Thursday 04 November 2004, 20:48 Makka Time, 17:48 GMT
The Palestinian leader is said to be in a 'critical condition'
As Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat slipped into a coma on Thursday, speculation over who will succeed him was rife.
Unlike this week's US presidential election, there are as yet no clearly defined candidates who will have their fates decided at the ballot box.
Indeed, it is uncertain if the Palestinians - confronted by the reality of Israeli occupation - will get to choose a new leader or have one foisted upon them through a back-room deal.
Key outside power brokers, such as Israel and the US, will also try to influence Arafat's succession for sure.
According to London-based Palestinian analyst Abd al-Bari Atwan, it is imperative that the Palestinians hold elections to choose a leader and break the Arafat-led Fatah movement's stranglehold on power.
"Arafat is by far the most popular figure in Palestine," the al-Quds al-Arabi editor told Aljazeera.net. "But no other figure in his Fatah movement commands much support among Palestinians. So why should they be allowed to maintain power?"
But some analysts say it is far from certain that credible elections can be held within the West Bank and Gaza under a state of occupation.
Collective leadership?
Khalid Amayreh, Aljazeera.net's correspondent in the West Bank, says the situation is further complicated by Arafat's elimination of any possible rival.
He said it would also be impossible for one figure to unite the Palestinians in the same way as Arafat had done.
"It is highly possible that there will not be one leader," he told Aljazeera.net.
No other figure in Palestine commands Arafat's popularity
"The safest option would be for some sort of collective leadership. But the problem is that Fatah will not tolerate power sharing."
Amayreh added that Arafat's death would be bad news for the Israelis in the sense that the Palestinian leader is the only man who could have made as many concessions as he has and still politically survive.
Amayreh said, "The Palestinian leadership will inevitably have to get more hardline to enjoy a measure of popularity among the Palestinian people. They will not accept someone who is in the pocket of the Americans and the Israelis.
"Popular resistance movements like Hamas will not seek power themselves but without Arafat they will inevitably gain more influence."
THE CONTENDERS
Mahmud Abbas
Also known as Abu Mazen, Abbas, 69, is the most senior Palestinian leader after Arafat and one of the few surviving founder members of Fatah - the main political group in the PLO.
Abbas built his reputation as one of the architects of the peace process with Israel during the 1990s.
Mahmud Abbas is the seniormost PLO leader after Arafat
In 2003 he was appointed Palestinian prime minister with the remit of implementing a peace plan with the Israelis known as the roadmap.
However, Abbas resigned four months later in the face of repeated Israeli invasions of Palestinian territory and an internal struggle with Arafat.
Touted by politicians in Washington and London as the Palestinian moderate who would deliver peace, Abbas was branded at home as an Israeli appeaser. Although his position within Fatah makes him a strong contender to take over from Arafat, he has little grassroots support among ordinary Palestinians.
Ahmad Quraya
Quraya, or Abu Ala, is another of the chief architects of the peace process with Israel during the 1990s.
Quraya's credentials rest on his past role as a peace negotiator
After Abbas's departure as prime minister in 2003, he was charged with reviving the American-backed road map to peace as PM. This he has so far failed to do.
Nevertheless, as one of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation's most senior leaders, the 67-year old's supporters say he has the trust and respect of all sides in the conflict.
On the other hand, his detractors say he is too close to the Israelis and, like Abbas, has little grassroots support.
Marwan al-Barguthi
The highly popular Marwan al-Barguthi is currently languishing in an Israeli jail, accused of being behind a spate of bomb attacks.
Born in Ram Allah in 1958, al-Barguthi was the liaison officer for the Palestinian Liberation Organisation in Amman and Tunis.
Imprisoned for six years for his role in the first intifada (1987-1992), al-Barguthi was deported to Jordan in 1987.
Al-Barghuthi (R), currently in an Israeli jail, is a popular figure
After the 1993 Oslo accords, he returned to the West Bank in April 1994 and took over as secretary-general of Fatah in the West Bank.
He considers any Palestinian who bargains over the 1967 borders a traitor.
Aside from enjoying good relations with Islamic groups, al-Barguthi is also critical of the centralisation of power under Arafat and accuses his officials of financial corruption.
A pragmatist, he believes that a permanent solution to the Middle East conflict can be found only if the mediator is changed. According to him, the US is too close to Israel to be an honest broker.
Muhammad Dahlan
Muhammad Dahlan, 43, is the man that many believe the Israelis and the Americans would like to see as Palestinian leader.
After a bust-up with Arafat earlier this year, Gaza's former security chief is now without an official post but retains influence and a militia in the area.
Dahlan is a former Gaza security chief who has his own militia
Dahlan, who was one of the youngest leaders of the first Palestinian intifada in 1987, says he was jailed 10 times by the Israelis between 1981 and 1986
As part of the Palestinian delegation at the Camp David peace talks in 2000, he says he was one of those who fought the hardest to reach a settlement with the Israelis.
But with the outbreak of the second intifada in 2000 and his subsequent crackdown on Islamic activists, Dahlan's credibility in the eyes of the Palestinian street eroded.
And his good relations with Israel and the US have led to accusations that he is colluding with the enemy.
Jibril Rajub
Jibril Rajub, 51, is the former security chief in the West Bank, where he still has considerable influence and a militia.
Rajub has been criticised for cracking down on Islamic groups
A long-term member of Fatah, he was sentenced to life in prison by the Israelis in 1970 for throwing a grenade at a convoy of Israeli soldiers.
Viewed as a pragmatist, he had ordered his forces to clamp down on resistance groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad to stop them from attacking Israel.
He argues for the continuation of the Palestinian Authority as the best organisation to represent Palestinian interests.
Rajub is also said to be regarded favourably by Israel and the US.
Two rockets fired at Israel from Lebanon, no damage
There is new evidence of Iranian-Syrian collusion to transform Lebanon into a safe haven for al Qaeda. Iran has already signaled its intention to allow its proxies to replace Arafat’s Fatah movement as the most important armed Palestinian force in Lebanon.
In addition Hezbullah and Iranian allies have been planning to take over Ein Hilweh. If Iran succeeded in capturing Ein Hilweh it would become a military base jointly operated by Iran-Hezbullah and al Qaeda. This was a development Arafat was not willing to tolerate, as it could be the last straw, causing the Americans to give Sharon the green light to take him out. #msg-4476762
-Am
Two rockets fired at Israel from Lebanon, no damage 15 Nov 2004 18:59:19 GMT
Source: Reuters
BEIRUT, Nov 15 (Reuters) - Two rockets were fired towards Israel from inside Lebanon on Monday, one landing in the sea and the other in an Israeli town just across the border without causing any damage, Lebanese security sources said.
They said the Katyusha rockets were fired at around 7 p.m. (1700 GMT) and that police were trying to find out who had fired them. Initial indications were that Hizbollah, the main group fighting Israel from Lebanon, was not involved.
One Lebanese security source said the rockets were fired from north of Naqoura, a Lebanese town close to the border. One rocket landed near the Israeli town of Shlomi, while the other fell into the sea on the Lebanese side of the border.
Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon in 2000 after a 22-year occupation but there have been sporadic clashes in the border area since, mostly between Hizbollah guerrillas and the Israeli army.
Other groups have claimed responsibility for firing rockets towards Israel in the past. A Hizbollah spokesman said he had no information about Monday's incident.
Earlier this month, the United Nations said it was concerned about the possibility of rising tensions along the Israeli-Lebanese frontier, and called for maximum restraint.