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Yasser Arafat's body may be exhumed to see if he was poisoned

By Catholic Online (NEWS CONSORTIUM)
July 5th, 2012
Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)

The body of the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat may be exhumed to investigate claims that he was assassinated with the radioactive substance polonium. Arafat, who died in 2004 from a mystery illness, was long rumored to have been murdered at the hands of the Israeli spy agency Mossad.

LOS ANGELES, CA (Catholic Online) - To this end, the Palestinian Authority has agreed to the exhumation. Arafat's body will be disinterred from a mausoleum in Ramallah on the West Bank in order to investigate the claim.

According to a recent investigation, a urine stain on Arafat's underwear had traces of Polonium-210, the highly radioactive substance which killed Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko six years ago.

Those who are exposed to a lethal dose of Polonium, usually by orally ingesting it, die within two to three months. There are no serious symptoms after being exposed, but nausea and fatigue sets in after a week.

A highly radioactive element, Polonium is used, among other things, to power spacecraft. Marie Curie discovered it in 1898, and her daughter Irene was among the first people it killed: She died of leukemia several years after an accidental polonium exposure in her laboratory.

At least two people connected with Israel's nuclear program also reportedly died after exposure to the element, according to the limited literature on the subject.
 

A single microgram of Polonium, the size of a spec of dust is enough to kill someone, due to its slowly-excreted alpha particles which attack the body's organs. Polonium affects the liver, kidneys, spleen, bone marrow, and gastrointestinal tract.

Polonium poisoning is a slow, painful death as it takes to accumulate dangerous internal exposures. Victims usually lose hair, and the lining of the gastrointestinal system is destroyed. There is severe diarrhea, intestinal bleeding, and loss of fluids and disturbance of electrolyte balance.

There had been previous theories that Arafat, who died in a Paris hospital in November of 2004, had contracted cancer, cirrhosis or even HIV.

The Institute de Radiophysique in Lausanne, Switzerland, proved that Arafat's underwear registered a level of 180 millibecquerels of Polonium-210, more than 20 times the dose to kill an average human being.

Dr. Francois Bochod with the institute said the only way to confirm the findings would be to exhume Arafat's body to test it for polonium-210.

"But we have to do it quite fast because polonium is decaying, so if we wait too long, for sure, any possible proof will disappear," he told Al Jazeera.

Arafat led the Palestinian Liberation Organization's fight against Israel from the 1960s but signed a peace agreement with the Jewish state in 1993 establishing Palestinian self-rule areas in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

His mysterious death came four years into a Palestinian uprising, after talks with Israel had failed to lead to a Palestinian state.

The doctors who treated Arafat in his final days could not establish the cause of death, refusing to give details of his condition, citing privacy laws, fuelling a host of rumors and theories over the nature of his illness.

© 2012, Catholic Online. Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.

Article brought to you by: Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)