The Palestinians, who have long cried foul, with some pointing the finger directly at Israel, cited today apparent inconsistencies between the French findings and separate ones from Switzerland and Russia that gave currency to alleged poisoning by polonium.
"The Swiss and Russian reports, as well as the investigations carried out over the past nine months by the Palestinian team confirm that Arafat did not die of disease or of old age," said Ahmed Assaf, spokesman for Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's Fatah party.
"We in Fatah believe... Israel alone is behind this crime, and we intend to get to the culprits."
Israel has consistently denied having a hand in Arafat's death at a French military hospital, and foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told AFP today the results of the French probe were "no surprise."
French doctors were unable to say in 2004 what killed Arafat, and an autopsy was never performed, at the request of his widow, Suha.
But a 2004 French hospital report said Arafat had "four symptoms" whose simultaneous occurrence could not be explained by natural illness or disease.
However, a 2004 French hospital report did say Arafat had "four symptoms" whose simultaneous occurrence could not be explained by natural illness or disease.
In the latest report, French experts ruled out poisoning, and believe Arafat may have died of natural causes, a source close to the probe said yesterday.
Those findings differ significantly from those of Swiss scientists, who said last month their research offered some support for the suggestion that significantly higher-than-normal amounts of polonium killed Arafat.
"I'm still completely convinced that the martyr Arafat did not die a natural death, and I will keep trying to get to the truth," she said.
"I'm shocked by (the results of) the French medical report, of which I only received four summary pages to look at.
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