-Caveat Lector-

http://www.boston.com/dailynews/264/world/Israel_plants_flag_in_Palestin:.shtml

Israel Plants Flag in Palestinian Headquarters;
Arafat Calls for End to Militant Attacks
By Jamie Tarabay
Associated Press | Boston Globe

Saturday, 21 September, 2002

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) Israel planted its flag in Yasser Arafat's compound
Saturday, and shell bursts shook his offices, chipping away at the building
in an ever-tightening siege designed to make the Palestinian leader
surrender militants or leave into exile.

Soldiers with loudspeakers in the evening shouted to the estimated 200
people holed up in Arafat's offices to evacuate the building the last one
still standing in the compound or else troops would blow up the building.

Israel has insisted that it does not aim to harm Arafat even as it has torn
his command center down around him over the past three days, and it appeared
unlikely troops would carry out the threat.

Earlier Saturday, Arafat appealed to Palestinian militants to halt attacks
on Israel but refused to hand over 20 wanted members of his entourage. He
spent the day making telephone calls and faxes from a conference room in the
battered building, surrounded by shattered cars and barbed wire.

An Israeli shell overnight destroyed a staircase in the building, trapping
Arafat to four rooms on the second floor of the building. In the morning,
several more shells struck the building, including one that hit the floor
above and dusted Arafat with dirt and debris.

At one point, Israel troops raised a flag on a nearby building in the
compound. When told of the flag, Arafat got up to take a look from a window,
said Hani al-Hassan, a senior PLO official trapped inside.

Israel, preparing for a long standoff, said it would not withdraw from the
compound before the wanted men surrender and left open the possibility that
even then troops might not leave.

Israeli officials have told the Palestinians the assault, which was launched
after a Tel Aviv suicide attack last week, seeks to isolate Arafat. But
Israeli television cited defense officials saying the assault aims to make
conditions so unbearable that the Palestinian leader leaves into exile.

The United States and the European Union have urged Israel to show restraint
and have been trying to defuse the crisis amid fears in Washington that a
flareup between Israel and the Palestinians could complicate its campaign
against Iraq.

France demanded Saturday that Israel halt the operation, saying it was
unacceptable. The European Union's foreign policy coordinator, Javier
Solana, said the raid would not end terrorism but would undermine efforts to
reform the Palestinian Authority and work out a truce.

Arafat has been under Israeli siege before including 34 days in spring when
he was confined in the same office building, as well as a 1982 siege in
Beirut. But he never seemed weaker.

Many Palestinians have been demanding that he share power, the United States
seeks to sideline him and Israel's prime minister reportedly wants to expel
him, held back only by warnings from Israeli security chiefs that such a
step could backfire.

On Saturday, bulldozers dug a deep trench and troops ran coils of barbed
wire around the main office building. The smaller wing of the large L-shaped
structure the only building still standing was heavily damaged.

A massive D-9 bulldozer about the size of a small house belched smoke as it
shoveled debris. Diesel fumes from tank exhaust and dust filled Arafat's
office.

Five explosions rocked the compound Saturday, and aides said there was
concern Arafat's building might collapse.

A picture taken by his personal photographer and released Saturday showed a
grim-faced Arafat wearing thick, black-rimmed glasses, poring over papers at
his desk, with several aides at his side. Beside him was a holstered pistol
with belt, next to a desk calculator, a box of tissues and two bottles of
mineral water.

Those trapped with him said Israeli troops demolished water pipes, the main
kitchen and the pantry, but that there was enough water from rooftop tanks
and stored food to last a few days.

Palestinian officials said Israel's demand for the surrender of wanted men,
including West Bank intelligence chief Tawfik Tirawi, was just a pretext,
and that Sharon's real objective is to humiliate Arafat.

''Sharon is implementing his plan of destroying the Palestinian Authority
and the peace process, harming President Arafat and resuming the
occupation,'' said Palestinian Cabinet Minister Saeb Erekat.

Raanan Gissin, a Sharon adviser, left open the possibility that troops would
stay on even if the wanted men surrender. ''First of all, we want those
people in our hands,'' he said. ''Then we will consider what action, what
further action we will have to take in order to ensure and defend our
citizens.''

Five Israelis and a Scottish seminary student were killed in Thursday's
suicide bombing on a Tel Aviv bus, claimed by the Islamic militant Hamas
group.

In a statement published by the Palestinian news agency Wafa, Arafat again
called on militants to halt attacks inside Israel.

He did not directly address the surrender of the wanted men, though his
aides have said they would not be turned over. ''We are ready for peace, not
for capitulation,'' he said in the statement, his first comment since the
Israeli raid began.

Arieh Mekel, an Israeli Foreign Ministry official, dismissed Arafat's appeal
to the militants. ''We don't care what Arafat says, one way or the other,''
he said.

Israel initially called for the surrender of 19 Palestinian officials,
including members of the intelligence service and Arafat's Force 17
bodyguard unit. It detailed allegations against four of them, but never
released a complete list.

On Saturday, a senior army officer taking reporters on a tour of Arafat's
compound said Israel wanted 50 men to give themselves up. Army officials
said the figure increased because Israel initially did not have a complete
picture of who is inside.

Two senior Palestinians who have been in contact with Israeli officials said
Israel never formally demanded the surrender. However, a third official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said the issue was raised by Sharon in a
phone call.

The U.N. Security Council was to meet Monday to discuss the siege. Erekat
said the Palestinians are dismayed the debate will not be sooner. ''Things
cannot wait until Monday. We want an immediate decision from the council,''
he said.

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