahmoud Zahar confirmed to Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper that he had received the letter from Noam Schalit. Islamic militants affiliated with Hamas captured Cpl. Gilad Schalit in June 2006 in a cross-border raid, and are still holding him, Israel says.
    ‘‘It was a personal letter of condolences,’’ Schalit told The Associated Press on Thursday. He said he did not appeal to Zahar to help free 21-year-old Gilad, but declined to disclose the text of the letter.
    Zahar’s 24-year-old son, Hussam, a Hamas militant, was one of 19 Palestinians killed Tuesday in an Israeli operation against Gaza rocket squads. Scenes of Zahar weeping as he kissed his dead son’s forehead were shown on Israeli TV Tuesday.
    ‘‘Our hearts break when our sons are killed but we don’t have any other choice,’’ Zahar told Yediot. ‘‘It hurts but we have a homeland and holy sites that are more important than them.’’
    Zahar’s eldest son, Khaled, also was killed by Israel, in a failed assassination attempt on the Hamas leader in 2003.
    Zahar heads Hamas’ military wing, which has killed more than 250 Israelis in suicide bombings in recent years. He is widely believed to have masterminded Hamas’ bloody June takeover of Gaza.
    Ayman Taha, a Hamas spokesman, suggested Thursday that Schalit had not been maltreated by his captors.
    ‘‘Islam instructs us to treat war prisoners well, to keep them safe and not to harm them,’’ Taha said. But he cautioned that the Israeli operations in Gaza could drag Schalit’s captivity out for years.
    Hamas’ supreme leader, Khaled Mashaal, said from Damascus on Wednesday that the military action in Gaza on Tuesday would hurt chances that Hamas would release Schalit.
    Israeli defense officials also said they thought the high Palestinian death toll and the killing of Zahar’s son dealt a serious blow to efforts to work out a deal for Schalit’s freedom in exchange for Palestinian prisoners Israel holds.

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