The announcement from the Nobel Peace Prize Committee on October 11, 2002 that Jimmy Carter would receive this year’s 2002 Nobel Peace Prize will be received with great enthusiasm by Yassir Arafat’s Palestinian Authority dictatorship and received with equal dissapointment by human rights circles among the Palestinian Arab people.
Carter was the US observer and facilitator of the Januray 1996 elections that catapulted Arafat to be the “democratically elected” leader of the Palestinian Arab people.
Our news agency worked with a Palestinian Arab TV crew to cover those elections.
However, Arafat manipulated these elections with rules that forbid anyone from running against him without his express approval, as reported by the UN election observer team.
Indeed Dr. Haider Abdul Shefi, who had led the PLO delegation at the Madrid negotiations in 1991, offered his candidacy, only to be rejected by Arafat.
When Dr. Shefi said that he was going to run anyway, a bomb explosion in Dr. Shefi’s home convinced him otherwise.
More discrepancies in Arafat’s “democratic” elections were docmented by Mr. Daniel Polisar, the head of the PEACE WATCH observer team to the PA elections, in his article, “How Arafat Rigged the 1996 PA Elections” republished on the June 28th 2002 issue of Israel Resource Review.
Jummy Carter, who purports to symbolize a commitment to peace and justice, had nothing to say in criticism of the lack of “democracy” in the PA elections.
Instead, Carter takes credit for the “democratic” nature of the PA elections, in numerous articles that Carter has written and numerous speeches that Carter has given.
When I asked Carter immediately after the PA elections about the fact that Arafat had rigged the elections, Carter responded with a chuckle and said that “We have problems like that in Chicago too”.
Jimmy Carter now shares the notoriety of receiving the Nobel Peace Prize with Yassir Arafat.
You might call Carter the father of Palestinian Autocracy.
[Satirist Tom Lehrer once remarked that he left the field of satire when US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger received the Nobel Peace Prize at the height of the Vietnam War. Lehrer said that “now there is nothing more to satirize”.]