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Subject: Arutz-7 News: March 25-31, 1999
Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 17:47:08 -0800
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Date: Thu, 25 Mar 1999 17:13:10 +0200
To: arutz-7@a7.org
From: Arutz-7 Editor <neteditor@a7.org>
Subject: Arutz-7 News: Thursday, March 25, 1999

Arutz Sheva News Service
<http://www.a7.org>
Thursday, March 25, 1999 / Nisan 8, 5759
------------------------------------------------

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
1. POLITICAL PARTY POINTS
2. SENATE TO HOLD HEARINGS ON PALESTINIAN ARAB KILLERS
3. FIRST LADY'S REMARKS

1. POLITICAL PARTY POINTS

The united nationalist camp front has completed its list of Knesset
candidates. Former Ramle mayor Moshe Peretz will be in the ninth
spot, on behalf of Benny Begin's Herut party. Tenth will be Rabbi
Menachem Felix of Elon Moreh (Tekumah), then Refaelah Segal (Moledet),
Sarah Tiktinsky (Herut), and former Prime Minister Shamir's Bureau
Chief Yossi Ben-Aharon. The first eight on the list are Begin, Ze'evi,
Porat, Kleiner, Elon, Hendel, Ariel, and Peled...

The Mordechai-Shachak-Meridor-Milo centrist party published its
platform last night. The platform states that the party is agreeable to a
territorial "compromise" in the Golan Heights, and does not rule out
the option of uprooting Jewish towns in Judea and Samaria. The party
plans to complete its Knesset list today...

Another surplus-votes agreement has been signed, between Ehud
Barak's One Israel party and Meretz. After each of their Knesset seats are
tallied following the upcoming election, the surplus votes of one
party will be added to those of the other if it will enable the second
party to thus gain an extra seat...

Avigdor Lieberman - an immigrant from the former Soviet Union,
former head of Prime Minister Netanyahu's office and leader of the new Yisrael
Beiteinu (Israel is Our Home) party - spoke to Arutz-7 yesterday about
his party's list of Knesset candidates: "I think this is a list that
truly represents the unity within the Nation of Israel. Within the
top ten, we have three residents of Judea and Samaria (Yesha), three
women - two of whom are from development towns, IDF Colonels, doctors,
and native Israelis. We are the first party to determine that all our
conventions will be in Jerusalem. We not only represent Yesha, but we
also act on behalf of Yesha, and do not simply talk. The Likud used
to talk a lot about the Land of Israel, but left not a grain of sand
in Yamit or in Sinai. We will not support any agreement that will
cause the removal of Yesha settlements. We have a plan for 400
kilometers of new roads in Yesha that will connect communities, and
develop industry there."...

MK Azmi Bishara (Hadash) has announced his candidacy for Prime
Minister - the first Arab to do so in Israel. He said that he does not want to
be Prime Minister, but that his candidacy will have an important
political role to play on behalf of the Israeli-Arab public. MK Moshe
Peled, now of Moledet, asked the Chairman of the Elections Committee
to invalidate Bishara's candidacy, on the grounds that Bishara said
today that the Jewish nation is a "fiction with no right to exist."...

2. SENATE TO HOLD HEARINGS ON PALESTINIAN ARAB KILLERS
The United States Senate will hold a first-of-its-kind official
hearing today to discuss Yasser Arafat's sheltering of 20 Palestinian
Arab terrorists involved in the murders of 12 American citizens in
Israel. The murders were perpetrated since the signing of the Oslo
accords in 1993. Today's hearing will be held under the auspices of
the Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations
Committee, at the request of Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA). The
witnesses will include Martin Indyk, Assistant Secretary of State for
Near Eastern Affairs; Stephen Flatow of New Jersey, whose 20-year-old
daughter Alisa, a junior at Brandeis University, was murdered in a bus
bombing by Palestinian Arab terrorists in Israel in 1995; Vicki
Eisenfeld of Connecticut, whose son Matthew, a graduate of Yale
University, was murdered in a terrorist attack in Jerusalem in 1996;
Diana Campuzano of New York City, a 33-year-old businesswoman who was
permanently injured in a terrorist attack in Israel in 1997; and
Jean-Claude Niddam, the Israeli Justice Ministry's Director of Legal
Affairs Concerning the Palestinian Authority. The PA has also been
invited to send a representative.

It has been reported that yet another Palestinian Arab terrorist who
was involved in the murder of U.S. citizen Alisa Flatow has been
released from prison by the Palestinian Authority. The Israeli
government reported that the PA recently set free Adnan al-Ghoul, who
took part in the bombing attack on an Israeli bus near Kfar Darom in
April 1995, killing Ms. Flatow, along with seven Israelis. A report
by the Israeli Ministry of Justice in October 1998 identified three
additional terrorists involved in the bus bombing - Yousef Samiri,
Hassan Hamadan, and Nasser Hindawi - as free men in PA territory.
Israel has asked the PA to hand the four terrorists over for
prosecution, as the Oslo accords require, but the PA has ignored all
of Israel's 44 requests for the extradition of terrorists. As a
result, the Flatow family has urged that the killers be transferred to
the United States for prosecution there, in accordance with American
law.

3. FIRST LADY'S REMARKS

U.S. First Lady Hillary Clinton's claim that Yitzchak Rabin implicitly
supported the creation of a Palestinian state is "clearly contradicted
by Rabin's lengthy record of statements opposing a Palestinian state,"
according to the Zionist Organization of America. The New York Times
reported last Friday that Mrs. Clinton allegedly said that "her
remarks [in favor of a Palestinian state] were a 'reflection of her
discussions' with Yitzchak Rabin, the late Israeli Prime Minister,
'and that Rabin had told her that 'it was very difficult to negotiate
with a nonentity.'"

The ZOA points out, however, that Rabin consistently opposed the
creation of a Palestinian state: When Labor Party official Nissim
Zvilli made a statement in February 1994 which seemed to accept the
idea of a Palestinian state, Rabin emphasized that he (Rabin) was
"firm in my opposition to statehood," and pointed out that statements
in favor of Palestinian statehood "contradict decisions by the [Labor]
party convention and do not reflect the party's positions." Several
times afterwards, Rabin again declared his opposition to a Palestinian
state. ZOA National President Morton A. Klein condemned Ms. Clinton
for misrepresenting Rabin's position, and said, "Prime Minister Rabin,
and all Israelis, have good reason to be concerned about the possible
establishment of a Palestinian state. If such a state were created,
Israel would be reduced to its precarious, nine-miles-wide borders of
1967, and enemy tanks would be able to cut Israel in two at its
mid-section... A PLO-Hamas state - a veritable mini-Iraq - would be
situated on Israel's doorstep, in close proximity to the cities where
70% of Israel's population lives."

*********************************************************************

Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 15:30:29 +0200
To: arutz-7@a7.org
From: Arutz-7 Editor <neteditor@a7.org>
Subject: Arutz-7 News Brief: Friday, March 26, 1999

Arutz Sheva News Service
<http://www.a7.org>
Friday, March 26, 1999 / Nisan 9, 5759
------------------------------------------------
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TODAY'S HEADLINE:

1. NETANYAHU REJECTS EUROPEAN DECISION
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told a visiting group of young
European Parliamentary leaders today that he rejects the European
Union decision favoring the establishment of a Palestinian state. He
said that the EU should have showed more sensitivity before making a
recommendation that is so dangerous for Israel, in light of the fact
that one-third of the Jewish people were killed on its lands during
the Holocaust. MK Yossi Sarid (Meretz) later said that the Prime
Minister should not "take the name of the Holocaust in vain... A
Palestinian state already exists, for all practical purposes, and what
is left now is only to negotiate its borders and limitations."
Netanyahu explained to the young Europeans that there are two types of
peace: "Peace between two democratic nations, and peace between
democratic and non-democratic nations. The problem is that Israel has
no democratic countries around it. Our policy is therefore to ensure
that the peace we make is defensible. We are against the
establishment of a Palestinian state that can make alliances with Iran
and Iraq and become a real danger to Israel." The Prime Minister also
emphasized that a solution can be reached "only by negotiations
between the sides, as the Americans say, and not in the form of
external dictates."

**********************************************************************

Date: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 17:23:36 +0300
To: arutz-7@a7.org
From: Arutz-7 Editor <neteditor@a7.org>
Subject: Arutz-7 News: Sunday, March 28, 1999

Arutz Sheva News Service
<http://www.a7.org>
Sunday, March 28, 1999 / Nisan 11, 5759
------------------------------------------------
Delivered Daily via Email, Sunday thru Friday
--- See below for subscription instructions ---

***************************************

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
1. LIKUD PROTESTS BEILIN CONSENT TO PALESTINIAN STATE
2. OTHER ELECTION TIDBITS

1. LIKUD PROTESTS BEILIN CONSENT TO PALESTINIAN STATE
The Likud has requested an urgent special session of the Knesset,
following reports that Labor MK Yossi Beilin held talks four years ago
with a top PA figure on the establishment of a Palestinian state.
Likud Knesset faction head MK Ruby Rivlin has delivered the 30
signatures necessary for such a special session. Palestinian
Authority senior Nabil Sha'ath told the French newspaper Le Monde that
Beilin, with the apparent consent of then-Prime Minister Yitzchak
Rabin, agreed to the declaration of a Palestinian state. The paper
states that in the spring of 1995, Beilin and Shaath "examined the
possibility of the Palestinian state being declared and recognized by
Israel as soon as the problems of the settlements and of the borders
had been dealt with. Along with this [the sides] would continue
talking about other subjects like Jerusalem. 'We talked about the
creation of settlement-blocs on an area that would not exceed 5% of
the West Bank, in exchange for which Israel would cede 5% more
territories in Gaza', Sha'ath revealed."

2. OTHER ELECTION TIDBITS
Shimon Peres predicts that after the coming elections, a
national-unity government would be formed, without the participation
of any religious parties.

MK Moshe Peled, #8 on the Moledet-Tekumah-Herut list - now known as
the National Union - says that many of his colleagues have been asking
Benny Begin to withdraw his candidacy for Prime Minister. Peled says
that Begin's candidacy does not seem to be garnering wide support.
Number three on the list, MK Chanan Porat, spoke in Beit El last week
and explained that, as election day nears, Begin could exact a
not-insignificant political price from Netanyahu for withdrawing his
candidacy.

Leading Likud members are not excited about Netanyahu's campaign
strategy. They met last night with his campaign advisor, Arthur
Finkelstein, and complained that the campaign is uninspired and
shallow. Likud representatives also expressed reservations about the
focus of the campaign on Jerusalem, claiming that the Likud is
perceived unreliable on this issue.

Head of the pre-military yeshiva program in Beit Yatir, LT.-Col.
(res.) Moshe Hager, who says about himself that he is "not a rabbi,
but a religious educational personality," will run with Rafael Eitan
on an independent Tzomet party list in the coming elections. The
negotiations between Agriculture Minister Eitan and Prime Minister
Netanyahu regarding a reserved spot on the Likud list for Eitan did
not succeed, and after the previous Tzomet MKs scattered off in
different directions, Hager agreed to run with him. Hager explained
to Arutz-7 today that he does not feel that the candidacy is a gamble:
"Unfortunately, the National Union, because of internal intrigues,
did not see fit to include Raful in its list. I think, however, that
it is important for such a man to be in Israeli politics." Hager
admitted, however, that he does not rule out the possibility that on
the eve of the elections, if it appears that Tzomet is not receiving
the minimum public support necessary for Knesset representation, but
is merely wasting votes for the right-wing, "whoever has a sense of
national responsibility will come to the appropriate conclusions" and
will withdraw from the running.

********************************************************************

Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 15:04:17 +0300
To: arutz-7@a7.org
From: Arutz-7 Editor <neteditor@a7.org>
Subject: Arutz-7 News: Monday, March 29, 1999

Arutz Sheva News Service
<http://www.a7.org>
Monday, March 29, 1999 / Nisan 12, 5759
------------------------------------------------
Delivered Daily via Email, Sunday thru Friday
--- See below for subscription instructions

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
1. EDELSTEIN PREDICTS LARGE IMMIGRANT SUPPORT FOR NETANYAHU
2. LIKUD HOPEFUL: UNITY IS CRUCIAL
3. ARAB OFFICES IN JERUSALEM TO BE CLOSED

1. EDELSTEIN PREDICTS LARGE IMMIGRANT SUPPORT FOR NETANYAHU
Yisrael B'Aliyah's #2 man, Immigration and Absorption Minister Yuli
Edelstein, rebuffed rumors today that his party is about to announce
its support for Ehud Barak as Prime Minister. Edelstein said that
"though many Yisrael B'Aliyah activists are disgruntled with
Netanyahu's tacit support for [the rival immigrants' party] Yisrael
Beiteinu, their views do not necessarily represent the perspectives or
policies of the party leadership.
We did not advise our voters to support a particular candidate during
the last election, and we plan to maintain the same policy this time
around." He added that most of the party's voters will probably
support Netanyahu: "In '92, immigrants played an important role in
toppling Shamir, as they did with the Labor government in '96. This
is the first time [since the massive wave of Russian immigration] that
there is no widespread feeling of frustration or a sense on the part
of the immigrants that they haven't been taken care of. It's natural,
then, that the incumbent will enjoy their broad support."

Yisrael B'Aliyah sees itself as a partner in "any Zionist government"
that is formed after the elections, Edelstein stated, "which rules out
partners such as Meretz and the Arab parties. We continue to say that
a broad national-unity government will be the only format which will
have the ability to last the full four-year term, and we will push for
such an arrangement after the elections."

2. LIKUD HOPEFUL: UNITY IS CRUCIAL
Prof. Yuval Shteinitz, in the 20th position on the Likud list of
Knesset candidates, told Arutz-7 today that he is happy with the
party's campaign slogan - "Strong leadership for Israel's future."
Shteinitz said that he would have chosen a different motto - "We're
continuing to save the nation" - and explained that "we have to recall
what was happening during the Labor government - fast-paced
withdrawals from a planned 90% of Judea and Samaria, terrorist
attacks. Then Netanyahu was elected, and he stabilized the situation.
He stopped the pace of the withdrawals, the terrorism went down, and
brought about a situation that we can live with. But the chosen
slogan is also very good." Shteinitz said that it's not true that if
one party wins big in the first round, the other party's candidate
will benefit in the second round. "The opposite is definitely the
case, and that's why it's important to work for the success of the
Likud, and not only Netanyahu, in the first round... One thing is
clear: whichever political wing is less divided will win."

3. ARAB OFFICES IN JERUSALEM TO BE CLOSED
The Ministerial Committee for Jerusalem Affairs decided today to close
three Palestinian Authority offices in eastern Jerusalem. It was also
decided to tighten the supervision over Palestinian officials who are
working towards Palestinian sovereignty in the eastern half of the
Israeli capital.

*********************************************************************

Date: Tue, 30 Mar 1999 17:38:05 +0300
To: arutz-7@a7.org
From: Arutz-7 Editor <neteditor@a7.org>
Subject: Arutz-7 News: Tuesday, March 30, 1999 + interview with
Prime Minister Netanyahu

Arutz Sheva News Service
<http://www.a7.org>
Tuesday, Mar. 30, 1999 / Nisan 13, 5759
------------------------------------------------
Delivered Daily via Email, Sunday thru Friday
--- See below for subscription instructions ---

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
1. NO CHANGE IN AMERICAN POSITION
2. PALESTINIAN TAX AGAINST YESHA COMMUNITIES

***SPECIAL INSERT:
INTERVIEW WITH PRIME MINISTER BINYAMIN NETANYAHU

1. NO CHANGE IN AMERICAN POSITION
Contrary to earlier reports, the official U.S. position in favor of
continued Israeli withdrawals from Yesha has not changed. U.S.
Embassy spokesman Larry Schwartz was quoted yesterday by an Associated
Press reporter as saying that Israel need not resume withdrawals until
the Palestinians meet their Wye commitments. "The handover of
territory is the last step," AP quoted Schwartz as saying, "[after]
other conditions [are] met first by the Palestinians." Schwartz
listed the collection of weapons from Palestinian opposition groups
such as Hamas, the prosecution and imprisonment of murderous
terrorists, and consistent security cooperation with Israel. He
stressed, however, that the United States still expects Israel to act
on other aspects of the Wye agreement, such as releasing Palestinian
prisoners from Israeli jails, opening a 'safe passage' between Gaza
and Hevron/Ramallah, and allowing a seaport to be operated in Gaza
City.

However, State Department spokesman James Rubin denied yesterday that
there had been a change in the American stance. Rubin said it was not
correct to say that because the Palestinians have not done what is
expected of them, the Administration does not currently expect Israel
to pull back. Rubin said, "The issue is not who goes first. The
parties should be focusing on a serious process of implementation. If
we had a serious process underway, one in which both sides were
fulfilling their obligations, we would not be having this discussion."
Dr. Aaron Lerner of IMRA interviewed Schwartz today, and the latter
said that the AP reporter, through no fault of his [the reporter's],
misunderstood the interference-racked cellular phone call. When
Lerner asked Schwartz what he really meant to say, Schwartz repeated
Rubin's above-quoted words.

2. PALESTINIAN TAX AGAINST YESHA COMMUNITIES
A new tax will be imposed by the Palestinian Authority on its workers:
a tax to finance the struggle against Jewish settlements in Yesha.
The tax will be 5% of their salaries. An additional 1% tax on
imported goods will be levied for the same purpose. PA "Finance
Minister" Muhmad El-Nashashibi has called upon private entrepreneurs
within the PA to support projects to stifle the growth of the
settlements. El-Nashashibi is not alone: Director-General of the PA's
Agriculture Department Mahmad Abu Samrah has just completed a proposal
to discourage Palestinian laborers from working in the Yesha
communities, with the aim of halting construction there. Arutz-7
correspondent Ariel Kahane reports that roughly 2/3 of the Palestinian
Authority's yearly budget is financed by Israel.

***SPECIAL INSERT:

INTERVIEW WITH PRIME MINISTER BINYAMIN NETANYAHU

Haggai Segal: Good afternoon, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
Prime Minister Netanyahu: Good afternoon, and Happy Pesach.

HS: Back to Jerusalem. Yesterday, the ministerial committee that you
head decided to close three Palestinian Authority offices in eastern
Jerusalem. Why wasn't the Orient House also closed?

PMN: The Orient House is a building that has some legal activities
going on there - a Palestinian woman lives there, and there are all
sorts of other activities. For this reason, it wasn't closed
altogether. But within two or three rooms, illegal activity is going
on. I ordered yesterday that judicial measures be taken against the
people who are engaged in this illegal activity.

HS: This will take a long time -
PMN: I don't think so.
HS: - and in the meantime they continue to receive foreign diplomats
there.

PMN: This is true, but they don't receive foreign diplomats there in
general, but only specific ones. Since the Six Day War, there have
been in Jerusalem some 18 consuls whose job it is to talk with the
Palestinian population. This is not new, this was before Oslo, and it
continued afterwards. About two weeks ago, Feisal Husseini and other
PA figures dared to deliver a diplomatic briefing there. We
immediately acted against them, and took away special privileges from
them.

HS: But he [Husseini] keeps on saying that nothing has changed, that
it is open, and that it continues the way it always was -

PMN: No, no - it is not open, and it is not the way it once was. The
opposite is true. When Barak was Foreign Minister, some 80 heads of
state and Foreign Ministers visited in the Orient House. But we have
simply stopped this. If there will continue to be provocative
activity - and I think that what is going on there is simply that -
then we will strengthen our activities, and they should know that we
will not accept this attempt to eat away at our sovereignty. We are
sovereign in Jerusalem, in its entirety.

HS: What about the Palestinian Parliament building in Abu Dis - we
heard this morning that part of it extends into Jerusalem itself?

PMN: This is a question of markings on the map. As you know, Abu Dis
is mostly outside of Jerusalem. It is possible that the building that
is being built extends some meters into Jerusalem, and we are checking
this. In any event, first of all, the building is not yet complete.
But in addition, I will not tolerate a Palestinian capital in any
place, because there is no Palestinian state. We are not prepared to
recognize a state of the Palestinians, in contrast with Barak and his
friends, because we know the great danger to Israel presented by an
armed Arab state in the heart of our land, with military alliances
with Iran and Iraq, with the ability to bring in missiles and planes,
a state that will enjoy the umbrella - maybe even a nuclear umbrella -
of Iran and Iraq... The Labor Party has already agreed to recognize a
Palestinian state, and has included this in its platform, and whoever
goes this far is already 80% along the way to agreeing to Jerusalem as
the capital of a Palestinian state.

HS: The Likud is totally against any Palestinian state?

PMN: Unambiguously, and also against any Palestinian capital,
anywhere, and certainly not in Jerusalem. I will add something else.
The "balanced" press barely paid any attention to something
astonishing, which I have said all along: Nabil Shaath said that
Yossi Beilin of Labor agreed to give 95% of Yesha for a Palestinian
state - this is what Barak means when he says that he won't return to
the '67 borders - and even to this they don't agree! So Beilin agreed
to give them the remaining 5% from the Negev! But even to this they
didn't agree - even if Beilin gives them a state, and a capital in Abu
Dis, they also continue to demand the new Jerusalem neighborhoods of
Ramot, Gilo, etc. And even this is not enough: They also demand full
right of return for all the refugees from 1948... And this is only
the opening position of Mr. Beilin, who is designated to be Barak's
Foreign Minister. This Barak-Beilin-Peres-Meretz alliance will return
us to a situation of general dismemberment where we will not be able
to defend ourselves...

HS: In any event, many Likud activists are defecting to the Centrist
Party...

PMN: ... The Centrist Party is simply air, and it is melting away,
because the public knows that in the end there are only two
possibilities: Either the left will win, headed by Barak, or the
nationalist camp, headed by myself. Even the arguments that we [the
right-wing] wage amongst ourselves, within the family, are
insignificant compared with the certain knowledge of the great danger
presented by Barak and his friends, the shrinking of Israel and the
division of Jerusalem - nothing less. Against this, one united and
consolidated force will stand. After Pesach, we will begin our
official campaign. The Likud is like a great steam locomotive - it
takes time for it to get started, but once it does, it will take off
strongly, pulling behind it many cars, including Yesha, and the
religious-Zionist public, and the hareidim, and the secular public
that sees what is happening and is concerned about the future of the
Land, as we all are. I think that this great camp will win, as I
believe that "the Eternity of Israel will not Fail."

By the way, people have asked me which of my two sons will snatch the
Afikoman [the "dessert" matzah; a prize to keep the children awake
during the Passover Seder] this year. I don't know the answer yet, of
course, but I *do* know who will snatch the Afikoman on May 17th
[Election Day]: We will!

HS: Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Happy and Kosher Passover, and
thank you.

PMN: Happy and Kosher Passover to you too.

**********************************************************************

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1999 Feast of Tabernacles Celebration
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