OCCUPIED
RAMALLAH, West Bank, September 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) -
After a night of relentless bulldozing which left Palestinian President
Yasser Arafat’s office the only building still standing in his
compound, the Israeli army was Sunday, September 22, gnawing away at
Arafat’s last redoubt, where he and 250 people are crammed in four
rooms.
According
to security sources inside the office, an Israeli excavator was only
centimeters away from the area where the Palestinian leader and his
entourage were enduring their third day of siege, in increasingly
precarious conditions, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
“We
have no water, no phone lines and no air-conditioning. Only part of the
building still has electricity,” another official inside the
threatened office told AFP over a mobile phone.
“It’s
very hot and close in here. It’s starting to smell quite bad,” the
official said, referring to the lack of water since Friday morning
causing clogging in the toilets and bathrooms.
The
official said the three-storey structure, which was built by the British
during their 1923-1948 administration of Palestine, was “shaking from
the ongoing bulldozing. We feel them coming closer and closer.”
Two
gigantic, yellow-colored excavators could be seen tearing down the
building on each of its flanks, with their iron arms stretching all the
way to the rooftop and their large heads methodically poking all the way
down to the basement.
Unlike
the previous three days, the army was using civilian heavy machinery
rather than its usual army-green excavators.
The
governor’s office, which stands at the western end of the building,
had been completely wrecked by dawn, leaving only a wall between the
excavators and Arafat’s offices.
Two
tanks were watching over the demolition from a mere ten meters, their
guns pointed at the building. An army bulldozer was waiting at their
side to collect the rubble.
“We’re
getting very little sleep. We’re all crammed up with not enough
mattresses for everybody,” said former Palestinian finance minister
Salam Fayad, staying next to Arafat on the building’s second floor.
The
army, using tanks and bulldozers, took over the Ramallah compound late
Thursday after an emergency cabinet meeting decided to isolate Arafat,
whom Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s government blames for every
anti-Israeli attack.
The
cabinet demanded the surrender of some 20 Palestinians wanted for
alleged involvement in attacks and said to be holed up with the
Palestinian leader.
They
include West Bank intelligence chief Tawfiq Tirawi and the commander of
Arafat’s Force 17 bodyguard, Mahmud Damra.
Forty-three
men have turned themselves in to date but Palestinian and Israeli
security sources said none of them are on the wanted list.
On
Saturday, the former Labor Minister Ghassan Khatib said that Arafat will
“never” hand the 20 Palestinians.
“After
discussions and consultations with the Palestinian leadership - and this
is not subject to discussion - the Palestinian leadership will never
deal with this issue ... it would be like political suicide,” Khatib
told AFP.
“So
it’s not going to happen. Sharon can keep people under siege as long
as he wants,” he added.
In
another development Palestinian parliamentary speaker Ahmed Qorei spoke
with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and other senior officials in
a bid to defuse the crisis provoked by the siege on Arafat’s compound,
a source close to Qorei said Sunday.
Qorei
“spoke with Peres and with a number of other senior Israeli
officials,” the source said, without giving details of what was
discussed, AFP reported.
According
to a report on Israel army radio, Qorei spoke with Sharon, Peres and Ben
Eliezer over the course of the weekend and was told that Israel had no
intention of harming Arafat, but that the siege would continue until the
20 wanted men inside had turned themselves over.
Meanwhile,
Israeli troops killed shot dead four Palestinians as thousands of angry
protestors defied a curfew in the West Bank early Sunday, challenging
the military’s siege of Arafat’s headquarters.
The
demonstrators, already furious over the army’s three-month
reoccupation of the West Bank, faced off with troops who had escalated
their assault on Arafat’s Ramallah compound with a threat to blow up
the building sheltering Arafat and about 200 of his followers.
The
demonstrations erupted in the West Bank town of Ramallah when a group of
around 30 foreign peace activists were joined by hundreds of Palestinian
residents in a march toward Arafat’s battered compound where the army
is demanding the Palestinian leader hand over 20 wanted resistance
fighters.
Two
demonstrators, including a journalist, were killed during the overnight
demonstrations in Ramallah, where more than 1,000 people rallied, while
another was killed in the Balata refugee camp by Nablus, where at least
2,000 protested, and a fourth Palestinian was shot dead by Israeli fire
in the West Bank town of Tulkarem, medical sources and witnesses said.
“Abu
Amar (Yasser Arafat), we will sacrifice our blood and soul for you,”
chanted Arafat supporters massed at the Surda checkpoint, as military
helicopters circled over the city and the Muqataa.
Demonstrations
also flared in Bethlehem and Jenin, as well as in the Gaza Strip, with
gun-toting protestors firing in the air in Gaza City and the southern
towns of Rafah and Khan Yunis.
Occupation
soldiers’ voices boomed in Arabic over loudspeakers, demanding
everyone inside the building “come out immediately one by one with
your hands up because a huge explosion is going to happen.”
“They
have called on us to give up and surrender or they will blow up the
offices on our heads,” a Palestinian security official inside
Arafat’s offices told AFP.
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, CBS
News reported.
As
demonstrators also poured into the streets of the northern West Bank
city of Nablus, Israeli occupation troops also opened fire, killing
19-year-old Ryad Hashash in the flashpoint refugee camp of Balata,
medical sources said. Another Palestinian was seriously wounded in the
same incident.
A
young Palestinian who was critically injured in similar circumstances in
Tulkarem, died of his wounds later on, medical sources said.
In
another development all Palestinian hospitals and medical facilities
were put on red alert for casualties.
“We
have declared a state of emergency in all the hospitals in the West Bank
because for all the people going out into the streets,” Munzar
al-Sharif said.
“We
expect that the situation will escalate more and more and that there
will be many casualties,” he said