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- <text id=94TT0907>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Middle East:Walls Came Tumbling Down
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 30
- The Walls Came Tumbling Down
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Arafat returns to Palestinian territory and puts his authority
- behind the construction of a new nation
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Lisa Beyer, Dean Fischer and Jamil Hamad/Gaza City
- </p>
- <p> In blazing Mediterranean sunshine, Yasser Arafat crossed the
- border from Egypt into the Gaza Strip, dropped to his knees
- and kissed the sandy soil. As the welcoming crowd cheered and
- waved black-red-green-and-white flags, he was surrounded by
- officials and security men from the Palestine Liberation Organization.
- He and his aides piled into a convoy of cars and trucks carrying
- armed guards and sped along the main north-south route into
- Gaza City. Thousands of supporters roared a welcome outside
- the building where the Israeli army of occupation had its local
- headquarters until last May.
- </p>
- <p> The initial return of Yasser Arafat, awaited so long by his
- Palestinian followers and dreaded by so many Israelis, went
- surprisingly smoothly. There was one brief scare: two Israelis
- working for the Israel Broadcasting Authority were seized by
- Palestinian security personnel for possessing handguns but were
- later released.
- </p>
- <p> The long-delayed arrival brought to fruition the tentative peace
- agreement that Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
- approved on the White House lawn last September. When he stepped
- onto Palestinian land for the first time in 27 years last Friday,
- Arafat was wearing his usual green military-style uniform, holstered
- pistol and checkered kaffiyeh. But he acknowledged that he must
- now switch roles from guerrilla leader to head of government.
- "We need national unity," he told a crowd of 70,000, who repeatedly
- drowned out his words with cheers. "Big, big, big, big missions
- await us--to build this homeland and rebuild what the occupation
- has destroyed."
- </p>
- <p> Arafat basked in the ululations, flashed the V-sign and tossed
- white carnations into the throng. Yet even amid the euphoria,
- there were doubts about the future. Medical technician Ayman
- Nasrallah said he was glad Arafat had returned because "it symbolizes
- the cooling down of the Palestinians. Until recently, Arafat
- represented the gun; now he represents peace." But asked whether
- Arafat would be a good Governor, Nasrallah replied, "No. He
- has no qualifications to be head of state."
- </p>
- <p> Arafat's visit was scheduled for just three or four days. Soon
- he will have to return to establish a permanent presence in
- the territories that Israel captured in the 1967 war. He and
- his colleagues will have to construct a functioning government
- on the first bits of occupied land handed back for Palestinian
- self-rule. In the teeming and poverty-ridden Gaza Strip and
- the tiny West Bank enclave of Jericho, the P.L.O. must prove
- that it can make a success of governance. If that goes well,
- Israel has promised to hand over the whole of the occupied West
- Bank, excluding East Jerusalem, to Palestinian administration.
- But if Arafat and his comrades prove unable to keep order and
- build a viable society, the Israelis could call a halt to the
- experiment. Many Palestinians fear that Arafat may fail them
- and that the effort to build something new will collapse.
- </p>
- <p> Some Israelis--and some Palestinians--still hope for that
- failure and are willing to use violence to defeat the tentative
- peace process. Israeli troops and Palestinian soldiers sealed
- off the Gaza Strip so cars from Israel could not enter during
- Arafat's visit, but an estimated 100,000 hard-line Israelis
- rallied in Jerusalem on Saturday, crying "Death to Rabin!" and
- "Death to Arafat!" On Thursday, others had clashed with police,
- set fires on streets and threw rocks at Palestinian cars. One
- settlers' group offered a $33,000 reward for Arafat's capture.
- Islamic extremists, who also oppose the peace agreement, claimed
- responsibility for shooting and wounding two Israeli soldiers
- in the Gaza Strip and called the attack "a present for Arafat."
- </p>
- <p> Still, the relative order surrounding Arafat's entry into Gaza
- was remarkable, all the more so because the trip was organized
- on just two days' notice. His decision to make the visit last
- week was vintage Arafat: solitary, sudden and unpredictable.
- He gave no one a preview of his intentions. Last month, after
- checking into a Tunis hospital to recover from exhaustion, he
- told an aide, "I have the right to take sick leave." Nodding
- sympathetically, his adviser suggested that he take two or three
- months off. "At least," responded Arafat. Two weeks later, he
- decided to go to Gaza.
- </p>
- <p> Although the announcement was surprising, his arrival was long
- overdue. The Palestinians of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank
- had been expecting Arafat since May 4, when Israel and the P.L.O.
- signed the autonomy agreements that transferred administrative
- authority over the Jericho enclave and most of the Gaza Strip.
- The Israeli security forces then withdrew, and thousands of
- Palestinian security forces took over. Yet the Chairman remained
- at P.L.O. headquarters in Tunis. His close associates began
- to speculate on the reasons why. Some said he was waiting for
- their share of border controls to be turned over to Palestinians.
- Others said he was unwilling to arrive without ready cash in
- his pocket to pay off supporters. Some Palestinians, fed up
- at the delay, even suggested Arafat was afraid he would be assassinated.
- </p>
- <p> The day before the visit was announced, a P.L.O. spokesman in
- Tunis confirmed to reporters that Arafat would be meeting Israeli
- Prime Minister Rabin and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres in Paris
- this week. He insisted, though, that no date had been set for
- the Chairman's visit to Gaza and Jericho. It was not a deception;
- Arafat simply did not confide his plans to anyone until Wednesday.
- Says Mohammed Sobeih, secretary-general of the Palestine National
- Council: "Arafat wants to keep everything in his hands. His
- trust in people is limited."
- </p>
- <p> That operating style is becoming a liability. Arafat's ingrained,
- lifetime habits of secrecy and high-handedness have already
- caused serious splits among the P.L.O. leadership and deep concern
- among the rank and file. Even many of his closest, most loyal
- associates believe he is incapable of transforming himself from
- guerrilla chief to government executive, which he must do if
- he is to create the new state they regard as the inevitable
- outcome of the Palestinian struggle. They are worried that if
- he cannot make that transition, the Palestinians of the West
- Bank and Gaza will rebel against his authoritarian style. "If
- he tries to be a dictator, he will be thrown out," says a member
- of the P.L.O. executive committee. "Our people will not accept
- it."
- </p>
- <p> Though Arafat's arrival in the Gaza Strip marked another step
- toward the beginning of Palestinian self-rule, much remains
- to be done. Public security was successfully handed over to
- Palestinian security forces in May. But civilian administration
- of Gaza and Jericho--in such matters as education, health,
- taxation, postal service--has remained in limbo. Arafat has
- named 18 of the 24 members of the Palestinian Authority that
- will administer the areas until elections are held, but they
- have established no real control yet. Hours before Arafat's
- appearance last week, Haidar Abdel-Shafi, a former Palestinian
- negotiator, said, "We want to change to a democratic system.
- We have had enough symbols and romance."
- </p>
- <p> There is considerable doubt about how swiftly Arafat will delegate
- real responsibility to the Authority and when elections for
- a Palestinian legislative council will be held. One of his lieutenants
- has proposed that he appoint a vice-chairman of the Authority
- to be responsible for running the territorial governments day-to-day,
- pending elections that would possibly take place next year.
- But Arafat has shown no inclination to accept that plan or any
- other that would require him to share his power. "The Palestinian
- Authority," complains a senior P.L.O. official, "consists entirely
- of yes-men." Says a Western diplomat: "Arafat is in no hurry
- for elections. He will try to structure them to prevent a challenge
- to his pre-eminence."
- </p>
- <p> Two of Arafat's closest associates--Farouk Kaddoumi and Mahmoud
- Abbas--decided to stay on at P.L.O. headquarters in Tunis
- rather than join the new Authority in the territories. They
- are not convinced that Arafat will ever delegate responsibility.
- Another adviser says, "He wants to be the leader of a Palestinian
- state just like all the other Arab leaders whose authority is
- absolute."
- </p>
- <p> That is exactly what the Palestinians who live in the occupied
- territories are afraid of. They consider themselves high achievers,
- entrepreneurs, educated and democratic, and they swear they
- will establish the first true Arab democracy. They now have
- their chance to prove it, and they are worried that they may
- end up with another Arab autocracy like Libya, Syria or, at
- best, Egypt. Arafat's established style of leadership does not
- reassure them.
- </p>
- <p> Palestinians inside the occupied territories believe that Arafat
- and some of his colleagues will try to resist democratization
- but will lose that battle. "When ((Arafat and his aides)) speak
- of democracy," says Lily Feidy, an assistant dean at Bir Zeit
- University in the West Bank, "it is something different from
- what we want." If Arafat tries to postpone free elections in
- order to maintain his own dominance, warns Bassam Abu Sharif,
- a P.L.O. official based in Amman, "the people will start another
- intifadeh to implant democratic institutions."
- </p>
- <p> Residents of the territories fret not only that Arafat is too
- authoritarian but also that he may be unqualified for the new
- task of Palestinian nation building. He and the other old guerrilla
- leaders are skilled politicians and able promoters of the Palestinian
- cause internationally. But, argues Hassan Abu Libdeh, deputy
- director of a Palestinian development council, "that does not
- make them capable of running a sophisticated sanitation plan."
- Adds Saeb Erakat, a member of the Palestinian Authority: "They
- need to leave the Tunis mentality behind. No more limousines;
- no more first-class tickets."
- </p>
- <p> The Palestinians believe that open politics and efficient administration
- will lead to prosperity. If they make a secure beginning, they
- are convinced, investment will flow in--not only the $2.5
- billion in development funds pledged by other nations but money
- from wealthy Palestinians overseas. "The first thing we need
- is money and investment," says Hassan Asfour, an official of
- the Authority in Gaza. "Then you will see how Palestinians will
- build a strong country." Unfortunately, Gaza and West Bank residents
- point out, "capital is cowardly": stability and practical planning
- will be needed to reassure investors.
- </p>
- <p> These voices are speaking to Arafat. They are telling the Chairman,
- now 64, that he must adjust to new requirements to build the
- nascent Palestinian state. He is still their father figure,
- the single most important and unifying force in the P.L.O. But
- they expect him to move from autocracy to democracy, from revolution
- to construction. After spending a lifetime in the cause of Palestine,
- he risks rejection if he cannot learn to share power with the
- people he has led for a quarter-century.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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