http://www.geostrategy-direct.com/geostrategy-direct/secure/2004/11_09/do.asp

The Palestinians, including Mrs. Arafat, want to know
where Yasser's stolen billions are

Arafat controls billions of dollars meant for the Palestinian people.
In a word, he stole it, intelligence sources agree.
Yasser Arafat
#
Position: PLO, Palestinian Authority chairman
#
Age: 75
#
Whereabouts: hospital outside Paris
Yasser Arafat is fighting a serious illness that could make or break
the Palestinian leadership and its commitment to terror.

Arafat is being treated in a French military hospital outside Paris
for an undetermined illness that appears to resemble intestinal
cancer. His door has been closed to all but family members while the
rest of the Palestinian leadership watches helplessly.

The reason: Arafat continues to hold the purse strings to the
Palestinian finances. For the last decade, he was the final, and often
only word on payment to everybody from the suicide bomber to the
janitor. Not a dime was paid without Arafat's okay.

Arafat has used PA funds to finance Palestinian terrorists for suicide
and other attacks on Israel. The United States has designated Arafat's
Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade as a terrorist entity.

Before he left, Arafat approved a three-member emergency committee to
operate the PA and PLO in his absence. Official said Qurei was meant
to run the PA's daily affairs while Abbas was appointed acting
chairman of the PLO.

Palestine National Council chairman Salim Zaanoun, the third member of
the committee, was said to be a symbolic figure.

Abbas and Qurei sought to acquire Arafat's power to allocate money
during the absence of the PA chairman. But as he boarded a Jordanian
Air Force helicopter for Amman, Arafat refused.

"I'm still alive, thank God, so don't worry," Arafat was quoted as saying.

Arafat controls billions of dollars meant for the Palestinian people.
In a word, he stole it, intelligence sources agree.

His personal fortune has been estimated at between $2 and $3 billion,
most of it in Swiss bank accounts. He would have been worth a lot more
were it not for the hard times in exile from 1982 until 1993, when
Arafat was worth up to $5 billion, mostly through drug trafficking in
Lebanon.

Arafat made his biggest killing over the last decade of the PA. Thanks
to Arafat's economic adviser, Mohammed Rashid, Arafat pocketed nearly
$1 billion from both PA and Israeli revenues. Israeli and Palestinian
sources said Arafat's Israeli partner was the late General Security
Services senior official Yossi Ginossar, also a confidant of the late
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Over a five-year period, Ginosar's
company, ARC, opened Swiss bank accounts for Arafat and deposited more
than $900 million.

The biggest feat has been hiding that money. In 1997, the PA auditor's
office said in its financial report that $326 million, or 43 percent
of the annual budget, was "missing." Of the 57 percent of the budget
that was accounted for, security forces took up 35 percent and
Arafat's office took up another 12.5 percent. This left 9.5 percent of
the PA budget for anything that remotely resembled help to ordinary
people.

The PLC, which determined financial mismanagement, appointed a
committee to find the missing funds. The panel found that such
ministers as Nabil Shaath, Talal Sidr and Yasser Abbed Rabbo spent
plenty of money on personal items and confirmed the receipt of bribes
by officials in the Civil Affairs Ministry.

The PA chairman was also said to have ordered the investment in the
computer companies of Ali and Mazzan Shaath, sons of PA International
Cooperation Minister Shaath. At the same time, Amin Haddad, Arafat's
designated governor of the Palestine Monetary Authority, established
several import-export fronts for Arafat.

Arafat liked to keep his money within the family. In 1994, Arafat
instructed PA Finance Minister Mohammed Zohdi Nashashibi to provide
$50,000 per month to a Jerusalem media center owned by Raymonda Tawil,
Arafat's mother-in-law, and Ibrahim Karaeen, an associate of Arafat's
family.

Little wonder that Arafat's close aides became rich quickly and sent
their wealth and children abroad, particularly to Britain and the
United States. On a nominal annual salary of $18,000 Hisham Maki, then
head of the Palestine Broadcasting Services, became a millionaire
within a few years by taking bribes and selling PA-owned equipment.

Maki was assassinated in January 2001 by Fatah gunmen in what was
believed to have been part of a dispute with his partner, another PA
official.

Immediately after his assassination, Arafat froze Maki's personal bank
accounts, estimated at $17 million.

For Palestinians, the main question is where is Arafat's money? Issam
Abu Issa knows how Arafat stole and concealed money. Abu Issa was the
founder and chairman of the Palestine International Bank from 1996
until he fled to Qatar in 2000.

"Rather than use donor funds for their intended purposes, Arafat
regularly diverted money to his own accounts," Abu Issa said in a
report for Middle East Quarterly. "It is amazing that some U.S.
officials still see the Palestinian Authority as a partner even after
U.S. congressional records revealed authenticated PLO papers signed by
Arafat in which he instructed his staff to divert donors' money to
projects benefiting himself, his family and his associates."

Abu Issa knows what it's like to be on the other side of the table
with Arafat. Arafat dissolved the board of directors of Abu Issa's
Palestine International Bank and then seized the bank's assets of $105
million. Arafat appointed a new board, including a convicted felon
sought by Interpol.

When Palestinian legislators sought to investigate, Arafat's brought
out his thugs. At the same time, the Palestine Monetary Authority
concealed and destroyed bank records and supplied false information to
a leading U.S. auditor. That led to a diplomatic crisis between Qatar
and the PA.

Still, Arafat, thanks to his friends in the State Department, had the
last laugh. In February 2004, Abu Issa was arrested as he arrived in
Kennedy Airport in New York. The reason: the PA relayed allegations to
the State Department that Abu Issa participated in money-laundering.
After Qatar intervened, Abu Issa was released, but had to reapply for
a visa to the United States.

"The message was clear: Foggy Bottom supports Arafat and will turn a
blind eye toward the concerns of dissidents," Abu Issa said.

The United States has been supporting former PA security chief
Mohammed Dahlan as Arafat's successor. To his friends in the Bush
administration, Dahlan, 43, has all the qualities for Arab leadership:
a smooth talker and brutal cop. Arafat asked Dahlan to accompany him
to Paris in a move designed to keep him out of the Gaza Strip and any
coup plot.

Another challenger has been Fatah Secretary-general Marwan Barghouti,
sentenced to life in prison for a series of terrorist attacks.
Barghouti, 44, has followers in the West Bank but does not appear to
have the iron will necessary to face Arafat loyalists.

How long will Arafat live? This is not clear. His blood count has been
unusually low but this might not mean leukemia. Neither Israeli nor PA
officials know much about Arafat's condition, and the only one
authorized to issue information from his hospital bedside is the
chairman's wife, Suha.

And Suha wants to keep Arafat alive for as long as possible to find
out where his money is. 







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