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World Pressure Mounts on Defiant Israel to Lift Arafat Siege

Arafat has been making phone calls to all leaders to save him, in vain so far

CAIRO, September 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - World pressure mounted on Israel Tuesday, September 24, 2002, after a UN Security Council resolution calling for the Jewish state to lift its five-day-old siege of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's headquarters.

On behalf of the European Union, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, whose country holds the rotating EU Presidency, telephoned Arafat and renewed criticism of the Israeli blockade.

"The EU is pressing the Israeli government to bring about a de-escalation of the situation," said the EU Presidency in a statement, adding that Rasmussen also called for "the greatest possible Palestinian restraint."

As Israel turned a deaf ear to the UN resolution passed early Tuesday, French President Jacques Chirac said that he was "dismayed at the development of the situation in the Middle East."

"I believe these methods will achieve nothing, and that the siege of the Muqataa (Arafat's headquarters) must be lifted, and that Mr. Arafat must be given back his full freedom to travel," he said at the end of a Europe-Asia summit in Copenhagen, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Also speaking from the Danish capital, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad warned that death or injury to the Palestinian President resulting from the siege could turn him into a martyr and spark "a great deal of anger" among the world's Muslims.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair said a new international conference is needed on the Middle East peace process.

U.S. President George W. Bush, meanwhile, said Israel's siege was "not helpful" to enacting Palestinian political and security reforms that are needed for peace.

However,  he stopped short of calling on Israel to withdraw and defended the U.S. decision to abstain from the Security Council resolution demanding Israel end the operation as sending "a message" to both sides.

"Our abstention should have sent a message that we hope that all parties stay on the path to peace," Bush said.

The U.S. refusal to veto the resolution as it has done in past situations was seen as a rebuke to Israel, which refused to end its blockade until Arafat hands over at least 20 wanted activists Israel claims are holed up with him.

But, as soon as European-drafted Resolution 1435 condemning the destruction of the veteran leader's West Bank compound in Ramallah and urging the army to lift the siege was adopted, Israel vowed to pursue the operation.

"The United Nations can do what it wants, but Israel will continue the operation until its aims are achieved," a senior Israeli official told AFP.

Egypt, for its part, hailed Resolution 1435, with Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher saying it "constitutes new pressure on Israel".

"We expect that the United States will contribute with the rest of the Security Council members to apply this resolution (for) a withdrawal and the lifting of the siege," Maher said.

Pope John Paul II joined Muslim states and the rest of the world in demanding that Israel lift the siege.

The Pope's spokesman, Joaquin Navarro Valls, said the Pope urged "the suspension of all actions which compromise the already faint hopes for peace in the region," in a message to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), based in Saudi Arabia, called for the "immediate intervention" of the international community to end the blockade around Arafat's offices.

The Secretary General of the 57-member OIC, Abdul Wahed Belqeziz, said that the siege was a "flagrant defiance of international conventions, agreements and laws."

From the other end of the world, Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi telephoned Arafat to inform him that he had made a request for Israel to lift the siege.

Kawaguchi also reminded Arafat of the need to crack down on suicide attacks against Israel, a Japanese official said in Tokyo.

However, it seems that Israel is still a country above the law and stronger than the will of the international community, according to observers and political analysts.

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