Get on TheList!
FEATURES
Never too late to learn
In Israel, tension in air
Variety of vendors
COMMUNITY
Tomorrow's leaders?
Brooklyn yeshiva honors Rebibo
PROFILE
Braff shares the 'unthinkable'
SPECIAL SECTION
Thanksgiving Planner
Thanksgiving: the American Sukkot?
HEALTH
Local doctors ride for charity
FASHION
What is modest dress?
NATION
Syrian Jews mark 100 years in U.S.
Leader's legacy lives on
Debbie Schultz seen as rising star
European Jews split on Bush win
Cleveland ready for UJC meeting
WORLD
Putting shtetl life on film
ISRAEL
Israelis reflect on life after Arafat
Arafat at death's door, Palestinians move to end chaos
OPINION
Editorial - A test by any other name
Commentary - Faux mitzvah is faux pas
In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
ARTS
Hillel Players spend evening with Neil Simon works
BUSINESS
People on the move
SINGLES
Dealing with the unorthodox date
COMING UP
This Week
MILESTONES
Births
B'nai Mitzvah
Weddings
Obituaries
TORAH STUDY
Living for today and tomorrow
Get on TheList!
HOME PAGE

November 12, 2004/Cheshvan 28 5765, Vol. 57, No. 11

Arafat at death's door, Palestinians move to end chaos

DAN BARON
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
JERUSALEM - Yasser Arafat may be on the verge of death in a French hospital, but back home the temporary Palestinian leadership is breathing new life into prospects of peace with Israel.

Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei and his predecessor, Mahmoud Abbas, declared a police crackdown on the chaos in the West Bank and Gaza Strip on Nov. 7.

"This goes into effect immediately," said Palestinian Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat.

The initiative was billed as a move to restore law and order after recent clashes between Arafat loyalists and a new generation of Fatah members.

It also included a Palestinian Authority request that terror factions halt attacks on Israel proper, a move the groups were considering and were ex-pected to accept.

Israeli officials, who had braced for a potentially cata-strophic succession struggle in the West Bank and Gaza since Arafat was flown to Paris with a severe stomach complaint on Oct. 29, expressed cautious encouragement.

"There are indications that the Palestinian Authority is trying to close ranks and stop the Hamas terrorism, but there is no way of knowing if this will succeed," Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told the Israeli Cabinet.

"We believe Hamas and other terror groups will answer the Palestinian Authority's call for violence to be curbed."

Israel still insists that the Palestinian Authority disarm Hamas and other terrorist groups in accordance with the U.S.-backed peace "road map."

That need was underscored over the weekend of Nov. 6-7 by the death of an Israeli soldier in a "friendly fire" incident as his unit clashed with Palestinian gunmen in the West Bank town of Tulkarm. In a separate incident in nearby Jenin, Israeli commandos killed four Al-Aksa Brigade terrorists.

But in Jerusalem there is a growing conviction that, with Arafat gone, the extremists could lay down their arms in exchange for a place in a new, broad Palestinian government.

On Nov. 6, Qurei and his security chiefs held a rare conference with Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Al-Aksa Brigade at which the factions requested a power-sharing role.

The Palestinian Authority, wary of alienating Israel and the United States by closing ranks with terrorist groups, was circumspect. "We are talking about unity in all forms and aspects," Qurei told reporters when asked about the talks in Gaza.

Israel, meanwhile, is keen to avoid any appearance of meddling in the future of the Palestinian Authority and offered to ease closures in the West Bank and Gaza so that Palestinian security forces can restore order.

Mofaz also told the Cabinet that Israeli security forces were prepared to facilitate Arafat's burial in Gaza should his condition - recent reports indicate he is suffering liver failure, although several other ailments have also been suggested - prove fatal.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has ruled out the Palestinian Authority's request to lay Arafat to rest in Jerusalem, but some Palestinian officials discreetly agree with the choice of Gaza - the Pal-estinian leader's father is already buried there, in the Khan Younis Martyrs Cemetery.

Arafat's wife, Suha, has reportedly requested that he be kept on a life-support system indefinitely - or at least until she can wrap up his will to her satisfaction. The delay has increased tension in the Palestinian ranks. But according to Palestinian sources, the patience of the comatose Palestinian leader's French hosts may be wearing thin.

Qurei and Abbas flew to Paris on Nov. 8 for a final consultation with Suha Arafat on whether her husband should be declared dead. Another option, ac-cording to sources, is to fly Yasser Arafat to Cairo, where his demise would segue with a pan-Arab state funeral. From there, it is but a short flight to Gaza.


Home