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November 19, 1965 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-11-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Departure Date:
MARCH 16, 1966

23 DAYS

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(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to the Jewish News)
UNITED NATIONS — The Arab
states at the special political-com-
mittee, supported by the Soviet
bloc and a number of other mem-
bers, succeeded Wednesday in the
adoption of a Pakistan-Somalia
amendment to the United States
resolution regarding Arab refu-
gees.
The amendment In effect would
authorize a new method for giving
relief to the Arab refugees by the
UN Relief and Work Agency for
Palestine refugees. The amend-
ment was adopted on a roll call
vote of 43 in favor, 39 opposed and
24 abstentions. Israel, supported
by the United States, Britain,
France and Canada, was among
those casting the negative votes.
The action took place in the
General Assembly's special pol-
itical comittee after Israel had
withdrawn an amendment to the
U.S. draft which would have
called upon the Arab states and
Israel to negotiate a solution of
the Arab refugee problem.
After the vote on the amendment
which had been introduced on be-
half of the Arab states by Paki-
stan and Somalia, the United
States asked for and received an
adjournment of the meeting to
consider whether it wanted its
resolution put to a vote with the
approved amendment.

* * *

Britain Opposes Funds
for Arab Refugees Serving
Palestine Liberation Army

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA)
— Britain told the General As-
sembly's special political commit-
tee, which has been debating the
Arab refugee issue for five weeks,
that it is oppossed to the giving
of any. UN aid for the support of
"political or militant activities."
Without mentioning the Pale-
stine Liberation Organization, an
army formed by the Arab
states for recruitment of Arab
refugees into a military force
for war against Israel, C. Peter
Hope, Britain's representative in
the committee, said that his gov-
ernment has for years been giv-
ing funds to the United Nations
Relief and Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees — but only
"for humanitarian relief." The
resources of UNRWA, he in-
sisted, "should be used to assist
genuine refugees, genuinely in
need."
Thus, the British delegate sup-
ported two of Israel's contentions
in this year's refugee debate —
opposing giving of UNRWA aid to
those refugees who enlist in the
PLO, and telling the committee
that UNRWA should rectify its
relief rolls so as to deny further
relief to the many thousands of
fraudulent claimants for UN aid.

Nazi Forced Father
to Hang Son, Witness
Recalls at Trial of 12

BONN — A former prisoner at
Sobibor concentration camp in Po-
land testified here that he saw
Nazis force a father to hang his
son when the youth refused to hang
his father.
Jakob Biskubicz, 39, recalled the
incident at the trial of 12 former
SS guards at the camp. Biskubicz,
now a police official in Tel Aviv,
said a German SS (Elite Guard)
overseer "supervised" the hang-
ing at a gallows near the camp.
The witness said he could not
identify the guard who ordered the
hanging, but he named Karl Fren-
zel, one of the accused, as the
guard he saw seize a baby from
the arms of its mother and tear it
apart.
The former guards are accused
of participating in the murder of
between 1,500,000 a n d 1,750,000
Jews at the Sobibor camp.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, November 19, 1965-5

Prior to the voting on the amend-
ment, the sponsors withdrew one
clause in their document which
would have "deplored Israel's
`continued refusal' to heed a 1948
Assembly resolution which, they
contended, called for repatriation
or compensation for the Arab
refugees.
Israel had reiterated its readi-
ness to negotiate directly with the
Arab states in regard to solution
of the Arab refugee problem. At
the same time, Israel rejected
firmly any proposals that would
impose upon its government a
United Nations custodian for
property which the Arabs claim
to have abandoned in Israel.
Both points were made Tuesday
in the special political committee
by Ambassador Michael S. Comay,
chairman of Israel's delegation to
the United Nations, who intro-
duced Israel's amendment to the
resolution presented by the United
States.
The U.S. draft, among other
things, refers to a 1948 Assembly
resolution dealing with "repatria-
tion" of the refugees to Israel and
compensation by Israel.
Comay's amendment would have
struck out that reference, substi-
tuting an appeal to the Arab gov-
ernment and to Israel to "under-
take direct negotiations" on the
refugee issue and pledging the
UN's assistance to the "finding of
an agreed solution."
The Israeli ambassador's state-
ment rejecting the idea of a U.N.
custodian referred to a separate
resolution introduced by three
Moslem states — Afghanistan,
Malaysia and Somalia. In that
draft ,the Moslems, as a front
for the Arab states, called for
the naming of a UN custodian
"to protect and administer Arab
property, assets and property
rights in Israel and to receive
income derived therefrom on be-
half of the rightful owners."
As he had stated in the commit-
tee earlier, Comay Tuesday again
affirmed that the United Nations
has no jurisdiction whatever over
any properties inside Israel. Such
properties, he insisted, are sub-
ject only to Israeli domestic law,
and a UN custodianship would
violate Israel's sovereignty.
Moslems' own amendment to the
U.S. draft, which they withdrew
before the vote, sought to strength-
en the reference to the 1948 reso-
lution by urging Israel "not to
obstruct any further implementa-
tion" and "deploring Israel's con-
tinued refusal" to implement the
provisions voted in 1948.

It was pointed out here by Isra-
el that the 1948 document was
only "permissive" in character
and did not obligate Israel either
to repatriation or compensation.
United States sources had said
here Tuesday that the main aim of
the U.S. draft was merely to vote
continuance of the mandate of the
United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine refugees for
a three-year term beyond the
agency's present mandate, which
is to expire in June, and to assure
that UNRWA can continue to aid
the Arab refugees.
The U.S. draft would also direct

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