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Foreign Minister Douglas
Hogg was expected to invite
Mr. Arafat to visit London,
the London Jewish Chroni-
cle has learned. Mr. Hogg
and Mr. Arafat were ex-
pected to meet later this
week in Timis.
A visit to London would
boost Mr. Arafat's standing
in the administered ter-
ritories, where his sup-
porters face opposition from
Palestinian militants.
In London, Mr. Safieh told
the audience of Jewish
leaders and Arab diplomats
that recent polls indicate
there is overwhelming sup-
port for the self-rule accord
among Palestinians.
A survey taken in Gaza, he
said, revealed that more
than 70 percent are in favor
of the accord, while 11 per-
cent oppose it.
"History is in the mak-
ing," Mr. Safieh declared.
"History is on the move."
The PLO official stated
that the PLO's goal is to
create a Palestinian state
living peacefully "side by
side with Israel."
Mr. Safieh, who called the
Israel-PLO accord a
"splendid" achievement,
said that the problem of
Jerusalem could be solved by

The meeting
focused on the
need to encourage
dialogue.

making it the capital of both
Israel and Palestine. "It
should remain undivided
with free access to every-
one," he said.
In Sydney, Australia, the
elected head of the
Australian Jewish commun-
ity and the representative of
the Palestine Liberation
Organization in Australia
took part for the first time in
a direct, person-to-person
exchange.
The meeting last week
between Isi Leibler, presi-
dent of the Executive Coun-
cil of Australian Jewry, and
PLO representative Ali
Kazak focused on the need to
encourage dialogue between
Australian Jews and
Muslims and on ways in
which Australians and the
Australian government
could support projects that
would provide economic as-
sistance to the Middle East.
In Belgium, PLO repre-
sentative Chawki Armali
met with the Jewish com-
munity and, for more than
an hour, took part in a radio
show organized by the
Belgian Jewish radio sta-
tion, Radio Judaica. LI

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