صور توضح حياة ياسر عرفات من الانطلاقة وحتى الاستشهاد..
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A portrait of Yasser Arafat in the 1940s. Arafat was born on August 24,
1929 in Cairo, Egypt, to Palestinian parents. He spent most of his youth
in Egypt, and is believed to have started smuggling weapons into
Palestine, then under British mandate, in 1946.
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Arafat
moved to Kuwait in 1956 after fighting in the first Arab-Israeli War
and finishing his engineering degree at the University of Fuad I (now
Cairo University). In 1958, he and other Palestinian activists formed
Fatah, a Palestinian nationalist group advocating armed struggle against
Israel.
-/AFP
Arafat,
left, sits with members of the Palestine Liberation Organisation,
formed in 1964 as an umbrella union of groups fighting against Israel's
takeover of Palestine. After 1967's Six-Day War, Arafat's Fatah gained
prominence, and he became PLO chief in 1969.
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Arafat
(right) stands next to a machine gun in in Lebanon, where the PLO
relocated after King Hussein expelled it from Jordan in 1971. It
remained based in Lebanon until 1982, when the Israeli army invaded the
country and forced the PLO to relocate to Tunisia.
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The
PLO was granted observer status at the UN in 1974 shortly after Arafat
addressed the UN General Assembly, which then recognised the right of
the Palestinian people to sovereignty.
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Arafat,
right, met with Saddam Hussein, then-president of Iraq, in October
1988. Two months later, Arafat recognised Israel's right to exist and
renounced violence in a speech to the UN General Assembly, leading US
President Ronald Reagan to lift a 13-year ban on talks with the PLO.
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After
the First Intifada (1987-1993), the PLO and Israel negotiated the Oslo
Accords - intended to be a framework for future talks - which allowed
Arafat to return to Gaza in July 1994. The deal established the
Palestinian Authority, of which Arafat became president in 1996.
ERIK JOHANSEN/AFP
Folowing
the Oslo Accords deal, Arafat (left), then-Israeli Foreign Minister
Shimon Peres (centre), and then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin won
the Nobel Peace Prize in December 1994.
AMR NABIL/AFP/Getty Images
Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Barak, left, and Arafat shake hands after signing
an agreement on September 4, 1999, paving the way for talks on a
permanent peace deal. In July 2000, nine days of talks at Camp David
ended with Arafat and Barak failing to reach a lasting peace settlement.
ABBAS MOMANI/AFP/Getty Images
The
Second Intifada, a period of intensified violence, began in late
September 2000. In December 2001, Israel retaliated to a slew of suicide
bombings by destroying much of Arafat's Ramallah headquarters,
essentially forcing him into house arrest.
ATEF SAFADI/EPA
Responding
to US pressure to have Arafat relinquish some of his power, the PA
elected a prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, for the first time in April
2003. Abbas resigned the following September and was succeeded by Ahmed
Qurei, but Arafat remained the primary decision maker.
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Arafat
died on November 11, 2004, after falling ill the previous month. For
many, Arafat remains a powerful embodiment of the Palestinian cause,
which he spearheaded for almost four decades.