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Palestinian Exiles Leave Cyprus For Europe

Exiled to Europe

LARNACA, Cyprus, May 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The first of two planes taking 12 exiled Palestinian to various European countries left Cyprus on Wednesday, May 22.

The Lear Jet aircraft was carrying three of the 12 Palestinians, who are being taken to Europe under an E.U.-brokered deal that ended the five-week Israeli army siege of Bethlehem's Nativity Church, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

A second plane, a Spanish military aircraft, was due to take off with the remaining militants.

Under an internationally-brokered deal the Palestinians, considered by Israel to be hardened terrorists, are to be taken in by Italy and Spain, which have agreed to host three each, Greece and Ireland which will each take two and by Portugal and Belgium, which will take one each.

A 13th Palestinian will remain in Cyprus. The group of 13 men was flown to Cyprus on a British air force plane almost two weeks ago as part of a deal brokered by the E.U. and the United States to end the Israeli army siege of the Bethlehem Church of the Nativity, one of Christianity's holiest places.

The men were among a group of 123 Palestinians that the Israeli army besieged, and released under the deal which saw another 26 resistance fighters transferred to the Gaza Strip and 84 other Palestinians freed.

Although the E.U. had agreed to take them, it had dithered over exactly where and how to accommodate them, risking the bloc seeing what it regards as a diplomatic triumph in helping to end the Bethlehem siege spoilt by the reluctance of member states to host the men.

The Spanish military transport plane arrived Larnaca airport late Tuesday, May 21, to fly nine of the militants to their respective destinations.

Yacovos Papacostas, the head of Cyprus' anti-terrorist unit, said an Italian jet also arrived in Cyprus on Tuesday to fly out the three Palestinians slated for exile in Italy.

The Palestinian Authority representative in Cyprus, Samir Abu Ghazaleh, later conferred with the Nativity 13 and the Italian ambassador. When asked by reporters whether the three resistance activists due to be exiled in Italy would fly separately, he nodded affirmatively.

Abu Ghazaleh said the 12 are due to leave the island Wednesday at 8:00 am (0500 GMT).

The Cypriot government, meanwhile, denied on Tuesday that the 13th Palestinian was "the worst" of the group and that no country had agreed to accept him for that reason.

"The 13th Palestinian poses no particular problem, and there is no question of leaving him here," an official source said. "Negotiations to find him a new country will take several days."

In another development, U.S. President George W. Bush said Tuesday, May 21, that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat has "clearly disappointed" him, and that sweeping Palestinian reforms are "step one" down the path to Middle East peace.

"I think peace is possible. It's going to take a while, it's going to take a lot of work," he said one day before heading on a week-long trip to Europe, where he has been criticized for allegedly taking an overly pro-Israel stance.

"That starts with a security apparatus that actually functions for the benefit of the Palestinian people, by fighting off terror, by rejecting extremism," he told a roundtable of European reporters.

A unified security force, "in which authority and responsibility are properly aligned," would prove that the Palestinians are making "a concerted effort to fight terror," he emphasized. "That's step one."

In addition to quelling anti-Israeli terror, Bush maintains that Arafat's Palestinian Authority must also undertake a war on corruption to ensure that international aid and the benefits of trade reach suffering Palestinians.

"There's money willing to be spent," Bush said. "I've committed to it. But I'm not committed to sending money in a place until I'm convinced it's going to be spent to help the Palestinian people."

The U.S. leader had harsh words for Arafat, saying the Palestinian leader had squandered "chance after chance" for a peace deal that could pave the way for Bush's vision of a Palestinian state living in peace with Israel.

The president said progress requires "a commitment for the United States to continue to lead on the issue, and we will; a commitment by the Israelis to make the tough choices necessary for the Palestinian state to exist; the commitment by the Palestinians to renounce and fight terror."

It will also require "the commitment by the Arab world to become engaged not only in the humanitarian aspects of the region, but to be a part of the building of the institutions necessary for a Palestinian state to exist," he said.

Meanwhile, the Syrian Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam said Tuesday that conditions stipulated by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for Syrian participation in an eventual Middle East peace conference "make peace impossible."

"When Sharon dictates the conditions, that means that peace is impossible in the midst of international policies that support this executioner and criminal who is leading Israel toward destruction," Khaddam told journalists here.

In a meeting on Monday with the Israeli parliament's foreign affairs and defense committee, Sharon called for "the end of the Syrian occupation of Lebanon."

He called for Syria's "expulsion of the terrorist organizations present on its territory, as well as of Iranian Revolutionary Guards present in Lebanon," where Syria is the main power-broker with a garrison of about 20,000 troops.

Also, Sharon insisted on a dismantling of Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrillas and an end to Syrian support for the resistance movement.

The prime minister, in his string of demands, called for the deployment of the Lebanese army up to the border with Israel to prevent guerrilla attacks and information on Israeli soldiers who have gone missing in south Lebanon.    

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