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Israeli President Shimon Peres (R on this archive picture) is scheduled to be received at the White House on Wednesday where US President Barack Obama will present him with the presidential medal of freedom.
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JERUSALEM (AFP-EJP)---Nearly 70,000 Israelis have signed a petition calling on President Shimon Peres to press for the release of an Israeli-American spy during a visit to Washington, Israeli media reported on Sunday.
Peres left for the United States overnight, and is scheduled to be received at the White House on Wednesday, where US President Barack Obama will present him with the presidential medal of freedom.
The petition, signed by a number of prominent Israeli personalities, calls on Peres to use his trip to push for the release of Jonathan Pollard, an American imprisoned in 1987 for spying for the Jewish state.
"We urge you to use your exceptional diplomatic position to work for the immediate release of Jonathan before you receive your medal, which would otherwise make a mockery of Israel," the petition said.
Signatories include former Israeli president Yitzhak Navon, several Israeli Nobel Prize laureates and Israeli leftwing authors Amos Oz, David Grossman and A.B. Yehoshua.
Before leaving for the US, Peres told the Israeli radio he would discuss Pollard’s freedom with Obama.
“I will raise the issue in my private conversation with President Obama,” Peres promised. “The decision is not in my hands but I will do my best. We want the man to be free but publicity does not always help.”
Peres referred to a pressure campaign urging him to do everything possible to secure Pollard’s release in Washington.
Peres will formally be presented with the petition shortly before he meets with Obama in Washington, so he can show it to him.
Pollard, a former US navy analyst, was convicted of passing thousands of secret documents about American intelligence activities in the Arab world to Israel between May 1984 and his arrest in November 1985.
He was granted Israeli citizenship in 1995 and was officially recognised by the Jewish state as an Israeli spy in 1998.
Israelis have said that Pollard's punishment and the long-standing US refusal to reduce his sentence have been particularly harsh, considering that he gave information to a friendly nation.