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Israel Dismisses U.N. Resolution Demanding It Retract Threats Against Yasser Arafat
Associated Press ^ | Sep 20, 2003 | Matthew Rosenberg

Posted on 09/20/2003 5:01:31 AM PDT by New Horizon

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel dismissed a U.N. resolution demanding it retract threats to remove Yasser Arafat while the Palestinian leader hailed the vote Saturday, calling it an important sign of support for the Palestinians. The overwhelming vote in the U.N. General Assembly on Friday - 133 nations endorsed the measure - came as the incoming Palestinian prime minister stridently defended Arafat, saying he is key to peace efforts and the United States should treat him as a real partner.

Prime Minister-designate Ahmed Qureia's criticism of U.S. policy was the strongest sign yet he does not plan to challenge Arafat, whom Israel and the United States tried to circumvent by pressing for the creation of the post of prime minister.

Instead, Arafat appears to have maintained a central role, handpicking Qureia after the resignation of the first prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, and moving to shape a Cabinet of loyalists from his Fatah party.

Regardless, Bush said Thursday that Arafat "had a failed as leader" and accused him of forcing out Abbas, who resigned Sept. 6 after wrangling with Arafat for months.

Qureia called Bush's statement "regrettable" and said it "does not serve the peace process."

"Arafat is the elected leader of the Palestinian people and represents the will of these people," Qureia told The Associated Press on Friday. "President Arafat is a real partner."

Arafat also responded Friday. "You have to know we are the authority of the Palestinians that has been recognized by all the Palestinians," he told ABC News. Bush "has to remember that President Clinton was dealing with me, his father was dealing with me. And he was in the beginning with me."

Arafat's popularity soared after Israel's decision on Sept. 11 to "remove" him at an unspecified time. Israeli officials have suggested he may be exiled, killed or simply isolated at his shattered compound in the West Bank town of Ramallah.

A first attempt at the United Nations to condemn the Israeli decision was thwarted by the United States, which vetoed a Security Council resolution because it did not censure the Palestinians for suicide bombings that have killed more than 400 Israelis in nearly three years of fighting.

But Friday in the General Assembly, Palestinian diplomats won the support of the European Union and many African states by adding a condemnation of suicide bombings to match language in the resolution deploring Israel's "extrajudicial killings and their recent escalation."

"This decision is of the utmost importance," Arafat told hundreds of supporters who gathered outside his compound in the West Bank town of Ramallah. The resolution "shows the international community ... stands by the Palestinian people, who have lived under this occupation that does not respect any laws"

Only two other countries - Micronesia and the Marshall Islands - joined Israel and the United States in opposing the resolution, though 15 nations did abstain.

General Assembly resolutions - unlike those of the powerful U.N. Security Council - aren't legally binding. But they do carry symbolic weight.

The vote was "a real slap to Israel and to its supporters," said Nabil Abu Rdeneh, a senior aide to Arafat

Israel said the Palestinians should concentrate on fighting terrorism, not U.N. resolutions.

"Once again, the Palestinians have decided to focus their energies on rhetoric instead of fighting terrorism," the foreign ministry said in a statement.

U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte called the resolution unbalanced for not condemning specific Palestinian militant groups.

Israel and the United States say the Palestinians must take action against the militants, as required under the U.S.-backed "road map" peace plan. Both, however, have said they don't believe the Palestinians will crack down as long as Arafat retains any power.

Israel's announcement that it would remove Arafat triggered daily marches in support of Arafat.

Saturday, about two thousand people marched in the West Bank town of Hebron, carrying Palestinian flags and banners that read "Arafat is our hero" and "Arafat is our leader" and chanting "in our blood and in our souls we will redeem Arafat."


TOPICS: Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arafat; israel

1 posted on 09/20/2003 5:01:32 AM PDT by New Horizon
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To: New Horizon
What's Hebrew for "Kiss my A$$". A loose or more pungent translation is also acceptable.

The General Assembly can make all the resolutions it wants. Means nothing.

Isreal needs to stop talking and DO something about the fleabag.
2 posted on 09/20/2003 5:17:19 AM PDT by Ronin (When the fox gnaws -- smile!)
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To: Ronin
Isreal needs to stop talking and DO something about the fleabag.

Remember this: "EL" means God, thus Israel. So you should never misspell this again like I have so many times. That's how I remember how to spell it. What's confusing a little to me is RA means God in another culture...

Anyways, after so many bombings and terrorist acts by Arafat, you woulda thunk they would have taken him out by now, so what is really holding them back, pacifism?

3 posted on 09/20/2003 5:31:52 AM PDT by sirchtruth
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To: New Horizon
"Arafat is the elected leader of the Palestinian people and represents the will of these people," Qureia told The Associated Press on Friday. "President Arafat is a real partner."

Why don't we just assume that this is true? This would simplify things greatly. After all, Arafat (Pig-Face) has prooven that he has no interest in peace. His direct support of the terrorist organizations and the slaughter of a whole lot of innocent men, women, and children just demonstrates the Palestinian's lack of respect for human life and of civility. Therefore, as the "legitimate" representation of the Palestinian's desires, this shows that they all are a bunch of murderous animals. Round them up and ship them off to Syria where they feel similarly. If they won't co-operate, they face the price. Murderers deserve only one "reward" and that is death.

4 posted on 09/20/2003 5:47:33 AM PDT by TheBattman (Did I really need a sarcasm tag?)
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To: New Horizon
"You guys better cut it out, or we'll write up a resolution."

"We're gonna' go U.N. on your *ss,"

I'm really starting to get tired of the U.N. and all their resolutions. Don't they have better things to do? What good are they? Why are they still here?
Whenever I see or hear about some kind of ineffective gov't or international group of "experts", I wonder why we can't just fire them like at work.
5 posted on 09/20/2003 5:48:31 AM PDT by baltodog (I'm Polish. I'm left-handed. I'm a drummer. I demand reparations.)
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To: sirchtruth
so what is really holding them back, pacifism?

The US.

6 posted on 09/20/2003 5:49:49 AM PDT by TheBattman (Did I really need a sarcasm tag?)
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To: New Horizon
The New York Sun is only by subscription, thus I have no URL, this letter is out of the ODT(On Dead Tree) version from 9/18/03:

Democratically Elected

You note uncritically ["U.N. Security Council Rocked By Fiery Session About Isreal, Foreign, September 16, 2003] the statements by Terje Roed Larsen, Middle East representative of U.N. Secretary General Kofi Anna, that Yasser Arafat is the "democratically elected," leader of the Palestinian Arabs.

In fact, Mr. Arafat's term as president expired long ago. Under the Oslo II Accord, Chapter 1, Article III, Paragraph 4, the President of the Palestinian Authority "shall be elected for a transitional period not exceeding five years fron the signing of the Gaza-Jericho Agreement on May 4, 1994." The P.A. held its first and last presidential election on January 20, 1996, when Mr. Arafat mustered 88% of the vote against an unknown 72-year-old grandmother named Samiha Khalil, i.e. Mr. Arafat's presidency ended in 1999.

Alternatively, the law of Mr. Arafat's own P.A. stipulates that "The President is elected for a five year term," which means that his term ended in 2001. Having stayed in power long past the expiration of his mandate, Mr. Arafat is better described as "strongman," "President-for-life," or, most accurately, "Terrorist-in-Chief."

Robert Jancu, Esq.
Executive Director
Zionist Organization of America
Manhattan


7 posted on 09/20/2003 6:20:54 AM PDT by StriperSniper (The slippery slope is getting steeper.)
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