Israeli security forces have opened fire on a crowd of Palestinians waiting for 29 prisoners freed by
Shots were fired into the air when the crowd surged forward to greet the men at the Erez crossing "and when they didn't stop, they fired at their legs," an Israeli military spokeswoman said on Tuesday.
Two people, including a Reuters news agency photographer, were reportedly wounded.
The release of the
It was unclear why Peres delayed the pardons but
The prisoners were released in an effort to bolster Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president ahead of a US-sponsored conference which will discuss Palestinian statehood.
Cheering and waving
Dozens of family members and supporters, some cheering and waving yellow flags of Abbas's secular Fatah movement, had waited for hours to greet the prisoners.
"Thank God we were released and we hope that all other prisoners from all other factions will be freed," said Abdel-Hadi Hassanein, who was freed after serving half of his 14-year sentence for several shooting attacks against soldiers.
Hassanein's four-year-old nephew said: "He was spared by the Jews. A kiss to Abu Mazen [Abbas], a kiss to my uncle and a kiss to Fatah."
The crowd moved away after the shooting and continued its celebrations as the prisoners completed the crossing.
Domestic opposition
The release has stirred domestic opposition in
The prisoners were required to renounce violence in writing as a condition for their freedom.
Meanwhile, Nour Odeh, Al Jazeera's
Odeh said: "The Palestinian authorities had no hand in choosing who, and how many prisoners would be freed."
Olmert and Abbas are to meet in
The release of prisoners is highly emotive for Palestinians, who regard the nearly 11,000 men and women held in Israeli jails as fighters against foreign occupation.
Abbas's office had welcomed
The last such gesture by
PHOTO CAPTION
Dozens of relatives and friends had gathered to greet the freed prisoners at the Erez crossing