http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,516827,00.html


Yasser Arafat's gaunt, fragile appearance during last weekend's inauguration
of an emergency cabinet for the Palestinian Authority has raised a flurry of
speculation over the state of the 74-year-old leader's health. Palestinian
officials on Wednesday denied rumors that Arafat had last week suffered a
mild heart attack and explained that Arafat has been suffering from a bad
case of the flu or an intestinal infection. But according to a source inside
the compound, the recent working diagnosis is that Arafat is suffering from
stomach cancer. Al-Jazeera TV reported Wednesday that two teams of doctors,
one from Jordan and the other from Egypt, arrived in Ramallah Wednesday to
treat Arafat. Abu Dhabi TV reported on Thursday that following their
examination of the Palestinian leader, the Egyptian doctors "expressed
concern" about the state of his health. Neither report specified his
condition.

The prognosis for stomach cancer patients depends on the stage at which the
cancer is diagnosed and treated, and the size and location of the tumor.
Whatever the state of the cancer, however, such a diagnosis poses a major
challenge to both Israel and the Palestinian Authority, which could require
some nimble refereeing by the Bush administration.
The most immediate crisis would involve the need to treat Arafat's
condition. The Ramallah compound in which Arafat has been holed up for the
best part of two years is hardly the most conducive environment for invasive
surgery. It would, in theory, be possible to erect a surgical suite at the
compound, but hospitalization would certainly be preferable from a medical
standpoint. Israel has until now insisted that if Arafat leaves his
compound, he'd be on a one-way ticket out of the West Bank. And each new
terror attack brings renewed public and political pressure on Sharon to make
good on his cabinet's in-principle decision to expel the Palestinian leader.
But Arafat has vowed to go down fighting against any attempt to remove him
from the compound, and the Bush administration has restrained Israel from
carrying out the threatened expulsion, on the grounds that such a move would
be "unhelpful" to the pursuit of stability. The Palestinian leader's new
condition, however, could raise uncomfortable choices for Israel, the
Palestinians and the Bush administration.

If Arafat's condition proves to be terminal, the Palestinians will be forced
to answer the long-deferred question of succession, and the running debate
in Washington and Jerusalem over the prospects for pursuing a peace
agreement without the aging Arafat will have been settled. The question of
Arafat's succession is complicated by the fact that his power derives from
the three separate offices he holds: Palestinian Authority president, PLO
chairman and leader of the Fatah movement. The PA constitution requires that
if the president is incapacitated, his post would be temporarily filled by
the Speaker of the Palestinian legislature. However, the Speaker's position
is currently vacant, following Ahmed Qureia's resignation from it in order
to become prime minister. Following Thursday's meeting of the Palestinian
legislature at which Arafat's appointment of an emergency cabinet was
rebuffed, Qureia reportedly signaled Arafat that he no longer wants the
position.

Rather than a simple transfer of the mantle of power from one uncontested
national leader to another, Arafat's passing would likely open a protracted
period of power struggles and realignments in Palestinian politics - and it
appears unlikely that all three of his positions would be filled by a single
successor. The immediate implications for any peace process will be
uncertain, although the Israelis and the Bush administration have long
insisted that breaking Arafat's grip on the Palestinian national movement is
a prerequisite for progress.



xponent

Palestine Maru

rob


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