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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (5760)8/23/2003 4:21:33 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793543
 
Of course I agree that the terrorist wing is not a by-the-way; it is the whole raison d'etre of Hamas.


We went through this for decades in Belfast with the IRA. The Political wing was supposed to be seperated from the terrorist wing. Hamas is now appealing to the Euros to override Bush's freeze, and some will, I bet.

[The Jerusalem Post Internet Edition]

Hamas calls on EU to rebuff US demands for freezing of funds
The Associated Press Aug. 23, 2003

Europe should reject U.S. demands that it freeze the funds of Hamas officials and pro-Palestinian charities, the Lebanese representative of the Hamas militant group said Saturday.

"We call on the countries that the Americans are trying to pressure not to respond to the pressure," Osama Hamdan said in a statement. He added the "American decisions ... are based on Israel's interests."

A similar call was issued by one of the charities named by the U.S. government, the Sanabel Endowment for Relief and Development, which denied Saturday having any links to Hamas and expressed "astonishment at the unjustified" freeze.

On Friday, the United States froze the assets of six Hamas leaders, including Hamdan, and five European-based organizations that it said raise money for the radical Palestinian group.

President George W. Bush said he ordered the freeze because Hamas had claimed responsibility for Tuesday's suicide attack on a packed bus in Jerusalem that killed 20 people, including six children.

"Hamas has reaffirmed that it is a terrorist organization committed to violence against Israelis and to undermining progress toward peace between Israel and the Palestinian people," he said.

Bush called on "all nations supportive of peace in the Middle East" to recognize Hamas as a terrorist organization and to join the United States in freezing the groups' funds.

The Sanabel Endowment, which is based in Lebanon, faxed a statement to The Associated Press in Beirut, saying: "The endowment has nothing to with any Palestinian movement or organization, be it the Hamas movement or any other, and offers its services to all the sons of the Palestinian people in Lebanon."

The charity said it sponsors more than 12,000 orphans and helps Palestinian refugee families in need. "We urge all those concerned not to respond to American pressures that are dictated by the Zionists," Sanabel added.

In his statement, Hamdan said neither he nor any of the other five Hamas leaders named by the U.S. Treasury had any bank accounts in the United States and Europe.

"Resistance is our real asset, and our people's support for the resistance is what we what we pride ourselves on," he said. Hamas has long defended its policy of suicide bombings in public places as a valid tactic against the military superiority of Israel.

The Treasury named the six Hamas leaders as: Sheik Ahmed Yassin, the spiritual mentor of Hamas; Abdel Aziz Rantisi, an aide to Yassin; Osama Hamdan; and three members of the Hamas political bureau in Damascus, Syria - Imad Khalil Al-Alami, Khalid Mishaal and Musa Abu Marzouk.

The Treasury named the charities as the Committee for Charity and Aid for the Palestinians, which is based in France; the Association for Palestinian Aid in Switzerland; the Palestinian Relief and Development Fund, or Interpal, which is based in Britain; the Palestinian Association in Austria; and Sanabel.

Khaled Mashaal and Moussa Abu Marzouk declined comment Saturday. They both referred callers to Hamdan.

Rudolf Gollia, a spokesman for Austria's Interior Ministry, said late Friday that the country's counterterrorism agency already had investigated the Palestinian Association in Austria and found no evidence of wrongdoing or grounds for charges.

The group registered in Austria in 1993, he said.

"Under Austrian law, there were no grounds for punitive action," Gollia told the Austria Press Agency.

Bush, who stopped in Washington state during a two-day trip through the northwestern United States, spoke of the Jerusalem bus bombing and the renewed violence in the Middle East.

This article can also be read at jpost.com



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (5760)8/24/2003 10:18:59 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793543
 
Arafat maneuvers to sideline Dahlan
The Associated Press Aug. 24, 2003

Palestinian leaders were locked in a power struggle Sunday, officials said, triggered by Yasser Arafat's attempt to hand control over all the security forces to a loyalist in apparent hope of sidelining the US-backed Palestinian security chief.

The current security chief, Mohammed Dahlan, is supported by Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, whom Arafat has repeatedly tried to undermine since appointing him in April under US pressure.

International mediators now want Arafat to relinquish control of the security forces and allow Abbas and Dahlan to clamp down on militants, in response to a Hamas bus bombing that killed 21 people in Jerusalem last week. Arafat continues to command several of the security branches, while Abbas and Dahlan supervise the rest.

Instead of giving up control over armed men, Arafat proposed Saturday to pass the supreme command to Nasser Yousef, a staunch Arafat loyalist. Such an appointment would effectively sideline Dahlan.

Palestinian militants, meanwhile, fired a new, longer-range rocket into Israel on Sunday, the army said. The rocket, which landed less than a kilometer (mile) from the Israeli city of Ashkelon, fell on a beach, just 10 meters (yards) from an unmanned lifeguard post, the army said.

The militants fired the rocket from an area of the Gaza Strip that allowed them to target Ashkelon, rather than the much smaller Israeli town of Sderot, which had previously been the target of Qassam rockets, the army said.

The rocket was fired just hours after Dahlan's forces began arresting weapons smugglers in the Gaza Strip, seizing weapons and detaining at least a dozen suspects Saturday. Dahlan's forces also sealed off two tunnels used to smuggle weapons from Egypt to the Gaza Strip.

If Yousef is appointed interior minister, Dahlan will become irrelevant, a Palestinian official said on condition of anonymity. And if Yousef takes over, Arafat will retain effective control over the security forces, the official said, something the Americans and the Israelis oppose.

The official said he doubted the initiative would be approved by the central committee of the ruling Fatah faction. A meeting of the committee scheduled for later Sunday was canceled for reasons that remained unclear.

A main Palestinian obligation, according to a US-backed peace initiative, is to dismantle militant groups.

Yousef, who is one of the oldest members of the Palestine Liberation Organization, was part of a senior guard who spent the 1980s in exile with Arafat in Tunis and Lebanon. In 1994, when the Palestinian Authority was established, Yousef was a senior police commander.

Palestinian Information Minister Nabil Amr denied Israeli media reports that Dahlan and Abbas are threatening to resign.

"There is a small crisis now about how we will strengthen the unity of our security forces...and how the Palestinians will enforce the willingness of the authority and the rule of law," Amr told Israel's Army Radio.

"We want to unify our security forces under one title, under one address," Amr said.

According to officials who attended Saturday's meeting, Abbas was initially vehemently opposed to Yousef's appointment but later expressed flexibility on the issue.

If approved by the Fatah central committee, the nomination would move to the Palestinian Legislative Council, which has to approve all Cabinet postings.

Israel retaliated for Tuesday's bus bombing with a helicopter missile strike that killed Ismail Abu Shanab, a Hamas leader.

After Abu Shanab's killing a cease-fire declared by militant groups on June 29 collapsed. Abbas came under even greater pressure to rein in militants, something he is reluctant to do for fear it will spark internal fighting.

Without Arafat's cooperation, a clampdown would be even more difficult, Amr said, noting that US Secretary of State Colin Powell made a similar statement after the bus bombing.

In a rare call on Arafat whom the United States has ignored for months Powell called on the Palestinian leader last week to hand over control of his security forces to Dahlan so he would be able to effectively fight terrorism.

"We will never achieve any progress, especially in organizing our security forces... to all our steps, we need Yasser Arafat, we need his cooperation," Amr said.

In the West Bank city of Nablus, Israeli forces uncovered a bomb lab, blowing up the site where they found an 80-kilogram (176 pound) bomb, fertilizers and other bomb-making materials, the army and Palestinian witnesses said.

Two rockets similar to the Qassam rockets fired from the Gaza Strip were found in the explosives factory, the army and witnesses said. It is unusual for the army to find rockets in the West Bank, which is in much closer range to central Israeli cities than the Gaza Strip.

This article can also be read at jpost.com