PA Rejects Israeli Demand to Find and Hand Over Alleged Zeevi Assassins

Published October 18th, 2001 - 02:00 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

Israeli occupation troops killed three Palestinians, including a 12-year-old schoolgirl, in an attack on Ramallah Thursday. Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority (PA)rejected an Israeli demand to find and hand over the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) fighters alleged to have killed Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi 

The Qatar-based Al Jazeera satellite channel reported that the PA would not comply with the Israeli demand.  

Israel earlier issued an ultimatum to the PA to extradite the alleged PFLP assassins immediately and outlaw the radical Marxist group, or be classified as harbouring terrorists, said AFP. 

Israeli authorities compared Arafat to Afghanistan's Islamic Taliban regime. 

 

ISRAELI TROOPS KILL THREE, INCLUDING 12-YEAR-OLD GIRL 

 

Three Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank town of Ramallah when occupation tanks and bulldozers ploughed into the edges of the town, Palestinian medics told AFP. 

The incursions came a day after the PFLP claimed it had shot dead Zeevi, following up the attack with a suicide bombing in southern Israel that wounded two Israeli soldiers, said the agency. 

The girl, identified by hospital officials as Rahim Ward, was killed when at least one tank shell hit the Ibrahim school in Jenin, in the northern West Bank. At least three other pupils were wounded. 

In Ramallah to the south, two Palestinian men were killed in clashes that erupted when at least seven tanks moved into autonomous Palestinian zones and armoured bulldozers started demolishing anti-tank defences, said AFP. 

A 24-year-old police sergeant, Marwan Ibrahim Sabri, was gunned down by Israeli forces in the confrontation. Another man, Mohammed Abu Raz, was also killed. 

An army spokesman said the Israeli forces in Jenin had come under Palestinian fire. 

The attacking forces announced in Arabic a strict curfew over loudspeakers, warning people in the towns not to leave their homes. 

The latest killings brought the death toll in the latest Palestinian uprising against 34 years of military occupation to 881, including 682 Palestinians and 177 Israelis. 

 

PA OFFICIAL: ISRAEL PLOTTING TO KILL ARAFAT 

 

Israel is scheming to assassinate Arafat and other senior Palestinian figures in a bid to destroy the peace process, top Arafat aide Nabil Abu Rudeina charged Thursday. 

The official's statements were mirrored in remarks made by top Israeli officials and settlers quoted by AFP.  

"We have to get rid of Yasser Arafat by expelling him from the region," said Finance Minister Silvan Shalom on Israeli public radio. 

Environment Minister Tzahi Hanegbi made the same proposal on Wednesday. 

And a spokesman for Jewish settlers in the West Bank town of Hebron called for Arafat to be "eliminated" in retaliation for the assassination of Zeevi, who had championed their cause, added the agency. 

 

ISRAELI OFFICIALS MEET ON STRATEGY 

 

On Wednesday, Israel weighed responses to the assassination of Zeevi, amid settlers' calls for the "elimination" of Yasser Arafat.  

The Tel Aviv-based Haaretz newspaper reported that the Israeli cabinet met Wednesday night to decide on measures in the wake of the killing of Zeevi.  

Defense Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer was also scheduled to meet Wednesday evening with the heads of the security establishment to decide on possible measures to be taken in response to the killing.  

The inner security cabinet decided Wednesday to freeze all contacts with the Palestinian Authority until it "ends violence," and to "step up" the military response to terror attacks. The inner cabinet, however, did not make a decision to carry out assassinations of Palestinian political leaders beyond the 40-odd individuals already targeted and killed.  

The government has also barred Arafat from using the Gaza airport, said the paper on its Internet edition.  

The Palestinian Authority condemned the assassination and President Arafat has ordered the arrest of those behind the assassination. 

Reports said the PFLP spokesman in Ramallah was arrested on Arafat's orders.  

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres urged Arafat to rein in assassins, warning that all peace hopes were now in peril.  

"All our efforts will go up in smoke if Arafat does not arrest Palestinian militants," Peres said, after Zeevi was gunned down in Jerusalem by the PFLP in revenge for the assassination of its own leader, Israeli radio reported, said AFP.  

Peres, in a statement issued by his ministry, said he was "stunned" by the "sordid murder" of Zeevi.  

"Despite ideological differences," the dovish foreign minister paid tribute to the tourism minister's "courage, determination and sense of responsibility during the many years that he spent in the army."  

Peres, the main architect of the 1993 Oslo peace accords, has already called on Arafat several times to arrest Palestinians accused of "terrorism" by Israel.  

Earlier, Israel suspended all contact with the PA and reinstalled the blockade it had partially lifted off the Palestinian lands as Prime Minister Ariel Sharon blamed Arafat for the killing.  

"I hold Arafat fully responsible, inasmuch as he set the terrorism in motion, even though he knew very well what the consequences would be," Sharon told a special session of the Knesset convened to pay respects to the slain minister and former general.  

"We will wage a war without mercy against the terrorists" Sharon warned. "Only criminal terrorists could dream of assassinating elected members of a democratic state," he added.  

 

US URGES BOTH SIDES TO STAY ON PEACE PATH 

 

The United States on Wednesday urged Israel and Palestinians to keep moving forward on the path toward peace despite the assassination of Zeevi.  

"It would be a tragedy if the terrorists were able to derail that process," said State Department spokesman Philip Reeker, as quoted by the agency.  

"So we want the Palestinians and the Israelis to continue with the positive steps that they've recently embarked on to improve the situation and begin to restore some measure of cooperation," he said.  

He added, however, that the killing was "a despicable act of terrorism that we condemn in the strongest terms," and called on Arafat to find the perpetrators.  

"[President] Arafat and the Palestinian Authority must move now to find and arrest all those responsible for this act as well as to continue arrests of other known terrorists," Reeker added.  

 

PA BLASTS ZEEVI KILLING, ISRAELI ASSASSINATIONS  

 

The Palestinian Authority condemned the killing of Zeevi, as well as Israel's own policy of political assassinations in the year-old intifada or uprising against 34 years of military occupation.  

"The Palestinian Authority rejects completely and condemns all acts of assassination," a statement said.  

"We give our condolences to the Israeli government," it added.  

The Palestinian Authority asserted its opposition to "assassination on all levels, even in the case of Zeevi, the radical one," the statement said, alluding to Zeevi's extremist ideology in favor of expelling all Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.  

The PA also reaffirmed its commitment to the ailing ceasefire agreement hammered out between Arafat and Peres on September 26.  

"The Palestinian Authority confirms its decision in favor of a complete ceasefire and will do what they have to do in these matters according to the law," it said.  

 

EU CONDEMNS 'COWARDLY ASSASSINATION’  

 

The European Union condemned "in the strongest terms" the "cowardly" assassination, saying "this criminal act will not interrupt the most recent efforts of the Israeli and Palestinian authorities" toward peace.  

France, Britain and Germany, joined by the European Commission, quickly spoke out, expressing shock and condemnation of the killing.  

The attack "will most certainly slow down efforts for the Middle East peace process," a European Commission spokesman said, cited by AFP.  

EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana himself said Wednesday "I would like to condemn in the strongest possible terms the assassination this morning of Rehavam Zeevi."  

Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair, who earlier this week met in London with Arafat, said "we condemn utterly this contemptible act of violence."  

He urged "restraint on all sides in response to the men of violence who only want to wreck any proposals for peace.  

On Monday, the British prime minister had given his most public support yet for a "viable" Palestinian state, which would coexist peacefully alongside Israel.  

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, due to embark on a new peace mission to the Middle East next week, expressed his dismay and conveyed his condolences to Peres and Zeevi's family.  

 

LEBANON'S REFUGEES DANCE WITH JOY  

 

Hundreds of Palestinians in Lebanese refugee camps danced with joy as they celebrated the assassination, said agencies.  

Streaming in from all corners of Ain El Helweh camp in southern Lebanon of 60,000 residents, jubilant Palestinians gathered in front of the PFLP offices there.  

Flashing the "V for victory" sign, they shouted "mabruk," the Arabic word for congratulations.  

PFLP activists handed out sweets, while youths waved the Palestinian and PFLP flags.  

Others, wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the portrait of slain PFLP leader Abu Ali Mustapha, formed circles, arms round each other's shoulders, and danced the dabka.  

"Our heroes have avenged Abu Ali Mustapha and the martyrs of the Intifada killed by Zionist bullets," said Hussein, a 55-year-old grocer, who closed his shop to join the "party."  

PFLP spokesman Abu Talal told AFP in Ain El Helweh that "the heroic action of our fighters is a normal response to the crimes perpetrated by Sharon against Abu Ali Mustapha and the heroes of the Intifada."  

Mustapha was killed on August 27, when Israeli helicopter gunships blasted his Ramallah office with missiles as part of a policy of eliminating alleged "terrorists."  

The PFLP had sworn that the assassination would not go unpunished.  

 

ISRAELI CABINET REBEL RECONSIDERS RESIGNATION AFTER MURDER OF ALLY  

 

Israel's National Infrastructure Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Wednesday he was considering withdrawing his resignation from the government after the slaying of Zeevi, his fellow cabinet right-wing rebel.  

"After this attack, we are asking ourselves what Rehavam Zeevi would have done, and we will reach a decision very soon," said Lieberman, who tendered his resignation Monday, together with Zeevi, in protest at the government's peace moves.  

Their resignation had been due to come into effect at 1:30pm (1130 GMT). The pull-out of their ultra-nationalist bloc had been strongly opposed by Sharon, who would nonetheless have retained a comfortable majority in the Knesset.  

Lieberman, head of the Russian-immigrant Israeli-Beitenu which was allied in parliament with Zeevi's National Union, said: "The reality has changed. It is impossible to carry on as if nothing had happened."  

 

JEWISH SETTLERS DEMAND 'ELIMINATION' OF ARAFAT  

 

Jewish settlers demanded that Israel "eliminate" Arafat in revenge for the slaying of the right-wing politician, a champion of the Jewish settlements illegally built in the Palestinian territories.  

"The first thing which needs to be done is the elimination of the Palestinian Authority and Yasser Arafat," David Wilder, spokesman for the ultra-Orthodox settlers in the West Bank city of Hebron, epicenter of the radical settler movement, told AFP.  

When asked if he was calling for the army to assassinate Arafat, Wilder said: "Yasser Arafat is the head of a snake that represents practices of terror. If you don't chop off the head of the snake, it continues to attack and kill."  

 

HAMAS: ISRAEL REAPS WHAT IT SOWS  

 

Hamas cheered the slaying of Zeevi as the consequences of Israel's policy of assassinating Palestinian leaders during the year-old Intifada.  

"I think the reasons for the shooting of Zeevi was Sharon and his policies, which included the assassination of political leaders and children," said Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Al Rantissi, whose own group has been battered by Israel's policy of gunning down political leaders.  

"Who started killing political leaders? The Jews. And now they pay the price," Rantissi added.  

"They chose to be killed. We accept this game." - Albawaba.com

© 2001 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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