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UN security council to meet on Yassin assassination
Ha'aretz ^ | March 23, 2004 | Shlomo Shamir and Yoav Stern

Posted on 03/23/2004 8:50:02 AM PST by Piranha

The United Nations security council is to convene at 3 P.M. EST (10 P.M. Israel time) on Tuesday evening, to discuss the assassination of Hamas spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in Gaza City on Monday morning.

During the debate, the members of the council will determine the UN response to the killing by Israel, although any resolution is subject to a veto by the United States or one of the other permanent members of the council.

The debate will take place after the U.S. foiled an initiative by Algeria to bypass any discussion and move straight to the formulation of a declaration on the assassination. The U.S. instead prevented the release of such a statement, a move that brought about Tuesday's discussion.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Monday condemned the attack on the wheelchair-bound Hamas leader shortly after he left a mosque near his Gaza City home following morning prayers.

White House 'deeply troubled' The White House said Monday it was "deeply troubled" by Israel's assassination of Yassin.

"We are deeply troubled by this morning's actions in Gaza," White House Scott McClellan said.

Earlier Monday, the United States denied it had given the green light to Israel to kill Yassin and appealed for calm in the region following the assassination.

The European Union and other countries condemned Israel's killing of Yassin as a violation of international law that has further "inflamed" tensions in the Middle East.

On Monday night, representatives of the Quartet - the U.S., United Nations, Russia and the EU - will be meeting for talks on the consequences of the assassination in Cairo.

White House national security advisor Condoleezza Rice said in morning television shows the United States did not have advance warning of the assassination from Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom was set to meet Rice, U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Colin Powell Monday in previously scheduled meetings to discuss the peace process.

"It is very important that everyone step back now and try now to be calm in the region," Rice told NBC's "Today" show. "There is always a possibility of a better day in the Middle East and some of the things being talked about by the Israelis - about disengagement from areas - might provide new opportunities."

"I would hope that nothing will be done to preclude those new opportunities from emerging," she added.

Pressed on whether the United States had played a role in Yassin's death or whether Sharon had called President George W. Bush directly to tell him that Israeli forces planned the assassination, Rice replied: "He did not."

She did not directly condemn the attack. "Let's remember that Hamas is a terrorist organization and that Sheikh Yassin himself has been heavily involved in terrorism," she said.

EU: No extra-judicial killings The foreign ministers of the European Union nations appealed to Israel and Palestinians on Monday to "refrain from acts of violence which will only lead to more deaths and will put a peaceful settlement still further from reach," and said that while Hamas was guilty of "atrocities," Israel was not "entitled to carry out extra-judicial killings."

In a statement issued at their monthly meeting, the foreign ministers said Yassin's assassination "has inflamed the situation... Violence is no substitute for the political negotiations which are necessary for a just and lasting settlement."

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said the "unlawful" assassination of Yassin, a quadriplegic, would not make Israel any more secure. His killing was "very unlikely to achieve its objectives," Straw said. "I don't believe Israel will benefit from the fact that this morning an 80-year-old in a wheelchair was" assassinated.

Straw spoke of "Israel's paramount need to defend itself" against terrorists, but if it wants "the full support of the international community, it needs to do so within the boundaries set by international law."

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer also said he was "deeply concerned about the possible consequences," and French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said the killing "amplifies the cycle of violence."

He urged Palestinians and Israelis to recommit to the road map, saying, "At the very moment when we are trying to give a new impulse to the peace process, we are quite worried to see that violence is again taking the lead."

Polish Foreign Minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz said Monday he feared the implications of the assassination. "I'm afraid that it may have very, very negative consequences not only in terms of Israeli-Palestinian conflict but I'm afraid that the threat of terrorist attacks also on other countries, including European [ones], is growing,"

"I really fear that we will see new violence," Luxembourg's Lydie Polfer told reporters.

"Of course we are against assassinations like this. This is not the way ahead. There's only one way ahead, and that is political," said Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller.

The Vatican also condemned Israel's killing of Yassin, saying lasting peace can never be reached by a show of force.

"The Holy See joins the international community in deploring this act of violence not justified in any state [run by] the rule of law," said Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls.

The statement said that authentic and lasting peace "cannot be the fruit of a simple show of force" but is "above all the fruit of moral and legal action."

Turkey condemned as "very dangerous" and "wrong" the killing of Yassin on Monday, while demonstrations were staged outside Israeli diplomatic missions in Ankara and Istanbul.

About 100 people, carrying posters of Sheik Ahmed Yassin, burned U.S, and Israeli flags near the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul. About 50 protesters denounced the attack near the Israeli Embassy in the capital Ankara. Both buildings are heavily protected.

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said he feared the killing would escalate violence. "The operation Israel conducted this morning is very dangerous. I am very concerned," he said. "It can escalate the situation, it can escalate terrorism," he told reporters.

He said the assassination came when both sides should have been exercising restraint.

Quartet to meet on consequences of assassination Envoys from the United Nations, United States, Russia and the European Union have arranged to meet for talks on the consequences of the assassination, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher said Monday.

The four representatives will meet at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo on Monday night.

Maher said that in his talks with U.S. envoy William Burns hours after the assassination, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said there needed to be "a crystal-clear position on the peace process under these circumstances."

Burns, who is America's envoy to the Middle East, is one of the four representatives who is scheduled to take part in the meeting. The others are: the European Union's Marc Otte, Russian envoy Alexander Kalugin and U.N. representative Terje Roed-Larsen.

Iran: Assassination a criminal act Iran's vice president Ali Abtahi on Monday called for revenge for the killing of Yassin, "who turned into the leader of the entire Muslim nation after his death." He said that the operation would most likely not lead to the results Israel hoped for. "Now we will all unite and support the Palestinian struggle," he said.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi said: "This is a criminal act and a further example of the Zionist regime's barbarity... The Zionist regime will plunge further into the crisis it brought upon itself."

Lebanese President Emile Lahoud said Israel was mistaken if it thought violence could suppress the will of the Palestinians.

"Assassinating any symbol cannot kill those rights but will increase the resistance... Israel will find the same fate in the occupied territories as it found in south Lebanon," he said.

Shops and schools closed in north Lebanon's Palestinian refugee camps and residents took to the streets to vent their anger and vow revenge as the news broke that Israeli helicopters had killed Yassin with rockets outside a Gaza mosque.

A student from Egypt's al-Azhar university, one of the most prestigious institutions of Islamic learning, said students were preparing protests outside their residence in eastern Cairo.

Ahmed Jibril, leader of the radical Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, told Lebanon's al-Manar television: "This Zionist enemy could not have committed this crime without the United States giving it the green light."

"The United States is convinced that we are not a people who are defending a cause but views us as terrorists," he added.

Jordan, meanwhile, vehemently condemned the assassination of Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in Gaza City on Monday, calling it a "massacre", government spokesperson Asma Khader said, and added that the killing "damages any chance for peace in the region."

Popular television preacher Yusouf Qaradawi on Monday called on all Muslims to act against Israel following the assassination.

In an interview to Hezbollah's Al Manar television, Qaradawi demanded that the Muslims of the world give "financial and moral support" to the struggle against Israel.

Qaradawi, who by mistake called Yassin "Ahmed Palestine," said that the assassination has brought an end to all peace initiatives. "They are useless," Qaradawi said, adding that "Israel doesn't care for all the initiatives, and Sharon and his gang only understand the language of force."

Al Jazeera television on Monday interviewed a prominent Islamic leader from Sudan, Hassan Turabi, who made a connection between the Gaza assassination and the goings on in other flashpoints in the Muslim world, such as Chechnya, Indonesia and the U.S. detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

"The struggle will spread to the hearts of the nations," Turabi predicted, and added that Arab regimes would now have to express a resolute position regarding the Palestinian issue, otherwise they will be replaces.

Turabi said that Hamas would continue to operate under the spirit of Yassin, "because Islam has no leadership crises. The prophet Mohammed also had a replacement," he said.

Mohamed Mahdi Akef, leader of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, on Monday called the assassination "an unforgivable crime" and said the Palestinians should not lay down their arms because violence was the only language that Israel understood.

"We will not rest, we will not sleep until the last Zionist leaves our territory," Akef said. The influential Brotherhood shares the Islamist views of Hamas.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Israel; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: hamas; hypocracy; israel; palestinians; powell; statedepartment; terror; un
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How I wish the US would distinguish between military actions in the WAR ON TERROR, versus Kerry-style police actions. The killing of Yassin was every bit as morally justified as would be the killing of Osama bin Laden or his no. 2 man in Pakistan. Israel, in its judgement, believed that this morally-justified action was strategically beneficial, and there are many who agree.
1 posted on 03/23/2004 8:50:03 AM PST by Piranha
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To: Piranha
Did I miss the UNSC meeting for the last 57 times Hamas slaughtered innocent Israelis?
2 posted on 03/23/2004 8:52:41 AM PST by Coop ("Hero" is the last four-letter word I'd use to describe John Kerry)
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To: Coop
Yeah, and why is the Vatican only concerned when terrorists are killed? Why don't they denounce the killing of Jews in Israel or the killing of Christians in the Middle East, China, and other parts of Asia?
3 posted on 03/23/2004 8:55:09 AM PST by DallasMike
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To: Piranha
Ha'aretz is socialist scum paper. In this entire article, not one mention of the attack on Ashdod last week in which Hamas - Yassin's group - tried to poison an entire city.
4 posted on 03/23/2004 8:55:21 AM PST by thoughtomator (Voting Bush because there is no reasonable alternative)
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To: Piranha
I don't get this at all. I don't get the disconnect between the US war on terror and Israel's war on terror. Why is the killing of Assin any different than any other terror leader??
5 posted on 03/23/2004 8:56:49 AM PST by Huck (In the Soviet Union, there were Admin Moderators everywhere!)
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To: Piranha
well done Israel!
6 posted on 03/23/2004 8:57:08 AM PST by Jon Alvarez
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To: DallasMike
As a Catholic, I understand the Vatican's role in renouncing violence. But I am absolutely embarassed at its blatant bias regarding this terror.
7 posted on 03/23/2004 8:57:36 AM PST by Coop ("Hero" is the last four-letter word I'd use to describe John Kerry)
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To: Piranha
yup this just proves that the UN has utterly failed its mandate since the 'end' of the Korean War.

With the USA fundinf 25% of its expenses is all the more reason for the UN should just shrivel up and go away permanently.

I can seldon think of a more worthless, inept, morally corrupt organization which proport to be for 'good' but is so rotten to its utter core (Well maybe the Democrat Party for the most part as its main competition).

8 posted on 03/23/2004 8:59:16 AM PST by prophetic
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To: DallasMike
Yeah, and why is the Vatican only concerned when terrorists are killed?

Your statement is not supported by fact. And it is anti-Christian

9 posted on 03/23/2004 9:01:15 AM PST by ladyjane
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To: Piranha
"Our leader, Abu Annan, says he will protect us, and that we don't need no stinking end of slavery, rape or our terror
as long as money continues to flow to the French and to Kofi's own son, Tojo Annan.
So why don't all you dhimmis just give up and surrender NOW, like the French and Spanish already have."


10 posted on 03/23/2004 9:02:11 AM PST by Diogenesis (If you mess with one of us, you mess with all of us)
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To: thoughtomator
Don't blame the messenger. If the UN is holding this meeting, and the US merely vetoes a resolution but doesn't back Israel (which I believe it will not do), then I see this as a wedge between the US and Israel, both of which are in the vanguard of the war on terror.
11 posted on 03/23/2004 9:03:03 AM PST by Piranha
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To: Piranha
IRAN: He said that the operation would most likely not lead to the results Israel hoped for...

No - it acheived EXACTLY the results Israel hoped for - to kill the S.O.B.

12 posted on 03/23/2004 9:04:18 AM PST by epluribus_2
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To: Piranha
Israel was not "entitled to carry out extra-judicial killings."

And since these people do not believe in the death penalty, "judicial" killings are also not allowed.

I guess that Israel is just supposed to roll over and play dead.

13 posted on 03/23/2004 9:08:07 AM PST by sd-joe
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To: ladyjane
Your statement is not supported by fact. And it is anti-Christian.
No it isn't. It's anti-Catholic.
14 posted on 03/23/2004 9:08:41 AM PST by petconservative
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To: petconservative
same thing.
15 posted on 03/23/2004 9:09:15 AM PST by epluribus_2
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To: prophetic
We should be nice to the UN - Post-Yassim, Anan will probably ally with Iran-Syria v. US/Israel in the War for World Tax
16 posted on 03/23/2004 9:09:40 AM PST by Republicus2001
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To: Piranha
We had damn well better veto any kind of condemnation of this action.
17 posted on 03/23/2004 9:10:35 AM PST by Blue Scourge (Off I go into the Wild Blue Yonder...)
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To: Coop
You must have. Surely the UN would not be unfair in their condemnation.
18 posted on 03/23/2004 9:11:00 AM PST by kenth
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To: Piranha
Israel -- in atonemnet -- should at least send flowers for the funeral.
19 posted on 03/23/2004 9:11:43 AM PST by Stagerite
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To: petconservative
"We are deeply troubled by this morning's actions in Gaza," White House Scott McClellan said.

Why are "they" deeply troubled? They should be happy this monster is dead. This is all a part of the war on terrorism, isn't it? Or does the war on terrorism only apply to those to terrorize Amercians.
20 posted on 03/23/2004 9:12:02 AM PST by petconservative
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