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May 20, 1988 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-05-20

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

INEWS1

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...

Rome (JTA) — The life pri-
son sentences imposed on
Palestinian terrorist leader
Abul Abbas and three of his
cohorts responsible for the
1985 hijacking of the Italian
cruise ship Achille Lauro was
last week upheld by Italy's
highest court.
Abbas, whose real name is
Mohammad Zaidan, heads
the Palestine Liberation
Front. During the hijacking,
he pretended to e et, as a
mediator with the terrorists.
But communications moni-
tored by American intelli-
gence showed him to have
mastermined the crime. Ab-
bas is currently believed to be
directing terrorist attempts to
Infiltrate Israel from
southern Lebanon. He also
reportedly aspires to succeed
the late Abu Jihad as second
in command of the PLO.
A Genoa court had origin-

ally passed sentence on him
and two of his lieutenants,
Ozzudin Badratkan and Ziad
el-Omar, and on another
liberation front militant, Ab-
dulirahin Kales. All are
fugitives.

The high court also upheld
the Genoa court's 30-year
prison sentence for one of the
hijackers, Magied al-Molqi,
who murdered cruise pas-
senger Leon Klinghoffer, an
American Jew who was con-
fined to a wheelchair.

The Achille Lauro was hi-
jacked in Egyptian waters on
Oct. 7, 1985, while on a cruise
that originated in Genoa.
About 700 people aboard,
passengers and crew, were
held hostage for 41 hours. The
only fatality was Klinghoffer,
who was shot in the head and
thrown into the sea with his
wheelchair.

Israeli Doctors
Go On Strike

U)

U

Achille Lauro Hijack
Sentences Upheld

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Physicians
of the government hospital
system and of the Histadrut's
Kupat Holim (sick fund)
hospital network, in a coor-
dinated strike action, put all
hospitals on a Sabbath
schedule. According to a
spokesman, they plan to con-
tinue last week's action,
thereby threatening to return
the hospitalization and treat-
ment system to the chaotic
situation which prevailed
during a four-month strike by
doctors in 1983, when virtu-
ally all patients were sent
home from the wards and on-
ly life-or-death cases admitted
and treated.
lb fill in the gap, the doctors
then opened small coop-
erative clinics in hotels and
private homes, charging pa-
tients for treatment — sums
which the patients could not
recover from the sick funds to
which they were still paying
dues. Kupat Holim doctors
have begun operating such
private clinics again.
The only hospitals operat-
ing normally during the cur-
rent strike were the private
Hadassah, Bikur Holim and
Shaare Zedek hospitals in
Jerusalem, Assutah in Tel
Aviv, Elisha in Haifa and the
Herzliya Medical Center.
The Laniado Hospital in
Natanya was also open, as its
patron, the Klausenburger
Rebbe, has forbidden all its
employees ever to strike, on

religious and moral grounds.
During the strike action,
out-patient clinics are closed
at specifed hospitals and on-
ly emergency operations are
be performed.

Soviets Want
Spy's Release

Jerusalem (JTA) — A West
German newspaper reported
that Israel and the Soviet
Union were negotiating for
the release of a Jewish emigre
serving an 18-year prison
sentence in Israel as a Soviet
spy.
The report said the case of
Professor Markus Klinkberg,
reportedly sentenced in 1983,
was discussed by Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres with
Soviet officials whom he met
in Madrid last week while at-
tending a meeting of the
Socialist International Coun-
cil. The newspaper claimed
that Klinkberg's release was
Moscow's precondition for
restoring normal relations
with Israel.
The 60-year-old biologist
came to Israel as an emigrant
from the Soviet Union. He
was deputy director general of
the Biological Institute in
Ness Ziona. His frequent
trips to Switzerland for
"medical reasons" were sup-
posedly a cover for contacts
with Soviet agents.

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