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May 23, 1980 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-05-23

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

18 Friday, May 23, 1980

Live this day as if it were
the last.

CASH

FOR YOUR DIRMOIREL
PRECIOUS JEWELS
*
ZICUtdale

SCUIA.
755 W. Big Beaver Rd.
(6 Mile at 1.75 )
Troy, Michigan
Phone:313-362-4500

Support for Israel Repeated by Candidates at AIPAC

(Continued from Page 1)
That's the real target for
criticism in the Middle
East."
Mondale reiterated that
the Carter Administration
is for an undivided
Jerusalem but he did not
indicate under whose sover-
eignty.
Anderson drew heavy
applause when he said that
"as President I would rec-
ognize Jerusalem as the

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capital of Israel and move
our embassy." When the
applause subsided, he ob-
served that he had not
finished his sentence and
added that he would move
the embassy to Jerusalem
"at the conclusion of the
peace-making process." He
added, "You can applaud
again," but the applause
was noticeably less vol-
uminous.
Asked about his
endorsement of his can-
didacy by former Under-
secretary of State George
Ball, a persistent critic of
Israel, Anderson said
that "we've agreed to
disagree on matters in-
volving the Middle East. I
don't share his views in
that regard." Respond-
ing to his sponsorship of
amendments in the Con-
gress that tended to es-
tablish a Christian
America, he reiterated
that was an "error" and
that he has "demon-
strated my fidelity to
separation of church and
state since 1971."
Asked why not move the
U.S. embassy to Jerusalem
now and not wait until the
peace process is finished, he
said that "it seems given the
difficulties we face in the
current negotiations this is
not an appropriate time to
raise the issue. I am com-
mitted to an undivided
Jerusalem as the capital of
Israel on culmination of the
peace settlement in that
area."
Kennedy scored the Car-
ter Administration's record
on Israel, pointing to the
1977 Soviet-American
agreement, weapons to
Saudi Arabia, U.S..ambas-
sadors meeting with Pales-
tine Liberation Organiza-
tion officials and the U.S.
vote for the anti-Israel reso-
lution March 1 in the UN
Security Council.

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Discussing settlements,
Kennedy said, "I reject the
idea that the U.S. can
superimpose its will on the
issue of settlements." He
said that the issue has "to be
worked out between Israel
and Egypt and the other
states." Israel's interest in
the settlements "is an issue
of security and that's what
the U.S. should be focusing
on."
On Jerusalem, he said
"Israel has made a con-
vincing case of sover-
eignty" but that "moving
of our Embassy has to be
worked out with the
people in the area." He
added "I do believe that
the issue should be re-
solved in the total peace
settlements."
Cline said Bush "rejects
any tradeoff in Israel's secu-
rity and oil for America." He
added that "it is essential
for the Soviet Union and
hard-line rejectionist na-

tions to understand we have
the will to protect ourselves
and our friends."
He urged "arrangements
with the state of Israel and
others to use military
facilities to protect" U.S.
national interests. "On the
security of Israel there can
be no compromise," he said.
Casey, who is Reagan's
campaign manager, did not
mention Jerusalem in his
prepared remarks although
Reagan had previously said
that he favored Israeli
soveriegnty over the city.
Casey said that "America's
duty is to assure that peace
in the Middle East does not
mean suicide." The Reagan
Administration, Casey said,
"will work with Israel as a
friend and ally that will
enhance Israel's economic
and military capabilities
and resistance to ter-
rorism."
Asked about former
Texas Governor John

Connally's allegiance to
Reagan after Connally
had been critical of Is-
rael, Casey said Reagan's
"appoiritees will share
his (Reagan's) basic
views." Casey said "yes"
when asked if Reagan
would back economic
and military aid to Israel
on "present levels."
AIPAC president Lawr-
ence Weinberg told the
meeting that "if we (the
U.S.) had stood up" when
the Israeli embassy was
seized in Teheran and given
to the PLO "then perhaps
our embassy would not have
been seized."

Detroit area resider
who attended the AIPA-
sessions included Mrs. Ann
Barnett, Dr. Halley Faust,
Mrs. Dorothy Gross-
Lansky, Rabbi Richard
Hertz, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
C. Levy Jr., and Morris
Baker of Windsor.

Arab Mayors, Judge

Court Wants Expulsion Explained

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
The Israel Supreme Court
has given the Defense
Ministry 45 days to explain
why its expulsion orders
agains three West Bank
political figures should not
be rescinded the the depor-
tees permitted to return to
their homes in the Hebron
region. The high court acted
Tuesday on appeals by the
families of Mayor Fahed
Kawasme of Hebron, Mayor
Mohammed Milhim of
Halhoul and Kadi (religious
judge) Rajeb Buyud
Tamimim of Hebron.
They were deported on
May 3, following the killing
of six yeshiva students in a
terrorist ambush in Hebron
the previous night. The
three men were held mor-
ally responsible for the act
inasmuch as political
statements by them in the
preceding weeks allegedly
created an atmosphere con-
ducive to violence.
In issuing its show-cause
order to the Defense Minis-
try and the military gover-
nor of the West Bank, the
Supreme Court took a dim
view of the fact that the de-
portees were. expelled with-
out being given their legal
right to appeal before a spe-
cial committee which ad-
vises the military govern-
ment in such matters. State
Attorney Gavriel Bach ad-
mitted in court that the de-
portations were effected in a
manner contrary to ac-
cepted custom and obliquely
admonished the govern-
ment. The state should
honor the law, he said.

However, Bach argued
that the deportation
came in the immediate af-
termath of "the brutal
and traumatic event" in
Hebron. Justice Haim
Cohen retorted that be-
cause the event was
"brutal and traumatic"
the deportations should
not have been carried out
in the same way.
Cohen recalled that the

Supreme Court had ruled 32
years ago that the emer-
gency regulations of the
former Mandate govern-
ment in Palestine which
allowed summary deporta-
tions were illegal unless the
subject was given prior
opportunity to appeal. The
justice expressed "surprise"
that this right was not ac-
corded the Arab leaders.

Meanwhile, the Supreme
Court has under considera-
tion an appeal on behalf of
two Arab families — the
Shumalis of Beit Sahour
near Bethlehem and the
Kaabas of Balata village
near Nablus — who were
removed from their homes
by Israeli authorities last
week and placed in a des-
erted former refugee camp
near Jericho in the Dead
Sea Valley.

The military government
acted after members of both
families allegedly hurled
rocks and a gasoline bcimb
at Israeli military vehicles.
The appeal accused the
authorities of collective
punishment in violation of
the Fourth Geneva Conven-
tion.

The case is the first in
which families and their
belongings were de-
ported internally, i.e.
within the occupied ter-
ritories. Yaacub Shuman,
60, his wife and their two
daughters, one a teacher
and the other a student at
Bir Zeit University, are
living in a clay but in the
Ein a-Sultan Camp which
housed 50,000 refugees
before the Six-Day War.
Their '§on, Tariq, 17, is ac-
cused of throwing a stone
at the car of the
Bethlehem military gov-
ernor.

The 12 members of the
Kaaba family were sent to
the same site after a family
member, Ahmed Moham-
med, 27, allegedly threw a
gasoline bomb.

Security Council
Condemns Israel

UNITED NATIONS
(JTA) — The Security
Council on Monday adopted
a resolution strongly de-
ploring Israel for its failure
to readmit the three West
Bank leaders. The vote was
14-0 with only the United
States abstaining on the
ground that the resolution
was unbalanced.

The resolution "strongly"
deplored Israel for its fail- _
ure to act on a May 8 Secu-
rity Council resolution
which called on the Israeli
government to facilitate the
return of the three Palesti-
nian leaders. The U.S. also
abstained on that resolution
which also was adopted 14-0

The three West Bank
leaders were present at the
Council's debate. The two
mayors addressed the
Council, denouncing the Is-
raeli occupation.
The three tried to re-
turn to the West Bank
May 11, following the
Council's May 8 resolu-
tion, but were turned
down by the Israeli mili-
tary authorities.
Yehuda Blum, Israel's
ambassador to the UN, told
the Council before the vote
that the meeting was called
once again — the fifth since
March — to divert attention
from the continuing Soviet
"aggression and occupation
in Afghanistan."
The Israeli envoy note
that proceedings had beer
initiated in Israeli courts
behalf of the three W
Bank leaders. "Thus, those
who have insisted on this
meeting of the council to-
day," Blum said, "have
again demonstrated that it
is not considerations of law,
justice and good faith that
guide them, but rather their
well-known fixations which
they translate into a con-
stant political manipula-
tion of this organization."

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