Roundup: Palestinian PM to go for Gaza meeting as medical source says Arafat "brain dead"
5/11/2004 15:13
Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei will head to Gaza on Friday to meet
officials over the situation following reports that Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat's health had deteriorated, Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath said
Thursday. Qurei will attend a meeting, which groups 13 Palestinian factions,
including Arafat's mainstream Fatah movement, the Islamic Resistance Movement
(Hamas) and the Islamic Jihad movement (Holy War), Shaath said. The meeting
will discuss the situation in the West Bank and Gaza after a possible death of
Arafat, said a Palestinian source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The
source said the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) was making efforts not to
leave any political vacuum after Arafat's death, which may cause chaos and
anarchy in the Palestinian territories. Shaath reiterated that Arafat was
still alive while a French medical source said Thursday that Arafat is "brain
dead." French RFI television quoted the source as saying that Arafat is
prolonged in "very deep coma of stage IV" thanks to life support machines and
such artificial care can be "extended for several days or several weeks thanks
to the machines." SELF-CONTROL, COLLECTIVE LEADERSHIP CALLED IN ARAFAT'S
ABSENCE Tayeb Abdel Rahim, Arafat's bureau chief, called on Thursday upon the
Palestinians to show self-control, patience, steadfastness and national unity in
the absence of Arafat. "We call upon our people to stop listening and
following rumors published by the media about President Arafat's health...All of
us should pray for his quick recovery," he said in a statement to reporters in
Ramallah following reports that Arafat's health deteriorated. "All reports
that President Arafat in clinical death are untrue and not accurate," said Abdel
Rahim, adding that "the Palestinian leadership is following in concerns moment
after moment the situation." The official said all leading Palestinian
corporations and institutions would be in open-ended meetings. "We would brief
our people on every development concerning the president's health," he
added. Meanwhile, Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
called on Thursday for an immediate formation of a collective leadership. The
collective leadership must include all Palestinian national and Islamic factions
to fill any power vacuum which would emerge after the death of Arafat, the two
groups said in a joint statement. The statement came amid fears fed by
speculations on a possible death of Arafat that an internal power struggle would
emerge in the Palestinian territories since Arafat had appointed no successor
yet. PALESTINIAN OFFICIALS BLAST ISRAEL'S MEDIA REPORT ON ARAFAT'S
HEALTH Israel's Television Channel 2 reported on Thursday night that Arafat
had died, which was immediately denied by Qurei, saying that Arafat is still
alive and getting treatment at Parcy Hospital in France. A Palestinian envoy
accused Israel of trying to break the will of the Palestinians by launching a
"propaganda war" over Arafat's health conditions. "We don't know why Israel
is so intent on launching this war of propaganda, constantly saying President
Arafat is in critical conditions," Mohamed Sobeih, a permanent Palestinian
representative to the Cairo-based Arab League, told Xinhua in a telephone
interview. "All Israeli measures will fail in the end because the will of the
Palestinians just cannot be broken," he said. Abbas Zaki, member of Arafat's
Fatah movement central committee also said, "the Israeli media reports were
aimed at causing confusion and horror among the Palestinians in Gaza and the
West Bank." ISRAELI POLICE, PRISONS RAISE LEVEL OF ALERT Israeli police
and prisons raised the level of alert Thursday night following conflicting
reports that Arafat may be dead, according to media reports in
Jerusalem. Police were quoted as saying that they have prepared a plan named
"a different reality," which projected different scenarios that may happen after
Arafat's demise. In case an official statement is released announcing
Arafat's death, Israel police will be kept on level three alert, meaning a
strengthening of forces throughout the country in preparation for any possible
scenario. On news of the deterioration of Arafat's health conditions, the
Israeli Prison Service Authority beefed up security and raised the alert in
prisons throughout the country. Meanwhile, intelligence officers were
instructed to monitor carefully the 4,000 Palestinian security prisoners held in
Israel.
Xinhua
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