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Regional News
Dead Palestinian militant clouds peace efforts


Published Date: March 25, 2010 

RAMALLAH: A Palestinian plan to rename a major square after a female militant 
who killed dozens of civilians in a notorious 1978 bus hijacking in Israel has 
turned into a new stumbling block for relaunching Mideast peace talks. Israeli 
officials, under fire from the US for hindering the negotiations with their 
Jerusalem settlement plans, are denouncing the move as pure incitement. US 
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has also said the idea could sour the 
atmosphere.

For Palestinians, Dalal Mughrabi is a national hero in the long struggle to 
form their own state, and buildings and streets in the West Bank already bear 
her name. The uproar, however, could deny them the moral high ground at a time 
Israel is coming under increasing pressure over Jewish settlements.

Three decades after her death, Mughrabi continues to cast a long shadow over 
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. On March 11, 1978, she led a squad of 
militants who sailed from Lebanon in rubber boats, landed on an Israeli beach 
and killed an American photographer. They proceeded to seize two buses, going 
on a rampage that killed 37 Israelis, including 13 children, according to 
Israeli figures. Mughrabi, who was 19, was killed. It remains the deadliest 
militant attack in Israeli history. Earlier this month
, officials in the Ramallah suburb of el-Bireh were set to dedicate a square 
after Mughrabi, coinciding with the 32nd anniversary of the attack. The 
ceremony, set to take place during a visit to the region by Vice President Joe 
Biden, was canceled at the last minute under Israeli and American pressure, 
according to Palestinian officials.

But a group of activists from President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement held an 
unofficial dedication, and Palestinian officials are pledging to move forward 
with a formal ceremony in the future.

While there are no signs or pictures of Mughrabi, the square already has been 
restored with fresh flowers and grass, and planners say they plan to hoist a 
large photo of Mughrabi at the site. "We are determined to name the square 
after Dalal," said Adnan Damiri, the senior Palestinian security official from 
Fatah who has spearheaded the effort. The square is next to a security 
headquarters.

I can't understand the Israeli fuss," he added, noting that Israel has named 
numerous streets and buildings after military heroes who killed Palestinians in 
battle. Mughrabi is among the greatest heroes in Palestinian society. Schools 
have been named after her, and Ramallah, the Palestinian administrative center, 
recently dedicated a street to her memory. "She is a Palestinian martyr and 
deserves to be honored," said Ramallah's mayor, Janet Mikhail.

Officials in Abbas' government have tried to distance themselves from the 
latest controversy, calling it a local issue. But no one has spoken out against 
the plan. The controversy has come at a sensitive time in peace efforts. The US 
has been working for more than a year to get the two sides to resume peace 
negotiations.

Just as those talks were about to start, Israel announced plans during the 
Biden visit to build 1,600 new homes for Jews in disputed east Jerusalem. The 
announcement threw the peace talks into doubt and has drawn heavy criticism 
from the US and the Palestinians. Responding to the crisis, Israel has pointed 
to the Mughrabi case as evidence that the Palestinians are not serious about 
peace.

In a high profile speech this week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused 
the Palestinian government of fomenting incitement. "They named a public square 
after this murderer and the Palestinian Authority did nothing," he told the 
annual conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee in Washington.

Addressing the same conference, Clinton chided the Palestinians for moving 
forward with the plan, though she appeared to place the blame more on Hamas 
than the Fatah officials leading the effort.

When a Hamas-controlled municipality glorifies violence and renames a square 
after a terrorist who murdered innocent Israelis, it insults the families on 
both sides who have lost loves ones over the years in this conflict," she said. 
"These provocations are wrong and must be condemned for needlessly inflaming 
tensions and imperiling prospects for a comprehensive peace." The mayor of 
el-Bireh, a member of the militant Islamic Hamas, declined comment and 
apparently was not involved.

For now, Palestinians appear set to leave the issue on hold, wary of further 
antagonizing the Americans. But they believe Israel is using the dispute to 
deflect attention from its settlement policies in east Jerusalem and the West 
Bank _ areas claimed by the Palestinians for a future state. "This is an 
Israeli campaign, and unfortunately the American officials have fallen into the 
trap," said Nimr Hammad, an adviser to Abbas. "Every side honors its victims. 
The Israelis are using this issue as a pretext to
take us away from the most important thing, the settlements."-AP


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