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August 01, 1980 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-08-01

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

12 Friday, August 1, 1980

_ _ r.
COMPLETE ALTERATIONS

r-- _

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Terrorist Prisoners Continue
Hunger Strike After Two Die

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The
23 imprisoned terrorists
transferred to Ramleh
prison last week have re-
newed their hunger strike
to protest the deaths of two
fellow prisoners. They had
begun their hunger strike
three weeks ago to protest



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allegedly inhumane condi-
tions at the maximum secu-
rity Nafha prison in the
Negev where they were
serving their sentences.
The strike was resumed
as a special committee ap-
pointed by the Interior
Minister began its investi-
gation into the deaths of Ali
Mohammed Jaapari, 30, a
Jordanian, on July 22, and
Mouhammed Haloua, 28, of
Gaza, who died two days la-
ter. According to initial re-
ports, they suffocated when
food they were being force-
fed lodged in their lungs.
Some sources appeared to
link the renewal of the
hunger strike with the visit
to Ramleh prison by Felicia
Langer, an Israeli attorney
representing some of the
prisoners. Ms. Langer sub-
sequently wrote to the
prison authorities claiming
that three prisoners had
scars on their bodies as a re-

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sult of beatings.
Meanwhile, some 25
Arab women continued a
hunger strike at the office
of the International Red
Cross in East Jerusalem
as an expression of sol-
idarity with the pris-
oners. The office has be-
come a center for Arabs
coming from the West
Bank to wish the pris-
oners well.
Families of some of the
prisoners are also staging
sit-ins at the Red Cross
headquarters.
Langer and Leah Zemel,
two leftwing lawyers who
have frequently repre-
sented suspected terrorists,
said some of the prisoners
were in bad shape and
should be given medical
treatment.
Zemel had charged ear-
lier that Nafha prison,
which opened two months
ago specifically for persons
convicted for terrorist ac-
tivities, had conditions
worse than in other Israeli
jails. She said some of the
prisoners were beaten, a
charge denied by the war-
den. She also claimed that
prisoners were forced to
sleep on the floor.

Adam and
the Creatures

These services done on premises
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• Watch Repair
• Restringing

Barry

Arab-European Dialogue
to Include PLO Terrorists

-

ELECT

MICHAEL STEIN

REPUBLICAN For STATE REPRESENTATIVE
65th DISTRICT

'

THANK YOU!

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(West Bloomfield, Franklin, Southfield Township, Bloomfield Hills,
Bloomfield Township, Sylvan Lake, Beverly Hills and Bingham Farms.)

The warmth and enthusiasm of your response has been a big help in
the campaign.

MICHAEL STEIN

It all comes down to the wire on

EVERY VOTE COUNTS!
PLEASE HELP
MAKE THE DIFFERENCE!

ELECTION DAY,

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5th / l ) 77('`, (l d '

/

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BONN (JTA) — Chedli
Klibi, secretary general of
the Arab League, said in
Germany last week that the
foreign ministers of the
Arab League and the Euro-
pean Economic Community
(EEC) member states will
hold a conference some time
this year which will include
representatives of the
Palestine Liberation
Organization.
Klibi made the an-
nouncement at a press con-
ference at the end of his
three-day visit to West
Germany. He said the Arab
League and the EEC have
agreed to renew the Euro-
Arab dialogue, but this time
on a political level in con-
trast to the past when the
discussions were limited to
cultural and trade matters.
Egypt, which the Arab
League boycotts because of
its peace treaty with Israel,
will be excluded from the
dialogue, Klibi said.
The Arab League offi-
cial claimed that West
Germany always had
reservations about the
Camp David accords and
that they have increased
considerably of late. He
claimed that the Bonn
government is convinced
that no peace settlement
can be reached in the
Middle East without the
participation of the PLO.
During his visit, Klibi
met in Hamburg with
Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt, Foreign Minister

Hans-Dietrich Genscher
and other West German
leaders.
Friends of Israel here ex-
pressed astonishment and
scorn over Genscher's fail-
ure to react to the speech by
Klibi. The speech was de-
scribed as one of the most
vicious attacks on Israel
and the Jewish people ever
made at an official event in
Bonn.
One leading newspaper
interpreted the incident as
yet another sign of Bonn's
policy of wooing the Arabs
and snubbing Israel. -
.Klibi a Tunisian, de.
scribed ' the Arab-Israel
conflict as a confronta-
tion between a colonial
and a racist aggressor on

one hand and a refugee
people suffering inhu-
man conditions but de-
termined to resist foreign
rule.

He denounced Zionism as
a regressive ideology sup-
ported by a modern super-
power and claimed that
Zionism manifested itself
by racial and religious dis-
crimination and the forcible
annexation of land.
The fact that .Genscher
said nothing was contrasted
by friends of Israel with the
defense of Israel voiced by
former West German
President Walter Scheel
two years ago when
President Hafez Assad of
Syria similarly attacked Is-
rael during a visit to Bonn.

Begin Returns to Work

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Prime Minister Menahem
Begin returned to this desk
Tuesday promptly at 8 a.m.
after four weeks of re-
cuperating from a mild,
heart attack. He set about
his schedule briskly, chair-
ing a ministerial committee
meeting at which Agricul-
ture Minister Ariel Sharon
reportedly put forward de- •
tails of proposed new set-
tlements on the West Bank
(Begin said before his at-
tack that Israel had plans
for another 10 settlements
— and these would be the
last).
During his recuperation
period at hospital and at
home, Begin has kept ab-
reast of political and inter-
national developments.
Monday he met with U.S.
Ambassador Samuel Lewis
and his top military attache
for a review of the situations
in Syria and Lebanon.
Lewis also is understood
to have reiterated Ameri-
ca's objection to the plan to
move the Prime Minister's
Office to East Jerusalem.
Begin cancelled a meet-
ing he was due to have
had Wednesday evening
with Labor opposition
chief Shimon Peres on
the grounds that Peres'
positions had been
broadcast in advance on
the radio. Kol Yisrael
radio reported Tuesday
afternoon that Peres
would express opposi-
tion to Begin's plan to
move his office to East

Jerusalem.
Asked to comment on the
cancellation, Peres said he
had not discussed with
anyone at all" what he pro-
posed to tell Begin. The
premier's move was "petty
and factional," Peres said.
He (Peres) had wanted to
discuss "certain recent de-
velopments'? that had ef-
fects above and beyond
party differences.
Asked point blank
whether he did indeed op-
pose the proposed move to
East Jerusalem, Peres indi-
cated that he did, saying
that "for me, this is one city,
not two halves."
In Tel Aviv, meanwhile,
U.S. diplomatic sources
indicated that there were no
outright instructions from
Washington to Ambassador
Lewis — as yet — to boycott
the premier's office should it
be moved to East
Jerusalem. But the sources
said the move would "cause
communications problems.'"

Girls Town
Banquet Honors
Founding Rabbi

NEW YORK — Girls
Town-Or Chadash, the edu-
cational institute located in
the Galilee, will hold its
15th anniversary banquet
Nov. 9 at the New York Hil-
ton.
Rabbi Moshe Tanami, the
Chief Sephardic Rabbi of
Rekasim, Israel and the
founder of the institute, will
be honored at the banquet.

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