Arafat picks emergency Cabinet
By Associated Press
Published October 6, 2003
RAMALLAH, West Bank - Yasser Arafat installed an eight-member emergency Cabinet on Sunday with Ahmed Qureia as prime minister, an apparent attempt to deflect Israeli action against him after a suicide bombing a day earlier.
Israel threatened last month to "remove" Arafat, without setting a time, and there were new demands for his expulsion after Saturday's attack by Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Nineteen Israelis were killed in a crowded beachfront restaurant in the northern port city of Haifa.
Aides to the Palestinian leader said he was clearly concerned about Israeli action after the bombing. There was no direct move against Arafat on Sunday; instead, Israel bombed a target inside Syria that it said was a Palestinian Islamic Jihad training base, striking deep inside its neighbor's territory Sunday for the first time in three decades.
In installing an emergency Cabinet, Arafat makes it more difficult for Israel to move against him. The United States appears willing to give Qureia a chance, and any Israeli action against Arafat could force Qureia's immediate resignation and cause chaos in Palestinian areas.
Qureia, who had been tapped for the job last month, had initially planned to present a larger Cabinet to Parliament for approval on Wednesday. Arafat's decree Sunday meant that Qureia takes office immediately.
Qureia told the Associated Press that he would try to implement the U.S.-backed "road map" peace plan and "work ... to get out of this situation of chaos in the Palestinian territories."
Qureia has not outlined his security plan, though he is not expected to dismantle militant groups, as required by the road map. Palestinian Authority officials fear a confrontation with Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad will trigger internal fighting.
Qureia said three portfolios were assigned: Nabil Shaath as foreign minister, Salam Fayad as finance minister and Nasser Yousef as interior minister. Qureia listed the other five members of the Cabinet as Saeb Erekat, the current chief negotiator; Nabil Abul Hummus, the current education minister; Jamal Shobaki, the current minister of local affairs; and two legislators from Arafat's Fatah movement, Abdel Rahman Hamad and Jawad Tibi.
The Cabinet is to be sworn in Tuesday and immediately hold its first meeting, Qureia said.
There was no immediate Israeli comment because of Yom Kippur, the Jewish holiday that ends at sundown today.
The Palestinian official said security forces have taken some action against militants in recent days, seizing more than 400 pounds of explosives in the West Bank town of Jericho and arresting five would-be attackers.
The claim could not be verified independently, and the Israeli military said it could not comment until the end of Yom Kippur.
GAZA STRIP: Israeli troops fired from a tank-mounted machine gun at a group of Palestinians crossing a road closed by the military. A 26-year-old man was killed and three people were wounded, witnesses and hospital officials said.
The road had been closed earlier in the day as part of travel restrictions imposed after the suicide bombing. Troops sealed off parts of Gaza, cutting the 20-mile-long coastal strip into four sections, to prevent the movement of militants and weapons, army officials said.
World and national headlines
Arafat picks emergency Cabinet
Diplomat says leak puts wife in danger
Election 2004The presidential candidate CNN built?
In two weeks, Clark has millions
IraqEx-official: Blair knew arms absent
U.S. weapons hunter says he's on trail of anthrax, Scuds
Nation in briefShooter kills mother, pastor
World in briefHundreds flee storm in Mexico

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 727-893-8111
|
|