Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

Arafat Begs Israelis To Save Him

October 10, 2001

ARAFAT CRIES OUT FOR HELP FROM ISRAEL TO STAY IN POWER

GAZA LOCKED DOWN BY ARAFAT ARMY INSIDE, ISRAEL ARMY OUTSIDE UNIVERSITIES CLOSED BY TROOPS, PRESS BANNED

VIDEO OF GAZA DEMONSTRATIONS SOON AT http://www.MiddleEast.Org

MID-EAST REALITIES © - MER - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 10/10: It's a most complicated political dance than ever at this historical crossroads. But bottom line Yasser Arafat and his regime have now, even more than before, thrown their future to the Israelis and the now omnipresent CIA; the Palestinian opposition groups are realizing they are next on the list when the Americans finish with Afghanistan (along with the regime in Baghdad); and the Palestinian street is seething, largely fed up with the repression, corruption, and deceptions of Arafat and company.

Western news stories usually are slanted and twisted of course -- especially when it comes to anything relating to Israel and the "peace process" -- even when reporting important breaking developments. The following story just on the wires, for instance, has a headline that could easily be changed to the following heading without changing anything else: "Arafat Begs Israelis to Save Him as His Rule Begins to Crumble". And that take on it all is certainly far closer to reality!

PALESTINIANS ASK ISRAEL FOR HELP AS PRO-BIN LADEN RIOTS SPREAD

[Middle East Newsline, GAZA, 10 October]: The Palestinian Authority is on emergency alert amid unprecedented unrest against the rule of chairman Yasser Arafat.

Officials said the PA has boosted security throughout the West Bank and Gaza amid riots in several cities. At least three people were killed and a dozen people were injured in clashes since Monday.

Israeli sources said the PA has asked the Jewish state for riot control systems. The sources said Israel has not responded to the request.

The PA has shut down several universities and deployed officers in major intersections to preserve order. Officials said the concern is that opposition elements will join to foment unrest against the Arafat regime.

The rioters have torched two Palestinian police stations and attempted to attack other facilities throughout the Gaza Strip. Opposition groups have blamed PA police chief Brig. Gen. Ghazi Jabali for the killings and have called for his dismissal.

"The leadership regrets these painful incidents," a PA statement said. "It calls on all national and Islamic forces to stand firm against elements who are trying to distort our strong national unity."

The violence began on Monday when university students held pro-Bin Laden demonstrations in Gaza City. Police used tear gas to disperse the demonstrators.

When that failed police opened fire on the demonstrators, some of them who were seen holding firearms. Three people were killed and 12 were injured.

The riots spread to other cities in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. In some cases, Palestinians attacked police stations. In all, several dozen people were injured.

Arafat was not in Gaza at the time. He was on tour of the Middle East and the Gulf.

The PA has increased security in Gaza. They also banned media coverage of demonstrations.

But the unrest continued on Tuesday. About 1,500 students marched in support of Bin Laden at Nablus's An Najah University.

Also in Nablus, a Palestinian detained on charges of collaborating with Israel was found dead. The Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group said this was 27th Palestinian to die in custody since 1994.
Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/10/455.htm