tJn Relevancy Hinges on Action in Urgent Matters, Anti-Terror Committee UNITED NATIONS (JTA) —The U.S. representative to the 35-nation United Nations ad hoc committee on inter- national terrorism told the committee that prompt UN action to deal with the prob- lem was urgent. Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett, deputy permanent representative on the Secur- ity Council, said that "If the United Nations is to be con- sidered an organization rele- vant to the needs of today's world, it is going to have to grapple with and seek rea- sonable compromises on is- sues of urgency, even though approaches to such issues may be greatly divergent, as in the present case." Bennett added that the U.S. believes that the ad hoc committee "can and ought to make significant progress" in dealing with the immedi- ate problem, "the export of violence to innocent per- sons." He said actions must be taken in such a way as "to strengthen basic human rights" and that there was no reason "why measures to protect human life should conflict with other human rights, such as self-determin- ation and individual liberty." Bennett proposed adoption of a convention dealing with the spread of international terrorism to third countries as one that could be taken now. The Japanese representa- tive at the ad hoc committee said the recent hijacking of the Japan Air Lines jumbo jet stressed again the seri- ousness of the problem of international terrorism and the urgent need to adopt ef- fective measures at the na- tional as well as the inter- national level. Tadashi Ohtaka said the General Assembly should condemn international ter- rorism, and concrete meth- ods for combatting it should be established and put into effect as soon as possible. In Tel Aviv Transport Minister Shimon Peres said it is imperative for interna- tional organizations respon- sible for air travel safety to meet inunediately to imple- ment measures to ensure such safety. Speaking to representatives of airline companies, Peres called for an about war against hijackers: a war against terrorists by every nation, punishment of hi- jackers and preventing them from finding asylum in any country, and alertness at air- ports by airport authorities and airlines. For e i g n Minister Abba Eban said the Japanese jet- liner affair proved the futility of hijacking. He said its finale in Benghazi showed Libya to be the "pathologi- cal capital of the world." Speaking to an internation- al audience of visiting youth, Eban said Libya is the place "to which the crazed hi- jackers almost naturally gravitated." Contentions that Israel was vulnerable to such attacks, Eban said, proved to be exaggerated by the fact that the abductors refrained from entering Is- raeli air space. (The Libyan government announced that the hijackers of the JAL jumbo jet will go on trial as common crim- inals. No date for the trial was given in the announce- ment of the Libyan informa- tion minister. (Libyan authorities said they rejected the hijackers' appeal to be "treated as revolutionaries struggling against tyranny." The gov- ernment is sure the hijackers are not defenders of any cause but are after only money, adventure and fame, it said.) In Amsterdam the chair- man of the Dutch Civil Avia- tion Commission, Jan C. Fonteyn, said that "not much can be done" to prevent air- line hijacking and contended that "the world will have to learn to live with airline hi- jackings as it has learned to live with traffic accidents." Speaking on Dutch tele- vision, Fonteyn said Holland had "tried to learn every- thing possible" from the se- curity methods of other coun- tries but, he added, "there has unfortunately been in- sufficient international coop- eration in this area." He did not elaborate. The government commis- sion confirmed that none of the passengers on the hi- jacked Japan Airline plane had undergone security checks because the Tokyo- bound plane was not con- sidered a security risk. The commission was established 21/2 years ago. In Bonn, a leading member of the Christian Democratic Union-Christian Socialist Union opposition in West Germany, Alfred Dregger, who is 'chairman of the Hesse CDU, called on the Bonn government "to wage relentless war on interna- tonal terrorism." Territories Included in JNF Land Hunt JERUSALEM (JTA)—Yaa- cov Tsur, chairman of the Jewish National Fund, said here that the JNF's policy was to acquire as much land as possible, wherever it was possible, including the ter- ritories. But Tsur, in a radio inter- view, would not go into de- tails, saying it was better to talk less about these matters. He did say that land is be- ing acquired in the Gush Et- Zion area for the development of existing settlements. Tsur said land was bought from anyone willing to sell it, including companies and re- ligious institutions. But he said it was governmental policy that the land be bought only by public bodies. Meanwhile, the JNF has announced it will build a 6-5- kilometer four mile road to link Nazareth to British Royal Forest which was planted earlier this year to honor Queen Elizabeth II sil- ver wedding anniversary. The forest, on Mount Deb- orah, will have 1,000,000 trees. The road, which will be constructed by blasting out bedrock, will provide a scenic view of the Jezreel Valley, one of Israel's most beautiful spots. Dregger said the fight against terrorism could only succeed if all states proved their determination to pur- sue acts of violence inde- pendent of political oppor- tunism. He said he fully supported the Japanese government's demand on Libya for the ex- tradition of the terrorists who hijacked the Japan Air Line jumbo jet. Dregger also demanded that the West German gov- ernment should go back to their decision not to ask, for legal and political reasons, for the extradition from Lib- ya of the three. surviving Arab assassins responsible for the Munich Olympic mas- sacre last September. He said this decision made "a sheer mockery of the system of international law." At a press conference in East Berlin, Palestine Liber- ation Organization leader Yassir Arafat disclaimed any responsibility by the PLO for the Japan Air Lines hi- jack and said the perpetra- tors should be punished. Arafat also a tt a ck ed Bonn's policy on Israel. He said thousands of millions of dollars had been sucked out of the German workers to support Israel. Arafat has been in East Berlin for talks on coopera- tion and on establishing a PLO office in the East Ger- man capital and to attend the East German World Youth Festival. Meanwhile, 20 young Israeli Communists were snubbed at the festival. According to re ports reaching Bonn, this was on Moscow's orders to East Germany because of the presence of Arafat. Letter Bomb Found In Jerusalem JERUSALEM (JTA) — A letter bomb was discovered Monday in the Jerusalem sorting office, police an- nounced. It was defused harmlessly. 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