[iwar] [fc:Israel's.Tourism.Minister.Killed]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-17 14:45:56


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Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2001 14:45:56 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Israel's.Tourism.Minister.Killed]
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Israel's Tourism Minister Killed

By LAURIE COPANS Associated Press Writer

October 17, 2001, 7:43 AM EDT

JERUSALEM -- One or more gunmen, lurking in a hotel hallway, shot and
killed an Israeli Cabinet minister on Wednesday with three bullets to
the head and neck.  A radical Palestinian faction said it carried out
the assassination to avenge the killing of its leader by Israel two
months ago. 

The killing of Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi, 75, who advocated the
ouster of all Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip, threatened
to re-ignite the cycle of violence that has wracked the holy land for
the last year. 

It came at a time when the U.S.-supported Sept.  26 cease-fire appeared
to be holding in many areas. 

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon convened Cabinet ministers for urgent
consultations.  The attack came a day after Sharon outlined his position
in future peace talks, saying he was willing to negotiate an accord that
includes a Palestinian state, but would dictate strict limitations that
Palestinians have already rejected. 

Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's government issued a statement saying
it condemned the killing and remained committed to a truce with Israel. 

The Palestinian Authority said it had warned in the past about the
dangers of assassination, suggesting Israel's targeted killings of
Palestinian militants accused of attacks on Israelis could lead to
escalation. 

In the past year of fighting, Israel has killed more than 50
Palestinians, including several bystanders, in such attacks. 

The highest-ranking target so far has been Mustafa Zibri, leader of the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, who was killed Aug.  27
in an Israeli rocket attack on his office in the West Bank town of
Ramallah. 

The PFLP on Wednesday claimed responsibility for the killing of Zeevi,
saying it came as revenge for the death of its leader, widely known as
Abu Ali Mustafa. 

"Sharon has to know that Palestinian blood is not cheap and that those
who target the leaders of the Palestinian people are not safe from being
targeted and assassinated themselves," the PFLP said in a leaflet sent
to news agencies. 

Sharon said earlier this week that he would not abandon the targeted
killings, despite the truce and sharp U.S.  condemnation of the
practice. 

Zeevi was staying with his wife at the Hyatt Hotel in Jerusalem on
Wednesday.  At about 7 a.m., he was returning from the hotel restaurant
to his eighth-floor room when he was attacked outside his room, police
said.  He was shot three times in the head and face.  Zeevi's wife,
Yael, found him in the hallway, lying on his back in a pool of blood,
witnesses said. 

A fellow hotel guest, Rev.  David Hocking, said he rushed into the hall
after hearing Mrs.  Zeevi's screams.  "I saw her kneeling over him.  He
had obviously been shot.  The blood was everywhere," said Hocking, who
is leading a Christian tour group from Orange County, Calif. 

Zeevi was clinically dead when he arrived at Hadassah Hospital, said
Shmuel Shapira, the deputy director.  Doctors managed to restore a
heartbeat at one point, but after about three hours abandoned efforts to
revive Zeevi. 

At Ein el-Hilweh, Lebanon's largest Palestinian refugee camp, about 40
PFLP supporters with guns and pictures of Zibri danced and distributed
sweets after hearing about Zeevi's shooting.  Cheers intensified with
the news that he had died. 

Britain condemned Zeevi's killing and called for intensified efforts to
revive the Middle East peace process.  "The murder this morning is
absolutely appalling and it just refocuses the need to get the peace
process moving again," said a spokesman for Prime Minister Tony Blair. 

Zeevi, a retired army general, was widely respected, even by political
opponents, for his distinguished war record, but his advocacy of what he
called the "transfer" of Palestinians across the borders into
neighboring Arab countries was condemned by many as racist. 

"I had enormous respect for him even though we didn't agree on
politics," said Science Minister Matan Vilnai, also a retired general,
who served under Zeevi in the paratroops.  "His personal loyalty knew no
bounds."

Born in Jerusalem, Zeevi served from 1974 to 1977 as adviser to
then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on the war against terrorism.  He
opposed Israel's 1979 peace treaty with Egypt and in 1988 founded the
far-right Moledet Party that called for the "voluntary transfer" of
Arabs from Israeli-controlled territory. 

Zeevi sparked controversy in July for referring to Palestinians working
and living illegally in Israel as "lice" and a "cancer."

He was widely known by the incongruous nickname "Gandhi," acquired
because his youthful thinness reminded people of the pacifist Indian
independence leader Mohandas K.  Gandhi. 

On Monday, Zeevi and other members of the National Union, a bloc of two
small parties, said they were quitting Sharon's government.  Zeevi and
his allies argued Sharon was succumbing to U.S.  pressure and that his
policies toward the Palestinians were too soft. 

The exit of the National Union, which controls seven seats in the
120-member parliament, did not endanger Sharon's coalition government. 
However, Sharon, a hard-liner, now becomes more dependent on the
moderate Labor Party. 

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