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Peru Holds Men Found
With Jewish Hit List
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This space contributed as a public service.
New York — Authorities in
Peru are holding three men
who allegedly planned to at-
tack Jewish and Israeli in-
stitutions there. Interpol has
identified the men as
members of the terrorist
organization Abu Nidal.
Col. Javier Palacios, chief of
the Peruvian anti-terrorist
directorate, said an Interpol
report identified the group's
leader as Hocine Bouzidi and
named him as the planner of
the December 1985 terrorist
attacks at the El Al terminals
in the Rome and Vienna
airports.
Interpol spokeswoman
Beverly Sweatman in
Washington, D.C., would not
comment, saying Interpol
does not discuss cases under
investigation.
According to Manuel Ibnen-
baum, director of the Latin
American branch of the
World Jewish Congress in
Buenos Aires, - Peruvian
authorities arrested the men
July 30 when documents
found showing the men were
keeping several buildings in
Lima under surveillance were
found Allegedly watched were
the United States consulate,
the Israeli embassy, a
synagogue and Shalom, an
Israeli-owned travel agency.
Also in their possession
were the schedules of securi-
ty guards at the PLO offices
and U.S. consulate and lists of
Jewish and Israeli businesses
in Colombia.
The men being held are
identified as as Bouzidi, 36,
who carried Algerian iden-
tification papers; Mohamad
Abed, 1.9, also identified as
Mohamed Abed
Abdelrahman Ibrahim, who
carried Egyptian papers; and
Ahmed (also reported as Am-
man) Assad Mohamad, 19,
who held Lebanese papers.
The men were reportedly
establishing contact with the
Sendero Luminoso (Shining
Path) terrorist group, which
has for several years been try-
ing to overthrow the Peruvian
government by force.
Peruvian President Alan
Garcia is reportedly ready to
cooperate with any govern-
ment wishing to extradite the
men, but may expel them if
no country requests their ex-
tradition.
A spokesman for the U.S.
Justice Department in
Washington, D.C. said last
week that he did not know of
any outstanding warrants for
any of the men.
Last week the Israeli em-
bassy in Lima issued a state-
ment thanking Peruvian
authorities and police for hav-
ing frustrated "the criminal
attempt of Palestinian ter-
rorists to attack Peruvian
citizens and diplomats of
Israel and other countries."
The Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith has
urged the Peruvian govern-
ment as a result of the arrest
to reconsider its policy per-
mitting the PLO to maintain
an office in Peru.
Rabbi Mort Rosenthal,
director of the Latin
American Affairs department
of the ADL, said he hoped
that the countries in which
the men allegedly committed
terrorist acts would seek their
extradition and try them in
court.
Squatters' Graffiti
Causes Controversy
Bonn (JTA) — Graffiti call-
ing for a boycott of Israeli pro-
ducts that surfaced in Ham-
burg four months ago are at
the center of a controversy
pitting left-wing activists
against politicians and
Jewish groups there.
Daubed on the huge wall of
a building in Hamburg's
Hafenstrasse (Harbor Street),
the graffiti are illustrated by
a picture of a Kalachnikov ri-
fle and include such slogans
as "Boycott Israeli products,
kibbutzim and seashores"
and "Palestine — The people
will liberate you. Revolution
till victory."
Claiming responsibility for
the graffiti are leftist squat-
,
72
FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1988 „
ters, whose occupation of a
number of buildings on the
street has long been a
political sore point.
The graffiti can be seen
hundreds of yards away and
are especially visible to the
many thousands of drivers
who use the busy Landung
Bridge.
Protests have come from all
major political parties, except
the Greens, who largely sym-
pathize with the squatters.
Officials in Hamburg, a ci-
ty in the northern part of
West Germany, have promis-
ed repeatedly to remove the
inscriptions, which the local
press called outrageous and
anti-Semitic.
(