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E JEWELERS , 0-__ _ . . „, , ,. . % _ „.. ,., , _ = . ---.: 32940 MIDDLEBELT RD. • FARMINGTON HILLS, MI 48018 • 855-1730 34 FRIDAY JANUARY 22, 1988 Jerusalem (JTA) — Although unrest in the ad- ministered territories ap- peared to be waning, a residue of problems remain- ed. An Arab commercial strike last Monday paralyzed East Jerusalem while the fundamental political and ideological differences that divide the Labor Party and Likud emerged at the week- ly Cabinet meeting, fractur- ing the appearance of solidarity the two coalition partners had managed to maintain. Angry exchanges reported- ly erupted over the text of a Cabinet communique ex- pressing the government's support for the measures taken by the security forces to enforce law and order in the territories. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of Likud proposed the standard statement, such as those published in past weeks denoting Cabinet approval of the military's actions. Foreign Minister Shimon Peres of Labor insisted on a reference to the need for a negotiated political solution to the Palestinian problem. The statement that finally emerged asserted that the Cabinet "expressed its esteem and support for the actions by the security forces and Israeli police, notwithstanding its in- ternal disputes on topics re- lated to the political process." Apart from the verbal fire- works, the Cabinet session was reportedly a bleak debate over the situation in the ter- ritories. Ministers on both sides of the political divide were said to be deeply con- cerned that there is no guarantee the unrest will not erupt again once the curfews are lifted from the refugee camps. Curfews were gradually lifted at refugee camps in the West Bank. But they were strictly enforced at most camps in the Gaza Strip which, combined with incle- ment weather, kept demonstrators off the streets. Arabs confined to the refu- gee camps in Gaza were unable to go to their jobs in Israel, leaving farms and fac- tories in the southern region seriously understaffed. Residents of towns not under curfew did show up for work, unhindered by rock-throwing youths who had turned many back in recent days. But young Palestinian ac- tivists were apparently responsible for the total strike in East Jerusalem. Israeli authorities, trying to persuade merchants and shopkeepers to open for business, were confronted by a wall of solidarity and fear. The strike was a response to the violent confrontation be- tween police and Palestinian demonstrators on the Temple Mount last Friday, the Moslem sabbath. The police action led leaders of Israel's Arab community to protest what they called the "desecra- tion of the Moslem shrines." They referred to police in- tervention when a group of youths emerged from the Al Aksa mosque after prayers, shouting religious and na- tionalist slogans. They burn- ed Israeli and American flags and displayed the Palestinian flag, which is forbidden by Israeli law. The police fired tear gas at the demonstrators. War Criminal Dies In Zagreb New York (JTA) — Andrija Artukovic, the former Croa- tian interior minister con- victed of murdering 700,000 Jews, Croats, Serbs and Gyp- sies during World War II, died last Saturday in a prison hospital in Zagreb, Yugoslavia. Artukovic, 89, was deported from the United States two years ago, after a 36-year bat- tle with U.S. and Yugoslav authorities. Artukovic was already in frail health in 1986, when the U.S. deported him from his home in Seal Beach, Calif. to stand trial in Yugoslavia for war crimes that earned him the nicknames "Butcher of the Balkans." The Yugoslav court sentenced Artukovic to the firing squad, but the sentence had been postponed indefinitely because of his poor health. Greek Calls For Recognition Athens (JTA) — The leader of Greece's largest opposition party called on the govern- ment to extend full diplomatic recognition to Israel immediately, or cer- tainl before Greece assumes the rotating presidency of the European Economic Com- munity on July 1. Konstantinos Mitsotakis, head of the New Democracy Party, said if the government fails to do this, his party would recognize Israel the moment it comes to power.