The widow of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat said Wednesday she wants his body exhumed to find out whether he was poisoned after tests showed high levels of a radioactive substance on some of his personal belongings.
Suha Arafat told CNN she is
requesting the body be exhumed "to make sure 100% of the existence of
polonium."
A Swiss doctor said Wednesday
they found high levels of toxic polonium-210 on some of Arafat's belongings,
though it does not mean he suffered radiation poisoning.
"We have evidence there is too
much polonium, but we also have hints from the medical records that this may not
be the case," said Francois Bochud, director of the Institut de Radiophysique in
Lausanne, Switzerland. "The only way to resolve this anomaly would be by testing
the body."
Suha Arafat said she had not made
an official request to the Palestinian Authority for exhumation because no
official request is needed. The Palestinian Authority said Wednesday that it
would not object to exhuming the body from its tomb if Arafat's family
approves.
If it turns out that Arafat, who
died in 2004, was poisoned, "Any result will be significant for us to help know
the truth," said Suha Arafat, the former leader's widow. "It is a form of
closure for our family. Closing one wound but opening a new one, wondering who
is responsible."
Bochud's research team tested
Arafat's toothbrush, clothing and keffiyeh, the trademark black-and-white
headscarf he often wore, Bochud said.
But getting data from items like
clothing "is really tricky business," said Cham Dallas, a professor and
toxicologist at the University of Georgia's Institute for Health Management and
Mass Destruction Defense.
"We don't have enough
information to make any definitive statement, but it does seem a bit of a
stretch" to conclude that Arafat was poisoned by polonium-210, he told CNN in a
telephone interview.
Dallas questioned how much
confidence the Swiss scientists could have in their measurements and said he was
looking forward to results from tests carried out on the body after it is
exhumed.
"I'd have a lot more confidence
if you could give me a bone sample," he told CNN in a telephone interview. He
cited compartments inside the bone as particularly telling. "There's old bone
and then there's new bone," he said. "If you're sampling, it would come out very
differently."
Arafat died at age 75 at a Paris
military hospital after he suffered a brain hemorrhage and slipped into a coma.
Palestinian officials said in the days before his death that Arafat had a blood
disorder -- though they ruled out leukemia -- and that he had digestive
problems.
Rumors of poisoning circulated
at the time, but Palestinian officials denied them, and then-Foreign Minister
Nabil Sha'ath said he "totally" ruled them out.
Two weeks after Arafat's death,
his nephew said medical records showed no cause of death. Nasser al-Kidwa, who
was the Palestinian observer to the United Nations, said toxicology tests showed
"no known poison" -- though he refused to exclude the possibility that poison
caused his uncle's death.
"The suspicion that he was
killed, that he was deliberately murdered, has been there all along and most
Palestinians believe that," said Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Palestinian
Liberation Organization's executive committee. "I personally believed it because
I was with him; I saw him; I saw the transformation and it certainly was
unnatural."
Ashrawi said she had spoken with
Arafat's doctors, who told her that they could not rule out the possibility that
he had been poisoned. "But we didn't have any kind of thread, any kind of
evidence," she told CNN. "This report, in many ways, tells us our suspicions are
founded that there is sufficient evidence to say that he was killed, that he was
assassinated using polonium."
Only a few countries, including
the United States, Israel and Russia, have stocks of polonium-210, a fact that
would limit the list of possible suspects, he said. "You would only use polonium
if you were making a statement, not if you were trying to hide," he said.
Someone trying to get away with
murder would be better off using pharmaceutical agents, since a number of of
them "disappear in the body" and cannot be identified later, he said.
"I can't figure out why they
would use it, frankly," he said. "There are so many really cool agents to kill
people if you want to be secret and even if you want to make a statement."
Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas has ordered a committee investigating Arafat's death to follow up
on all reports "and to seek assistance from Arab and international experts to
find the truth behind Arafat's illness and death," said his spokesman, Nabil Abu
Rudeineh.
It should be possible to detect
any remaining polonium -- a naturally radioactive chemical element -- in
Arafat's body, despite the time that has elapsed since his death because he was
buried in a tomb, not underground, Bochud said.
Arafat's widow asked the Swiss
institute to analyze some of his belongings and medical documents, Bochud
said.
The Qatar-based satellite
network Al Jazeera relayed the request and broadcast a report about the test
results.
The testing found no evidence of
traditional poison, Bochud said.
But Al Jazeera and the family
then asked him to test for radioactive material, and found an "unexplained
amount of polonium-210," he said, adding, "We are testing tiny quantities so it
is difficult to measure and not conclusive."
A body fluid stain contained 180
megabecquerels per liter of the radioactive isotope, while a typical sample
would contain 5 megabecquerels per liter, Bochud said. A becquerel is a unit of
measurement of radioactivity.
The fabric of Arafat's clothing,
without body fluid, contained less than 10 megabecquerels per liter, Bochud
said.
Tests involving biological
samples -- such as urine, sweat or blood -- contained higher levels than other
samples taken from his clothing, he said.
Arafat's widow had left his
clothes inside a sports bag from the time they were returned to her eight years
ago from the hospital, Bochud said.
It was not clear whether
anything that may have happened to the clothes -- over the years or in the
testing process -- may have affected the test results.
Asked whether polonium-210 could
have been applied to the items since Arafat's death, Bochud said, "Anything is
possible."
Bochud also said the Institut de
Radiophysique did not verify that the clothing was Arafat's; another
organization concluded that the DNA on the items was similar to that of Arafat's
daughter.
Zahwa Arafat provided her DNA
for the comparison, Suha Arafat told CNN. The wait for test results, which
lasted months, "was emotionally difficult," she said.
Former Russian spy Alexander
Litvinenko died of polonium poisoning in London in 2006.
But it's hard to compare the
cases of Arafat and Litvinenko, who was diagnosed when he was alive, Bochud
said.
Arafat's symptoms when he died
were not entirely consistent with polonium poisoning, he said.
"For example, the bone marrow
stayed in good shape until (the) death of Arafat. In other cases of polonium
poisoning there is a decaying of the bone marrow," the medical expert said.
"Another point, he did not lose his hair as would be expected in the case of
polonium." poisoning.
Scientists performed more than
50 measurements on the belongings between February and June, he said.
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