id
stringclasses
383 values
context
stringlengths
39
11.6k
entities
sequencelengths
2
2
tlinks
listlengths
6
6
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court <ei9>trial</ei9> that led to a $107 million verdict <t3>this week</t3> in favor of abortion providers.
[ "t3", "ei9" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei9", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei9", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei9", "target": "end ei9" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei9", "target": "start t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start t3", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei9", "target": "start t3" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which <ei8>was</ei8> the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict <t3>this week</t3> in favor of abortion providers.
[ "t3", "ei8" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei8", "target": "start t3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei8", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei8", "target": "start t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei8", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start t3", "target": "end t3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei8", "target": "end ei8" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley <ei6>said</ei6> Friday that he would <ei7>seek</ei7> a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers.
[ "ei7", "ei6" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei6", "target": "end ei6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei6", "target": "start ei7" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei6", "target": "end ei7" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei7", "target": "end ei7" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei6", "target": "start ei7" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei6", "target": "end ei7" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said <t2>Friday</t2> that he would <ei7>seek</ei7> a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers.
[ "ei7", "t2" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei7", "target": "end ei7" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei7", "target": "end t2" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei7", "target": "start t2" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei7", "target": "start t2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start t2", "target": "end t2" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei7", "target": "end t2" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that <ei10>led</ei10> to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury <ei14>ruled</ei14> that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers.
[ "ei14", "ei10" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei14", "target": "end ei14" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei10", "target": "start ei14" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei10", "target": "end ei14" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei10", "target": "end ei14" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei10", "target": "end ei10" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei10", "target": "start ei14" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court <ei9>trial</ei9> that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury <ei14>ruled</ei14> that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers.
[ "ei14", "ei9" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei14", "target": "end ei14" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei14", "target": "end ei9" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei9", "target": "end ei9" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei14", "target": "start ei9" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei14", "target": "end ei9" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei14", "target": "start ei9" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which <ei8>was</ei8> the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury <ei14>ruled</ei14> that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers.
[ "ei14", "ei8" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei14", "target": "start ei8" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei14", "target": "start ei8" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei14", "target": "end ei14" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei14", "target": "end ei8" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei14", "target": "end ei8" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei8", "target": "end ei8" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers says a decision to shut the site down is just a ``temporary <ei5>setback</ei5>.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont said. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei5", "ei39" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei39", "target": "start ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei5", "target": "end ei5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei39", "target": "start ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei39", "target": "end ei5" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers says a decision to shut the site down is just a ``temporary <ei5>setback</ei5>.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>.
[ "ei5", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei5", "target": "end ei5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei5" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and <ei21>featured</ei21> photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei21", "ei39" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei21", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei21", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei21", "target": "end ei21" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei21", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei21", "target": "start ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and <ei21>featured</ei21> photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood.
[ "ei21", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei21" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei21", "target": "end ei21" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei21" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Pathway Communications, which has <ei28>maintained</ei28> the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei28", "ei39" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei28", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei28", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei28", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei28", "target": "end ei28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei28", "target": "start ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has <ei28>maintained</ei28> the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice.
[ "ei28", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei28", "target": "end ei28" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei28" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei28" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei28" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers says a <ei3>decision</ei3> to shut the site down is just a ``temporary setback.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont said. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei3", "ei39" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei3", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei3", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei3", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei3", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei3", "target": "end ei3" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers says a <ei3>decision</ei3> to shut the site down is just a ``temporary setback.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>.
[ "ei3", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei3", "target": "end ei3" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Neal Horsley <ei6>said</ei6> <t2>Friday</t2> that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers.
[ "ei6", "t2" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei6", "target": "end t2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei6", "target": "end ei6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei6", "target": "start t2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei6", "target": "end t2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start t2", "target": "end t2" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei6", "target": "start t2" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
The Web site <ei20>included</ei20> the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei20", "ei39" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei20", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei20", "target": "end ei20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei20", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei20", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei20", "target": "start ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>. The Web site <ei20>included</ei20> the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood.
[ "ei20", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei20", "target": "end ei20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei20" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei20" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Horsley called the <ei36>move</ei36> a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei39", "ei36" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei36", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei36", "target": "end ei36" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei36", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei36", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei36", "target": "start ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were <ei25>killed</ei25>, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei39", "ei25" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei25", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei25", "target": "end ei25" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei25", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei25", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei25", "target": "end ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers <ei2>says</ei2> a decision to shut the site down is just a ``temporary setback.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont said. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the move a ``temporary setback.'' ``We are presently searching for a bolder and more principled (Internet service provider) to host the Nuremburg Files,'' the statement <ei39>said</ei39>.
[ "ei39", "ei2" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei39", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei2", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei2", "target": "end ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei2", "target": "end ei2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei2", "target": "start ei39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei2", "target": "end ei39" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, <ei17>closed</ei17> it <t4>Thursday</t4> night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont said.
[ "t4", "ei17" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei17", "target": "start t4" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei17", "target": "end ei17" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei17", "target": "end t4" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start t4", "target": "end t4" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei17", "target": "start t4" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei17", "target": "end t4" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were killed, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day. Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that ``The Nuremberg Files'' was knocked off-line without notice. The company said it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on ``threatening and harassing language.'' Horsley called the <ei36>move</ei36> a ``temporary setback.''
[ "ei36", "ei19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei36", "target": "end ei36" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei36" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei36" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei36" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei36" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>. The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were <ei25>killed</ei25>, most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day.
[ "ei19", "ei25" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei25" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei25" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei25" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei25", "target": "end ei25" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei25" } ]
APW19990206.0090_1
ATLANTA (AP) -- The creator of an anti-abortion Web site found to be a threat to abortion providers <ei2>says</ei2> a decision to shut the site down is just a ``temporary setback.'' Neal Horsley said Friday that he would seek a new Internet service for his ``Nuremburg Files'' site, which was the focus of a federal court trial that led to a $107 million verdict this week in favor of abortion providers. Horsley was not a defendant in the suit, in which the Portland, Ore., jury ruled that such sites constitute threats to abortion providers. MindSpring, which provided the Internet space for the site, closed it Thursday night for violating ``our appropriate use policies,'' spokesman Serge Clermont <ei19>said</ei19>.
[ "ei19", "ei2" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end ei19", "target": "end ei2" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start ei19", "target": "start ei2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei2", "target": "end ei2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei19" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end ei19", "target": "start ei2" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start ei19", "target": "end ei2" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told <27>told</27>lly in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "27", "5" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 27", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 27", "target": "end 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <12>demonstrations</12> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), tol<27>told</27>rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "27", "12" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "start 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 12", "target": "start 27" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a<27>told</27>ly in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "27", "3" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 27", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 27", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 3" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a<27>told</27>ly in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "27", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 27" } ]
article-11816_1
Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), <27>told</27> a <28>rally</28> in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "27", "28" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 27", "target": "end 28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "start 28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 27", "target": "end 27" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 27", "target": "start 28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 28", "target": "end 28" } ]
article-11816_1
Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees <31>started</31> the strike Tuesday. He <33>noted</33> that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons.
[ "33", "31" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 33", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 31", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 31", "target": "start 33" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "start 33" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <32>strike</32> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted t<33>noted</33>he strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons.
[ "33", "32" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 32", "target": "end 32" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 33", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 32", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 32", "target": "start 33" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 32", "target": "end 33" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 32", "target": "start 33" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, <6>calling</6> for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "6", "5" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 6", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 6" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, c<6>calling</6>for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "6", "3" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "start 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 6", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 3", "target": "start 6" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas <4>addressed</4> a written letter to mark the day, <6>calling</6> for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "6", "4" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 4", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 4", "target": "end 4" }, { "relation": "=", "source": "start 4", "target": "start 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 6", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 4", "target": "end 6" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 4", "target": "start 6" } ]
article-11816_1
Speakers in the <38>rallies</38> <39>agreed</39> to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them.
[ "39", "38" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 38", "target": "end 39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 39", "target": "end 39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 38", "target": "end 39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 38", "target": "start 39" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 38", "target": "start 39" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 38", "target": "end 38" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <44>strike</44> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiatio<47>negotiations</47>Israeli prisons' services.
[ "44", "47" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "start 47" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 47", "target": "end 47" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 44", "target": "start 47" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 47" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "end 47" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 44" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <44>strike</44> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding t<48>demanding</48>i authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions.
[ "44", "48" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 48", "target": "end 48" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 48" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 44", "target": "start 48" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "start 48" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "end 48" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 44" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <44>strike</44> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the divisi<46>division</46>
[ "44", "46" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 46", "target": "end 46" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 44" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 44", "target": "end 46" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "start 46" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 44", "target": "end 46" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 44", "target": "start 46" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also <20>attended</20> the demonstration.
[ "20", "18" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 20", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was <15>freed</15> in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also a<20>attended</20>the demonstration.
[ "20", "15" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 20", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 15" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "start 20" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap <16>deal</16> reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also a<20>attended</20>the demonstration.
[ "20", "16" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 16", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 20", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "end 16" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 16", "target": "end 20" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap <19>deal</19> reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also a<20>attended</20>the demonstration.
[ "20", "19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 20", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 19", "target": "end 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "end 19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 19", "target": "start 20" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "end 20" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also spoke to demo<56>spoke</56>tors in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "5" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" } ]
article-11816_1
<49>Clashes</49> broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also sp<56>spoke</56>o demonstrators in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "49" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 49", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 49", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 49", "target": "start 56" } ]
article-11816_1
The soldiers <51>dispersed</51> the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also sp<56>spoke</56>o demonstrators in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "51" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 51", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 51", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 51", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 56" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <12>demonstrations</12> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also spoke to de<56>spoke</56>rators in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "12" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 12", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 56" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also spoke to demon<56>spoke</56>ors in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "3" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 3", "target": "start 56" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also spoke to demon<56>spoke</56>ors in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 56" } ]
article-11816_1
Several Palestinians were <53>injured</53>, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also sp<56>spoke</56>o demonstrators in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "53" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 53", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 53", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 53", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 53", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 53", "target": "start 56" } ]
article-11816_1
Clashes <50>broke</50> out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "armed resistance is the only method to free prisoners." Speakers of various factions, mainly rival Fatah and Hamas also sp<56>spoke</56>o demonstrators in Gaza, who called for a broader Arab and international move to protect the prisoners and release them from the Israeli jails.
[ "56", "50" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 50", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 50", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 50", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 56", "target": "end 56" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 50", "target": "start 56" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 50", "target": "end 50" } ]
article-11816_1
Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees <31>started</31> the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He <34>added</34> that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met.
[ "31", "34" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 31", "target": "end 34" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 34", "target": "end 34" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "start 34" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 31", "target": "start 34" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 34" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <32>strike</32> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started<31>started</31>rike Tuesday.
[ "31", "32" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 32", "target": "end 32" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "start 32" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 31", "target": "start 32" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 31", "target": "end 32" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 32" } ]
article-11816_1
Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club <30>said</30> that about 1,500 detainees <31>started</31> the strike Tuesday.
[ "31", "30" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 30", "target": "start 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 31", "target": "end 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 30", "target": "end 31" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 30", "target": "end 30" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 30", "target": "start 31" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 30", "target": "end 31" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined de<37>demonstrations</37>eld in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "5", "37" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 37", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 37", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes bro<49>Clashes</49>near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "5", "49" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 49", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 49", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed t<51>dispersed</51>trators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them.
[ "5", "51" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 51" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carr<23>carried</23>tures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners.
[ "5", "23" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 23", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 23", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 23", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 23", "target": "end 23" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 23", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, <29>calling</29> for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "5", "29" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 29", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 29", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 29", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 29", "target": "end 29" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 29", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to m<5>mark</5>the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "5", "3" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 3", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to m<5>mark</5>the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "5", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "=", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": "=", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was fr<15>freed</15>n a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974.
[ "5", "15" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 15" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, ac<53>injured</53> to medics.
[ "5", "53" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 53", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 53" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas <4>addressed</4> a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "5", "4" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 4", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 4", "target": "end 4" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 4", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 4", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 4", "target": "end 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stone<52>threw</52>the them.
[ "5", "52" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 52" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 52" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 52" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 52", "target": "end 52" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 52" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, c<54>called</54>on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
[ "5", "54" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 54" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 54" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 54" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 54", "target": "end 54" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 54" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, according to medics. Ahmed Bahar, Deputy Speaker of the Hamas-dominated parliament, called for a third popular uprising, or Intifada in the Palestinian territories and various Arab countries in support for the prisoners, adding "arme<55>adding</55>stance is the only method to free prisoners."
[ "5", "55" ]
[ { "relation": "-", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 55" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 55" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 55" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 55", "target": "end 55" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 55" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap de<19>deal</19>eached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974.
[ "5", "19" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 19", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "end 19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 19", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "end 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd wave<22>waved</22>estinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners.
[ "5", "22" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 22", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 22", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 22", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 22", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 22", "target": "end 22" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <26>strike</26> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to m<5>mark</5>the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights.
[ "5", "26" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 26", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 26", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 26", "target": "end 26" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 26", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 26", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chan<24>chanted</24>gans against Israel's policy against the prisoners.
[ "5", "24" ]
[ { "relation": "-", "source": "end 24", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 24", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 24", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 24", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 24", "target": "end 24" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally<28>rally</28>amallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division.
[ "5", "28" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 28", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 28", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 28", "target": "end 28" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 28", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 28", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, c<57>called</57>on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
[ "5", "57" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 57" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 57" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 57", "target": "end 57" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 57" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 57" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out n<50>broke</50>he Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "5", "50" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 5", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 5", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 50", "target": "end 50" } ]
article-11816_1
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to <5>mark</5> the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the dem<21>demonstration</21>
[ "5", "21" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 21", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 5", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 21", "target": "end 5" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 21", "target": "end 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 21", "target": "start 5" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 21", "target": "start 5" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes b<49>Clashes</49>t near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "11", "49" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 49" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 49" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed<51>dispersed</51>nstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them.
[ "11", "51" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 51" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> <12>demonstrations</12> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "11", "12" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 12" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 12" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joi<11>joined</11>monstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "11", "3" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 3" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joi<11>joined</11>monstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "11", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 11" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was <15>freed</15> in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974.
[ "11", "15" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 15" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 15" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 15" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 15" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 15" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured, <53>injured</53>ng to medics.
[ "11", "53" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 53", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 53" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap <16>deal</16> reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974.
[ "11", "16" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 16" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 16" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "end 16" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 16" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 16" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or <11>joined</11> demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out<50>broke</50> the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "11", "50" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 11" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 11", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 11", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 50", "target": "end 50" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes <49>Clashes</49>ut near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "18", "49" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers disperse<51>dispersed</51>onstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them.
[ "18", "51" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <12>demonstrations</12> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was r<18>released</18>in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "12" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 12", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was rele<18>released</18>a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "3" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined demonstrations held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was rele<18>released</18>a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was <15>freed</15> in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was r<18>released</18>in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "15" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 15", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 15", "target": "end 15" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed the demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them. Several Palestinians were injured,<53>injured</53>ing to medics.
[ "18", "53" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 53", "target": "end 53" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap <16>deal</16> reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was r<18>released</18>in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "16" ]
[ { "relation": "-", "source": "end 16", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "start 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 16", "target": "end 16" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 16", "target": "end 18" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap <19>deal</19> reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was r<18>released</18>in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration.
[ "18", "19" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 19" }, { "relation": "=", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 19", "target": "end 19" }, { "relation": "=", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 19" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke ou<50>broke</50>r the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "18", "50" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 50", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 50" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
A former Jordanian prisoner who was <18>released</18> in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the <21>demonstration</21>.
[ "18", "21" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 21", "target": "end 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "end 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "start 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "end 18", "target": "start 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 21" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 18", "target": "end 18" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <37>demonstrations</37> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes b<49>Clashes</49>t near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers.
[ "37", "49" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 37", "target": "start 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 49", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 37", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "start 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 49" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <37>demonstrations</37> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities. They marked the Palestinian Prisoner's Day, the day when the first Palestinian prisoner was freed in a first ever prisoners' swap deal reached between Palestinians militants and Israel in 1974. Among the demonstrators, there was a group of children, who wore the uniform of the prisoners in Israeli jails while their hands and legs were tied by chains of iron. A former Jordanian prisoner who was released in a Hamas-Israel prisoners swap deal on Oct. 18 also attended the demonstration. The crowd waved Palestinian flags as well as flags of various Palestinian Islamic and national factions, carried pictures of the old prisoners and chanted slogans against Israel's policy against the prisoners. Civil Palestinian servants also went on a strike for several hours. Abdel Rahim Mallouh, a member of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told a rally in Ramallah that the prisoners " are the address of the first central issue the Palestinian people stand around," calling for the immediate reconciliation and ending the division. Qadoura Fares of the Palestinian Prisoner's Club said that about 1,500 detainees started the strike Tuesday. He noted that the strikers represent all factions in all Israeli detention facilities and prisons. He added that more prisoners will join the strike if their demands were not met. Meanwhile, the cities of Nablus, Hebron and Jenin in the West Bank had witnessed similar demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners. Speakers in the rallies agreed to keep supporting the prisoners' issue and said that Israel must respond to their demands of improving their living conditions and free them. The rally in Hebron was distinctive with a significant participation of leaders from both Fatah Party and Islamic Hamas movement amid calls for keeping the unity of the prisoners' movement in Israeli jails, as not all the 4,700 prisoners went on the hunger strike. The prisoners were all supposed to join the hunger strike, but deep disputes between the two rival groups had led to a division among the prisoners. Most of the prisoners were waiting for the results of the negotiations with the Israeli prisons' services. The hunger striking prisoners are demanding the Israeli authorities to stop the administrative detention (a detention with no trial), end the policy of isolating prisoners in solitary sells, allowing prisoners families from Gaza to visit their sons in Israeli jails and improving their living conditions. Clashes broke out near the Israeli jail of Ofer near Ramallah between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers. The soldiers dispersed<51>dispersed</51>nstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets after they threw stones at the them.
[ "37", "51" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 37", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "start 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 37", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 51", "target": "end 51" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" } ]
article-11816_1
Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined <37>demonstrations</37><12>demonstrations</12> held in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "37", "12" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 12", "target": "start 37" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 12" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 12", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 12", "target": "start 37" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians marked on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger <3>strike</3> in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined dem<37>demonstrations</37>ld in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "37", "3" ]
[ { "relation": "<", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 3" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 3", "target": "start 37" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 3", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 3", "target": "start 37" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" } ]
article-11816_1
Thousands of Palestinians <1>marked</1> on Tuesday the Prisoner's Day in solidarity with 1,500 Palestinian prisoners, who went on an open-ended hunger strike in Israeli jails, until the Israeli prison services meet the demands of improving their living conditions. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed a written letter to mark the day, calling for implementing the Fourth Geneva Convention related to protecting civilians in times of war in the Palestinian territories, treating the Palestinian prisoners as prisoners of war and enabling them to gain their basic rights. The cabinet of the caretaker Palestinian government in the West Bank, which held its weekly meeting in Ramallah, called on the United Nations for immediate and serious intervention and pressure on Israel to release all the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. Hundreds of Palestinians rallied or joined dem<37>demonstrations</37>ld in several West Bank and Gaza Strip cities.
[ "37", "1" ]
[ { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "start 37" }, { "relation": "-", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 1", "target": "end 1" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "end 1", "target": "end 37" }, { "relation": ">", "source": "start 1", "target": "start 37" }, { "relation": "<", "source": "start 37", "target": "end 37" } ]