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                   FOREIGNERS AND U.N. EVACUATING GAZA

   ARAFAT TRIES TO CAPITULATE HOPING FOR INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT

     GENERAL POWELL, SECRETARY OF STATE, CANCELS LATIN VISIT
        TO STAY IN WASHINGTON AS WAR BREWS IN MIDDLE EAST

                  "Americans should not travel to Gaza at the present time
and those who
                  live there should depart to a safer location when they can
do so." 
                                                                  U.S.
Embassy, Israel

                  A convoy of cars carrying foreign staffers of the U.N.
Relief and Works
                  Agency left the agency's compound in Gaza Saturday
afternoon. The cars
                  were loaded with luggage.

MID-EAST REALITIES ? - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 6/02:
Arafat is in an impossible situation, one prepared for him by his worst
enemies but one he has considerably helped put himself in by incompetence,
corruption, and ineptitude.  If he turns to severe repression of his own
people on orders from the Israelis and the CIA, the only way the Intifada
can now be stopped, he creates the conditions for his own eventual demise
from within, and maybe a Palestinian civil war.  If he does not, the clock
for demolishing his "Authority" and exiling or even capturing him is
ticking.  There have been other moments in history like this in the Middle
East, often with non other than General Ariel Sharon in command at one
crucial level or another.  Sharon waited more than a year for the excuse to
invade Lebanon in 1982, and then pounced when Israel's Ambassador in London
was shot even though Prime Minister Maggie Thatcher at the time publicly
went on record that those who did it were anti-PLO anti-Arafat Palestinians.
It appears Sharon has once more set the stage, is now waiting for and
provoking the excuse, with the tanks positioned and set to roll.


                                 FOREIGNERS LEAVE GAZA STRIP
    
                  GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip ?? Associated Press, 2 June:
                  Dozens of foreigners living and working in
                  the Gaza Strip left Saturday amid fears of an Israeli
military retaliation for
                  a suicide bombing that killed the bomber and 18 young
people at a Tel
                  Aviv disco.

                  The foreigners packed lightly, expecting to return within
a few days, after
                  being contacted by their consulates and embassies in
Israel, said a
                  Palestinian employee of a foreign consulate who requested
anonymity. He
                  said he knew of at least 20 foreigners who left Gaza on
Saturday. 

                  Eighteen young people were killed late Friday when a
suicide bomber
                  blew himself up near dozens of people waiting in line to
enter a Tel Aviv
                  beachfront nightclub. Ninety Israelis were wounded in the
attack, including
                  14 who were in serious or critical condition.

                  After previous bomb attacks, Israel has responded by
shelling Palestinian
                  security installations, but not civilian offices. But in
the West Bank and
                  Gaza Saturday, the Palestinian Authority ordered its
employees to leave
                  their offices.

                  Other foreigners took measures to prevent their homes and
offices from
                  becoming Israeli military targets, flying their national
flags from official
                  residences and offices.

                  A large Omani flag flew from the top of its ambassador's
home Saturday,
                  while Egyptian flags were hoisted on the front gate and
the roof of the
                  residence of the Egyptian representative to the
Palestinian Authority,
                  which is located near Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's
compound in
                  Gaza.

                  Four Australian flags were erected over a tourist resort
north of Gaza City
                  operated by Abdel Karim Sabawi, a Palestinian-Austrialian.

                  The U.S. embassy said recent events, including the brief
detention of an
                  American journalist by militants several days ago,
heightened its concern
                  for the safety of U.S. citizens in Gaza.

                  "Americans should not travel to Gaza at the present time
and those who
                  live there should depart to a safer location when they can
do so," the
                  embassy said in a travel warning issued to American
citizens Saturday. 

                  A convoy of cars carrying foreign staffers of the U.N.
Relief and Works
                  Agency left the agency's compound in Gaza Saturday
afternoon. The cars
                  were loaded with luggage.

                  U.N. officials would not say whether the United Nations
had ordered its
                  foreign staffers to leave the Gaza Strip.



                ISRAEL GIVES ARAFAT 24 HOURS TO WORK FOR CEASEFIRE

JERUSALEM, June 2 (AFP) -  A tough Israeli response to the Tel Aviv bombing
looked unlikely Saturday evening, as Israel gave Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat 24 hours to carry out his promise that he would do "whatever is
necessary" to achieve a ceasefire.

Following Arafat's pledge, Israel's inner security cabinet gave Arafat no
more than 24 hours to prove he wants to work to calm the violent situation
in the region, according to Israeli public radio.

The Tel Aviv suicide bombing, which left 19 dead and more than 100 injured,
was the deadliest incident so far in the eight-month Palestinian uprising
against Israeli occupation, and brought the death toll to nearly 600.

The Gaza Strip was eerily silent on Saturday, with Palestinians evacuating
public buildings in fear that Israel would abandon its 10-day-old unilateral
ceasefire and come at them with all guns blazing, witnesses said.

Despite wide Israeli scepticism over Arafat's declaration, Israeli Arab
parliament member Ahmed Tibi told Israeli television that Arafat had already
started to work for a ceasefire.

"Arafat made an important declaration to that effect and has started to
phone his aids over the past hours in order to make sure his commitment to a
return to calm is carried out in the field", Tibi said after a meeting with
the Palestinian leader.

Pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to strike back at the
Palestinians has been mounting domestically, with demonstrators calling for
"war" outside the defence ministry in Tel Aviv where Sharon met with senior
ministers and military chiefs.

Israeli Science and Culture Minister Matan Vilnai, a member of the security
cabinet, implied Israel would wait to see if Arafat's ceasefire statement is
consolidated by acts on the ground.

"He says he will do everything. Let him do it, and we will see."

For his part, Dan Meridor, the head of the Israeli parliament's foreign
affairs and defense committee, said: "The ball is in Arafat's court. The
only way for him to avoid dangerous developments is to clearly order a
ceasefire on his radio".

"We are in the process of judging how serious this order is, if he arrests
the men in Hamas and Islamic Jihad, in all about 100 terrorist experts whom
he has previously freed," Meridor said about Arafat's declaration.

But Israeli television's military commentator reported that the security
cabinet had secretly decided to break its unilateral ceasefire without
authorising any spectacular military strikes that could harm Israel's image.

Arafat condemned Friday's as-yet-unclaimed attack, which ripped through a
line of Israeli teenagers waiting to enter a beachside night club, saying he
was against any killing of civilians.

"We are ready to make the utmost effort to stop the bloodbath among our
people and the Israeli people, and to do whatever is necessary for an
immediate and unconditional ceasefire," Arafat told reporters.

Shortly afterwards, senior Palestinian peace negotiator Saeb Erakat, called
for US Middle East envoy William Burns to return to the region immediately
to help the sides work to implement a ceasefire.

Three radical Palestinian groups, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine groups, which have mounted previous suicide
bomb attacks, refrained from claiming responsibility.

But Hamas politbureau chief Khaled Meshaal justified the attack as a form of
"self-defence" and said more suicide bombings would surely follow.

"Nothing can halt these attacks and resistance except the departure of
(Israel's) occupation forces" from Palestinian land, he said.

Seven people were lightly injured Saturday in clashes with police as
hundreds of enraged Israelis sought revenge against Arabs after the bomb
blast, throwing rocks at a mosque near the Tel Aviv neighborhood of Jaffa.

The Israeli army said Saturday it had imposed a blockade on all Palestinian
towns and villages in the neighbouring West Bank following the bombing and
advised all Palestinians to leave Israel immediately.

Israeli leaders roundly condemned Arafat for the bombing, saying he had not
taken action against perpetrators of violence.

US President George W. Bush had earlier urged Arafat to call for an
"immediate ceasefire" after the Tel Aviv bombing which he denounced as a
"heinous terrorist attack."

"There is no justification for senseless attacks against innocent
civilians," Bush said in a statement issued from the presidential resort in
Camp David, Maryland.

Condemnations of the attack poured in from numerous other world capitals,
the European Union and the United Nations, while Egypt, Jordan and Russia
called for restraint.

Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer accused Arafat of wanting "to
provoke chaos in the Middle East."

Following the security cabinet meeting, Sharon's office said the security
situation had forced the premier to cancel a trip planned for next week to
Germany, Belgium and France to press Israel's case among European leaders.

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and US Secretary of State Colin Powell
both cancelled a visit to an Organization of American States meeting in
Costa Rica.

Israeli Communications Minister Reuvin Rivlin suggested Saturday that Israel
might expel Arafat from the territories if he does not bring an end to the
violence, underlining that it was only a possibility.

"Arafat himself is saying that he is controlling everything on the
Palestinian side. If he can't, let him leave Palestine," Rivlin said. "Maybe
we should send him far away from Gaza," Rivlin told AFP.



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