Yasser Abd Rabbo

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Yasser Abd Rabbo (Arabic:ياسر عبد ربه) (Abu Bashar ابو بشار) is a Palestinian politician (b. in Jaffa 1944/45). Member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization's Executive Committee. He holds an M.A. in Economics and Political Science from the American University in Cairo.[1]

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Yassir Abd Rabbo started his political career in the Pan-Arab ANM, the Arab Nationalist Movement. When the Palestinian branch of the ANM evolved in 1967 into the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), he became one of its leaders. In 1969, the PFLP split, and a faction under Nayef Hawatmeh formed the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, in 1974 renamed the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), of which Abd Rabbu became a main leader.

During the 1980s, Abd Rabbu moved closer to the position of Yassir Arafat, leader of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), and supported his attempts to negotiate a two-state solution. This led to friction within the DFLP, and as Arafat gave his blessings to the Madrid Conference of 1991, the organization split. Abd Rabbo, supported by Arafat, headed a faction mainly based in the West Bank, that backed these negotiations, and he became one of the Palestinian leader's main advisors; Hawatmeh's Syria-based DFLP faction resisted the talks. The Abd Rabbo faction reformed as FIDA, the Palestine Democratic Union, dropping the Marxist-Leninist platform of the DFLP and rescinding armed struggle. Abd Rabbo became FIDA's representative on the PLO Executive Committee. In 1993, however, Abd Rabbo left his post at the Madrid delegation in protest, when he discovered that Arafat had initiated another round of talks without informing him (these parallel negotiations eventually led to the 1993 Oslo Accords.

After the signing of the Oslo Accords - which Abd Rabbo supported, the Madrid controversy notwithstanding - Abd Rabbo was permitted by Israel to return to the West Bank. He was a cabinet member for FIDA in several of Arafat's Palestinian National Authority (PNA) governments, and served on several Palestinian diplomatic delegations during negotiations with Israel (including the failed Camp David 2000 Summit). He also presented several unofficial peace initiatives, widely believed to have had Arafat's blessing, such as the 2003 Geneva Accord. These initiatives, coupled with his public condemnations of suicide bombing attacks during the al-Aqsa Intifada, strengthened Abd Rabbo's image as a pro-peace moderate, and he is often presented as a Palestinian "dove".

In 2002, he resigned from FIDA after internal disputes. Women's rights activist Zahira Kamal had been chosen in an internal election to replace him as minister[2] in the government of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), but Abd Rabbo refused to step down, and instead left the party. He was able to remain in the cabinet as an independent, with Arafat's backing, but was replaced in FIDA by Saleh Ra'fat, its current Secretary-General.

After the death of Yassir Arafat, Abd Rabbo was removed from the post of minister in the PNA government by Arafats successor, Mahmoud Abbas. Pending new elections, he remains on the Executive Committee of the PLO.

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