Supplement to Archive Prophecy Update 70
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Dardanelle MBC
July 10, 2005
Around and Around the Chicken Coop, the Monkey Chased the Weasel – Pop Goes the Weasel!
The Middle East chicken coop, with sides from Jericho to Damascus to Beirut to Gaza to Jericho, is being circled by PA Chairman Abbas. The following article by the Associated Press from the Jerusalem Post is an accurate assessment of the problem of Palestinian refugee camps and the Hizbollah in Lebanon.
Both the Monkey and the Weasel are circling the coop to get the Israel chickens inside it. After much circling, I expect the chicken coop to be penetrated from the north in a Jihad by all the Islamic monkeys and weasels in the Middle East, but first the roosters inside the coop must be lulled into a sleepy state of believing they can whip any Islamic force that attempts to penetrate their borders.
I believe the most likely time for this Jihad to be launched is 2007. However, as I have said many times, it will eventually occur, but the year of its occurrence is speculation on my part.
Begin AP Article
Abbas Meets Lahoud, Berri in Lebanon
Associated Press, THE JERUSALEM POST
July 9, 2005
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas said Friday he would abide by any decision that the Lebanese government takes concerning
the disarmament of Palestinians living across refugee camps in Lebanon.
“We are guests in Lebanon, temporary guests, and we are subject to Lebanese laws just like everybody else in Lebanon,” Abbas said after talks with President Emile Lahoud.
Abbas arrived in Beirut Friday from neighboring Damascus, where he met with Syrian President Bashar Assad. In addition to the meeting with Lahoud, Abbas held talks with Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and outgoing Prime Minister Najib Mikati.
He is also scheduled to meet with a Palestinian delegation from refugee camps in Lebanon.
During his visit to Lebanon Abbas is expected to discuss the issue of disarming Palestinians living in the country as demanded by UN Security Council resolution 1559, which calls on Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias to give up their weapons.
The resolution, issued last September, refers to Hizbullah and thousands of armed Palestinians living in 12 Palestinian camps across Lebanon.
Hizbullah has refused to disarm and the Lebanese government, which considers
the group to be a legitimate resistance group, supports its stance, saying disarmament hinges on an overall peace settlement with Israel.
Lebanon hosts more than 350,000 Palestinian refugees, including thousands of armed guerrillas from the mainstream Palestinian Fatah faction, in densely populated camps around the country that are off limits to the Lebanese government. Authorities fear there would be bloodshed if they go into the camps, where many Islamic militant fugitives are known to be hiding.
The first refugees came to Lebanon in 1948.
Their presence is a touchy subject and officials fear conspiracies to settle them in Lebanon, something that would upset the delicate balance among the country’ s 17
sects.
Palestinian officials have stressed Lebanese sovereignty and said Palestinians will not commit acts that threaten Lebanon’s security. But Abbas would likely be heavily criticized back home for disarming them; it might be perceived as an introduction to permanently sett
ing the Palestinians in Lebanon.
Resolution 1559 also called for the withdrawal of the Syrian army from Lebanon, which was completed in April. However, Abbas said he had not raised the matter with Lahoud.
“Resolution 1559 concerns the Lebanese government and people, and we are with them in any decision they take concerning implementation of this resolution,” he told reporters after their meeting.
Abbas also thanked the Lebanese government for the recent easing of labor restrictions for Palestinians born in Lebanon.
A decree issued last month by Lebanon’s labor minister relaxed rules denying Palestinian refugees living in the country since
the creation of Israel the right to work in most jobs, allowing them to work in a range of private-sector jobs.
Abbas said it was up to the Lebanese government to decide on an appropriate time for open ing a Palest
inian embassy in Beirut.
End AP Article
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