Showing posts with label Abbas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbas. Show all posts

7/09/2012

Palestinian president approves Arafat autopsy


Πηγή: USA Today
By AFP
July 9 2012

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) – Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has given his permission to exhume the remains of his predecessor, Yasser Arafat, a top aide said Monday, days after a Swiss institute reported finding elevated traces of a radioactive substance on the late leader's belongings.

The findings by Switzerland's Institute of Radiation Physics were inconclusive, but revived speculation that Arafat was poisoned.

The legendary Palestinian leader died Nov. 11, 2004 in a French military hospital, a month after falling violently ill at his government compound in the West Bank town of Ramallah.

The Swiss institute has said it would need to examine Arafat's remains for conclusive findings, though a clear-cut outcome is not assured because of the decay of the substance, polonium-210, over the years. Last week, Abbas said he was willing, in principle, to allow an autopsy, provided he receives permission from religious authorities and Arafat's family.

Arafat was buried in a mausoleum that has become the centerpiece of the Ramallah compound where Abbas' headquarters are located. The exhumation would create a huge spectacle that could upset some devout Muslims, though there seems to be a widespread desire among Palestinians to determine the cause of death.

Abbas aide Saeb Erekat said Monday that the Palestinian president has decided to invite the Swiss experts to Ramallah in order to examine the remains. "We are on the way to an autopsy," Erekat told The Associated Press.

Erekat said a Palestinian medical expert would contact the Swiss institute later Monday or Tuesday to offer the invitation. Erekat said an autopsy could be conducted as soon as the Swiss team arrives. There was no immediate comment from the institute.

Arafat's widow, Suha, has repeatedly called for exhuming the remains. She worked closely with the Arab satellite TV station Al-Jazeera, which conducted an investigation into Arafat's death and received permission from her to submit her husband's belongings for testing. The top Muslim cleric in the Palestinian territories has also given his blessing to exhuming the remains.

Arafat's nephew, Nasser al-Kidwa, has been cool to the idea of an autopsy but signaled he will not stand in the way.

"Our belief was always that it was an unusual death, and most likely he (Arafat) was poisoned. Now all indications say he was poisoned," al-Kidwa told AP. Al-Kidwa, a former Palestinian envoy to the United Nations, heads the Yasser Arafat Foundation and is the custodian of Arafat's memory.

Erekat suggested that Abbas was firm in his decision to move forward.

Polonium-210 is a highly lethal substance, and less than 1 gram (0.04 ounces) of the silver powder is sufficient to kill. Because polonium-210 decays rapidly, experts have been divided over whether testing Arafat's remains would provide a solid clue eight years after his death.

Polonium's most famous victim was KGB agent-turned-Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko, who died in London in 2006 after the substance was slipped into his tea. Someone poisoned by polonium would experience multiple organ failure as alpha radiation particles bombard the liver, kidneys and bone marrow from within.

French doctors said in 2004 that Arafat, then 75, died of a massive stroke. According to French medical records, he had suffered inflammation, jaundice and a blood condition known as disseminated intravascular coagulation, or DIC.

But the records were inconclusive about what brought about the DIC, which has numerous possible causes, including infections and liver disease. Outside experts who reviewed the available records on behalf of The Associated Press were also unable to pinpoint the underlying cause.

In the last three years of his life, Arafat was confined by Israel to his Ramallah walled compound, the Muqata. The Palestinian leader was seen by Israel and the U.S. as an obstacle to peace efforts and a sponsor of attacks that killed hundreds of Israelis.

Israel has emphatically denied a role in Arafat's death. Officials say that with Arafat locked in to his headquarters, there was no need to kill him, and argue that an assassination would only have destabilized what already was a difficult period of heavy fighting. Senior Palestinian officials have repeatedly accused Israel of killing Arafat, saying it had the means, motive and opportunity.

A renewed investigation could lead to uncomfortable questions for the Palestinian leadership. If an autopsy was to reveal that Arafat was indeed poisoned, the probe would also have to look at Palestinians who had access to him.

The Al-Jazeera TV's investigation is also embarrassing to the Palestinian Authority, which launched its own probe after Arafat's death and failed to discover any leads.




10/03/2011

Abbas is punished by $200m cut in aid from US


Πηγή: The Independent
By Donald Macintyre
Oct 1 2011

The United States Congress has blocked nearly $200m in aid for the Palestinians, threatening projects such as food aid, health care, and support for efforts to build a functioning state.

The decision to delay the payments runs counter to the wishes of the Obama administration and reflects Congressional anger at Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's so far unrealised pursuit of Fatah-Hamas reconciliation and statehood recognition at the UN.

The freezing of the funds, which were to have been dispersed in the US fiscal year that ends today, is the most tangible sign yet of the seriousness of Congressional leaders' threats of an even wider halt to funding in the coming year if Mr Abbas continues with his actions at the UN. It was strongly condemned yesterday by the Palestinian Authority.

There have been persistent demands in Congress to withhold up to $600m – the average amount given by the US in bilateral assistance to the West Bank and Gaza every year since 2008 – in the next financial year over the issue.

The administration remains, as does Congress, opposed to the Palestinians' application for full UN membership, which Mr Abbas submitted last week. But it argues that assistance to the Palestinian people is what a US official described as "an essential part of the US commitment to a secure future and two-state solution for Palestinians".

Former President Bill Clinton, among others, this month warned legislators to leave the issue of aid to the administration, adding: "Everybody knows the US Congress is the most pro-Israel parliamentary body in the world. They don't have to demonstrate that."


9/30/2011

To isolate Abbas, US prods Jordan to host Hamas-Damascus

Khaled Meshaal in Jordan


Πηγή: DEBKAfile
Sep 30 2011


Washington has played a strong card against Mahmoud Abbas' push for UN acceptance of a Palestinian state and his playing hard to get for resumed peace talks. After some arm-twisting, Jordan's King Abdullah agreed to let his main rival, the radical Hamas political leader, Khaled Meshaal, visit Amman. The Hamas leader arrived Wednesday, Sept. 29, for the second time since he and the entire Hamas leadership were expelled from the kingdom 12 years ago. He last visited Jordan in 2009 to attend his father's funeral.
Jordanian Interior Minister Mazen Saket made it clear that the special entry permit covered only a limited stay. Some Jordanian sources explained it was granted on the grounds of his ailing mother's admission to hospital.

However, DEBKAfile's Washington and intelligence sources report that the Hamas leader came to Amman for bigger fish: negotiations in the hope of permission to transfer the organization's political headquarters and staff from Damascus to Amman.

The Jordanian King is flatly opposed to this step – especially now - given the Palestinian terrorist leader's past history with the kingdom. He faces heavy US pressure, backed by Saudi Arabia, to relent. So far, he only agreed very reluctantly to Meshaal paying a short visit.
The Obama administration began pushing hard for the move when in the first half of September, the military rulers of Egypt decided to shut the door against Meshaal and his staff's relocation in Cairo. At first, they were amenable, hoping to use the transfer to get at Syrian President Bashar Assad and weaken Iran's westward drive into the Arab world. In the second half of August, they invited Meshaal to Cairo to discuss the transfer.
But in early September they changed their minds for three reasons:

1. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt's earlier flirtation with Iran had gone sour and the generals decided it was not a good time to introduce a pro-Iranian Palestinian entity into Cairo's unstable political scene.

2. Hamas-Gaza had become a major thorn in their sides. Its armed militias and terrorists had poured out of the Gaza Strip to seize parts of northern Sinai and were taking delivery of burgeoning consignments of Libyan arms through Egypt and the peninsula. The last thing Egypt needed, they reckoned, was for Hamas to gain a second organized logistic headquarters in Cairo.
3. Like other Middle East rulers, the Supreme Military Council of Egypt recognizes that Assad is on the point of finally crushing the popular uprising against his rule. They are therefore wary of unnecessarily antagonizing him. Accepting the Hamas political bureau in Cairo would be seen as a vote of no-confidence in the Syrian ruler's chances of survival.
Washington's decision to arrange for the Hamas politburo to move to Amman was motivated most of all by the wish to put Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas in his place by having Hamas breathe down his neck not just from the Gaza Strip but also from Amman, where he maintains a large residence.
Washington was guided by four further considerations:

- Khaled Meshaal's exit from Damascus would divest Assad of a key regional power lever as well as excluding him from a role on the Palestinian issue;

- His relocation in Amman would, it is hoped, eventually weaken Hamas' ties with Tehran and the Lebanese Hizballah;

- Washington decided to help Hamas to move house in its capacity as a branch of the transnational Muslim Brotherhood headquartered in Egypt, a movement whose interests the Obama administration opted to promote in the Arab Spring. At the same time, by refraining from pushing Assad out, the Obama administration paradoxically aided in the failure of the Syrian uprising and its Muslim Brotherhood spearhead.

- The US administration sought to discipline the Palestinian leader for going through with his application for UN membership in defiance of President Barack Obama's strong objections.
Abbas, his Palestinian Authority and the PLO have always treated Jordan and its capital Amman as their logistical hinterland and sanctuary. Abbas spends at least as much time in his Amman mansion as he does in Ramallah. Placing Hamas' political leader cheek to jowl with him in his second home would pose a potential challenge to Abbas' position as the sole internationally-acceptable spokesman for the Palestinian cause.
If after moving to Jordan, Hamas should one day moderate its extremist agenda, which calls for Israel's annihilation and refuses to relinquish terror, Washington and Riyadh would acquire a second Palestinian option for negotiations outside Ramallah and the PLO establishment – or so it is believed in some US circles.
For more than a decade, the Hashemite king has kept Khaled Meshaal at arm's length and physically distant from his following among the violent elements of Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood leadership. His presence in Amman would strengthen those elements at a time when they are on the offensive.
But Abdullah found it hard to stand up to Saudi pressure which was accompanied by a guarantee that the oil kingdom's clandestine forces would stamp down on any Hamas subversion against the throne. He therefore relented – albeit only so far as letting Meshaal pay a short visit to the kingdom.


9/08/2011

Low chance U.S. can stop Palestinian U.N. bid: Mitchell



Πηγή: Reuters
By Arshad Mohammed
Thu Sep 8, 2011


George Mitchell, former U.S. special envoy for Middle East peace, said on Thursday there was little chance U.S. officials would be able to persuade Palestinian leaders not to seek greater recognition at the United Nations.


Mitchell, who stepped down in May after more than two years of fruitless efforts to make peace between the Palestinians and the Israelis, was downbeat about the odds of making progress in the coming months but more optimistic over the longer term.

The Palestinians have vowed to upgrade their U.N. status, either by seeking full United Nations membership for a Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip and West Bank or recognition as a "non-member state."

The United States and Israel have argued against this, making the case that the conflict should be resolved in direct negotiations and that taking steps at the United Nations would leave the two sides further apart.

David Hale, Mitchell's replacement as the U.S. Middle East peace envoy, and White House aide Dennis Ross met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Wednesday in the latest U.S. effort to halt the Palestinians' U.N. push.

"I think there was and is little likelihood that they will succeed in that effort," Mitchell said at a conference on peacemaking at Georgetown University in Washington.

If the Palestinians ignore U.S. and Israeli opposition and pursue full U.N. membership of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, the bid would likely fail because Washington would veto it in the U.N. Security Council.

It remains unclear whether the Palestinians will seek full membership, upgraded observer status or both.

Mitchell, who helped broker the agreement that ended the Northern Ireland conflict, earlier told the audience that he saw little chance of progress in the next few months but that he was more optimistic over the longer term.

"There are tremendous obstacles to be overcome, not the least of which is the internal political situation on both sides," Mitchell said.

"We in this country see our country deeply divided on major political issues (and) ought not to be surprised similar circumstances exist in other countries and make it difficult for leaders to take the steps needed to get from their current positions to what I think is the essential outcome," he added.

"In the short term, and I mean by that the next few months, it's difficult to be overly optimistic, to put it mildly," he said.

"But I believe that in the medium and longer term there is a basis for believing that they will be able to take those steps primarily because the current circumstance, in my judgment, is unsustainable and both societies face very large risks from a continuation of the conflict."


7/27/2011

Hamas snubs the application for recognition of Palestine

Palestinian rivals Fatah and Hamas in Cairo on May signed a reconciliation agreement ending four years of antagonism and fratricidal violence (c) Afp

27/7/11

The Palestinians appear before the Security Council their request for accession of a State of Palestine to the UN, announced Wednesday, July 27 President Mahmoud Abbas at a meeting of the Central Council of the PLO in Ramallah (West Bank) . A meeting at which the representative of Hamas, with which the Fatah of Mahmoud Abbas has reconciled a few months ago, refused to attend.

"We're going to the Security Council through a request to the Secretary General of the UN for a full membership in the UN and the recognition of Palestine on the 1967 borders," said Palestinian President at the beginning of the meeting the PLO (Organization for the Liberation of Palestine).

Invitation declined

According to the Special Envoy of the Nouvel Observateur in Ramallah, René Backmann, Hamas, who had been invited to attend the meeting of the PLO-politely declined.

The head of Hamas in the West Bank, Aziz Dweik sent a letter to the chairman of the PLO Central Council of Al Salim Zanoun, who had invited him. In his letter, he thanked for the invitation but said that Hamas will not participate in the meeting because he wants to wait for the approval of "reconciliation" signed on May 4 before being applied to invest in the activities of the PLO.

Two problems

The implementation of the agreement comes up against two major problems: the formation of a government of technocrats and independents, and especially the choice of prime minister. Hamas does not want Salam Fayyad as the Palestinian Authority Salam Fayyad insists it is he who ensures the quality of government management and support from abroad, including Westerners who consider his work as remarkable

7/21/2011

The Arab Spring and the Israelis - Palestinian conflict



The young man that set himself on fire in Tunisia sparkled the flames of an unprecedented turmoil around the Arab world. The West powers embracing the wave of change involved in the Libyan civil war. On top of the uncertain outcome of the Arab Spring the Israel - Palestinian issue is in the hart of the becoming as the Arab League on September is going to table a request for recognition of Palestine at UN as a full-fledged state with full membership at the international organization. The allies of the present Libyan war will sit at the opposite ends of the table during the UN's assembly as that move is rejected by the US .
Following Mubarak's fall a poll taken found Egyptians favored annulling the peace treaty with Israel by a 54 to a 36 percent margin. The anti - Israel feelings are reinforced by the rise of Muslim Brotherhood's popularity reflected on the lyrics of a local top pop song declaring "I hate Israel and I love Amr Moussa’’ when he is the former Secretary - General of the Arab League and a candidate in the Egyptian presidential election forthcoming on October or November. As a former U.S. peace negotiator Aaron David Miller put it: ‘‘The irony is that the challenges a new Egypt will pose to America and Israel won’t come from the worst case scenarios imagined by frantic policymakers and intelligence analysts an extremist Muslim takeover, an abrogation of peace treaties, the closing of the Suez Canalbut from the very values of participatory government and free speech that free societies so cherish.’ While Israelis fear change will create instability bolstering extremists the other side, namely Hamas and Abbas' government that in April signed a unity agreement reserving that both parties could please constituents on a key issue without risking their own holds on power responding to the present need to realign the national and social agenda and engage with diverse Palestinian communities. On May 3, Netanyahu called on Abbas to cancel the agreement, contending that Israel could not make peace with a Palestinian government that included a terrorist organization.


The coming elections


Besides these complications  and the economic crises the major players have to face a pre - election alarmed period, being so unable to inspire solid and long term promises in their foreign policy. USA's presidential election is to be held on Tuesday, November 6, 2012. Furthermore 2012 - 13 is characterized as the double electoral shock of French and German elections. Russian presidential elections is coming on 2012 along with China's (January 14). Israel's next elections is on December while the aforementioned agreement between Hamas and Abas paved the way for a new Palestinian elections in 2012. Iran set March 2012 for parliamentary elections while India July. So are Brazil and Turkey in 2012.
This dense forest of elections renders every agreement abortive emphasizing the uncertainty and instability of the present situation.


The UN membership


While claims are made that Netanyahu "made a deal" with Romania and Bulgaria to vote against the bid in exchange of permits to their nationals to work in Israel and a Palestinian delegation returning from Moscow said that Russia is supporting the bid to seek recognition it is evident that we are in front of a diplomatic race. Israel have launched a campaign to mobilize against recognition while PLO is running an opposite "massive" one.
The U.N. membership requires a recommendation from the Security Council and approval by two-thirds of the General Assembly, or 128 countries out of the 192 members. With the U.S. poised to veto the approval of Palestinian statehood at the U.N. Security Council, the Palestinians plan to turn to the General Assembly, whose decision would be non binding but could send a strong international message and put heavy pressure on Israel.
Considering last year's voting where the Palestinians achieved to get 123 votes and adding the thirty more recognitions that they have at present it is quite possible that they will amount in percentage terms the same proportion as Israel received in its 1949 admission to the organization.
On top of these one wonders if there is a strong reason for the Libyan war to be terminated before the forthcoming UN assembly on September.