THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6 October 3, 1975 ixxxxxxxxxxxxx x FOUND IN x x DETROIT X• THE LOST ART OF TAILORING XWhere? At Steve Petix, the home of the immaculate fit in custom, tailored-to- measure or quality brand X clothing. X . Open 9-6 daily (to 530 Sat ) v 9-9 Thurs. & Fri. "N Arrtpte perking Credit cards accepted .3< . . >c > >< ,.. .„ 31455 SOUTHFIELD ROAD / 645-5560 >< „, A Between t3 & 14 c1 re A XXXXXXX XX XXXX Police Agency Shuns Crackdown on International Terror (Editor's note: This is the last in a series of arti- cles by London scholar and researcher S. A. Barram on Interpol, the interna- tional police agency, its Nazi ties in the past, and its threat to modern so- ciety.) BY S. A. BARRAM The international charac- ter of modern terrorism has made it virtually impossible for a single national police force to deal with it. There- fore, to combat interna- tional crime successfully, the cooperation of law en- forcement agencies from many countries is needed. Such liaison in this con- nection, includes preventive measures—screening of travellers at airports and border posts, watching and trailing of suspects and most important, informa: tion relay on suspects' movements. Interpol, the Interna- tional Criminal Police Or- ganization, has been estab- lished just for this purpose—the combat of in- ternational crime. Whereas governments, in their dealings with ter- rorists, have been ham- pered by political and eco- nomic considerations, an international police force, if it were free of political and economic considera- tions, could effectively op- erate against terrorists. and find out how much you can save on a Thrifty®or Lifetime®muffler. 3826 N. Woodward (3 blks. N. of 13 Mile) Oak 350 Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-3 You'll never know how much you can save unless you call. However Interpol, which to many is an organization of super efficient detectives, dreaded by the interna- tional underworld, is far from an effective set-up in the combat of crime. Its arrest statistics, dur- ing the year ending 1970, showed 452 arrests, which would be a good average for a London Bobby. The statis- tic does not show convic- tions, as Interpol keeps only arrests records. Also, the number of ar- rests does not include ter- rorists, for Interpol ascribes political motives to interna- tional terrorism. According to article (3) of its Constitu- tion it refuses to get in- volved in the combat of ter- rorism: "It is strictly forbidden for the organiza- Southfield's Largest Olds Dealer Says . . . Put your cash ; to work . . . order your 1976 Oldsmobile Today! GOOD SELECTION OF 1975's STILL AVAILABLE OLDSMOBILE INC. 28000 TELEGRAPH at Tel-Twelve Mall Southfield, Mich. 48076 354-3300 BUY or LEASE scti tion to undertake any inter- vention or activities or a pol- itical, military, religious 6r racial character". Interpol, as the only world-wide organization which connects the police of over 120 member states, refrains from actively combatting murderers, extortionists and kidnap- pers and limits its scope of activity to the academic study of methods of terror- ism alone. The original intention of article (3) was the preven- tion of a recurrence of Inter- pol's World War II involve- ment in political police activities. The seizure of hostages, extortion, assassination massacre of civilians, whether Jewish or not, does not fall under the definition of political crime. To interpret the defini- tion to cover any violent act which has been mantled under a political label, is to evade due process of justice. It means that any ordi- nary gangsters which have made political attacks on wealthy individuals and cor- porations to camouflage standard kidnapping and gangsterism under the cloak of ideology, would fall under the protection granted by article (3) of Interpol's Con- stitution. The problem of interna- tional terrorism has been raised by several upright police delegates who in- tended to grip the problem at the Interpol Assembly in Cannes in 1974. However, what prospect of success could those dele- gates have had in the light of the numerous member states who overtly and cov- ertly support terrorism:- Al- geria, Bahrain, Cuba, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mordcco, Oman, Pak- istan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, Uganda, Union of Emirates, Zaire and others? Another effort was made this year in February. Avia- tion organizations insti- gated a congress at Interpol headquarters in Paris to co- ordinate the defense of air- lines and airports. Among the 32 countries who partici- pated at the congress were several Arab countries that support terrorism. For years international aviation organizations urged Interpol to change its attitude towards hijacking and terrorism. Their de- mands, based on interna- tionally accepted conven- tions, have been widely supported by the public, the media and many upright politicians, but Interpol re- mained unyielding. Interpol's policy endan- gers law abiding innocent people and forfeits the ele- mentary purpose of the pol- ice and the administration of justice—which is the protection of human rights with all its implications. If Interpol limits its ac- tivities in regard to inter- national terrorism to the study of methods, it plays strictly by the rules when it comes to Nazi criminals. Genocide, war crimes, experimentation on human beings, euthanasia and per- secution of minorities are defined by Interpol as politi- cal, religious or racial crimes and consequently, the organization, applying article (3), grants protection from extraditing the perpe- trators of Nazi atrocities. In 1961, the World Jewish Congress issued an official protest to the General As- sembly of Interpol—with- outsuccess. Interpol re- mained adamant. Regardless of Interpol's violation of the Universal Declaration of.. Human Rights, of the embarrassing past of its executives, re- gardless of its inefficiency to combat crime, that the organization refuses to track down perpetrators of genocide and international terrorists, the fact that In- terpol has achieved a status of a supra international in- stitution, accountable to no one but itself, funded by governments which have no say on the policy of the or- ganization and the way it spends its money, warrants a modification of its consti- tution and change of man- agement. If Interpol has become the self appointed guardian of society, who will protect us from our guardians? NY Jewish Civil Servants Layoffs Number in Thousands NEW YORK, (JTA) — About half of the 20,000 New York City civil service workers laid off because of the current fiscal crisis are Jews, according to Louis Weiser, president of the Council of Jewish Organiza- tions in Civil Service. The council is a fraternal organization comprised of some two dozen groups rep- resenting Jews in a wide range of municipal depart- ments. Weiser said that the coun- cil had organized job banks in efforts to help laid off Jewish civil servants obtain new jobs. He said between 30 and 40 dismissed Jewish policemen had been helped to find jobs in fields related to their police training, such as positions in private secu- rity firms. He gave the following breakdown of Jewish civil servants dismissed to date in the municipal economy drive: 140 police, 50 fire- men, 25 correction offi- cers, 500 in the Human Re- sources Administration, the city's superagency for welfare and poverty pro- grams; an estimated 7,000 teachers and other person- nel among board of educa- tion personnel; and about 1,500 in various other city departments for a total of 9,215 laid-off Jewish civil service employes. Weiser said that, in addi- tion to the creation of job banks, the Council also has been monitoring layoffs to make sure they are made in accordance with Civil Serv- ice regulations, such as that requirements of seniority prevail, with exceptions for war veterans. He said there had been in- quiries from non-Jewish laid-off workers concerning the announcement last Au- gust that the Israel Aliya Center of the American Sec- tion of the World Zionist Or- ganization was contacting dismissed Jewish municipal employes in an effort to per- suade them to go to Israel where jobs are available for police, firemen and teach- ers. - Weiser said the Council officials have been explain- ing that government work- ers must be Israeli citizens and that while Jews are au- tomatically entitled to Is- raeli citizenship under the Law of Return, non-Jews planning to go to Israel to seek government jobs must become citizens under the standard naturalization procedures. Israel Is Seeking Social Workers JERUSALEM (JTA) — A senior official of the Wel- fare Ministry has proposed a recruitment drive among laid-off social workers in New York City to fill Is- rael's need for another 500 professional social workers to carry out the country's minimum social welfare programs. The official said a thor- ough campaign by the Min- istry might convince many victims of New York's fiscal crisis to seek their profes- sional future in Israel. A recent survey con- ducted by the Welfare Min- istry disclosed an increasing gap between the number of university graduates in so- cial work and the demand for their services. OFFICE HOURS: MON.-THURS., 9 to\5, FRI., 9 to 4 Closed Sundays During July and August T1 ryn nip A $32 31 C r