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Captive soldier's parents camp at Olmert house

The parents of an Israeli soldier held captive by Palestinian militants set up camp outside Prime Ehud Olmert's residence on Sunday, vowing to stay there until the end of his term.
MIDEAST ISRAEL PALESTINIANS
Noam, the father of Israeli soldier Sgt. Gilad Schalit, who was captured by Hamas-allied militants in 2006, talks to journalists at a tent set up in solidarity with Gilad Schalit outside the Prime Ministers' residence in Jerusalem on Sunday.Sebastian Scheiner / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

The parents of an Israeli soldier held captive by Palestinian militants set up camp outside Prime Ehud Olmert's residence on Sunday, vowing to stay there until the end of his term to try to pressure his government to bring their son home.

Dozens of supporters, including high school children in costume for the Jewish Purim holiday, stood outside the protest tent where the parents of Sgt. Gilad Schalit sat.

Demonstrators handed out yellow ribbons and hoisted banners demanding the release of the soldier, who was seized by Gaza militants in a June 2006 cross-border raid.

For nearly three years, Schalit's parents have been waging a campaign to bring their son home. Olmert, who had taken office just months before Schalit was captured, will step aside within weeks after a new government is installed.

'Bring Gilad home'
"We demand that this government wrap this up once and for all and bring Gilad home," said Noam Schalit, the serviceman's father, who arrived at the protest tent on Sunday from the family's home in northern Israel. "We aren't telling the government how to do it. We are asking that Gilad be brought home."

"We will be here until this government ends its tenure and a new government is formed," said Aviva Schalit, the soldier's mother. Afterward, "we'll go back home and start counting the days again," she said.

Sunday marked Gilad Schalit's 987th day in captivity.

Government spokesman David Baker had no comment on the Schalits' protest.

Fifty feet (15 meters) away, three fathers who lost children in a 2003 bus bombing urged the government not to give in to Hamas' demands that Israel free Palestinian prisoners involved in deadly attacks in return for Schalit.

"I'm in favor of releasing Gilad Schalit. I oppose releasing terrorists," said Ron Kehrmann, whose 17-year-old daughter died in the bombing in the northern city of Haifa.