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Wednesday, November 10, 2004

CONTINUED CONTROVERSY OVER ARAFAT'S BURIAL:
MK Tibi: In the end, Arafat will be buried in Al Aqsa
By Haaretz Service


Yasser Arafat will ultimately be buried in the Al Aqsa Mosque in the Old City of Jerusalem, even if the step is years away, Israeli Arab MK and former Arafat advisor Ahmed Tibi said in remarks broadcast Wednesday.

[...]

At the weekend, Justice Minister Yosef Lapid touched off a furor by declaring that the Temple Mount was a site "where Jewish kings are buried, and not Arab terrorists." Arafat has also angered Jews in past statements dismissing Jewish historical claims to the compound, the site of the ancient temples.

"In the end," Tibi told Israel Radio, "if he is not buried today or tomorrow in East Jerusalem, a day will come when there is a sovereign Palestinian government, a Palestinian state with its capital in East Jerusalem, and Yasser Arafat will be buried in the mosque of Al Aqsa.

"This is definite. This will be," Tibi said.

[...]

UPDATE: An agreement may be falling into place for a funeral in Egypt and burial in Arafat's Ramallah compound:
Ramallah burial planned for Arafat
Average Palestinians appear unmoved by imminent demise


Matthew Kalman, [San Francisco] Chronicle Foreign Service

Wednesday, November 10, 2004

Ramallah, West Bank -- In the West Bank, preparations began Tuesday for Yasser Arafat's funeral, even though Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath told a Paris press conference that the Palestinian leader was "very much alive" and discussion of his death was "indecent."

The Abu Ghosh printing house in Ramallah received an urgent order early Tuesday from the Palestine Liberation Organization's public affairs office to print 10,000 large posters. Above the simple script "Yasser Arafat: The president, the leader," a photo of the ailing Palestinian Authority head stared defiantly out over Ramallah for the last time.

Palestinian officials burst into tears when they announced that Arafat would be buried in Ramallah, in the half-destroyed headquarters compound where he defied the onslaught of the Israeli army and spent the last three years of his life under virtual military siege. The officials hope the burial will follow an impressive state funeral in Cairo.

Israeli security officials said Tuesday the government would not object to the Ramallah burial, the Associated Press reported. Israel's Cabinet was to take up the matter today.

[...]

I hope very much that this works. We don't need another fight over the Temple Mount.

UPDATE (11 November): More here, including a correction to the Lapid quote above.

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