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Italy Keeps Silent on Fate of 13 Exiled Palestinians 

One of the 13 Palestinian exiles

ROME, May 21 (IslamOnline  & News Agencies) - The Italian government maintained a news blackout Tuesday, May 21, on the arrival from Cyprus of three Palestinian exiles, saying secrecy was necessary to ensure their safety.

"The matter of the Palestinians is being followed with absolute discretion and in secret, as it must be to guarantee the security" of the European states hosting them and the men themselves, said Interior Minister Claudio Scajola, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"Who are the three Palestinians, when are they coming and where are they going? Don't ask me these questions. I cannot answer you, for the obvious security reasons," a ministry spokesman told AFP.

The 13 Palestinians, labeled "most wanted" terrorists by Israel, are expected to fly to their host countries later Tuesday or Wednesday.

The men have been held under guard at a Cyprus hotel for the past 10 days since their negotiated release from the Israeli siege of Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, where they had been trapped for weeks with more than 200 other fighters and religious.

A final deal on what countries would accept the men was announced by Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Pique on Monday after tense negotiations on their legal status.

Current E.U. presidents Spain and Italy have agreed to accept three Palestinians each, Greece and Ireland two each, while Portugal, Belgium and Cyprus will take one each.

Italy had initially been asked to host all 13 of the Palestinians, but Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi refused, saying this was a problem for the E.U.

Given the dearth of official information, Italian media speculated Tuesday that the men could be housed in anything from a carabinieri station to a secret service "safe house", or even by a religious community.

Leading daily newspaper, Corriere della Sera, reported that Italy would use a plane from its own air force to bring the men from Cyprus, allowing them to flown in secrecy to a military airport.

The newspaper also said the Palestinians would be asked to sign a document allowing for a change of identity on their arrival.

Their presence in the country is being seen as an Italian gesture towards Middle East peace, but prominent politicians like Gustavo Selva said they would, at best, be tolerated.

"Without any hypocrisy, and along with millions of Italians, I say that these Palestinians are not welcome guests and that they must not be treated as high-class tourists on taxpayers' money," said Selva, who chairs the foreign affairs committee of Italy's lower house.

Meanwhile, AFP reported that a Spanish military plane was due in Cyprus late Tuesday to pick up the 12 Palestinians.

"We expect the Spanish plane to arrive at Larnaca airport between 6 pm and 8 pm (1500-1700 GMT) and leave early Wednesday morning to disperse the 12 Palestinians," a civil aviation source told AFP.

One of the 13 Palestinians who have been holed up at a seafront Cyprus hotel for 11 days since leaving Bethlehem under an EU-brokered deal is being left behind.

But the Cypriot government denies it is being saddled with the "worst" militant that no other country risks taking in because of problems with his legal status.

"The 13th Palestinian has no special record and there is no question of him being dumped here," an official source said. "Negotiations will take a few days to find him a new country." The name of the man being left behind has not been revealed.

One of the 13 said Tuesday he was still in the dark about his final destination. "I don't where I am going," shouted Abdullah Daoud from his fourth-floor balcony to reporters on an adjacent roof.

Daoud, 41, was Bethlehem's intelligence chief for the Palestinian Authority and is accused of harboring weapons and facilitating attacks against Jewish settlers.

The father-of-two said that when arriving at his E.U. destination he would "live normally like everybody else."

Talks are under way to reunite him with his family and Daoud confirmed he would keep politically active, "but only within the law".

Spain's Foreign Minister Josep Pique, whose country currently presides the 15-nation European Union, said the Spanish plane would first stop in Athens from Cyprus, then in Rome and finally Madrid, from where four of the Palestinians would be distributed to Portugal, Ireland and Belgium.

"Our new countries should have no fears. We are normal, civilized people," said Abdullah Daoud, reported BBC’s online news service.

"We will respect the law in each of those states. They are democracies which respect human rights. Why would we have anything against them?" he told Britain's daily newspaper, the Guardian.

They are expected to be designated by the E.U. as "free men on humanitarian grounds" but are likely to be kept under police surveillance. Permission to travel to other E.U. countries will not be allowed, according to Josep Pique.

The men will also be entitled to reunification with their families at a later date, reported the BBC.

   

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