Wednesday, April 3, 2002

Sharon: Arafat should seek exile
Fighting continues in West Bank; Palestinian leader still confined
By Laura King
Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank — Israeli tanks and helicopters shelled a heavily fortified Palestinian security headquarters in an all-night assault Tuesday.

Fighting raged outside Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity, and Israel’s prime minister proposed exile for Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Nine Palestinians and an Israeli soldier were killed in Tuesday’s violence.

By nightfall Tuesday, most of the about 400 Palestinians trapped in the compound of West Bank security chief Jibril Rajoub surrendered to Israeli troops, in a deal brokered by U.S. and European officials. About eight men remained inside. Israel had assaulted the compound saying top militants were inside, a claim denied by Rajoub.

In Bethlehem, Israeli helicopter gunships hovering over Manger Square exchanged fire with Palestinian gunmen near the Church of the Nativity, built over the grotto where tradition says Jesus was born. Several armed men sought refuge in the shrine.

Tuesday’s fighting came as Israel widened its 5-day-old military offensive, “Operation Protective Wall,” launched to uproot militants blamed for a string of terror attacks on Israelis.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Tuesday he has proposed that European Union envoy Miguel Moratinos or other diplomats fly Arafat into exile, raising the idea in public for the first time.

“I told him (Moratinos), if they would like, they will fly with a helicopter and will take him (Arafat) from here,” Sharon said during a tour of West Bank army bases, in remarks carried by Israel Radio. Arafat “will not be able to return.” Sharon said such a step would require Cabinet approval.

Arafat has been confined in his offices by Israeli troops holding his Ramallah headquarters since Friday. Palestinian Planning Minister Nabil Shaath said that Arafat “will not leave Palestine.”

Secretary of State Colin Powell expressed opposition to exiling Arafat, saying the Palestinian leader could “conduct the same king of activities” from a different place. “Until he decides he’s going to leave the country, it seems we need to work with him where he is,” Powell told ABC’s “Good Morning America”

He advised Sharon to “take care” in his offensive and said eventually a political solution would have to be found.

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said the offensive would last three to four weeks, the first senior official to give a timeframe. However, Sharon has said the campaign was open-ended.

Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department, citing a “deteriorating security situation,” warned Americans on Tuesday to defer travel to Israel, the West Bank and Gaza and said dependents of American diplomats in Jerusalem were being encouraged to go home.

KRT CAMPUS
Israeli soldiers take up positions on top of their Armored Personal Carrier near the west Bank town of Nablus Tuesday.

Two Israelis died Tuesday of wounds from last week’s suicide bombing at a Passover banquet, an attack that dramatically increased pressure on Sharon to take action. The death brought the bombing’s total toll to 24 and made it the deadliest Palestinian attack in 18 months of fighting.

Early Tuesday, Israeli tanks rolled into the West Bank towns of Tulkarem and Bethlehem. Israeli forces already control the towns of Ramallah and Qalqiliya.

In Ramallah, about 700 Palestinian suspects have been rounded up since Friday, the army spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ron Kitrey, said.

At Ramallah Hospital, with more than two dozen bodies piling up and decomposing at the morgue whose power supply was cut, Palestinians buried 17 of their dead in an adjacent parking lot. It was a gesture driven by grim practical necessity, but also intended as a powerful protest against hardships suffered by ordinary people during the 5-day-old Israeli military occupation.

A 56-year-old Palestinian woman who had a cast removed from her leg was shot and wounded, apparently by an Israeli sniper, as she left the hospital, said Dr. Hosni Atari. Soldiers prevented medics from treating her and she died, Atari said.

On Tuesday afternoon, Israeli troops briefly lifted a curfew. Crowds trailed out the doors of shops, lugging big tins of cooking oil and bags of pita bread.


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TCU Daily Skiff © 2002


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