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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (6660)1/10/2005 10:33:50 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Palestinians March in Support of Saddam
AP--01/17/2003
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip --

Thousands of Palestinians toting pictures of Saddam Hussein marched in support of the Iraqi leader Friday as Israelis lined up for gas masks, fearing attack on their cities if the United States goes to war with Iraq.

Also Friday, the Islamic militant group Hamas claimed responsibility for a botched attack with a booby-trapped raft. An Israeli navy gunship fired on the dinghy, causing a large explosion off northern Gaza. Hamas did not say what the attacker's target was, but several Jewish settlements are near the shore in that area.

In Gaza City, about 3,500 Palestinians filled narrow streets with fluttering Iraqi flags and pictures of Saddam. Some chanted together, "Our beloved Saddam, strike Tel Aviv," reviving an old slogan from the 1991 Gulf War.

Flanked by three guards hefting submachine guns, Abdel Aziz Rantisi, a Hamas leader, told reporters that the march was evidence of strong Palestinian support for Iraq.

"The Palestinian people and Iraqi people are in the same trench of resistance against the aggression and against injustice," he said.

Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who backed Iraq in 1991, has withheld public support for Saddam. Palestinian police officers did not try to break up Friday's rally.

At a rally in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, militants urged Arabs to volunteer to help defend Iraq from any attack.

"We call upon all nationalist and Islamist forces to immediately call for opening the doors to recruit volunteers to defend Iraq and its people," Salah el-Youssef, a senior official in the Palestine Liberation Front, a pro-Iraqi group, told the gathering of about 500 people in the Ein el-Hilweh camp.

In Jerusalem's largest shopping mall, dozens of Israelis lined up to get gas masks, with fears of war revived by Thursday's discovery of empty chemical warheads near Baghdad. Most of Israel's 6.6 million people have received gas masks from the military over the years.

Israel's Defense Ministry is to award a contract in the next few weeks for production of an improved gas mask with a battery-operated air pump and a more comfortable fit, especially for people with beards, ministry spokeswoman Rachel said.

The first of the new masks, which Israel has been working for years to develop, will be ready by late spring, she said.

Last month, a Defense Ministry expert, Esther Crasser, told an Israeli newspaper, that only one-third of the type of gas masks distributed in recent years are effective.

Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital, which has a staff well-drilled in treating victims of Palestinian suicide bomb attacks, is preparing to take in several hundred victims of chemical and biological weapons attacks. The hospital said it could treat Israelis wounded at home as well as American soldiers injured in Iraq.

The hospital, one of the best-equipped in the Middle East, is updating computer systems to handle registration of patients with foreign passports, spokeswoman Yael Bossem-Levy said.

In particular, the hospital staff is readying to treat burns and lung injuries in case they receive soldiers hurt by chemical or biological weapons, she said. The hospital did not receive a specific request from the Americans to take in wounded soldiers, she said.

Israel this week went into a higher stage of alert, code-named "Red Hail."

Hundreds of American soldiers are in place in southern Israel for joint maneuvers to prepare anti-missile defenses in case Iraq strikes Israeli cities as it did in 1991. At the time, Iraq fired 39 Scud missiles at Israel.

Preliminary exercises have begun and a live-fire drill is planned, involving two anti-missile systems, the American-made Patriot and the Arrow, developed by Israel and the United States. U.S. soldiers have brought Patriot anti-missile batteries with them and are to remain in Israel until the end of any war on Iraq.



To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (6660)1/10/2005 10:35:36 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 22250
 
The $300 million man

Jerusalem post ^ | 3-2-03

Congratulations are in order for Yasser Arafat. After a long and arduous career spanning nearly four decades, he has apparently succeeded in creating a cozy little nest egg for himself, so much so that Forbes magazine now lists him as one of the world's wealthiest people. Who ever said that terrorism doesn't pay?

With a personal fortune estimated at $300 million stashed away in secret Swiss accounts, Arafat is among those featured in the magazine's annual listing of the well-to-do. In a new category introduced this year entitled "Kings, Queens, and Despots," Forbes places Arafat in a respectable sixth place, right after Queen Elizabeth II of England, but ahead of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands.

While acknowledging that it is "a tricky business" to assess exactly how much Arafat and others on this select list might truly be worth, Forbes wryly notes that they deserve their own separate ranking because, "They don't exactly represent success stories of entrepreneurial capitalism."

In Arafat's case, that is putting it mildly. For a man who used to boast about being married to the Palestinian revolution, he has done more than his fair share of plundering his own people, treating their public resources as his personal ATM machine to be looted at will.

This is not the first time, of course, that Arafat's finances have come under scrutiny, raising serious questions about the utility of international aid programs to the Palestinians. Over much of the past decade, there have been sporadic reports about the chairman's vast wealth, suggesting that Arafat, like other dictators, has no qualms about defrauding those in need.

In November 1995, the US General Accounting Office compiled a report on Arafat's finances, but it was kept top secret due to unexplained "national security interests," which presumably meant a desire not to embarrass the Palestinian leader. In April 1997, the Israeli media revealed the existence of a secret bank account kept by Arafat in Tel Aviv, of all places.

Last June, the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Watan published photocopies of documents from Cairo indicating that Arafat had deposited $5.1 million into a private account he maintains in Egypt. The money, which had been donated by Gulf Arab states to help needy Palestinians, went instead to cover the living expenses of Arafat's wife and daughter, who reside in Paris.

Then, last August, OC Military Intelligence Maj.-Gen. Aharon Ze'evi (Farkash), in testimony before the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, said that Arafat's fortune amounted to $1.3 billion.

Whatever the precise figure, the fact remains that Arafat has been dipping his hand into the cookie jar, and it is about time that he be called to account for doing so. Some $5.5 billion in international aid has been sent to the Palestinian-controlled areas since 1994, much of it from the European Union. Nevertheless, there has been a great deal of reluctance among EU officials to carry out a thorough investigation of what became of all that money.

But this may finally be about to change. Thanks to the tireless efforts of Francois Zimeray, a European Parliament Member (Socialist Party, France), the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) launched an investigation last month into the PA's misuse of European aid. Working over the objections of External Relations Commissioner Chris Patten, Zimeray essentially had to force the EU's hand by gathering the requisite 178 signatures of fellow parliamentarians.

The burden now will fall on OLAF to conduct a comprehensive and earnest inquiry, something that, as Rachel Ehrenfeld pointed out in these pages on Friday, has never been done to date. "Despite EU claims to the contrary," Ehrenfeld wrote, "no real effort to monitor how the money it provided the PA was actually spent has ever taken place."

Moreover, after the Karine A affair last year, and the documents uncovered by the IDF during Operation Defensive Shield which revealed that Arafat had personally authorized the transfer of funds to terrorists it is essential that the funding pipeline be cut off. Money, after all, is fungible, and if the EU continues transferring funds to Arafat, who continues to finance terrorism, then the Europeans themselves bear part of the blame for the bloodshed that results.

Aware of the mounting international criticism he has faced in recent years regarding corruption, Arafat appointed a new finance minister, Salam Fayyad, in June 2002. Though Fayyad has taken several steps to try to improve the transparency of the PA's finances, Arafat reportedly circumvents and ignores him. Arafat's personal corruption may be the least of the reasons why it is in the interest of Palestinians and Israelis that he be removed from office, but it is one more that should be added to the list