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Politics : World Affairs Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (2789)9/24/2003 4:35:49 PM
From: lorne  Respond to of 3959
 
Al-Sharq Al-Awsat Columnist: Arafat Should Go
September 25, 2003 No.578
memri.org

In her September 19, 2003 column in the London-based Arabic daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat titled , "Should Arafat Go?" columnist Huda Al-Husseini urged Arab countries and the Palestinian people to make it clear to Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat that by clinging to power, he is preventing a solution to the Palestinian problem. The following are excerpts from Al-Husseini'sarticle: [1]

Arafat Has Become a Worn-Out Symbol That Has Lost Its Glory
"Yes, [Arafat should go], but not by expulsion, murder, or any other form of intervention by Israel.

"Why must Yasser Arafat leave his place in the Palestinian political arena? Because the Palestinian cause will never advance as long as he controls this arena.

"The solution to this problem relies on international elements, the most prominent of which are the U.S. and Israel. Arafat is not wanted – neither by the U.S. nor, most certainly, by Israel. Moreover, he has lost his legitimacy even in the eyes of the Europeans, and he is criticized in the Arab world too. It is true that Arafat is a symbol. But he has become a worn-out symbol that has lost its glory.

"In modern history, two prominent historic leaders have been symbols in the eyes of their people. The first was Nelson Mandela, who was imprisoned by South Africa's previous, racist regime – but no politician dared then to threaten to expel or kill him. The second leader was Xanana Gusmao, leader of the East Timor rebellion who was captured by the Indonesians. Then too, none of the Indonesian authorities dared to threaten him with expulsion or murder.

"But with Arafat the situation is different, because Israel's policy of threatening him with expulsion or murder has again placed him in the limelight. This policy does not attest to strategic thought; it is a blunder [for Israel], which Arafat has not figured out how to use in favor of the Palestinian cause, or for the good of the Palestinian people – but [only] in his own favor. This is because he thinks that he is the Palestinian cause and the Palestinian cause is him."

Arafat Turned His Back On a Palestinian State With East Jerusalem as Its Capital

"Arafat's expulsion would be a mistake, and his murder would be considered a crime. [But] his blowing kisses or flashing a V-sign is no better. This meaningless sign blocks the light at the end of the tunnel. Arafat has missed many opportunities… the most recent and obvious of which was the plan presented to him by the previous U.S. president, Bill Clinton, in 2000. Instead of accepting an opportunity that would lead to the end of the Israeli occupation, he turned his back on a Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as its capital…"

A Great Leader Knows When and How to Leave The Stage

"Arafat's problem is that he wants to prove that nothing will be realized without him, [while] it is obvious that nothing will be realized with him. He wants to preserve [national] principles, while in reality this concept no longer exists. [In reality,] national principles are represented by international forces and capital. Today no international force supports Arafat, and on the other hand he has lost all his capital – except perhaps for his secret bank accounts.

"There is another problem, for which the Arab countries are to blame. These countries are not openly telling Arafat the truth – which is that his insistence on remaining in the limelight will never bring about the realization of the Palestinians' aspirations.

"What Arafat needs is for the Arab states and the Palestinian people to talk to him frankly. As long as Arafat is the only element in the Palestinian Authority, Israel will continue to take advantage of this weak point – by means of Sharon or anyone else. Those who are enthused by the V-sign Arafat flashes will never notice that the limelight is being shifted from the Palestinian cause, the doors are closing in front of them, the settlements are spreading and expanding, and the fence continues to be built and continues to swallow up land.

"A great leader knows when and how to leave the stage – sometimes via his people, as happened to Winston Churchill, and sometimes via his wisdom, as happened to Nelson Mandela."



To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (2789)9/24/2003 4:59:59 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3959
 
Gus. Does Schroeder have a prayer mat yet? How about chirak.

Muslim German teacher allowed to wear veil
25 September 2003
stuff.co.nz

KARLSRUHE: Germany's highest court has ruled that a Muslim woman teacher has the right to wear a traditional headscarf in the classroom, settling an issue in Germany causing controversy throughout Europe.

The Federal Constitutional Court ruled that Stuttgart school authorities were wrong to bar Afghan-born Fereshta Ludin from a teaching job. She had been barred on the grounds that her headscarf would violate the state's neutrality on religion.

The ruling opened the way for Muslim women teachers across Germany to cover their heads while at school unless the country's federal states have laws expressly forbidding religious symbols in the classroom.

The hijab, as it is called in Arabic, has offended teachers, bureaucrats and modern-minded women in Europe for more than a decade. The September 11 attacks in the United States heightened fears the veil could cover a head full of radical thoughts.

Ludin had been banned from taking up a post in 1998 to teach English and German in primary and secondary schools. She had appealed to the constitutional court after lower courts had all ruled in favour of the regional government in the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg.

Ludin's case was the second the constitutional court has handled in as many months. In August, it ruled that Muslim shop assistants could not be fired for wearing a headscarf, despite managers' complaints that they put off customers.

In France, a state commission is debating whether Paris should forbid Muslim girls from wearing a scarf to class.

Not all Europeans have such troubles. The British, for example, generally shrug at the headscarves in their Muslim neighbourhoods as just another part of a multicultural society.



To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (2789)10/1/2003 3:33:47 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3959
 
Yet Arafat has a fairly consistent record of political moderation going back to 1988, when he persuaded the Palestinian National Council to recognize Israel's legitimacy, to accept all relevant United Nations resolutions and to opt for a two-state solution.

In fact, Arafat convinced the PNC to accept these things in 1976. The Palestinians, along with all of the Arab states that had disputes with Israel (Egypt, Syria, etc.) formally offered this to Israel in a UN resolution. Israel refused to listen and the U.S. obediently vetoed it. Following that, Israel built up Hamas to undermine the PLO's peace offer. They were unsuccessful, in more ways than one.

Tom