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Israel bars Arafat from Bethlehem
12/24/2001
Untitled
By IBRAHIM HAZBOUN Associated Press Writer
BETHLEHEM, West Bank —
Despite European and U.S. intervention, Israel said Monday it would not let
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat attend Christmas Mass in Bethlehem unless he
arrests the assassins of an Israeli Cabinet minister.
In Bethlehem,
Christmas festivities got under way in the afternoon without the Palestinian
leader for the first time since 1995. Scouts playing drums and bagpipes marched
in a Manger Square procession led by Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah, the top
Roman Catholic clergyman in the Holy Land.
An Israeli settler,
meanwhile, was shot and seriously injured near the West Bank town of Nablus,
officials said — the first such victim in about a week.
In Bethlehem,
the mood was somber, with only local Christians attending the scout march.
Manger Square was decorated with Palestinian flags, an Arafat poster and a large
banner reading: ``Sharon assassinates the joy of Christmas,'' in a reference to
the Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon.
Arafat, a Muslim, has said he
is determined to make his annual pilgrimage to Bethlehem, but it was unclear
Monday afternoon if we would try to defy the ban and make it to the town for
Mass at midnight (5 p.m. EST). He has been confined to his West Bank
headquarters in the town of Ramallah, 12 miles north of Bethlehem, for weeks by
an Israeli blockade. Israeli troops tightened the closure Monday to prevent
Arafat from getting out.
``No one can humiliate the Palestinians or make
them lose their determination,'' Arafat said Monday of the Israeli ultimatum.
When reporters asked Arafat whether he intended to defy the Israeli ban,
Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo answered for him, saying:
``Yes, yes, of course, see you tonight in Bethlehem.''
The Israeli ban
is a new blow to one of Arafat's symbols of authority — his annual appearance at
the Mass near the site where tradition says Christ was born — and it highlights
the restrictions Israel has placed on Palestinians' movements.
Earlier
Monday, Arafat met with Christian leaders, including Sabbah. ``The dignity of
President Arafat is the dignity of all of us,'' said Sabbah, a Palestinian.
``The occupation situation is unfair to the Palestinians and they have to have
their freedom. This is the message of Christmas.''
Senior European Union
diplomats said Monday they were trying to persuade Israel to rescind the travel
ban. ``We believe that this decision spoils a lot of positive points that Israel
has gained in European opinion in the past few weeks,'' said the Belgian
ambassador to Israel, Wilfred Geens, speaking for the EU.
Geens said
Arafat is the only Muslim leader who makes a point of attending Christmas Mass
in a show of religious tolerance. ``It would look very bad if Arafat were
prevented from attending the Mass,'' Geens told The Associated Press.
American officials spoke by telephone from Washington on Sunday with the
Israeli Foreign Ministry to try to get the ban rescinded, an Israeli official
said on condition of anonymity.
The Vatican also said it was pressing
for Arafat to be allowed to Bethlehem. Spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said that
``a diplomatic step has been made to avoid this arbitrarily imposed ban,''
without elaborating.
However, Raanan Gissin, a Sharon adviser, said
Israel would not to allow Arafat passage to Bethlehem unless he arrests the
assassins of Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi, activists in the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical PLO faction. Gissin said Israel
also wants Arafat to arrest the two leaders of the group, Ahmed Saadat and Jihad
Ghoulmi.
Otherwise, ``he will not be allowed freedom of movement,''
Gissin said. ``Arafat knows exactly where they are. Yet he has not arrested
them.''
Gissin said Saadat and Ghoulmi were behind plans for a new
suicide attack in the Israeli port city of Haifa. On Sunday, Israeli police
arrested two Palestinian suspects in Haifa, and said explosives were found in
their hotel rooms.
In Bethlehem, Manger Square was almost devoid of
decorations, to reflect the stark mood among Palestinians after 15 months of
fighting with Israel. A Christmas tree in the square was decorated with one
colored light and a few colored balls.
The Mideast fighting has dealt a
crushing blow to the city of 30,000 Palestinians. The town is dependent on
Christian tourists, and in 1999, before the outbreak of the fighting, thousands
of visitors joined the Christmas festivities.
``I try to enjoy
Christmas. Despite this, the Christmas spirit does not exist. Bethlehem is a big
prison. We can't move freely,'' said Richard Elias, 28, who carried his
4-year-old son, George, dressed in a Santa costume.
Israeli Defense
Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer announced the easing of security restrictions in
Bethlehem over the next few days to allow Christians access to the Bethlehem
shrines.
During 15 months of fighting, Israel has enforced
stringent travel restrictions, barring most Palestinians from leaving their
communities. The restrictions were tightened earlier this month, after attacks
by Palestinian militants killed 37 Israelis.
A week ago, Arafat ordered
a halt to all violence against Israel, and the number of attacks has since
dropped sharply.
However, a Jewish settler was seriously injured Monday
in a shooting attack near a settlement in the northern West Bank. The
circumstances of the shooting attack were not yet known, and it was not clear
whether the assailants escaped.
Arafat's speech and crackdown by
Palestinian security forces against militants has resulted in some of the worst
Palestinian infighting in years. Seven Palestinians were killed and about 100
injured in clashes between police and activists Thursday and Friday.
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