"They Have
Decided To Murder Arafat"
Press Release
Gush Shalom,
13 September 2003
"The
government of Israel has tonight resolved to commit a cold-blooded murder,
with the implementation deferred -- the cold blooded murder of the elected
president of the Palestinians. Let there be no mistake about it. Let
no one be fooled by the talk of 'deportation'. There is no intention
that Arafat will survive the encounter with Sharon's soldiers. I know
Sharon, I have followed his career for decades, ever since he was a
young commando officer carrying out brutal cross-border raids. He has
not changed in any essential, only in the amount of power held in his
hands. He means to do it, he means to kill Arafat. He will watch for
his chance, wait for a moment when the Americans look elsewhere - and
then he will pounce."
That was the immediate
response by Uri Avnery, former member of the Israeli Parliament and
veteran activist of Gush Shalom (The Israeli Peace Bloc). "The
cabinet ministers of the Government of Israel have tonight adopted an
ominous, criminal decision, whose implementation would entail rivers
of shed blood - far beyond all the horrors we have already seen in the
past three years. The effects will spread far beyond the confines of
this country - throughout the region and the world. The ministers who
raised their hands for this infamous resolution will never be able to
shirk of responsibility for what they have done".
Avnery -- spry and
energetic, two days after his eightieth birthday had been marked at
hundreds of political and personal friends packing the Tzavta Hall in
Tel-Aviv -- said these ominous words at the peak of an hours-long vigil
opposite the gates of the defence minstry in Tel-Aviv, the place Sharon
had chosen to gather the members of his Inner Cabinet. For hours we
have been tensely waiting -- more than a hundred Tel-Aviv activists
of Gush Shalom, Ta'ayush and smaller groups, among them also the former
KM Tamar Gozansli, as well as a similar number of Jerusalemites at a
simultaneous vigil outside the Prime Minster's office -- until we heard
the cabinet's ominous decision on a small squeaking transistor radio.
Israeli peace activists
seem doomed to spend a disproportionate portion of their lives on that
dismal small parking lot, coming again and again to manifest protest
at ever more outrageous acts of the government and army -- but this
time was different. This time we had the knowledge that in one of the
official buildings behind the fence on the other side of the street,
a small group of men was at that very moment gathered to take life-and-death
decisions -- and we, whose own lives might be directly affected, had
no confidence whatsoever in their motives or their judgement. This lent
an extra electric quality to the atmosphere, the feeling of being actors
in in vast tragedy -- an extra poignancy to the ongoing chanting from
young and not-so-young throats: "Sharon, Mofaz and Ya'alon -terrorists
in power!" / "All the minsters - are war criminals!"
/ "Down with the occupation!" / "Sharon, Sharon, the
Hague is waiting for you!" / "Jewish - Arab Brotherhood!"
/ "Peace Yes - Occupation NO, NO, NO!".
Oveall fluttered
a big banner bearing a long series of words: Liquidation>Suicide
Bombing>Liquidation>Suicide Bombing>Liquidation>Suicide
Bombing>Liquidation>Suicide Bombing>Liquidation>Suicide
Bombing>Liquidation>Suicide Bombing>.....
And now what? The
Americans blocked Sharon from sending his troops into the Palestinian
presidential compound -- already last night -- as according to some
press accounts he planned to do. But how much reliance can be placed
on the Bush Administration -- which itself engaged more than once in
adventurous, ill-considered and ill-fated decisions? For us, at least,
the immediate idea is to organise a visit of our own to Arafat's compound
-- not a visitation of death and destruction such as Sharon is planning,
but a visit of solidarity, of belief in the peace between this land's
two peoples, a peace which is still possible and which is more then
ever a vital need.