One word - Israel
Yasser
Arafat may have been poisoned with polonium, tests show
Swiss
scientists find levels of polonium 18 times higher than normal in
first forensic tests on former Palestinian leader's body
6
November, 2013
The
first forensic tests on samples taken from Yasser Arafat's corpse
have shown unexpectedly high levels of radioactive polonium-210,
suggesting the Palestinian leader could have been poisoned with the
rare and lethal substance.
The
Swiss scientists who tested Arafat's remains after the exhumation of
his body in November 2012 discovered levels of polonium at least 18
times higher than usual in Arafat's ribs, pelvis and in soil that
absorbed his bodily fluids.
The
Swiss forensic report was handed to representatives of Arafat's
widow, Suha Arafat, as well as representatives of the Palestinian
Authority on Tuesday. A copy of the report was obtained exclusively
by the al-Jazeera TV network, which shared it with the Guardian
before publication.
The
Swiss report said that even taking into account the eight years since
Arafat's death and the quality of specimens taken from bone fragments
and tissue scraped from his body and shroud, the results "moderately
support the proposition that the death was the consequence of
poisoning with polonium-210".
Suha
Arafat said the evidence in the report suggested that her then
healthy 75-year-old husband, who died in 2004 four weeks after he
first fell ill following a meal, was almost certainly murdered by
poisoning. She told al-Jazeera: "This is the crime of the
century."
Speaking
to the Guardian after receiving the report, she said she would press
for answers on who was responsible. "It's shocking … I
remember how Yasser was shrinking at the hospital, how in his eyes
there were a lot of questions. Death is a fate in life, it is
everybody's fate, but when it's poison it's terrible. We are mourning
him again now."
With
Zahwa, 18, her daughter by Arafat, she said she suspected a
"conspiracy to get rid of him", adding: "My daughter
and I have to know who did it. We will not stop in our quest to find
out. I hope the Palestinian Authority goes further on it, searching
every single aspect of it. It is of course a political crime."
She said: "This is separate from the peace process or talks. Any
judicial investigation is separate from the peace process."
David
Barclay, a British forensic scientist who had studied the report,
told al-Jazeera: "The report contains strong evidence, in my
view conclusive evidence, that there's at least 18 times the level of
polonium in Arafat's exhumed body than there should be."
He
said the report represented "a smoking gun". Barclay said:
"It's what killed him. Now we need to find out who was holding
the gun at that time," adding: "I would point to him being
given a fatal dose. I don't think there's any doubt at all."
The
Israeli government, however, dismissed the report. "The Swiss
findings are not conclusive," said Yigal Palmor, a foreign
ministry spokesman.
"Even
if they did find traces of polonium that could indicate poisoning,
there's no evidence of how that poisoning occurred. Before the
Palestinian Authority jumps to conclusions, there are many questions
still to be answered.
"Israel
is not involved in any way. There's no way the Palestinians can stick
this on us. It's unreasonable and unsupported by facts. We will see
yet another round of accusations, but there's no proof."
Dov
Weissglass, a former aide to Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime minister
at the time of Arafat's death, also denied Israeli involvement. "To
the best of my knowledge, we had no hand in this," he said,
adding that neither the prime minister nor the Israeli security
services had played any part in the Palestinian leader's demise.
"By
the end of 2004, we had no interest in harming him. By then, Arafat
was marginalised, his control over Palestinian life was minimal. So
there was no logic, no reason."
Danny
Rubinstein, a journalist and author of a book about Arafat, had a
different memory of events. In the weeks and months before Arafat's
death, he said, people in Sharon's inner circle talked constantly
about how to get rid of him. "For me, it was very clear from the
beginning. Every day this was the topic – should we expel him, or
kill him, or bomb the Muqata [Arafat's HQ]. It was obvious to me that
they would find a way."
Palmor
said that among the scientists who tested Arafat's remains only the
French team were independent. The Swiss were commissioned by Suha
Arafat, and the Russians by the Palestinian Authority, he said.
"These results should be taken with a few grains of salt. This
story is still as mysterious as it was on day one."
Tawfik
Tirawi, head of the Palestinian committee investigating Arafat's
death, did not respond to a request from comment. But a senior
Palestinian leader, Hanan Ashrawi, said: "This report confirms
the suspicions that we've had all along. We know Arafat was killed,
now we know how. And we know who had the means, the opportunity and
the motive. Justice must now take its course."
Arafat
died in a French military hospital on 11 November 2004,. He had been
transferred there from his headquarters in the West Bank after his
health deteriorated over weeks, beginning with severe nausea,
vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhoea around four hours after eating
dinner on 12 October. French doctors have said he died of a massive
stroke and had suffered from a blood condition known as disseminated
intravascular coagulation, or DIC. But the records were inconclusive
about what brought about the DIC. No autopsy was carried out.
Allegations
that Arafat may have been poisoned emerged immediately after his
death and the claim was raised again by al-Jazeera TV last summer,
following a nine-month investigation culminating in the film What
Killed Arafat?
Al-Jazeera
said it was given access to a duffel bag of Arafat's personal effects
by his widow, which it passed to a Swiss institute. Swiss
toxicological tests on those samples including hair from a hat,
saliva from a toothbrush, urine droplets on underpants and blood on a
hospital hat found that the belongings had elevated traces of
polonium-210, the lethal substance used to kill the Russian dissident
Alexander Litvinenko.
The
Swiss institute said Arafat's bones would have to be tested to get a
clearer answer, warning that polonium decayed fast and an autopsy
needed to be done quickly. In August last year, French prosecutors
opened a murder inquiry into Arafat's death. In November, Arafat's
corpse was exhumed from its mausoleum in Ramallah in the presence of
three international teams of scientists: the Swiss team, a French
team that was part of the Paris judicial investigation and a Russian
team.
The
Swiss team's report states that they carried out toxicological tests
on Arafat's "almost skeletonised body along with residues from
his shroud". The samples, including fragments of bones taken
from his left ribs and pelvis as well as remnants of tissue from the
abdominal cavity and grave soil, showed "unexpectedly high"
activity of polonium-210.
Suha
Arafat's lawyer, Saad Djebbar, told the Guardian the Swiss report was
"evidence that there was a crime committed". He said he had
handed the Swiss report to French investigators, whose inquiry is
ongoing. French scientists conducted their own tests as part of the
legal investigation but have not published findings as the inquiry
continues.
Arafat's
daughter, Zahwa, a student of international relations in Malta, told
the Guardian: "I want to find out who did it and their motive
for doing it." She said she trusted the French investigation to
shed light on that
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