The Jerusalem
Post Internet Edition:
Stars predict untimely end for Abbas and President Bush
Matthew Gutman, Dec. 27, 2004
With two weeks to go before elections for Palestinian Authority
chairman, security around the frontrunner, PLO leader Mahmoud
Abbas (Abu Mazen), has been bolstered to unprecedented levels – partly
on the word of a Tunisian astrologer.
The astrologer, Hassan al-Sharibi, gained fame in the Arab
world for prophesying the 1997 death of Princess Diana, the
assassination of Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin last March
and the "mysterious death" of former PA chairman
Yasser Arafat.
The Tunis-based oracle's prediction for 2005 is that both
Abbas and US President George W. Bush will be ferried cross
the River Styx by an assassin's bullet.
"Abu Mazen is in danger. That is why he is being kept
away from the public," a senior Palestinian official told The
Jerusalem Post over the weekend. "The people closest
to him are highly concerned about his safety."
The official, a member of Fatah for the past 30 years, characterized
the threat emanating from Sharibi's charts as "very serious." The
source added that Abbas's aides put a "great deal of credence" in
the Tunisian soothsayer.
Instead of a chance to kiss babies and shmooze with an adoring
crowd, Abbas's campaign kickoff event on Saturday was a dour
show. Dozens of leather-coated security agents secured the
podium as Abbas delivered a speech to an essentially handpicked
crowd, which responded with tepid applause. His guards swarmed
around him as soon as he concluded his speech.
He embraced a few key Palestinian figures – including
Ahmed Jbarra, better known as the "refrigerator bomber," whose
booby-trapped appliance exploded in Jerusalem's Kikar Zion
in 1975, killing 14; and Fadwa Barghouti, the long-suffering
spouse of Tanzim leader Marwan Barghouti, who is serving time
for five counts of murder – before being bundled off
the stage and into a waiting motorcade bound for the Mukata
compound in Ramallah.
Abbas's guards had similarly formed an impregnable phalanx
around him when the leader attended midnight mass in Bethlehem
on Christmas Eve.
Given the security concerns, his campaign headquarters refuse
to divulge his campaign schedule. And in lieu of large rallies,
Abbas's aides said Saturday they have scheduled smaller campaign
stops in major Palestinian towns and villages. There the putative
Palestinian leader will meet "friends" from his Fatah
faction and pose for photo-ops.
Saleh Masharka, an editor with the Ramallah-based Al-Hayat
al-Jadida, put little credence in the fatal alignment of the
stars in Abbas's astrological charts. However, he observed,
disgruntled "members of an increasingly fragmented Fatah
might be dangerous to Abbas."
In an incident last month, Fatah toughs burst into a funeral
tent for Arafat where Abbas was mourning, and opened fire.
Two Abbas security guards were killed and six people injured
in the ensuing gunfight.
Critics have labeled Sharibi a quack with flair who relies
on logic and wishful thinking. After all, predicting Yassin's
assassination – he was Israel's "public enemy No.
1" – and the death of an already ailing Arafat are
hardly major feats.
N., another source working on Abbas's campaign, said, "Everyone
is worried about him – it was the Americans' idea to
give him more bodyguards."
Soothsaying is not unusual in Islam, and Arabian leaders and early Muslim caliphs
relied on court astrologers as early as the eighth century.
"The Middle East region will be sitting on a volcano
in 2005, and the situation in Iraq will get even more dramatic
as Saddam Hussein is expected to die suddenly before his trial
even starts," Sharibi predicted, according to a report
by United Press International.
Among Sharibi's other projections are that Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon will lose his government and Osama bin Laden will
finally be captured – more likely dead than alive.
Dr. Muhammad Shtiya, Abbas's campaign manager, denied that
there is any danger to the man members of his campaign are
calling the "savior of the Palestinian cause."
Defending the restricted kickoff event, he argued that "the
idea was to select an audience that reflected the Palestinian
people, and that is what you saw on the podium."
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