{"id":194384,"date":"2002-02-28T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-12T16:47:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?p=194384"},"modified":"2019-03-12T16:47:50","modified_gmt":"2019-03-12T16:47:50","slug":"auto-insert-194384","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/auto-insert-194384\/","title":{"rendered":"Chronological Review of Events\/February 2002 – DPR review"},"content":{"rendered":"
D i v i s i o n f o r P a l e s t i n i a n R i g h t s<\/p><\/div>\n
<\/p>\n
Chronological Review of Events Relating to the<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Question of Palestine<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Monthly media monitoring review<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n February 2002<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 1<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Following a meeting with King Abdullah II at the White House, President Bush said Mr. Arafat had to show the world that he was “willing to join [the] fight against terror”, adding that he thought pretty good progress had been made until the “Karine A” arms shipment had been discovered for what seemed to be for “terrorist purposes”. President Bush assured King Abdullah that the US Administration did not plan to sever contacts with Chairman Arafat, but said the US would not renew direct efforts to broker Middle East peace until Mr. Arafat took concrete steps against terrorism. (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Turkish Presidential Spokesman Tacan Ildem said Chairman Arafat had written to <\/span>President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister Bûlent Ecevit asking for Turkey to become involved in the Middle East peace process. Mr. Ildem told reporters in Ankara that President Sezer believed that the only option facing the Palestinians and the Isra<\/span>elis was peace achieved through “prudence and dialogue” and that Turkey could play a “facilitator role”, for instance by hosting talks. <\/span>(AFP, Reuters)<\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A poll published in Ma’ariv<\/i> showed that 54 per cent of the Israelis surveyed were dissatisfied with the way Prime Minister Sharon handled security questions, compared with 37 per cent who expressed their satisfaction. It was not clear, however, whether respondents wanted the Prime Minister to act in a tougher or more conciliatory way with the Palestinians. 54 per cent wanted Chairman Arafat ousted, down from more than 70 per cent a few weeks ago. Some 47 per cent thought the Government should resume talks with the Palestinians. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p><\/div>\n After expressing regret, on 31 January, that Israel had not assassinated Chairman Arafat in Beirut in 1982, Prime Minister Sharon, in an interview with Ma’ariv, <\/i>said <\/i>“today we have no inclination to hurt Arafat personally. It would harm Israel. We have no intention now to harm Arafat or to dismantle the infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority.” (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The IDF had opened fire with heavy machine-guns on the Khan Yunis refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip, injuring one man and damaging several houses, hospital sources and witnesses said. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israeli public radio reported that Prime Minister Sharon had met with senior Palestinian officials, including Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) and Ahmed Qurei (Abu Ala), in Jerusalem for the first time since he had taken office in March 2001. PA officials denied a Ha’aretz <\/i>report that Mr. Sharon presented proposals for a long-term interim settlement, while other reports suggested that the meeting was merely in preparation for Mr. Sharon’s upcoming visit to Washington. Speaking to the Cabinet, the Prime Minister did not rule out further meetings with PA officials. Declaring, “we can’t walk away” from the crisis in the Middle East, Secretary of State Powell said he was pleased Mr. Sharon had met Palestinian officials and that he intended to do so as well in coming days. (AFP, Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 2<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israeli helicopter gunships launched a rocket attack at PA naval police HQ in Deir el-Balah, following Palestinian attacks on nearby army posts, in which one soldier had been slightly wounded. IDF troops backed by tanks moved more than 800 metres into Deir el-Balah opening fire at the residential area and a security barrier, injuring at least six Palestinians, according to medical sources. Later in the day five tanks and two bulldozers moved into Khan Yunis, about 1 kilometre from the “Morag” settlement, opening heavy machine-gun fire. (AFP, Reuters, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The Palestinian leadership issued a statement stressing that security could not be attained under occupation, and that the Israeli decision to erect the “Berlin wall” in Jerusalem, the so-called “Jerusalem Envelope” plan, would not bring security to Israel. (Arutz 7, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 3<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Fatah accused Israel of trying to assassinate one of its members in the Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem. The man was seriously wounded with a severed hand and shrapnel in his leg after an explosive device had gone off. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Ha’aretz <\/i>reported that at a Quartet meeting on 31 January in Washington, EU representatives Javier Solana and Miguel Moratinos had raised the idea of an international conference aimed at immediately renewing the political process, but the US had rejected it. As an alternative to an international conference, Mr. Solana had suggested adopting the French plan for new elections in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which had been formulated in consultation with senior PA officials. Both proposals had been supported by the UN Special Coordinator, but opposed by Israel. The US had also come out against a proposal that the “Quartet” function as a single body that would make parallel demands from both the Israelis and the Palestinians. Ha’aretz<\/i> quoted an Al-Hayat<\/i> report that the US was formulating a new ceasefire proposal that included new elections for PA President. (Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Chairman Arafat published an op-ed piece in The New York Times<\/i>, saying that the Palestinians were seeking only what the free world now enjoyed and only what Israel insisted on for itself: the right to control their destiny and to live as a peace nation. He also expressed his determination to put an end to the terrorist activities and, in a reference to the Palestinian refugee issue, for the first time acknowledged that the Palestinians must be “realistic” with respect to Israel’s demographic concerns. Nonetheless, Prime Minister Sharon’s Office dismissed the article as a “worthless publicity stunt,” while President Bush’s national security adviser Condoleezza Rice called it “not helpful.” (AFP, Arutz 7, DPA, The New York Times)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The IDF Judge Advocate-General’s office set out conditions for the army’s controversial policy of targeted killings of Palestinian militants, saying all other channels must first be exhausted and only “ticking-bomb” suspects are eligible for assassination. It ruled out revenge killings for past attacks and said strikes could only take place if there was “well-supported evidence” that a militant was planning or about to execute an attack in the near future. (AFP, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Assad Kotaite, President of the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), told reporters in Cairo that he had made a request to Israeli Transportation Minister Ephraim Sneh for Israel to stop destroying Palestinian aviation facilities and to allow the resumption of civilian air traffic. (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 4<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israeli helicopter gunships launched a rocket attack at a metalwork factory suspected of being used for producing mortar shells in the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip, setting it ablaze. (AFP, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Four Palestinians died when their car exploded near Rafah, about 400 metres from the border with Egypt. A fifth was critically injured and pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. The victims reportedly belonged to DFLP, which vowed to revenge the killings. Israeli security sources confirmed the following day that the five Palestinians had been the target of an IDF operation. (AFP, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Jerusalem municipal authorities demolished two houses in the Issawiya neighbourhood of East Jerusalem as “built without permission,” leading to clashes between Palestinians and the Israeli border police. Fifteen houses had been demolished in the city in January. (DPA, Ha’aretz, ITAR-TASS)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n B’Tselem issued its first comprehensive report about house demolitions in the Gaza Strip, saying the policy constituted “collective punishment” and was aimed at setting up security zones around PA areas in the Strip. (Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Secretary of State Powell met with Ahmed Qurei (Abu Ala), Speaker of the Palestinian Council, in Washington. “The Secretary took the opportunity to underscore what we have been saying publicly, as well as directly: that there is no question that Chairman Arafat and the Palestinian Authority have the responsibility right now to take strong, resolute and reversible action to halt the violence and terror,” said Deputy State Department spokesman Philip Reeker. Abu Ala told reporters after the meeting: “We talked about everything, what is on the ground, what is for the future and how to overcome all the problems and obstacles in the way of negotiations and peace.” (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Palestinian and Israeli businessmen participating in the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in New York announced that they would be meeting regularly in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to lobby their respective leaders for peace. The Chairman of the Federation of Israeli Chambers of Commerce, Dan Gillerman, said the business leaders would seek to convince their political leaders “that the key to everything, to economic prosperity, to standards of living, to success, to well being of our region, [was] peace.” Secondly, the group would try to demonstrate the value of negotiations even under the harshest conditions, he said. (AFP, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 5<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n In an interview with the Spanish newspaper El Pais,<\/i> French Foreign Minister Hubert Védrine said “to eradicate terrorism and build peace the 15 [EU Member States] believe that Israel needs the Palestinian Authority and its leader, Yasser Arafat, as an interlocutor in negotiations”. “There is no other solution but to create a Palestinian State next to that of Israel, it is an outcome that the current majority in power in Israel fears but is a necessity which is once again coming to the fore,” Mr. Védrine added. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer met with Israeli and Palestinian peace activists in Berlin to discuss options for reducing tensions in the Middle East. The Israelis present at the talks were former Justice Minister Yossi Beilin and Meretz Party Chairman, Yossi Sarid. PA Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo and the head of the Jerusalem Center for Media and Communication, Ghassan Khatib, attended on the Palestinian side. The participants agreed that the violence and terror in the region would only stop when trust and political dialogue between the two sides had been reestablished. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana, during a briefing for the European Parliament in Strasbourg on the situation in the Middle East, said that Israeli leaders did not wish to be perceived as “rewarding violence” and Palestinian leaders did not wish to be perceived as “rewarding occupation”. “We appreciate the political constraints on leaders of both sides. Nevertheless, if the cycle of violence is to be broken, there needs to be a new bilateral relationship incorporating both security cooperation and negotiations”, he added, noting that mutual recognition could be achieved if initially the principle of a Palestinian State were established. Discussions about borders and the status of Jerusalem could be negotiated later Mr. Solana said. The EU would continue to recognize Chairman Arafat as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and Israel should do the same, as a matter of urgency, he said. (AFP, DPA) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi told Italian deputies that Chairman Arafat was the sole Palestinian negotiator in a situation in the Middle East, which could “explode throughout the Arab and Muslim world”, adding that Italy would provide economic aid to the Palestinian population, working with “Israelis and aides of Yasser Arafat.” (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n President Mubarak said in Cairo said that the Palestinians had lost too many opportunities that could have led to the creation of an independent homeland. As early as 1948, 1956 and 1967 a number of proposals had been presented to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli territorial dispute, but they were all turned down, he said. Then came the Camp David negotiations and the framework formulated by late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, “when there were only 18 Israeli settlements”, but this too had been rejected. “Huge opportunities to resolve the conflict presented themselves and they were all lost,” said the President, adding that one such chance had been missed when Itzhak Rabin was Prime Minister of Israel. The Palestinians had insisted that the settlements be dismantled despite assurances by Prime Minister Rabin that the settlements would disappear eventually, as the Israelis had no interest in living among the Palestinians. President Mubarak, however, blamed much of the ongoing violence on Israel’s policy of sealing off Palestinian areas, saying these closures had led to despair and hopelessness among Palestinians and noting that the non-implementation of signed agreements was one of the factors complicating the issue. (DPA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Secretary of State Powell told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that Chairman Arafat must “choose once and for all” whether he wanted to pursue peace with Israel or continue on a course of confrontation and violence. Mr. Powell also called on Israel to ease restrictions on Palestinian territories. (AFP, DPA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Red Crescent spokesman Mohammed Iyad said the organization had checked and found “entirely incorrect” Israel’s allegations that Wafa Idris, the Ramallah woman killed when a bomb she carried into downtown Jerusalem exploded, got there by a Red Crescent ambulance. Mr. Iyad said that according to records, none of the group’s ambulances were in Jerusalem on the day of the explosion. “And Wafa [who was a volunteer in the Red Crescent] wasn’t even working that day. She usually worked on Fridays,” he added. He said the IDF was “raising the accusation because of criticism of its behaviour toward ambulances since the start of the intifada<\/u>.” According to Mr. Iyad, 68 Red Crescent ambulances had come under attack from the IDF leading to the death of a paramedic and the wounding of 122 other workers. Mr. Iyad stressed that the Red Crescent had also treated 39 Israeli casualties. “We will continue our work saving lives irrespective of the national identity of the victims.” The IDF is using the information to explain why it needs to examine ambulances at checkpoints. In two recent cases, a baby died during childbirth because the soldiers at checkpoints did not allow ambulances to get through the Jenin area. The IDF Prosecutor-General ordered an investigation of the last of the two deaths, and an IDF commission was set up, headed by Operations Division Chief Gen. Dan Harel, to lay down guidelines for procedures at checkpoints. In the latest incident of this kind, a baby boy was delivered at an IDF checkpoint west of Khan Yunis when the ambulance with his mother was delayed for several hours on the way to Nasser Hospital in the city. The mother wants to name the boy Hajiz, the Arabic for “roadblock.” (AFP, DPA, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 6<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n French Foreign Minister Védrine, speaking on RFI<\/i>, said that European countries did not agree with the Middle East policy of the White House and thought it was a mistake to support Prime Minister Sharon’s “purely repressive policies.” He described the isolation of Chairman Arafat as “another error.” Mr. Védrine also warned that the interests of the rest of the world were under threat from a “simplistic” US foreign policy that emerged after the 11 September attacks. (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Washington would continue to work with the PA and its elected leader, Yasser Arafat, US Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East William Burns told reporters in Cairo after meeting President Mubarak. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Another group of 125 Israeli reservists added their signatures to the letter stating that they would refuse to serve in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel Radio <\/i>reported. The IDF had already suspended 48 reserve soldiers and officers who had signed the letter first published on 25 January. (Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Municipality crews under heavy IDF protection resumed demolishing 28 Palestinian houses in East Jerusalem and Beit Hanina as “built without permits.” One house was destroyed in the Al-Ashqarya neighbourhood of Beit Hanina and two more in West Shu’fat. Sari Nusseibeh condemned the demolition as a “provocative offence.” Ha’aretz<\/i> quoted Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert as saying that the municipality would demolish unlicensed buildings in East Jerusalem “every week,” and alleging that the PA and affiliated groups were behind widespread illegal construction there, with the aim of undermining Israel’s sovereignty claims. In a further interview with Israel Radio<\/i>, Mr. Olmert did not repeat the allegations but denied the municipality was discriminating against Palestinians in the city. He said that of 219 building requests made by Palestinians last year, 191 had been approved. Israel also had extended the closure of Orient House for another six months, Israel Radio<\/i> and Palestinian sources said, and had closed two more Palestinian offices: The Land Research Centre, which was part of the Arab Studies Society in East Jerusalem, and the Multisectoral and Technical Offices of the Welfare Association, a NGO with headquarters in Geneva. (AP, BBC, DPA, Ha’aretz, LAW, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Amnesty International delegates who had been visiting Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory said that only justice and a commitment to uphold human rights for all could end a crisis that was spiralling out of control. The delegates, who included a military adviser, condemned the Israeli use of weapons that caused massive destruction of property, as well as of tank shells containing flechettes, as “entirely inappropriate for use in one of the most densely populated areas in the world.” “Areas of Palestinian homes which we had visited several times over the past year were now razed to the ground for alleged security reasons but apparently as collective punishment”, said delegates. “The IDF, whose mission statement emphasizes ‘the supreme value of human life’, is accepting or even ordering unpardonable acts,” said the delegates. Delegates also condemned Palestinian armed attacks on Israeli civilians. “The deliberate targeting of civilians can never be justified,” said AI. (AFP, AI press release MDE 15\/012\/2002)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Palestinian Police Commissioner Mussa Jadallah had met his Israeli West Bank counterpart, Commander Shahar Ayalon, for the first time since September 2000, said an Israeli police spokesman. The meeting took place at the Ma’alei Hahamisha kibbutz, west of Jerusalem, and focused on Palestinian-Israeli cooperation “in the field of criminal affairs” such as “shared investigations.” (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A 16-year-old Palestinian had died after having been shot by Israel heavy machinegun fire in the area of Salah ed-Din road in Rafah, Palestinian medical sources said. The incident occurred as an Israeli bulldozer and tank began bulldozing Palestinian land in the same area, witnesses said. (AFP, DPA, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The Vatican Secretary for Relations with States, Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran, asked that international observers be sent to the Middle East. He told Vatican Radio<\/i> that “the Holy See has been thinking of this proposal for more than a year, as one cannot witness passively the daily deaths of Israelis and Palestinians.” (WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n France would give €7.14 million (about US$6.28 million) in aid to Palestine in 2002, one-fourth of which would go to educational cooperation, the French Foreign Ministry announced. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Secretary of State Powell told the US House of Representatives International Relations Committee that he could not tie the “Karine A” arms shipment directly to Chairman Arafat on the basis of the information that was available to him. “It certainly is a case where he should have known and may well have known. I just cannot prove that he did know, or had direct control over the operation”, Mr. Powell added, noting that it was, however, close enough that the PA had to take responsibility for the incident. (AFP, Ha’aretz, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The IDF imposed a curfew on four West Bank villages located east of Nablus: Beit Hassan, Ein Shibli, Al-Agrabaniya and Al-Nassariya, as it searched the nearby area for militants after a Palestinian gunman killed a woman, her 11-year-old daughter and a soldier before being killed himself during an attack at the “Hamra” settlement also east of Nablus. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack. In the same area some 200 Palestinians were blocked at a checkpoint as they tried to return to their home from a visit to Jordan. In response to the attack, Israeli F-16s fired at the PA compound and factories and workshops in Nablus. Palestinian officials said 11 people, mostly policemen, were wounded. (AFP, Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post, Reuters, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 7<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israel launched a second retaliatory air strike on the PA compound in Nablus, wounding at least one person. “In retaliation for the murderous shooting attack which took place last night in Hamra settlement… the army this evening struck the offices of the Palestinian General Security Service in Nablus,” an IDF statement said. (AFP, Arutz 7, DPA, Reuters, XINHUA) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n US National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice warned visiting Defence Minister Ben-Eliezer that Israel’s decision to keep Chairman Arafat confined to Ramallah might not have the desired outcome. Ms. Rice, who stressed that she was speaking on behalf of President Bush, said Mr. Arafat’s confinement to his compound could have the reverse effect and actually strengthen his position. (Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n In a photo opportunity with Prime Minister Sharon at the Oval office, President Bush said he had assured Mr. Sharon that the US would “continue to keep pressure on Mr. Arafat to convince him that he must take serious, concrete, real steps to reduce terrorist activity in the Middle East”. Mr. Sharon described Mr. Arafat as “an obstacle to peace” and called for more pressure to be brought to bear to yield an “alternative” Palestinian Authority leadership. Mr. Sharon also said, that “Israel [was] committed to peace. At the end of the process, I believe that a Palestinian State would be, we will see a Palestinian State”. Asked repeatedly about Mr. Sharon’s call for a “boycott” of Mr. Arafat, President Bush declined to comment. White House officials, however, said President Bush had told Mr. Sharon that the US would “remain engaged in the region and engaged with the Palestinian Authority, a message that had also been conveyed to the press by White House spokesman Ari Fleischer before the meeting. Mr. Bush also said he was “deeply concerned about the plight of the average Palestinian, the moms and dads who [were] trying to raise their children, to educate their children,” adding that he had “$300 million in the budget to go through NGOs to help Palestinians be able to realize a better life.” (AFP, DPA, The Financial Times, Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post, Reuters, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, Javier Solana told the European Parliament in Strasbourg that Chairman Arafat remained the legitimate interlocutor for peace talks despite Israel’s dismissal of him as “irrelevant”. The Parliament website carried the following text of a Parliament resolution on the Middle East:<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 8<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The IDF said it had arrested three suspected militants during tank and troop raids in Nablus and Hebron and in the West Bank villages of Tamoun and Birzeit. Palestinian security sources said 10 tanks and armoured vehicles made incursions about 200 metres into Nablus with troops entering several homes and taking over a Palestinian checkpoint on the outskirts of the city. The IDF said in a statement that its forces were tightening a military blockade around Nablus because the city had harboured militants accused of carrying out attacks on Israelis. In another development, a Palestinian man had been killed overnight in an explosion at an Israeli checkpoint outside of Bethlehem, according to a Palestinian security official. The family of the killed Palestinian said they believed he had carried out a suicide bombing but the IDF reported no other casualties in the explosion. A 14-year-old Palestinian had died and another had been shot and wounded by Israeli police in a chase in East Jerusalem after an Israeli woman had been found stabbed, a police source said. (AFP, AP, BBC, Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post, Reuters, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 9<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n EU Foreign Ministers ended their two-day brainstorming retreat in the Spanish town of Caceres with a debate on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, saying there should be less stress on security and more on political aspects of the conflict. The creation of a Palestinian State must be the “starting point of a negotiating process,” French Foreign Minister Védrine said as he presented a plan drawn up by France. Mr. Védrine spelled out the sequence of events without detailing a timeline: (a) Palestinian elections “to support the PA’s popular legitimacy in its efforts to crack down” on extremists. These could be general elections or a vote for a legislative council that would prepare for presidential elections once a Palestinian State had been proclaimed. (b) For the elections, Israeli troops in the Occupied Palestinian Territory would withdraw to the positions they held before the current intifada<\/i> and lift travel restrictions. Israel would recognize the new Palestinian State, which would also immediately be admitted to the UN. The plan did not address the issue of the State’s borders. (c) The Palestinian State and Israel would then sign “a declaration of non-belligerency”, open negotiations and sign a peace accord based on UN Security Council resolutions. The plan won broad support, with none of the EU Ministers expressing any criticism, though some EU countries were believed to be skeptical of the elections fearing that extremists could win the polls. Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Piqué, the meeting chairman, said it would be developed further in another Foreign Ministers meeting on 18 February and a mid-March European summit in Barcelona. Also at the meeting, Italy called for an international peace conference and a reconstruction plan for the Palestinian territories, while the Spanish EU presidency submitted a document for discussion, saying it was not realistic just to build on the Oslo agreements and new initiatives were needed. (AP, Reuters, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n IDF troops, backed by tanks and APCs, staged a house-by-house search in the village of Tammoun looking for militants connected to the killing on 6 February of three Israelis in the “Hamra” settlement, about 10km south from Tammoun. Clashes with stone-throwing Palestinians erupted in the village and witnesses said troops shot and wounded two teenage brothers who were taken to a hospital in nearby Nablus. Military sources and Israel public radio reported 15 to 25 Palestinians arrested. (AFP, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The US and had Israel agreed to set up a joint commission as the first step towards providing international aid to the population in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Israeli public radio reported. The report said Prime Minister Sharon had submitted two plans to US officials, one short-term and the other long-term. The former reportedly consisted of lifting the blockade on areas where calm had been restored, while the latter was a kind of “Marshall plan” spreading aid to the Palestinian population over several years, with funds provided by the private sector worldwide, the radio added. The joint commission was due to examine the feasibility of this project. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 10<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Three IDF tanks and tens of military vehicles crossed some 500 metres into Nablus, triggering a gunfight. Seven Palestinians were injured, Palestinian security officials said. The IDF withdrew after arresting two men. One Palestinian died of a heart attack when besieged in his house by Israeli forces. In a separate attack, two Palestinian gunmen opened fire on the street near the gates of the IDF southern command HQ in Beersheba, killing two and wounding five people before being shot dead. Israeli security sources believed the attackers came from a village in the southern West Bank, and most of their victims were believed to be soldiers on a lunch break. Hamas’ military wing, Izzeddin Al-Qassam, took responsibility for the attack. (AFP, Reuters, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A number of rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel, landing east of kibbutz Sa’ad and near moshav Shuva, causing no damage. IDF investigation determined that these were the newer Qassam-2 rockets. Following the Palestinian rocket attack, the IDF split the Gaza Strip at two points: at “Netzarim” junction and in the area of the “Gush Katif” settlement block. Israeli warplanes launched a rocket attack at the Ansar-2 police complex near Chairman Arafat’s residence and HQ in Gaza City, already seriously damaged in December. Palestinian hospital sources said three civilians and seven members of the security forces had been wounded, none of them seriously. Helicopter gunships launched rocket attacks at the northern Gaza Strip. Palestinians said a compound on the Gaza beachside and stores, a house and an empty kindergarten in Jabalia had been hit, as well as the house of the Jordanian representative to the PA. Two local UNSCO employees had been wounded in the raid and their office damaged. UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Terje Rød-Larsen released a statement calling the attack “utterly unacceptable” and expressing “outrage that Israel deployed bombs of heavy tonnage in such close proximity to civilian areas and UN facilities.” The IDF spokesman expressed regret for the injury of the UN workers. (AP, Arutz 7, BBC, Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n LAW stated in its press release it had positive information that a 14-year-old Palestinian, shot dead by Israeli police in connection with the stabbing of a woman in Jerusalem on 8 February, had been murdered in cold blood, and demanded an independent inquiry. An Israeli expert categorically rejected the possibility that the bullet had been fired from a weapon at point-blank range. (Ha’aretz, LAW)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israel’s Minister of Housing and Construction Natan Sharansky confirmed reports that his office had been in the habit of officially informing US Ambassador to Israel Dan Kurtzer of planned construction projects in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Mr. Sharansky expected most crises pertaining to settlement construction to be avoided by this policy since he operated with the awareness that, while the US was not particularly pleased by construction, it was more upset by the feeling of being kept in the dark and not by the actual construction. Mr. Sharansky further saw in the policy of informing the Ambassador in advance a clear message to the US that Israel was operating within announced guidelines of not creating new settlements and only building to accommodate “natural growth.” (Arutz 7)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 11<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The following statement was issued by the Spokesman for Âé¶¹APP Secretary-General Kofi Annan:<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Israeli fighter jets and Apache helicopters launched a rocket attack at Al-Saraya Public Security Directorate compound in the centre of Gaza City, housing Force-17 guards, an office of the military intelligence and a jail, Palestinian officials said. Witnesses said the police had released prisoners from the compound during the strike, which came at a time of changeover between morning and afternoon shifts at nearby schools, and streets were crowded with schoolchildren. According to Palestinian hospital officials, at least 37 Palestinians had been injured, four of them seriously. Separately, a Palestinian shot in the head outside his shop in Rafah last week by Israeli forces had died of his injuries, Palestinian officials at Gaza’s Al-Shifa hospital said. (AFP, Reuters, WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n US State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the US was “deeply troubled” by the upsurge in violence in the region. “Though we understand the need for Israel to take steps to ensure its self-defence, we’re seriously concerned about Israeli attacks over the past several days on PA facilities, particularly in areas that are heavily populated by civilians… Attacks such as these are counterproductive to efforts to reduce the violence and restore calm,” Mr. Boucher said. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Israeli forces handed out demolition summons to Palestinian house owners near the settlement road in Beit Taamir, southeast of Bethlehem. (WAFA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 12<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The Palestinian leadership condemned the “savage Israeli attacks” on Palestinian targets and warned that “the destructive war launched by Israel against our people will undoubtedly spread to strike security and stability in the whole region”, a statement carried by WAFA<\/i> said. “The international community should understand that our people will not renounce any of their rights under the pressure of Israeli aggression, whatever the sacrifices”, the statement added. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n In remarks before the Senate Budget Committee, Secretary of State Powell said that on 10 February he had received a “somewhat positive” letter from Chairman Arafat on the “Karine A” arms shipment affair and he was examining it. On 11 February State Department spokesman Richard Boucher had welcomed Mr. Arafat’s “positive letter”, which had been delivered to Secretary of State Powell through the US Consul-General in Jerusalem, and had noted that “Actions must follow words and we hope now to see strong, resolute, and irreversible action by Chairman Arafat and the Palestinian Authority along the lines that he indicated in the letter”. Although Mr. Boucher had declined to detail the contents of the letter, another senior State Department official had been quoted as saying that the letter went beyond standard denials and indicated that Chairman Arafat was taking actions with regard to any possible arms smuggling or for that matter any form of military or arms relationship between the PA and Iran. (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A Palestinian policeman was killed in a firefight, which erupted when Israeli troops entered the Palestinian Area “A” town of Halhul, north of Hebron, in what Israeli public radio said was an operation to arrest Palestinian activists. The IDF issued a statement saying that “an armed terrorist” had been killed in an exchange of fire in Halhul and two assault rifles had been found near his body. One militant linked to the Fatah and another from Islamic Jihad had been arrested. According to witnesses, the Israeli troops destroyed three small buildings and damaged several cars in the area before withdrawing. One of the buildings razed housed a factory producing home-made rocket launchers, Israeli radio reported. In another raid, the IDF said it had arrested 10 Palestinians in an area under its security control near Ramallah. (AFP, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Referring to a plan worked out by himself and Palestinian Council Speaker Ahmed Qurei, Foreign Minister Peres said it contained three stages, starting with a ceasefire, moving to mutual recognition between Israel and a Palestinian State, and ending with an agreement on the borders of the new State. He said he envisaged negotiations on the terms of Palestinian statehood to take a year and implementation a further 12 months. The new State would initially cover the territory currently under full or partial PA control, which would amount to about two-thirds of the Gaza Strip and 40 per cent of the West Bank. In the third stage of the plan the issue of borders would be negotiated on the basis of UN resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973). Mr. Peres said he was confident the plan would be approved by the Israeli Labour Party and other parties would study it. (AP, BBC)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n “I think we are united in the belief that a two-State solution between Palestinians and Israelis is the only solution which can bring lasting peace to the peoples concerned”, EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana told a forum of more than 40 Foreign Ministers from EU and Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) countries convened by the Turkish Government in Istanbul in the aftermath of the 11 September attacks in the US under the theme “civilization and harmony”. Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi for his part called on the EU to put more pressure on Israel to stop the violence against the Palestinian people. <\/i>Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassem Bin Jabr Al-Thani, Foreign Minister of Qatar, currently holding the OIC presidency, said there must be an equitable solution for the Palestinians and their “desire to rid themselves of foreign domination can in no way be described as terrorism”. (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n A 42-year-old Palestinian woman had died of a heart attack at an Israeli checkpoint on her way to hospital in Gaza City, Palestinian medical sources said. She was riding a donkey cart and was trying to circumvent an IDF checkpoint near the “Netzarim” settlement, south of Gaza City. Upon hearing warning shots fired by the Israeli troops guarding the checkpoint, she fell off the cart and collapsed, a doctor from the Gaza City Shifa hospital told AFP<\/i>. The doctor added that 150 Palestinian adults suffering from serious illnesses and 40 children suffering from malnutrition and anaemia had been scheduled to receive treatment during the day but could not come from the Gaza Strip’s middle area to the hospital due to the Israeli closure. He also said that several ambulances had been turned away by the IDF at the “Netzarim” checkpoint. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Speaking in New York, at the opening of the 2002 session of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, <\/span>inter alia<\/i><\/span>, that “the virtual house arrest imposed on President Arafat should be lifted” and noted that “making progress on security-related issues alone, without addressing the occupation, will not bring lasting security”, stressing that it was “vital that all aspects” of the Tenet understandings and the Mitchell recommendations “should be advanced as a package”. <\/span>(Reuters, UN News Centre at <\/i><\/span>http:\/\/www.un.org\/News\/ossg\/latestsm.htm<\/i><\/a>)<\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n In Washington US State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the firing of the Qassam-2 rockets on 10 February by Palestinian militants was “deeply troubling” and that Chairman Arafat “had to act now to halt this kind of dangerous and provocative escalation.” Mr. Boucher also said that the US was “seriously concerned about Israeli attacks over the past several days on Palestinian Authority facilities, particularly in areas … heavily populated by civilians”, adding that “attacks such as these [were] counterproductive to efforts to reduce violence and restore calm.” (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 13<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n In a joint statement adopted in Istanbul, Foreign Ministers from the EU and the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) “underlined that for peace, stability and harmony to prevail, the Middle East conflict must be settled in a just and comprehensive manner and in accordance with international law and the relevant Security Council resolutions. In this context, the ‘two state’ solution would contribute to bring peace and security to the peoples concerned.” <\/span>(<\/i><\/span>www.europa-eu-un.org<\/i><\/a>)<\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The IDF had made incursions into the Palestinian-controlled villages of Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, and into Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia further north, in response to the launch of two Qassam-2 rockets by Hamas on 10 February, the IDF said in a statement. Israeli government spokesman Avi Pazner called the missile launches a very serious escalation. Palestinian security officials said three policemen had been killed in Deir el-Balah when an Israeli bulldozer had destroyed their post. IDF sources said soldiers had shot at the men after they had aimed their guns at the troops. The IDF had shot dead two more policemen in an exchange of fire in Beit Hanoun, hospital officials said. The IDF had also demolished three Palestinian security posts in Deir el-Balah overnight, Palestinian sources said. At least 10 Palestinians had been arrested in the raids. The IDF said it had pulled back from Deir el-Balah and Beit Lahia, and later also from Beit Hanoun. PA Gaza Security Chief General Abdel Razek Al-Majaida said the “reoccupation of the northern Gaza Strip sabotage[d] Palestinian, international and Arab efforts to restore calm”. Four IDF tanks and two bulldozers had rolled more than one kilometre into the Maghazi refugee camp near Deir el-Balah, Palestinian security officials said. There were no initial reports of shooting or injuries. <\/i>An armed Palestinian was killed near the settlement of “Morag” in the southern Gaza Strip. Israeli military radio said that an army unit had spotted four armed Palestinians approaching the settlement and had opened fire, killing one of them, while the others appeared to have escaped. (AFP, DPA, Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post, Reuters, XINHUA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson, in a statement from Geneva, after a meeting with a delegation of Arab ambassadors to the UN, said she followed “with ever deepening concern the deteriorating human rights situation affecting the whole population in the occupied Palestinian territories and the worsening human insecurity in Israel, as a result of suicide bombings and other attacks”. Ms. Robinson also called on the Israeli Government to end Chairman Arafat’s “house arrest” in Ramallah, adding that colleagues of hers who had just visited the region had seen first hand the “ongoing use of excessive force and other collective punishments such as restrictions of movement.” (AFP, DPA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Visiting British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told a press conference after a two-hour meeting with Chairman Arafat in Ramallah that the Israeli “house arrest” of Mr. Arafat was “unacceptable”. Mr. Straw said he had discussed with the Chairman “further steps that should be taken in the area of the occupied territories to deal with the extremists who undermine the vision of peace for the whole land”. He had also reiterated in front of Chairman Arafat what he had earlier said after meeting with Foreign Minister Peres that the PA should “do more” to crack down on Palestinian extremists in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Mr. Straw added that suicide bombers undermined the possibility of a political process and therefore there had to be an end to violence and a return to the negotiating table. (AFP, DPA, The Jerusalem Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Secretary of State Powell told a House of Representatives subcommittee that Chairman Arafat had written him “a letter three days ago on the ‘Karine A’ accepting responsibility, not personal responsibility, but as Chairman of the Palestinian Authority”. (AFP, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n 14<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Palestinian Council Speaker, Ahmed Qurei (Abu Ala) said senior PA officials would not meet with Prime Minister Sharon again, as long as “the aggressive Israeli policy” towards the PA and Chairman Arafat continued. Abu Ala also criticized comments by Israeli leaders calling for Chairman Arafat to be replaced, saying they were irresponsible. (Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Agreements recorded in a non-paper prepared by EU Middle East Envoy Miguel Angel Moratinos and printed for the first time in Ha’aretz<\/i>, showed substantial progress made between Israelis and Palestinians during negotiations in Taba in January 2001. The introduction to the document noted that although the paper had no official status, it had been acknowledged by the parties as being a relatively fair description of the outcome of the negotiations on the permanent status issues in Taba. The Israelis had agreed that the 1967 borders, in accordance with UN Security Council resolution 242 (1967), would be the basis for the border between Israel and a future Palestinian State. Ha’aretz<\/i> said a map presented by the Palestinians proposed they would get 96.9 per cent of the West Bank, whereas Israel proposed 94 per cent. Israel would annex the remainder, allowing some main settlement blocks to continue to exist, and would compensate with territorial exchanges. The parties had essentially agreed that Israel would evacuate Gaza. The parties had agreed that Jerusalem would be an open city, whose eastern part would be called Al-Quds and would be the capital of Palestine. The Palestinians had agreed that most of the Jewish neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem would remain under Israeli sovereignty, and both sides had agreed to a division of the Old City. “Both sides were close to accepting [former President] Clinton’s ideas regarding Palestinian sovereignty over Haram al-Sharif”, Ha’aretz<\/i> quoted the document as saying. Israel would have sovereignty over the Western Wall. Regarding the refugees, the parties had agreed that a just resolution of the problem had to lead to implementation of General Assembly resolution 194. There had been no agreement on the number of refugees that would be allowed to enter Israel. (DPA, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Following is the text of the press statement on the situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, made by UN Security Council President Adolfo Aguilar Zinser (Mexico):<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n