Palestinians remember Arafat
Friday, 12 November 2010
RAMALLAH, Nov 11 (AFP): Thousands of Palestinians gathered in Ramallah on Thursday to mark the sixth anniversary of the death of Yasser Arafat, whose dream of an independent state seems no closer than when he died.
Waving Palestinian flags and the yellow banners of the Fatah party that Arafat founded, men and women walked through the shut-down streets to the square across from the white mausoleum where the iconic leader is buried.
Politicians including Nasser al-Qidwa, a former Palestinian representative to the United Nations, addressed the massive crowd, many sporting hats and scarves decorated with the Palestinian flag.
Qidwa accused Israel of involvement in Arafat's death and said Palestinians were determined to pursue "the last piece of evidence in the assassination of Yasser Arafat."
Arafat died in a French hospital after several weeks of treatment. French officials, citing privacy laws, refused to reveal the precise cause of death or the nature of his condition, fuelling a host of rumours and theories as to the cause of his illness.
His successor, president Mahmud Abbas, addressed the enthusiastic crowds from the grave site, which is now the centrepiece of a new museum being built in Arafat's honour.
Waving Palestinian flags and the yellow banners of the Fatah party that Arafat founded, men and women walked through the shut-down streets to the square across from the white mausoleum where the iconic leader is buried.
Politicians including Nasser al-Qidwa, a former Palestinian representative to the United Nations, addressed the massive crowd, many sporting hats and scarves decorated with the Palestinian flag.
Qidwa accused Israel of involvement in Arafat's death and said Palestinians were determined to pursue "the last piece of evidence in the assassination of Yasser Arafat."
Arafat died in a French hospital after several weeks of treatment. French officials, citing privacy laws, refused to reveal the precise cause of death or the nature of his condition, fuelling a host of rumours and theories as to the cause of his illness.
His successor, president Mahmud Abbas, addressed the enthusiastic crowds from the grave site, which is now the centrepiece of a new museum being built in Arafat's honour.