World Protests Mount Against Plane's Hijacking (Continued from Page 1) on the incident, it was being em- phasized that every plane which had landed inadvertently in Israel —including Arab planes and Arab passengers—had been released promptly. In still another pressure move, the government published a formal statement calling the hijacking of the plane and its 38 passengers and 10 crew members "an inter- national crime of the greatest severity, contravening interna- tional law and morality." The statement warned that Israel would make "full use of her rights in the United Nations bodies" and would "examine the steps necessary to attain her just aim which is the immediate release of the plane crew and passengers." One of the factors involved in the matter of the timing of the request for a Security Council session was understood to be an expected report on the success or failure of the mission of Capt. 0. L. A. Forsberg of Finland, vice- president of the 33,000-member International Airline Pilots Asso- ciation. who was sent to Algeria to seek release of the plane and the male detainees. The pilots' or- ganization has threatened to boy- cott flights to and from Algeria unless the Algerian government acted to release the plane and the Israeli nationals. The cabinet also was waiting for Algeria's official response to a request from UN ecretary-General U Thant to re- he airliner and the de.- told the Geneva press that they had been well treated and had received good food while in de- tention. They said that Algerian officials had assured them that the remaining detainees • would be freed "within seven days." (The Italian Foreign Ministry reported Algiers had given as- surances that the crew and pas- sengers were in perfect health.) Israeli sources said security of- ficials had learned the identity of the three men who hijacked the El Al jetliner Tuesday and their places of origin. Foreign Minister Eban called in Aldo Pierantoni, the Italian minister. and stressed the importance of Italian inter- vention since the hijacking had occurred in Italian air space while the plane was en route from Rome to Lydda.- Since Algeria is still technically at war with Israel. it is conduct- ing a "full-scale investigation" to determine if the $6,000,000 jet and the Israelis should be held. London's Sunday Observer re- ported that the Algerian govern- ment was engaged in tough - nego- tiations with leaders of the Arab Front for the Liberation of Pales- tine about the hijacked plane, who claim credit for the hijacking. It reported that President Houari Boumedienne has apparently not yet been persuaded to accept the Front's proposal to keep the air- craft and crew as a means of forc- ing Israel to treat captured El Fatah members as prisoners of war (or to • release them). The president has to balance this re- quest against the national inter- ests of his country, the paper said. Israel has not signed the 1963 Tokyo draft convention for the prevention of aircraft hijacking but its contents are being studied, transport ministry sources said in reply to questions by JTA. Out of the entire United Nations mem- bership, fewer than 10 states have signed the convention, approved by the International Civil Aviation Organization, a UN agency, and it is still not in force. An Israeli passenger on the hijacked plane, who was among those flown to Paris from the Algiers airport because he had kept an Austrian passport, de- scribed how he had quietly eaten piecemeal during the flight to Algiers a picture of him and Israeli Defense Minis- ter Moshe Dayan which he feared would cause his deten- tion. Dr. Jacob Low of Zichron Yaacov had been on his way home binet meeting began with by Transport Minister armel, who described sures implemented on anes to diminish future g actions. He reported the number of passengers on El Al flights not only had not declined in the wake of the hi- jacking but that many air travel- ers had asked that their tickets on s other airlines be endorsed to El Al so that they could fly on the Israeli airline planes. Eban told the meeting that all Security Council members with which Israel has diplomatic rela- tions had been approached on the issue. He said it appeared that all contacted would vote at the projected Security Council meet- ing to call on Algeria to release immediately the plane and the detainees. He reported that Thant and his undersecretary, Dr. Ralph Bunche, were taking "vigorous ac- tion" to obtain Algerian compli- ance, out of fears that the hijack- ing and continuation of the present situation could endanger peace in the Middle East. He said also that several governments had expressed to Israel deep concern N over the possible results of such air piracy and the cooperation of any government in such acts. The government statement called the hijacking "a case of armed r o b b e r y perpetrated against defenseless civilians" and urged world press and pub- lic opinion "to continue protest- ing against this wanton act." In an earlier statement to the newspaper Yediot Ahronot, Car• mel said that it was difficult to believe that "the Arabs entertain the illusion that while Israeli air- lines are vulnerable" to hijacking, "theirs are immune. This will not be the case." He also said that Egypt "will not emerge clean" from the incident because that country housed and encouraged the Arab terrorist organizations which have claimed "credit" for the The late Sen. Robert F. Ken- aerial thievery. Calling the situa- tion created by the hijacking "a nedy, shown addressing the 39th annual national convention of double-edged sword," the trans- the Mizrachi Women's Organ- port minister expressed the hope that the Arabs would have "sec- ization of America, has been ond thoughts" about it. named recipient, posthumously, The 10 Israeli women and of the 1968 Amer i c a-Israel children—including three air Friendship Award. It will be pre- hostesses—released Saturday by sented at the organization's con- Algeria and flown by Swissair vention opening in Jerusalem to Geneva arrived at Lydda Air- and closing in New York Sept. port in Israel Sunday. They 15. Robert F. Kennedy • • amed Recipient of Mizraciii Award 48 Friday, August 2, 1968 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS from Tokyo where he had attended an international conference. After the Arab terrorists took control of the airliner over Italy, Dr. Low began eating the photograph and manager to finish the "meal" be- fore the plane was landed at Algiers airport. Because of the Austrian passport, Algerian offi- cials considered Dr. Low a foreign national and released him. He flew back to Israel July 25. Dr. Low related that the pas- sengers who were flown to Paris saw the crew of the Boeing 707 for the last time when the crew members passed' by near a window of the room in which the depart- ing passengers were held. He asked one of the crew whether Israel knew about the hijacking and added that one of the host- esses nodded. He also reported that the passengers and crew had been divided into three groups by their Algerian captors—the crew, Israelis and holders of foreign passports. Israeli officials said an examina- tion of the Boeing's manifest and passenger list indicated that three of the passengers were unac- counted for and that they pre- sumably were the hijackers. One was named Fazal, who had an India passport. Another was named Shimiyoun, with an Iran= ian passport, and the third was named Gachkoob with an India or Iranian passport. Officials said that it appeared that at least one of the three was a former resident of Jaffa. The terrorist who cap- tured the plane's cockpit was re- portedly a Syrian Air Force officer. The Christian Science Monitor reported from Beirut that the Al- gerian government is in a dilemma over the question. The paper's Mid- dle East correspondent said that the hijackers had added to inter- Arab tensions and had put Algeria in a position where refusal to re- lease the Israeli plane "endangers Algeria's own international posi- tion" and could result in the re- fusal of foreign airlines to con- tinue service into Algiers. The correspondent said Arab airlines "are vulnerable to Israeli inter- ception." The Monitor said that if Israel decided to take reprisals against the Arabs for the hijacking, she would be "at a decided advan- tage." The paper pointed out that "there are\ far more Arab airlines and they are far more vulnerable than Israel's El Al with its total of 14 planes (of which only seven are the firm's own property; the others are chartered)." "Jewish agents," according to the Monitor, "could pose easily as members of any of the na- tionalities that frequent Arab air lanes and with the efficiency of Israel's secret services, leg- endary since the kidnaping of Adolf Eichmann, havoc could be wrought on the air traffic of at least half a dozen countries." The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) a United Na- tions agency to which both Israel and Algeria belong, said that it had been in communication with all parties involved in the plane incident but had not had replies from all the parties. The ICAO was one of the first agencies to which Israel turned after the hijacking of the plane last Tuesday. It was assumed from the ICAO statement that the Alge- rian government, which had failed to reply to the United Nations sec- retary-general, had also failed to reply to the aviation agency. In Brussels, a foreign ministry communique reported that the Bel- gian government had expressed concern over the violation of inter- national principles in matters of air navigation but denied that it had intervened in Algiers. The min- istry also denied reports published in a Brussels newspaper Monday that an air crew of Sabena, the Belgian airline, would be sent to Algiers to fly out the Israeli plane and the Israeli prisoners. Thant received no elucidation Tuesday in a meeting with the Algerian ambassador, Tewfik Bouattoura, about what his gov- ernment's intentions were. Thant was reported to have ca- bled President Houari Boumedi- enne last week urgently asking for the release of the airliner and pris- oners. According to information received in Washington, the Alger- ian Cabinet, after protracted argu- ment, was now prepared to release the prisoners but could not agree on the timing of the action. Col. Boumedienne was described as wanting to hold the plane as booty and the passengers and crew as hosatges on the grounds that Al- geria is technically at war with Israel. Foreign Minister Abdel Haziz Bouteflika was said to be arguing for prompt release of plane and prisoners to allay inter- national criticism of Algeria. He said Algeria was in no way involv- ed with the hijacking of the plane. Senator Clark Speaks tine, interviewed in Beirut, said the plane will not be released be- cause it is viewed as "an instru- ment of war." He said the 12 men who are detained will be exchanged for the 1,000 Palestinian com- mandos jailed in Israel, stating: "The Israelis have said one Is- raeli is worth 100 Arabs, so the rate of exchange for our 12 prison- ers is about right." Several hundred young people, representing the New York Jew- ish Youth Council, picketed the Algeria Mission to the United Nations for 90 minutes on Wed- nesday demanding the return of the hijacked El Al aircraft and the detained crew and passengers. They carried placards reading: "Stop Terrorism in the Air," "Al- geria—Make Love, Not War" and "Americans Protest Air Piracy." The council represents the major Jewish youth and college organizations in the metropolitan area, embracing a membership of several hundred thousand. WASHINGTON (JTA) — Sen. Hebrew Corner Joseph S.- Clark, Pennsylvania Democrat, said in the senate that the Arab hijacking of an Israeli commercial airliner represents "a new and frightening threat to the Prof. Chaim Weizmann, the first - presi- security of air travelers of all dent of the State of Israel, was born nations." in the year of 1873 in a village near Pinsk in Russia. On account of the A member of the Senate Czar's oppression- against the Jews, he went to Switzerland, where he studied Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. chemistry. he was appointed an Clark said the action was "a seri- instructor Later in chemistry at the Uni- ous and unprecedented escalation versity of Manchester, England. During the First World War he in- of the Arab cold war against Is- vented an important chemical compound that helped in the English victory over rael." the German submarines. Through this The Senator said the hijacking he was successful in bringing the Eng- government in contact with Zion- was "one step over the brink" and lish ism. Lloyd George was prime minister asked how the United States would and Lord Balfour was foreign minister. November 2, 1917, Weizmann received respond if Chinese Communist On from the English foreign minister the terrorists hijacked a Pan-Ameri- known "Balfour Declaration," in con- nection with the upbuilding of a Jew- can airliner. He called on Algeria ish national home in the Land of to release the plane, with its crew Israel. To build the National Home, and all passengers, at once. Sen. Weizmann went to the Jews of the United States and asked for money to Clark also demanded a trial of build the country. Weizmann, the scholar and known the hijackers for "piracy" with chemist, founded in 1934 in Rehovot the "appropriate punishment." Sen. "Ziv Institute" for research in physics Clark said the hijacking "was a and biochemistry. 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