Thursday, 21 March, 2002
Powell Demands Arafat to Condemn Jerusalem Bombing
Publicly
David Gollust State Department 22
Mar 2002 03:10 UTC
 
The Bush
administration is formally designating the radical Palestinian faction - the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades - as a foreign terrorist organization. The
announcement came just hours after the group, an off-shoot of Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement, claimed responsibility for Thursday's
suicide bombing in Jerusalem.
Officials here say it
is unclear whether the Al-Aqsa faction carries out its attacks with the
approval or knowledge of Mr. Arafat or other top leaders of
Fatah.
But the decision by
Secretary of State Powell to add the group to the U.S. terrorist list,
communicated to Congressional leaders earlier this week, does reflect growing
administration concern about such a possibility.
State Department
spokesman Philip Reeker said that following Thursday's suicide attack, Mr.
Powell telephoned Mr. Arafat to demand action against the extremists. "The
secretary called upon Chairman Arafat to condemn today's acts publicly and
personally in the strongest manner, in English and in Arabic. The secretary
told Chairman Arafat he must punish the leaders of organizations responsible
for recent attacks, making sure those responsible are brought to justice.
Chairman Arafat must speak out personally and tell the Palestinian people that
these terrorist actions destroy his leadership and dash the dreams of the
Palestinian people for a Palestinian state," Mr. Reeker
said.
A State Department
official said Mr. Powell's language with the Palestinian leader was "extremely
tough and firm" and reflected U.S. anger over the latest bombing, and the fact
that it scuttled Israeli-Palestinian security talks painstakingly arranged by
U.S. envoy Anthony Zinni.
Mr. Reeker said the
secretary called for a 100 percent Palestinian effort to support the Zinni
mission and implement the cease-fire plan of CIA Director George Tenet, and
that this should include "unambiguous" orders to Palestinian security forces to
prevent terror attacks and enforce a truce.
The terrorist
designation for the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades will make it illegal for anyone in
the United States to provide money or other support to the group, deny U.S.
visas to its members or representatives, and require American financial
institutions to block any assets the group may have in the United
States.
There has been broad
support for the move against the Al-Aqsa group in the U.S. Congress, where
members have also been pressing the administration to take similar action
against the Tanzim militia, another group affiliated with
Fatah.
Nearly 30 other
groups are on the foreign terrorist list. Other Palestinian groups listed are
Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine.
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