AFP reports
French
experts reexamining evidence have confirmed their earlier conclusion
that the 2004 death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was not the
result of poisoning, a prosecutor told AFP Monday.
A centre in the Swiss city of Lausanne had tested biological samples taken from Arafat's personal belongings given to his widow after his death, and found "abnormal levels of polonium" -- an extremely radioactive toxin, but stopped short of saying that he had been poisoned by polonium. French experts "maintain that the polonium-210 and lead-210 found in Arafat's grave and in the samples are of an environmental nature," Nanterre prosecutor Catherine Denis said. The reevaluation of earlier data "disproves the hypothesis of an acute ingestion of polonium-210 in the days preceeding the appearance of symptoms," she said.
This confirmed French findings from 2013, which also matched those of a Russian team. However, a Swiss probe has said that the poisoning theory is "more consistent" with its test results.
Arafat died aged 75 on November 11, 2004 at the Percy de Clamart hospital, close to Paris. He had been admitted there at the end of October that year after developing stomach pains while at his headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where he had lived since December 2001, surrounded by the Israeli army.
Arafat's widow Suha lodged a complaint at a court in Nanterre in 2012, claiming that her husband was assassinated, sparking an inquiry. More.
Note: The latest major cover-up/conspiracy theory, came unsurprisingly from France and was widely publicised (France Inter, RTL Europe 1, France 3, TV5, JDD, Le Point, Atlantico, Le Huffington Post, RFI etc). Journalist Emmanuel Faux, Europe 1 and former correspondent in Jerusalem, maintained in a book (2014) that Arafat had been poisoned and that France was "hiding" the truth. Faux is the son of Israeël-basher lawyer Gisèle Halimi who is Jewish and Jean-Paul Sartre's secretary Claude Faux. He is a well-known Israel-basher. Other members of the family are also engaged in Israel-bashing, Faux' two half-brothers - Serge Halimi, journalist at Le Monde Diplomatique, and lawyer Jean-Yves Halimi.
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