"This is without a doubt the end of an era and the start of a
period of uncertainty, as he (Arafat) has not designated anyone to
replace him," said Makram Mohammed Ahmed, a well respected
editorialist for the Egyptian weekly, Al-Musawar.
The 75-year-old leader, who has come to symbolise the
Palestinian struggle for statehood, may change his mind now that he
is being treated in Paris for an unspecified illness and consider
delegating power, he added.
In the meantime, Palestinian prime minister Ahmed Qorei and his
predecessor Mahmud Abbas will grip the reigns of power, Palestinian
officials say.
For three years, Arafat was effectively blockaded in the
Muqataa, his Ramallah headquarters, by the Israeli army.
Several commentators said Arafat's departure from Palestinian
territory may be the spark needed to put back on track peace
negotiations between Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
government and the Palestinians.
"In the last few years Arafat was Mr Sharon's alibi for not
starting negotiations with the Palestinians," said Uri Zaki, an
advisor to Yossi Beilin, a former justice minister and an architect
in the 1993 Oslo peace accords.
"Now that Arafat is out of the political picture -- for now at
least -- Sharon has lost this alibi," Zaki added.
"It is a good time to see whether Mr Sharon will go for
negotiation with Qorei, the Palestinian Authority and the others to
negotiate the withdrawal of Gaza as a bilateral approach."
The Israeli daily Haaretz expressed hope in an editorial that a
reshuffle in the senior echelons of the Palestinian Authority "will
largely do away with the old claim that there's no partner for
talks".
"The Palestinian leadership, feeling its way toward a new era,
ought to be presented with a similar demand," it said.
"It must grasp that the disengagement plan is an opportunity to
reach talks with Israel."
- Nampa-AFP
The 75-year-old leader, who has come to symbolise the Palestinian
struggle for statehood, may change his mind now that he is being
treated in Paris for an unspecified illness and consider delegating
power, he added.In the meantime, Palestinian prime minister Ahmed
Qorei and his predecessor Mahmud Abbas will grip the reigns of
power, Palestinian officials say.For three years, Arafat was
effectively blockaded in the Muqataa, his Ramallah headquarters, by
the Israeli army.Several commentators said Arafat's departure from
Palestinian territory may be the spark needed to put back on track
peace negotiations between Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
government and the Palestinians."In the last few years Arafat was
Mr Sharon's alibi for not starting negotiations with the
Palestinians," said Uri Zaki, an advisor to Yossi Beilin, a former
justice minister and an architect in the 1993 Oslo peace
accords."Now that Arafat is out of the political picture -- for now
at least -- Sharon has lost this alibi," Zaki added."It is a good
time to see whether Mr Sharon will go for negotiation with Qorei,
the Palestinian Authority and the others to negotiate the
withdrawal of Gaza as a bilateral approach."The Israeli daily
Haaretz expressed hope in an editorial that a reshuffle in the
senior echelons of the Palestinian Authority "will largely do away
with the old claim that there's no partner for talks"."The
Palestinian leadership, feeling its way toward a new era, ought to
be presented with a similar demand," it said."It must grasp that
the disengagement plan is an opportunity to reach talks with
Israel."- Nampa-AFP