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</table><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><font color="#FFFFFF">BETHLEHEM, West Bank When 18-year-old Ayat al-Akhras blew herself up outside
a busy Jerusalem supermarket in 2002, killing two Israelis, her grieving
parents were unable to bury her and say their final goodbyes because
Israel refused to send her remains home.More than a decade later, after
appeals from human rights groups, Israel is handing over some 30 bodies
of Palestinian assailants, including that of al-Akhras, enabling her family
to arrange a funeral.Israel has returned the remains of Palestinian attackers
from time to time during the decades of conflict, sometimes as part
of prisoner swaps, but the current round involves the most recent suicide
bombers and gunmen and has revived painful memories for families and friends
of some of the victims.In the West Bank town of Bethlehem, the
teenage bomber's parents, Mohammed and Khadra al-Akhras, expect an easing
of their grief."The pain will end," said Mohammed al-Akhras, 67, who chain-smoked
while he talked and rested his hands gnarled from years
of manual labor on top of the cane he
uses to walk with. "At any time during the day, during the
night, we can go and visit her," he added.In Israel, the return
of the remains of attackers from the second Palestinian uprising a decade
ago has provoked some anger."Those who killed civilians should be treated
like people who committed war crimes," said Meir Indor, head of Almagor,
a group that speaks for victims of attacks by militants. "Eic
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