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January 07, 1983 - Image 25

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-01-07

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Inquiry on Slum Shooting

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
The Knesset has called for a
judicial inquiry into the
fatal shooting by police by a
resident- of the Kfar
Salemeh slum quarter of
Tel Aviv on Dec. 23. Interior
Minister Yosef Burg ap-
pointed an examining
judge.
The victim, Shimon
Yehoshua, a 29-year-old
Oriental Jew, allegedly
opened fire first on police
who were summoned to the
quarter to quell a distur-
bance there. The incident
touched off a wave of van-
dalism against Ashkenazic
Jews in Tel Aviv . which
spread last week to
Jerusalem.
The inquiry was sup-
ported by all Knesset fac-
tions. But during the de-
bate, Likud MKs accused
the Labor Alignment of
exploiting the incident
for political reasons. The
Laborites accused Mayor
Shlomo Lehat of Tel Aviv,

a member of Likud, of
"selectivity" in enforcing
demolition orders.

The trouble arose in Kfar
Salameh when municipal
workers were sent to de-
molish an extension to a
dwelling occupied by a large
family who allegedly added
a room without the required
permit. Family members
and their neighbors pelted
the workers with rocks and
burned tires in the street.

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Wage Accord Averts Strike

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Fi-
nance Minister Yoram
Aridor and Histadrut Secre-
tary General Yeruham
Meshel signed a new wage
contract for public em-
ployees last week.
As a result, Israelis were
able to usher in the new
year freed from the threat of
a paralyzing general strike,
which would have affected
virtually all government
services from the local to the
national level.
The agreement, which
provides for an across-the-
board 12 percent wage hike
for all civil service em-
ployees was seen as a re-
treat by Aridor. The finance
minister would not budge
for weeks above the nine
percent increase he origi-
nally acceded to.
But as more and more
civil servants joined the
strike each day for the
past week, suspending
classes for over a million
school children and
allowing garbage to pile
up and fester on the
streets, Premier
Menahem Begin came
under increasing pres-
sure from elected offi-
cials to intervene.
Begin normally allows
his finance minister a free
hand to run the economy.
But this time, with the situ-
ation assuming crisis prop-
ortions, he reportedly pre-
vailed on Aridor to yield.
The 12 percent hike was
demanded by Histadrut to
compensate civil servants
for the erosion of their real
wages by triple digit infla-
tion. It is linked to a new
system of cost-of-living in-
crease payments of a flat
four percent monthly.
The amount would be sub-
ject to review every three
months to allow for possible
increases during the preced-
ing quarter.

price rise index. The 12
percent will be retroac-
tive to September. The
COL payments system is
subject to further negoti-
ations.
Teachers, university lec-
turers, nurses and social
workers refused to accept
the accord signed over the
weekend. But they said they
would adjudicate their
demands without resort-
ing to a strike.

Friday, January 1, 1983 25

Security for Palestinians asked

JERUSALEM (JTA) — A Lebanon, the Valestinians
group of women has called have no way ordbfending
on the Israeli government to themselves because they
demand that the multi- have neither military
national force in Lebanon equipment nor representa-
guarantee the security of tion in the government.
In letters sent to all mem-
Palestinians in that country
once the Israel Defense bers of the Knesset Foreign
Affairs and Defense- Corn-
Force withdraws.
mittee, the women also
The women, members of criticized the Israeli gov-
the Israeli Women's Com- ernment for not rehabilitat-
mittee for Lebanese Refu- ing refugee camps in Leba-
gees, said that unlike other non before the winter sea-
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