2 Friday, June 28, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PURELY atkom COMMENTARY ■■ PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Refuting The Charge That Israel Negated Geneva Regulations Hijackers' demands, in connection with the barbarities now localized in Be- irut, include the charge that Israel has failed to adhere to the Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 49, dealing with civi- lian detainees. Israel refutes the charge. An explanation issued in refutation of the charge on behalf of Israel declares: At issue are provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which deals with the treatment of civi- lians in time of war. Article 49 prohibits the "forcible transfer from occupied territory to the territory of the occupying power or that of any power." It was this provision that the U.S. State Department cited in April in saying that Israel's trans- fer of the detainees from Lebanon violated international law "re- gardless of motive." But Israel, both at the time of the transfer and in .the statement today (June 20), has cited another sentence in Article 49 dealing with the movement of civilian de- tainees. It says: "The occupying power may undertake total or par- tial evacuation of a given area if the security of the population or imperative military reasons so demand. Such evacuation may not involve the displacement of pro- tected persons outside the bounds of the occupied territory except where for material reasons it is impossible to avoid such dis- placement. Persons thus evacuated shall be transferred back to their homes as soon as hostilities in the area in question have ceased." Israeli officials argue that the detention was legal because of the wave of attacks on Israeli army units in Lebanon. They also main- tain that the movement of the de- tainees to Israel was in accord- ance with the exception cited in Article 49 and was made neces- sary when the Israeli army, in the process of withdrawing from southern Lebanon, dismantled its prison camp at Ansar. The confusion caused by the repeated charges against Israel provides the need for this lengthy clarification. While it really has little if any relationship with the inhumanities perpetrated by the un- civilized hijacking, those who may be puz- zled by similar accusations that had come originally from Washington need the explanatory notes. Search For Truth About Lebanon Must Never End News media in the civilized world — there is a growing need to separate the civilized from the barbarically insaned — registered the urgently-needed realism in treating the Israeli connection in the crisis affected by the brutal hijackers. Much has been, much more will be written about the numerous crises involving the Middle East with the emphasis on the tragedies of Lebanon. Basic facts must never be forgotten. There has been a great deal of injustice leveled in the treatment of Israel's numerous roles in the Lebanese and Middle East situations. One espe- cially vital matter was analyzed in the current issue of Near East Report of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) by M.J. Rosenberg, the newslet- ter's last page columnist. Rosenberg took into account the "media's seeming indifference to the con- tinued killings in Lebanon now that the Israelis are out." He ascribes the dif- ference to "the press enjoying maligning Israel and that events in Lebanon pro- vided a pretext for it." Thereupon, Rosen- berg proceeds with his testimonial admon- itions: But there are other reasons, some quite ominous. On June 9, the Washington Post reprinted an article by London Sunday Times reporter David Blundy which first appeared in the British news- paper one week earlier. Blundy recapitulated some of the events of recent weeks. "Eyewitnesses last week said that the two camps — Sabra and Shatila — were wastelands. The tightly packed houses had been destroyed by artillery bombard- ments. Whole areas had been razed to the ground by bulldozers and dynamite. The stench of rot- ting bodies permeated the camp." He recounted particular hor- rors. "Cases occur such as that of the young, wounded Palestinian and his sister, aged about 13, who were on the ground floor of the hospital at Sabra. A soldier, a member of the Lebanese army's Shiite Sixth Brigade, told the girl to pick up her brother. She re- fused and they both were shot dead." There's more — much more. "A group of 15 Palestinians, wear- ing white shorts and T-shirts — patients from a hospital, some of them with saline drips still in their arms — were gathered together by Amal (the Shiite organization) militiamen and shot with machineguns. A Palestinian nurse came out of Sabra with a wounded man. The man was shot by Amal militiamen and the nurse was stabbed with a bayonet. The bodies were taken away in a truck." Blundy claims that there has been little "accurate reporting" about what is going on. And he explains why: "The Sunday Times and the BBC (British Broadcast- ing Company) reported killings at the camps. The BBC's Arabic- language report of the atrocities was monitored by Amal fighters, so the BBC immediately withdrew its three reporters because it feared that attempts would be made on their lives ... In fact, many reports of killings were not included because eyewitnesses were afraid for their own safety." Blundy also reveals that foreign correspondents in Beirut have created a "strange affiance" to protect themselves from the wrath of warring factions. "Jour- nalists who are normally in fierce competition ... have shared their sources and information and have agreed to release stories simul- taneously so that one newspaper or agency does not find itself iso- lated and the target for threats and attacks." The local press in Beirut has been at least as circumspect. Blundy says that there has been "scant reference" to the atrocities in the Lebanese press, although most reporters and "thousands of people" know what's happening. A local reporter told Blundy: "If we print them (the stories), we will get a bomb through our window." . The bottom line is what Blundy calls "fear and intimida- tion." Many reporters have been "withdrawn because of the risk of being kidnapped or killed. Those who remain find it increasingly difficult and dangerous to work." The contrast between writing from Lebanon and from Israel is obvious. In Israel, or in areas of Lebanon controlled by Israel, re- porters can interpret or misinter- pret the news as they see fit. In Lebanon — and throughout the Arab world — the press is terrified into submission. David Blundy's article helps explain an ugly and frightening situation. Does it not now behoove editors (like those at the Washing- ton Post, for instance) to inform their readers that the editorial slant of their coverage is dictated as much by fear as by facts? Such are the facts not to be over- looked and ever to be remembered as the situations develop. Even after the hijack- ing agonies end — and may that be soon and speedy! — realism leading to just evaluating of Middle East conditions must predominate. Punishment For Crimes, Remembering Bestialities Eventually there must be punish- ment for what had taken place on the TWA flight intended for Rome and the hijacking at Athens. There can never be compensation for the severest cruelty, for the horror of the brutal murder of an American aboard that airline. The Detroit News summarized it properly editorially on June 18, under the heading "They Kept Hitting Him": As the latest terrorist hijack- ing grinds on, there will be a ten- dency to forget the sheer brutality of the act. We believe, therefore, that it's worth remembering and reflecting upon what happened aboard Flight 847, in particular the beating and shooting death of an American serviceman by the hijackers. The serviceman has been identified as Robert Dean Stethem, 23, of Waldorf, Md., a steelworker in the Navy Seabees. An eyewitness report of the inci- dent was carried by Reuter, the British news agency, which we re- print from yesterday's editions. LONDON (Reuter) — An Au- stralian girl freed by the hijackers of a TWA jet described how the gunmen brutally assaulted an American serviceman before kil- ling him. Ruth Henderson; 16, said last night that the terrorists kicked him over and over until "they had broken all his ribs." She said she was sitting next to the serviceman Friday night when the hijackers "dragged him out of his seat, tied his hands, and then beat him up." She said: "I watched as they kicked him in the head. They kicked him in the face and knee caps and kept kicking him until they had broken all his ribs. Then they tried to knock him out with the butt of a pistol — they kept hitting him over the head but he was very strong and they couldn't knock him out. "Then they dumped him back in his seat next to me and left him for ages. I tried to nurse him but there wasn't a great deal I could do. Later, they dragged him away and I believe shot him." Will the guilty ever be able to atone for this? Even when the hijacking from Athens to Beirut is resolved, won't this horrible brutality remain inerasable on the records of the worst of crimes? When Bernard Baruch Was Irritated By Franklin Roosevelt Shortcomings Specific attention, often mingled with notoriety, accorded to "the guilt of silence" during the tragic years of the Nazi massacres of Jews brings to the limelight the leading world personalities. Franklin D. Rensevelt figures promi- nently in that cat. of characters. So do the major actors in the Zionist move- ment. Dr. David Wyman, in his serious study of the failures to aid in rescue ef- forts described in his The Abaridonment of the Jews (Pantheon Books) lists the chief offenders, and does not overlook one of the most picturesque men of that era. His reference to Baruch is in one sentence, "Bernard Baruch — influential with Roosevelt, Congress, the wartime bureaucracy, and the public — stayed away from the rescue issue." But in the currently republished autobiography of Ben Hecht, who is mentioned frequently in the Wyman book, Baruch appears in a role very critical of FDR. Ben Hecht's A Child of the Century, (Primus Imprint of Donald I. Fine Pub- lishers), is subtitled "the quintessential work of the great journalist, playwright and co-author of The Front Page", and is filled with dynamite. It reveals the many forgotten or overlooked occurrences and adds to the exposure of indifference in the matter of saving Jews and especially of nian door for the rescue of escapees from the Nazi terror. Ben Hecht was the great journalist of the first half of this century. He was the author of many novels and short stories which eventually became themes that dominated the movie industry. He was the incorrigible, the sensational, the controversial factor in the media. It was as co-chairman of the Committee for a Jewish Army of Statehood and Palesti- nian Jews with Peter Bergson (Hillel Kook), and Sam Merlin, that he was the chief factor in the several movements that were established to battle against restrictions of Jewish rights in Palestine, and as predecessors and collaborators of Menachem Begin in advocating ab- solutism in Zionism. That's how he fig- ured ultra-sensationally in demanding the rights advocated on a large public scale. Hecht authored the sensational ad- vertisements assailing the British anti- Zionist actions which prevented Jewish settlement in Palestine and he also engineered the fundraising which enabled the purchase of ships which op- erated in what the British considered "il- legal immigration." Hecht relates about the purchase of a large ocean boat which the Committee for a Jewish Army named the "Ben Continued on Page 22