Weep for Palestine. President George W. Bush, ably assisted by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, administered the last rites to a state that has been in the process of being born since the Oslo agreements projected the prospect of peace.
Sharon buried Oslo years ago by decimating the Palestinian Authority and destroying its infrastructure with the stated objective of breaking the Palestinians' will to resist. And now he has dealt the coup de grace by securing American consent to the negation of a Palestinian state.
In a week the world heard Orwellian talk of an audacity unrivalled in the 21st century, President Bush termed Sharon a courageous man for proposing to withdraw Jewish settlements from the Gaza Strip and gave him all he asked for - and more.
Israeli settlements on the West Bank can stay, contrary to what UN resolutions have said, and the millions of Palestinian refugees ejected from homes on the founding of the Israeli state in 1948 have no right to return to today's Israel.
The wall Israel is building by robbing Palestinians of more land, separating families from farmland and schools and health centres, can be completed. This much has to be said for President Bush: he has dispensed with the pretence of being an honest broker between Palestinians and Israel - no US administration ever was.
The US is now even more firmly aligned with the state of Israel as the occupation of Iraq is merging with Tel Aviv's aims. As President Bush's record shows, he has little time for international treaties and commitments, except when it suits his purpose, as in going back to the United Nations to cope with the consequences of the invasion of Iraq.
Standing truth on its head, George W. Bush has performed the miracle of holding aloft the tattered "roadmap" to peace as an exhibit. And the loyal Tony Blair of Britain, desperate to save shreds of his self-respect in parroting the US president, hugged the "roadmap", after his buddy had flogged a dead horse.
Where do we go from here and how will the outrage and anger that is sweeping the Arab world impact on events? Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak, President Bush's guest at his ranch days before the latter gave Palestine to Sharon on a silver platter, said he was "shocked".
And Jordan's King Abdullah is being presented with a fait accompli. Not for the first time, the leaders of the Arab world will demonstrate their impotence, Egypt weighed down by an annual American subsidy of $2 billion, and Jordan trying to survive as a small country in a dangerous world as best it can.
Yet the Arab leaders' dilemmas have grown immeasurably as America aligns itself with Israel more blatantly. They cannot continue to prevaricate in seeking to douse the anger of their peoples by seeking US benevolence and protection while allowing their media to vent their peoples' fury on Americans.
For one thing, the Arab leaders will be unable to contain the people within the constraints of rhetoric, as the curious episode involving a Jordanian police officer's firefight with his American counterparts in Kosovo shows.
For another, they will have to make greater efforts at achieving a measure of unity. The scheduled meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference in Malaysia on May 4 could be one opportunity to put heads together, but similar meetings have yielded little of substance.
There will be consequences for the rest of the world, the Israeli-Palestinian confrontation becoming a new rallying cause in the face of the great American betrayal. Israel might have succeeded in merging its suppression of Palestinians with America's occupation of Iraq and "war on terror".
But much of the world will resist the thesis that a people fighting for their independence from an alien ruler can be clubbed with plain terrorists, that Israel has acquired the right of banishing Palestinians to Bantustans, walled in and denied access to friends and neighbours and the wider world, except through humiliating Israeli check posts.
Israel is never slow to make its points. Buoyed by President Bush's carte blanche, 25 days after killing the spiritual leader of Hamas, Sheikh Yassin, an Israeli helicopter gunship has assassinated his successor, Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi.
The pitiful US response was to call for restraint "on both sides"; even in undertaking targeted killings, Israel retains US sympathy. And consider what Sharon has proposed on evacuating Jewish settlements on Gaza Strip, apparently by the end of next year.
Even after Israel withdraws its settlements, a territory 36 square kilometres in size holding 1.3 million people, it will control its air and sea space and border crossings. Further, it will retain a strip adjoining the border with Egypt which will be patrolled by its army. Palestinians then can wallow in misery, sealed off from their relations and friends on the West Bank, forgotten by the world.
The European Union has demurred on Sharon's highway robbery, expressing its reservations on America's decision to go back on previous US and United Nations commitments. The nearest the Israeli-Palestinian conflict came to resolution was during the dying days of President Clinton's second term.
Some 96 per cent of the West Bank and the whole of the Gaza Strip was to be given back to the Palestinians, with Jerusalem serving as a capital of both states. The absorption of major Jewish settlements around Jerusalem by Israel was to be compensated by the giving up of equivalent Jewish land.
The question of the Palestinian refugees' right of return to their original homes remained unresolved but a compromise of a symbolic number returning to Israel while compensating the rest was on the cards.
The so-called Quartet - comprising the US, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations can only indulge in rhetoric to save Blair's political career and its own embarrassment to deal with the sea-change in the situation.
Sharon, with the connivance of the Bush administration, has successfully aced Oslo and the Clinton compromise. The United States and the world must now steel themselves against the coming storm.
There will be a surge in violence, directed in particular at Israel, the US and Britain, and new spectacular acts of terrorism can be expected, despite the heightened state of alert in these countries.
At any rate, Americans are now adopting Israeli methods in seeking to retain control of occupied Iraq even as they are using pressure and guile to get the world to police Iraq. The latest ploy is to invite troops to guard United Nations installations and personnel - of course under US command. Unlike Tony Blair, the US refuses to give the UN a "central role" in Iraq, America demonstrating yet again that Britain does not count.
In short, the United States' adoption of the Israeli agenda to reform West Asia and the world is a dangerous development. Palestinians will never accept defeat.
The writer is a former editor of The Statesman and Khaleej Times.
Tough times for detainees in Britain
By Audrey Gillan
The first of the Muslim detainees released from London's Belmarsh high security prison after being held on suspicion of terrorism has said that his fellow prisoners are suffering such severe mental problems that they constantly consider suicide.
In his first interview since being released from the jail, after judges said there was no evidence that he was a terrorist, detainee M said being held without charge and without limit of time has made his fellow prisoners "crazy".
"Their situation has become very, very difficult for them," he said. "Three or four of them have become mad, exactly mad. They can't control themselves, they are not thinking in a good way." His claims came on the day that another detainee, G - neither can be named for legal reasons - was released from Belmarsh to become the first prisoner in Britain to be held under house arrest because he is too mentally ill to stay in prison.
The decision marks another embarrassing defeat for the British home secretary David Blunkett, who had fought to prevent both G and M from being released.
The UK's Special Immigration Appeals Commission ruled that G had become mentally deranged in Belmarsh and that his detention meant he was in danger of self-harm. He will now reside at his home under strict bail conditions and will be cared for by mental health workers.
According to M, G explained to him that he knew suicide was against Islam but he took consolation in an interpretation under the circumstances. "If you are lost in the desert and you don't have any food and drink but you have a bottle of wine, which is forbidden, then it is allowed for us to stay alive," he said. "I am in prison, I am thinking of taking my own life because I would do less harm than what prison is doing to me."
M stated, "One of them understands that he is crazy, because his situation is worse than the others. He thinks that everybody wants to kill him, that maybe he will lose his wife. "It is unlawful to detain people inside prison indefinitely and the situation is made worse because of the situation in the prison, where you are inside four walls for most of the time."
The 38-year-old Libyan claims that two of the detaineees have become full-time carers for their fellow prisoners because they are now so obviously sick. He recalled how he was once woken at 3am and asked by a prison officer to look after G. "Sometimes he is crying, sometimes he said: 'I would like to kill myself, I can't stay alone in my cell.' He is just thinking: 'When am I going to die?'"
M claims Belmarsh cannot cope with mental health issues but the British Home Office argues that each prisoner has the same healthcare provision inside as they would receive outside.
"They say they have healthcare in Belmarsh but it doesn't make a difference. They will take you from your single cell, they will put you with other people and maybe they are more mad than you. They will give you tablets to make you sleep and that's it. They are not coping with the situation. I have seen people become worse. It is absolutely appalling conditions."
M said he had not contemplated suicide but it has been reported that at least one of the other men attempted it. "I don't know if they have tried (suicide) but they are thinking about it," M said. "The reason is because they do not know if they will ever be released."
Recently, the UK Home Office said: "Anyone held in a high-security establishment has access to 24-hour healthcare. They are regularly seen by healthcare professionals and anyone can request a psychiatric assessment at any time, as can their legal representatives, and they will be seen." - Dawn Guardian News Service