by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
PLO official Hanan Ashrawi claims Palestinian leaders worked with U.S. and Israeli officials to combat terrorism during Second Intifada • PA, PLO fighting lawsuit that could compel them to pay $3 billion to victims of terrorist attacks in Israel.
Victims and their families have sued the PA
and the PLO over six shootings and bombings in the Jerusalem area from
2002 to 2004 that killed 33 people and wounded more than 450, saying the
defendants provided support to the terrorists who carried out the
attacks.
Lawyers for the Palestinians have argued in a
U.S. federal court that their government should not be held responsible
for the actions of a few individuals who acted on their own or at the
behest of outside terrorist groups such as Hamas.
Ashrawi, a member of the PLO's executive
committee, said she and other leaders, including the late Yasser Arafat,
worked with U.S. and Israeli officials to combat terrorism during those
years.
"It didn't serve the cause of the Palestinian
Authority or the PLO, nor the cause of freedom," she said of the
terrorist attacks.
Her testimony, which lasted about two hours, followed that of Majid Faraj, the PA's head of intelligence.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs have accused the
Palestinians of making payments to individuals convicted of terrorism as
a means of supporting their actions.
Faraj told the jurors the payments were
intended to help the convicted men's families and remove economic
reasons for them to engage in further attacks.
During cross-examination, Kent Yalowitz, a
lawyer for the plaintiffs, asked Faraj about Abdullah Barghouti, accused
of being one of Hamas' chief bomb-makers in the early 2000s.
Faraj had testified earlier that Barghouti
escaped from Palestinian custody in 2002. Yalowitz, however, showed
Faraj an Israeli police report in which Barghouti said the Palestinian
security forces allowed him to go free, despite his alleged role in
several attacks.
Faraj said he did not know the source of the police report.
Barghouti was later arrested by Israel and eventually sentenced to life in prison.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
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