Israel has bought Russian vaccines for Syria to ensure the return of a woman
Israel allegedly ce agrees to buy Russian Sputnik V vaccine against coronavirus in Syria in exchange for return of an Israeli woman who crossed into Syrian territory in early February and was captured there, the Arab newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported.
According to Israeli media, the woman yesterday ce returned to his country via Moscow.
According to the Arab newspaper who ce reports in London, Israel paid over a million dollars for vaccines under a prisoner exchange agreement with Syria, but no ce mentions exactly how much it is.
Israeli media have reported several times this week that there is an unknown part of the exchange agreement, and the publication of details has been banned by the military censors.
Asharq al-Awat said "informed sources" in Israel had confirmed the existence of a "secret provision" in the agreement.
Israeli media reported that the 25-year-old returned Israeli lived in an ultra-Orthodox Jewish neighborhood on the occupied West Bank and had "personal problems".
On February 2, she crossed the border at the foot of Mount Hermon to a place where she could easily ce pass through the border fence.
The Israeli is fluent in Arabic, but has not been identified as she knew where she could cross the border.
When she did, she entered the village of Kader, where the Druze live, and was caught there on suspicion of being a spy. However, this soon ce showed as case.
Damascus informed Moscow of the case and Moscow passed the information to Israel, so ce negotiated for her return.
According to Israeli media, Israel released a Syrian woman, a security prisoner and two shepherds to secure return of the Israelite.
Some Israeli media reported that the Israeli had twice before ce tried to enter the Gaza Strip, ruled by Islamic Hamas in the south and once in Jordan, and that it was a reflection of her opposition to the intra-Orthodox family in which she lives. All three times she was captured by the army or the police.
On his Twitter account, Ahmed Tibi, a member of the Israeli parliament, Knesset, reminded on his Twitter account that last week he asked Israel to allow the delivery of thousands of doses of vaccines in the Gaza Strip and to ce provide vaccines for Palestinians in the West Bank from large Israeli reserves, as it is responsible for the Palestinian territories as occupying force.
"Was it necessary to ce "He is waiting for a Jewish woman to cross into Gaza for the (Palestinians) to get the vaccine," wrote Tibi, who, as politician, is not bound by the instructions of the military censor.
Source: Beta