The Prisoner Release Paradox: Data That Speaks for Itself

A look at the raw data from the official list of released security prisoners tells a story that no propaganda can hide.
These are not civilians, not “captives,” and certainly not victims. The numbers themselves reveal the truth.




Who Was Released

Out of 250 individuals released:

  • 0 women (0%)

  • 0 children (0%)

  • 100% adult males

Every single one was categorized as a security prisoner.



Convictions and Charges

Among those released:

  • 231 were convicted of murder or attempted murder

  • The remaining 19 were convicted or detained for terror-related violence

92.4% were directly tied to lethal attacks.





Organizational Affiliation

According to official records, nearly all prisoners were members or affiliates of recognized terrorist organizations:

OrganizationNumber of Prisoners
Fatah158
Hamas64
Islamic Jihad16
Haz’a10
ISIS1
Unknown1

This is not a random mix of offenders. It is a structured group of trained militants.




Legal Status

The prisoners’ legal standing is clearly defined:

  • 27 were detained without trial

  • The rest were convicted in court

  • 100% have criminal or legal records



Summary of Facts

  • Total released: 250

  • Women: 0

  • Children: 0

  • Convicted of murder/attempted murder: 231 (92.4%)

  • Detained without trial: 27 (10.8%)

  • Affiliated with terror groups: 249 (99.6%)


The data shows a uniform profile: adult male, affiliated with terror organizations, convicted or detained for violent crimes.
And yet, these individuals are being publicly described as “captives,” “political prisoners,” or even “heroes.”

Facts contradict that narrative.

When every single released prisoner is an adult male tied to organized terror - calling them ‘captives’ is not compassion, it’s distortion.


Conclusion

Numbers don’t lie.
Out of 250 released individuals: zero were civilians, women, or children.
Most were convicted of murder or attempted murder.
Almost all belonged to terror organizations.

These are not hostages. They are offenders, released under a political agreement — and the data itself exposes the absurdity of portraying them as victims.

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