Israel Releases Arafat's Right Arm in the 'Karine-A' Ship Operation

File photo of oldest Palestinian prisoner, Fouad Shobaki.
File photo of oldest Palestinian prisoner, Fouad Shobaki.
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Israel Releases Arafat's Right Arm in the 'Karine-A' Ship Operation

File photo of oldest Palestinian prisoner, Fouad Shobaki.
File photo of oldest Palestinian prisoner, Fouad Shobaki.

Israel released the oldest Palestinian prisoner, Major General Fouad al-Shobaki, after 17 years behind bars on Monday.

Shobaki, 83, dubbed the sheikh of prisoners, was one of the close associates of the late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and was considered his right-hand man and the confidant of his secrets.

The Israeli occupation accused Shobaki of being the mastermind behind an attempt to smuggle weapons into the Gaza Strip in 2002 on a ship, known as Karine-A, which was the reason for the isolation and siege of Arafat in Ramallah in 2002.

After his release, Shobaki went directly to Arafat's tomb in Ramallah to lay a wreath on the grave.

In 2006, Israel arrested Shobaki, claiming he financed the arms ship, which was intercepted by the Israeli army in the Red Sea at the beginning of 2002 in operation dubbed "Noah's Ark."

Israel said he funded the ship, which was equipped to arm the Palestinians during the second intifada and loaded with about 50 tons of weapons, including rockets, RPG launchers, and high-explosive materials.

Shobaki was a Major General in the Palestinian security forces, responsible for the central military and financial administration. He received orders from Arafat, who wanted to arm the security services and Fatah movement.

After taking control of the ship, Israel convinced the US administration that Arafat was a significant supporter of terrorism. Tel Aviv then received the green light to carry out Operation Defensive Shield in 2002, when it invaded the West Bank and besieged Arafat.

After four years, the occupation forces kidnapped Shobaki from a private prison in Areeha, where he was being held, according to an agreement supervised by the US and Britain.

He was arrested along with the Secretary-General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Ahmed Saadat, Ahed Abu Ghulamy, Hamdi Qaraan, Basil Asmar, Majdi Al-Rimawi, and Yasser Abu Turki; a group belonging to the Popular Front whom "Israel" accuses of assassinating the Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi.

The occupation military court sentenced him to 20 years in prison, which was later reduced to 17 years.

Fouad al-Shobaki was born on March 12, 1940, in Gaza, in the al-Tuffah neighborhood. He holds a bachelor's degree in accounting from Cairo University.

He is a politician, a military general, and a member of the Fatah movement. He was one of the members of the Fatah movement who moved with Arafat to Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Tunisia, and then Gaza and Ramallah.

In 2011, Shobaki's wife died while he was in prison, and he married four of his six children, who gave birth to nine grandchildren whom he did not see.

Shobaki suffered from multiple health issues and looked tired while receiving medical care. He was transferred by an ambulance to the Tarqumia checkpoint, west of Hebron, where his family welcomed him before heading to Ramallah.



Jumblatt Hands Over Progressive Socialist Party Arms to Lebanese Army

Former Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt (Reuters)
Former Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt (Reuters)
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Jumblatt Hands Over Progressive Socialist Party Arms to Lebanese Army

Former Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt (Reuters)
Former Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt (Reuters)

Lebanon’s veteran Druze leader Walid Jumblatt on Thursday called on the Iran-backed Hezbollah group to hand its weapons over to the state, saying arms must be exclusively under government control.

Speaking at a news conference in Beirut, the former head of the Progressive Socialist Party said, “Weapons should only be in the hands of the Lebanese state,” adding that the Israeli-occupied Shebaa Farms, a long-disputed area on the western slopes of Mount Hermon, are Syrian territory.

Jumblatt’s appeal comes amid growing international calls for Hezbollah to disarm and for the Lebanese government to implement its longstanding pledge—reiterated in its ministerial statement and by President Joseph Aoun during his swearing-in—to ensure that only state institutions bear arms.

His remarks also come as Washington renews its push to resolve files with Syria, including border demarcation, as part of wider regional realignments.

“There’s a new chapter unfolding in the Middle East,” Jumblatt said. “If any Lebanese or non-Lebanese party possesses weapons, I hope they will hand them over to the state in a proper manner.”

He described “the most valuable weapon for future generations” as being one of “memory”—urging the country to pass down stories of resistance against Israel and its collaborators rather than stockpiles of arms.

Jumblatt said he had recently informed the president of the presence of weapons in his hometown of Mukhtara and asked the relevant security agencies to take over the matter. The arms, collected gradually since the May 2008 clashes between Hezbollah and his party, were fully handed over more than three weeks ago.

The arsenal, he said, consisted of light and medium-grade weapons that had been centrally gathered over the years.

He noted that Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri—himself a close ally of Hezbollah—remained a “friend and ally,” but added: “The issue of weapons has no bearing on Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon.”

Hezbollah has long justified its arsenal as essential to liberating the Shebaa Farms and Kfar Shouba Hills, areas Israel did not vacate during its 2000 withdrawal from south Lebanon. In recent years, the dispute has expanded to include 13 border points and the northern section of the village of Ghajar, which Israel annexed in 2022.

“Shebaa Farms are covered under UN Resolution 242. It is Syrian land occupied by Israel,” Jumblatt said.

He urged support for the Lebanese army and internal security forces, stressing that Israel still occupies territory and that several Lebanese villages remain destroyed.

He also called for the full implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah.

“In this round, Israel and the West have won with US backing,” he said. “But nothing lasts forever.”