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  /  |/  /  /___/  / /_ //    M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
 / /|_/ /  /_/_   / /\\         Making Sense of the Middle East
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  News, Information, & Analysis That Governments, Interest Groups,
         and the Corporate Media Don't Want You To Know!
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          ISRAEL ESCALATES FURTHER - PUBLIC EXECUTIONS, TOTAL BLOCKADES

         U.S. PROCEEDS WITH "MITCHEL COMMISSION" PREVENTING INTERNATIONAL
                   COMMISSION AND BLOCKING U.N. "OBSERVER FORCE"

               "The soldiers in the jeeps came out, and one
               of them approached the Hyundai and opened
               fire directly on Jamal Abd Arraziq and
               Awny Dhhair from a distance of no more than
               one meter."

               "Also today, in Hebron, Israeli bulldozers destroyed
               the old Palestinian market...  The people of the old
               city of Hebron, almost 40,000, have been under
               constant curfew for the past 40 days."

Today, 22/11/2000, between 10:00 and 10:30 a.m., two civilian Palestinian cars,
a black Hyundai and a white Mercedes were travelling along a street close to
Moraj Jewish settlement. Two Palestinians, Jamal Abd Arraziq and Awny Dhhair
were inside the Hyundai car, while three others, Khaleel Mhawish Ashair, Nail
Salim Allidawy, and the driver Nahidh Fujo, were inside the Mercedes car. The
Hyundai car was travelling in front of the Mercedes car. When the two cars approached
the junction of Moraj, an Israeli tank, which was standing about 50 meters in
front of them, opened fire on them.  The two cars turned to the left in an attempt
to escape the shelling, but they collided.  Meanwhile another Israeli tank closed
the road from behind the two cars and several Israeli military jeeps moved towards
the two cars. The soldiers in the jeeps came out, and one of them approached
the Hyundai and opened fire directly on Jamal Abd Arraziq and Awny Dhhair from
a distance of no more than one meter. Eyewitnesses, who saw the inside of the
Hyundai car, reported seeing dispersed flesh and teeth remnants inside the car,
and our field workers, who saw the two dead bodies, reported that the two bodies,
especially Jamal’s, were mutilated to the extent that it was very difficult to
identify them.  As soon as the shooting started, the driver of the Mercedes car
stopped the car and ran away, but the soldiers chased him and he was arrested.
Al-Mezan Human Rights Center.

                                   ===========================

Dear Friends,

Contrary to what you have been hearing on the news, the "Israeli" occupation
government is NOT allowing medical personnel to access their places of work or
to tend to people who have been wounded.

As recently as this morning, when the "Israeli" army shelled two civilian cars
in Gaza, killing 4 people and wounding 8, ambulances were prohibited from reaching
the site.  In another instance today, a man was shot and
injured in the village of Hussan, near Bethlehem.  Villagers contacted us at
the clinic here in Beit Sahour asking us to send an ambulance.  As we do not
have one, we called the emergency station in Bethlehem.  They responded by informing
us that their ambulances are not allowed to enter Hussan.

Also this morning, our outreach team was sent back again by "Israeli" soldiers
who were stopping every Palestinian car and shooting its four wheels.  This has
been the soldiers' "fun" for the last week.  Our
Pediatric Cardiologist, Dr. Mahmoud Nashashibi, has been prevented each week
from coming to our Center in Beit Sahour from Jerusalem.  Each week there are
up to 20 mothers who have brought their infants for an
echocardiography examination.   We have had to send them home because Dr. Nashashibi
is unable to come.  The Caritas Baby Hospital in Bethlehem, which relies on our
Center to perform this procedure for their pediatric
patients, has nowhere else to turn.  The same thing goes for our neurologist,
our diabetes specialist, and our dermatologist who come from Jerusalem.

Also today, in Hebron, Israeli bulldozers destroyed the old Palestinian market
(for "security reasons," they say).  The people of the old city of Hebron, almost
40,000, have been under constant curfew for the past 40
days.  Thirty-four schools have been closed and more than 13,000 children are
confined to their homes, in addition to 460 teachers. Four schools have been
turned into military compounds.

In addition, hundreds of trees have been uprooted in Gaza, in Beit Sahour, and
in almost every village in the north.  The olive harvest, one of the main means
of livelihood for many Palestinian farmers, has been destroyed
as the farmers are prohibited from collecting the olives from their trees.

All this and much more has happened only one day after the "Israeli" occupation
forces bombarded Gaza for over three hours with tank shells, gunfire, and helicopter
missiles, causing much damage and many injuries,
especially and mostly among the civilian population.

The escalation is obvious.  It seems the "Israeli" government has realized that
the Palestinian people are determined to win their freedom and independence.
 What they haven't yet realized, however, is that their
increasing aggression and terrorism will not crush this determination.

Dr. Majed Nassar - Union of Health Work Committees
Palestine - 22 Nov


  TWO DEAD, MORE THAN 50 HURT, IN CAR BOMB EXPLOSION IN NORTHERN ISRAEL
                      By Dina Kraft

HADERA, Israel (AP - Nov 22) - A car packed with nail-studded explosives
blew up next to a crowded Israeli commuter bus Wednesday,
sending the bus flying into a building as victims writhed on the
ground and nearby stores burst into flames. Two Israelis were
killed and more than 50 were hurt in the blast blamed on
Palestinian militants, further dampening hopes for a near-term
Israeli-Palestinian truce.

Israel said it ultimately held Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
responsible for the blast, and that it would retaliate. Prime Minister
Ehud Barak convened his security Cabinet for an emergency
session Wednesday evening to approve a response. In the past,
Israel has rocketed Palestinian targets over the killings of civilians.

The bomb, made of homemade materials and apparently
detonated by remote control, went off in downtown Hadera, a
working-class town in northern Israel, at about 5:20 p.m. local time
- evening rush hour.

It detonated as the bus passed the rigged car, parked outside a
pizza restaurant. The force of the blast propelled the bus across
the sidewalk and then front first into a bakery.

One woman had both legs blown off below her knees. She was
writhing in pain and still conscious when she was wheeled on a
stretcher to an ambulance. A bystander pumped the chest of a
man lying on the ground.

The pavement was littered with overturned cafe tables, shards of
glass and metal and victims' shoes. Rescue teams used a power
saw to extricate trapped and wounded passengers.

"I saw people scattered on the ground, people without limbs," said
Benny Tapiro, 22, who works at a photo store a few yards from the
blast site.

"I saw a baby on the ground and his father was near him and
injured in the back. I gave him over to the ambulance crew," Tapiro
said. The 2-year-old was taken to a nearby hospital.

Doctors and police said two people were killed and 55 wounded,
including three in serious condition.

The blast turned the rigged car into a twisted pile of smoking metal
and blew out the windows of the bus. Several nearby stores caught
fire. Thick smoke rose into the air.

"The whole bus flew in the air from the explosion," a witness,
identified as Shmuel, told Israel radio. "The whole floor of the bus
buckled."

In Jerusalem, tens of thousands of Israelis attended a rally held by
the hawkish opposition on Wednesday evening. Opposition leader
Ariel Sharon, whose Sept. 28 visit to a contested Jerusalem shrine
triggered the current round of Israeli-Palestinian fighting, said the
government must take much harsher action.

"We have to stop twisting and turning. Arafat is not a partner.
Arafat is a cruel enemy," Sharon said. "It is not the people who are
tired. It is this government which has gotten tired."

Barak, who heads a minority government, faces a new challenge
next week when parliament votes on a bill to hold early elections.
Sharon's harsh criticism of the government suggested he was
rebuffing Barak's new overtures for his faction to join the coalition.

Barak said responsibility for the attack lay with the Palestinian
Authority which, he said, "freed terrorists, members of Hamas and
Islamic Jihad, and encourages and directs its people to carry out
attacks."

Arafat's Palestinian Authority said it had nothing to do with the
bombing. "We condemn in the strongest way the false
accusations of the prime minister," Palestinian spokesman
Marwan Kanafani said.

About 100 supporters of the Islamic militant group Hamas, which
has carried out such attacks in the past, staged an impromptu
march of celebration in the Gaza Strip after the blast. However,
leaders of the group did not claim responsibility.

The explosion came several hours after Israeli troops tracking a
local Palestinian militia commander linked to Arafat's Fatah
movement opened fire on two cars in the Gaza Strip, killing four
people, including the wanted commander, the army said.

Palestinians said the soldiers fired without provocation. The
windshield of one of the cars was riddled with dozens of bullet
holes. Mohammed Dahlan, a Palestinian security chief in Gaza,
called the shooting a "barbaric assassination."

In all, more than 250 people have been killed in Israeli-Palestinian
fighting in the past two months. Several days ago, there was a lull
in the violence, as Arafat ordered gunmen to stop shooting at
Israelis from Palestinians areas. It appeared that both sides were
interested in a gradual return to negotiations.

However, bloodshed intensified again Monday when Palestinian
militants carried out a deadly bomb attack on an Israeli school bus
in Gaza. Israel rocketed Gaza in retaliation, killing two Palestinian
policemen. In response, Egypt recalled its ambassador, sidelining
itself as a mediator.

Wednesday's explosion and the expected Israeli retaliation further
dampened prospects for a resumption of peace talks before
President Clinton's term ends in January.

Israel has been on high alert for terror attacks by Palestinian
militants since the recent violence began. In the past, the Islamic
Jihad and Hamas groups have carried out car bombings in hopes
of wrecking Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking.

On Nov. 2, two Israelis were killed in the packed Mahane Yehuda
market in central Jerusalem when a car bomb exploded on a
nearby side street. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the
attack.

In Hadera, six people were killed in a suicide bombing in 1994 that
was claimed by Hamas. A string of bombings in Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem in 1996 killed scores of Israelis.



    ISRAEL SAYS INQUIRY NOT SUITABLE AMID VIOLENCE
                  By Larry Margasak

JERUSALEM (AP - 22 Nov) - Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak told
Defense Secretary William Cohen he sees value in an inquiry into
Israeli-Palestinian violence, Cohen's spokesman said Wednesday.
But the Israel has informed the United States the time is not right
for the U.S-appointed commission to begin its work.

An inquiry is not suitable while the violence continues, foreign
ministry spokeswoman Yaffa Ben-Ari said late Tuesday,
describing a diplomatic message sent to the Americans.

The investigation was approved by Prime Minister Ehud Barak and
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at an emergency summit meeting
last month in Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, with President Clinton.

Arafat had insisted on a U.N. commission, probably banking on
the consistent support he has found at the United Nations for his
complaints against Israel.

But Secretary of State Madeleine Albright composed a
commission headed by former U.S. Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell of Maine that gives U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan a limited role.

Albright met over lunch at the State Department Wednesday with
Mitchell as Israel was struck again by violence. A powerful car
bomb packed with nails exploded next to a bus in the northern
Israeli town Hadera during evening rush hour Wednesday, hurling
the bus into a storefront and setting nearby stores on fire.

Albright, at a news conference, said the commission would get to
work. She also urged Israel and the Palestinians to exercise
restraint. "We have to make the violence stop," she said.

Again rejecting a Palestinian proposal that the United Nations
dispatch an international force to the area, Albright said there has
been discussion of using observers. But she said that must be
approved by both Barak and Arafat.

In Israel, meanwhile, Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami said Israel
was not requesting a delay in setting up the commission but
expects it "to put together its working procedures, and we
obviously expect that it will start operating in an atmosphere which
is more susceptible to allow the members of the commission to
really work."

Speaking with reporters after Defense Secretary William Cohen
met privately with Barak, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon
said Barak agreed the commission "might be useful" in reducing
the violence that has disrupted the Middle East peace process.

"This may give some confidence to both sides," Bacon said,
explaining Cohen's comments to the Israeli leader.

According to Bacon, "Barak said he was prepared to cooperate
with the commission."

Bacon, saying he was quoting Cohen directly, said the defense
secretary told Barak "we need a time for passions to cool."

Bacon said Cohen and Barak also expressed concern that Syria
could get more involved in violence that has sporadically broken
out on Israeli's northern border after Israel withdrew from Southern
Lebanon.

"The concern was that Syria could be more involved at the
Lebanese border and that could lead to attacks against Israel,"
Bacon said.

Before beginning a private meeting with Cohen, the prime minister
thanked the United States for its "long-term support for the cause
of peace and stability" in the Middle East and for Israel.

Cohen responded that he has been meeting with leaders of the
Arab world and "I think all concerned want a secure and lasting
peace."

"There's a general concern that the violence can spin out of control
and we have to get to bargaining and the negotiating table," said
Cohen.

He added that Clinton, in his remaining days in office, has vowed
to devote "all of his energy and support" to getting the Israelis and
the Palestinians back to the negotiating table. "The United States
remains committed to the peace process," he said.

Cohen was returning to the United States after his meeting with
Barak.

Cohen flew directly to Israel after meeting in Cairo earlier
Wednesday with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and reporting
that Egypt would consider returning its ambassador to Israel if the
violence stops between the Palestinians and Israelis.

Even as Cohen was meeting with Mubarak, then Barak, violence
continued in the region. Four Palestinians were killed by Israeli
troops near a Jewish settlement, with each side blaming the other
for provoking a confrontation.

Cohen said Mubarak told him Egypt wants to remain part of the
peace process, but that he needs time to consult with the
ambassador.

"He indicated that he needed to call him back for consultations
and that the period has not set when he would go back," said
Cohen. "The conditions had to be such that he could return. He
hoped that could take place in the future, but there has to be a
cessation of the violence."

The Egyptian president recalled his ambassador from Tel Aviv
earlier this week for an unspecified period of consultation in Cairo.
The ambassador, Mohammed Bassiouny, left the Egyptian
Embassy in Tel Aviv on Wednesday morning, saying farewell to
the staff, and then headed to the Israeli-Egyptian border by car,
embassy officials said.

Cohen said Mubarak told him "he hopes the message could be
very clear that both sides have to stop the riots" and that he hoped
the ambassador could return "as soon as possible," but
emphasized that that the violence must cease before that
happens.

"He was willing to continue his efforts" to work for peace, but is
worried that violence could spread around the Middle East, Cohen
said.

"He believes it is imperative that both side stop the violence and
that they have to get back to the bargaining table," Cohen said.








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