Mohammed Abdel Rahman Abdel Raouf al-Qudwa al-Husseini, popularly known as Yasser Yassir Arafat or by his kunya Abu Ammar, was a Palestinian political leader.
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Mohammed Abdel Rahman Abdel Raouf al-Qudwa al-Husseini, popularly known as Yasser Yassir Arafat or by his kunya Abu Ammar, was a Palestinian political leader.
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Yassir Arafat was Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization from 1969 to 2004 and President of the Palestinian National Authority from 1994 to 2004.
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From 1983 to 1993, Yassir Arafat based himself in Tunisia, and began to shift his approach from open conflict with the Israelis to negotiation.
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Yassir Arafat engaged in a series of negotiations with the Israeli government to end the conflict between it and the PLO.
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The success of the negotiations in Oslo led to Yassir Arafat being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, alongside Israeli Prime Ministers Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, in 1994.
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Yassir Arafat's father, Abdel Raouf al-Qudwa al-Husseini, was a Palestinian from Gaza City, whose mother, Yasser's paternal grandmother, was Egyptian.
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Yassir Arafat's father battled in the Egyptian courts for 25 years to claim family land in Egypt as part of his inheritance but was unsuccessful.
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Yassir Arafat worked as a textile merchant in Cairo's religiously mixed Sakakini District.
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Yassir Arafat was the second-youngest of seven children and was, along with his younger brother Fathi, the only offspring born in Cairo.
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Yassir Arafat's first visit to Jerusalem came when his father, unable to raise seven children alone, sent Yasser and his brother Fathi to their mother's family in the Moroccan Quarter of the Old City.
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Yassir Arafat had a deteriorating relationship with his father; when he died in 1952, Yassir Arafat did not attend the funeral, nor did he visit his father's grave upon his return to Gaza.
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In 1944, Yassir Arafat enrolled in the University of King Fuad I and graduated in 1950.
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However, instead of joining the ranks of the Palestinian fedayeen, Yassir Arafat fought alongside the Muslim Brotherhood, although he did not join the organization.
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In early 1949, the war was winding down in Israel's favor, and Yassir Arafat returned to Cairo from a lack of logistical support.
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In 1990, Yassir Arafat married Suha Tawil, a Palestinian Christian, when he was 61 and Suha, 27.
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Since Yassir Arafat was raised in Cairo, the tradition of dropping the Mohammed or Ahmad portion of one's first name was common; notable Egyptians such as Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak did so.
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However, Yassir Arafat dropped Abdel Rahman and Abdel Raouf from his name as well.
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Yassir Arafat originally attempted to obtain a visa to Canada and later Saudi Arabia, but was unsuccessful in both attempts.
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Yassir Arafat did not want to alienate them, and sought their undivided support by avoiding ideological alliances.
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Fatah's manpower was incremented further after Yassir Arafat decided to offer new recruits much higher salaries than members of the Palestine Liberation Army, the regular military force of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which was created by the Arab League in 1964.
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Yassir Arafat was detained in Syria's Mezzeh Prison when a Palestinian Syrian Army officer, Yusef Urabi, was killed.
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Some have alleged that Yassir Arafat himself was on the battlefield, but the details of his involvement are unclear.
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The battle was covered in detail by Time, and Yassir Arafat's face appeared on the cover of the 13 December 1968 issue, bringing his image to the world for the first time.
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Yassir Arafat became Commander-in-Chief of the Palestinian Revolutionary Forces two years later, and in 1973, became the head of the PLO's political department.
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Yassir Arafat refused, citing his belief in the need for a Palestinian state with Palestinian leadership.
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Israel claimed that Yassir Arafat was in ultimate control over these organizations and therefore had not abandoned terrorism.
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Yassir Arafat became the first representative of a non-governmental organization to address a plenary session of the UN General Assembly.
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Yassir Arafat's speech increased international sympathy for the Palestinian cause.
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Yassir Arafat sent his army, along with the Syrian-backed Palestinian factions of as-Sa'iqa and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command led by Ahmad Jibril to fight alongside right-wing Christian forces against the PLO and the LNM.
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In 1985 Yassir Arafat narrowly survived an Israeli assassination attempt when Israeli Air Force F-15s bombed his Tunis headquarters as part of Operation Wooden Leg, leaving 73 people dead; Yassir Arafat had gone out jogging that morning.
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The following year Yassir Arafat had his operational headquarters in Baghdad for some time.
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Yassir Arafat accepted UN Security Council Resolution 242 and Israel's right "to exist in peace and security" and Arafat's statements were greeted with approval by the US administration, which had long insisted on these statements as a necessary starting point for official discussions between the US and the PLO.
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On 2 April 1989, Yassir Arafat was elected by the Central Council of the Palestine National Council, the governing body of the PLO, to be the president of the proclaimed State of Palestine.
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Yassir Arafat narrowly escaped death again on 7 April 1992, when an Air Bissau aircraft he was a passenger on crash-landed in the Libyan Desert during a sandstorm.
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Yassir Arafat insisted that financial support was imperative to establishing this authority and needed it to secure the acceptance of the agreements by the Palestinians living in those areas.
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Yassir Arafat became the President and Prime Minister of the PNA, the Commander of the PLA and the Speaker of the PLC.
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Yassir Arafat established an executive committee or cabinet composed of twenty members.
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Yassir Arafat began subordinating non-governmental organizations that worked in education, health, and social affairs under his authority by replacing their elected leaders and directors with PNA officials loyal to him.
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Yassir Arafat then appointed himself chairman of the Palestinian financial organization that was created by the World Bank to control most aid money towards helping the new Palestinian entity.
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Yassir Arafat established a Palestinian police force, named the Preventive Security Service, that became active on 13 May 1994.
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Yassir Arafat assigned Mohammed Dahlan and Jibril Rajoub to head the PSS.
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On 20 January 1996, Yassir Arafat was elected president of the PNA, with an overwhelming 88.
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Yassir Arafat continued negotiations with Netanyahu's successor, Ehud Barak, at the Camp David 2000 Summit in July 2000.
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Yassir Arafat rejected Barak's offer and refused to make an immediate counter-offer.
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Yassir Arafat was enjoying the support of groups that, given his own history, would normally have been quite wary of dealing with or supporting him.
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Yassir Arafat was finally allowed to leave his compound on 2 May 2002 after intense negotiations led to a settlement: six PFLP militants, including the organization's secretary-general Ahmad Sa'adat, wanted by Israel, who had been holed up with Yassir Arafat in his compound, would be transferred to international custody in Jericho.
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Yassir Arafat issued such a call on 8 May On 19 September 2002, the IDF largely demolished the compound with armored bulldozers in order to isolate Arafat.
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In March 2003, Yassir Arafat ceded his post as Prime Minister to Mahmoud Abbas amid pressures by the US.
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Yassir Arafat had a mixed relationship with the leaders of other Arab nations.
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In 2003 the International Monetary Fund conducted an audit of the PNA and stated that Yassir Arafat had diverted $900 million in public funds to a special bank account controlled by himself and the PNA Chief Economic Financial adviser.
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Fuad Shubaki, former financial aide to Yassir Arafat, told the Israeli security service Shin Bet that Yassir Arafat used several million dollars of aid money to buy weapons and support militant groups.
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Israeli government tried for decades to assassinate Yassir Arafat, including attempting to intercept and shoot down private aircraft and commercial airliners on which he was believed to be traveling.
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Yassir Arafat was admitted to the Percy military hospital in Clamart, a suburb of Paris.
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French doctors said that Yassir Arafat suffered from a blood condition known as disseminated intravascular coagulation, although it is inconclusive what brought about the condition.
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When Yassir Arafat's death was announced, the Palestinian people went into a state of mourning, with Qur'anic mourning prayers emitted from mosque loudspeakers throughout the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and tires burned in the streets.
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The next day, Yassir Arafat's body was flown from Paris aboard a French Air Force transport plane to Cairo, Egypt, for a brief military funeral there, attended by several heads of states, prime ministers and foreign ministers.
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Yassir Arafat was buried in a stone, rather than wooden, coffin, and Palestinian spokesman Saeb Erekat said that Yassir Arafat would be reburied in East Jerusalem following the establishment of a Palestinian state.
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Vladimir Uiba, the head of the Federal Medical and Biological Agency, said that Yassir Arafat died of natural causes and the agency had no plans to conduct further tests.
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In March 2015, a French prosecutor closed a 2012 French inquiry, stating that French experts had determined Yassir Arafat's death was of natural causes, and that the polonium and lead traces found were environmental.
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