First Published: 2012-07-04

 

Like Rafiq Hariri, Yasser Arafat was assassinated

 

Palestinians want international probe into death of former president Arafat after investigation showed he may have been poisoned.

 

Middle East Online

Poisoned with polonium?

RAMALLAH (Palestinian Territories) - The Palestinians want an international probe into the death of former president Yasser Arafat after an investigation showed he may have been poisoned, an official said Wednesday.

"We call for the formation of an international investigation committee modelled on the international investigation committee set up to look into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri," senior Palestinian official Saeb Erakat said.

The call came a day after the Al-Jazeera news channel broadcast the results of an investigation into the death of Arafat, who died in 2004, which showed that the Palestinian leader might have been poisoned with polonium.

The news channel said an analysis of Arafat's belongings, which were given to his wife by the Paris hospital where he died, showed high levels of the radioactive substance.

Polonium was used to kill Russian former spy turned Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko, who died in 2006 after drinking tea laced with the substance at a London hotel.

Francois Bochud, head of the Institute of Radiation Physics at the University of Lausanne, was among the scientists who worked with Al-Jazeera to analyse Arafat's death and test his possessions.

"The conclusion was that we did find some significant polonium that was present in these samples," he told Al-Jazeera.

Arafat, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who led the struggle for Palestinian statehood for nearly four decades, died on November 11, 2004, following several weeks of treatment.

He had been airlifted to France from his besieged headquarters in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

French officials, citing privacy laws, refused to reveal the precise cause of death or the nature of his condition, fuelling a host of rumours and theories as to the cause of his illness.

At the time of his death at the age of 75, Palestinian officials charged he had been poisoned by long-time foe Israel, but an inconclusive Palestinian investigation in 2005 ruled out cancer, AIDS or poisoning.

To confirm the theory that he was poisoned by polonium it would be necessary to exhume and analyse Arafat's remains, Bochud said.

"If (Suha Arafat) really wants to know what happened to her husband (we need) to find a sample -- I mean, an exhumation... should provide us with a sample that should have a very high quantity of polonium if he was poisoned," he said.


 

Damascus agrees ‘in principle’ to attend peace conference

Obama seeks to shape own political legacy

Algeria’s Belmokhtar brings terror to Niger

Egypt rulers reconcile with ex-regime tycoons

Secular Turkey curbs alcohol sales

Al-Qaeda controls villages in Yemen's Hadramawt

Israel, Palestinians urged to make hard decisions

Kerry slams Iran’s Guardian Council over poll candidates

US expands Iran sanctions blacklist

Deadly clashes in Lebanon's Tripoli continue unabated

Police make two further arrests in London soldier killing

Mali offensive opens Pandora’s Box: Qaeda offshoot spreads its wings

Darfur clashes displace 300,000 people in 5 months

Pepper spray charge: New episode in Tunisia Femen activist’s saga

Syria drags Lebanon into another Lebanese-Lebanese war

Mali Islamists take revenge on France in Niger

Khamenei’s recipe to secure his supreme rule: Limit presidential race to loyalists

Libyans in North Africa scared to return home

Syrian refugees head to Libya

Initiative of ‘Syrian origin’ offers Assad 'safe exit'

Cameron: Gruesome murder of British soldier is betrayal of Islam

Is Ennahda-led government waging a mock battle to distract Tunisians?

British FM: Mideast peace process urgent priority

Cloud of cynicism hangs over Kerry’s fourth visit to Israel

From secret to open role: More Nasrallah’s men die for Assad

Six killed in Lebanon’s Tripoli clashes

US acknowledges killing Awlaki

Friends of Syria to step up rebel aid if Assad fails to commit to peace

Mauritanian women denounce violence, rape

SARS-like virus claims another life in Saudi

'British soldier' beheaded in suspected Islamist attack

What is an Iranian drone doing in Bahrain, near Saudi Arabia?

Syria chemicals: ‘Mounting reports’ push UN to renew call for investigation

Ennahdha yields to Salafist pressure again: Ansar al-Sharia spokesman freed

New IAEA report reveals significant expansion of Iran nuclear capacity

EU approves civilian mission to help Libya tighten border security

Morsi seeks to assuage critics as pressure builds up in and outside Egypt

Hezbollah stokes fire of wide-scale civil war with role in Qusayr battle

Angry opposition suspends participation in Bahrain national dialogue

Iran distances itself from Saudi spy report

France sets aside millions of dollars to upgrade embassy security

Bouteflika’s heath: From news blackout to downpour of reassurances

12 killed in attack on Baghdad brothel

Qatar repeats Britain remarks to insist: Assad must step down!

Oman discusses US arms deal as it seeks to upgrade air defenses