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38
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1990
833-4440
Well HOP.
Will You?
Clash
Continued from preceding page
Despite Monday's victory,
however, Yitzhak Shamir is
likely to face serious
challenges to his leadership
as he attempts to carry dip-
lomatic efforts forward.
Sharon, released from the
constraints of membership
in the government, has al-
ready served notice that he
intends to lead the opposi-
tion from the right in an at-
tempt to block Shamir's
peace plan.
The Labor Party, on the
other hand, is already
pushing hard for an immed-
iate breakthrough. In a
statement issued Monday
night, the party expressed
concern that the peace pro-
cess was threatened.
"Postponing the process
will cause serious damage to
Israel and its interests," the
statement said.
For the moment, interest
is focused on Deputy Prime
Minister David Levi, whose
supporters constitute
perhaps one- third of the
Likud Central Committee.
Unlike Sharon and Modai,
Levi has refrained from per-
sonal attacks on the prime
minister and his allies.
Should his Monday night
meeting with 'Shamir prove
to be the first step in a rap-
proachment between the
two, Ariel Sharon would be
left alone on the far right fr-
inge of the Likud.
If, on the other hand, Levi
refuses to break away from
Sharon, the Likud could well
find itself heading for a split
that would open the way for
a Labor-led government, and
a Labor Party victory in the
next election. ❑
I NEWS
Includes Collection of 15 Hibels, Ladies'
Clothing, Antiques, Decorator Items, Antique
Oak and Glass Showcases, Glitz, Jewelry.
Terms: Cash and Carry
SUNDAY • FEBRUARY 25 • 2:00 P.M.
I INSIGHT
Germans . Begin Trial
Of Suspected Nazi
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Bonn (JTA) — An accused
Nazi war criminal who elud-
ed a death sentence in the
Soviet Union and evaded
deportation from the United
States is finally facing
justice in West Germany.
The trial of 86-year-old
Boleslays Maikovskis, which
opened Friday in the nor-
thwestern city of Munster,
culminates 25 years of legal
proceedings and intensive
manhunts in both the Soviet
Union and the United
States.
According to the prosecu-
tion, the accused Nazi col-
laborator coordinated the
mass shooting in 1942 of at
least 170 people in the
village of Audrini, which he
burned to the ground.
Afterward, he ordered the
hanging of a Jewish resident
and made sure it was done,
the prosecution said.
Maikovskis was police
chief in the adjacent town of
Rezekne during the German
occupation of Latvia.
Klaus Schacht, chief of the
Dortmund-based office for
the prosecution of Nazi war
criminals, who is in charge
of the case, said Maikovskis'
recent indictment is only a
partial accounting of the
atrocities he is said to have
committed.
Additional charges are be-
ing prepared that implicate
him in the murders of hun-
dreds more people in Latvia.
Maikovskis was sentenced
in absentia to death by a
Soviet court in Riga in 1965,
after he was found guilty of
assisting in the murder of
20,000 Latvian Jews.
He lived in the Hamburg
area of West Germany after
World War II, before coming
to the United States as an
immigrant in 1951.
Until sometime in 1987,
Maikovskis lived in the
Long Island town of
Mineola, N.Y., where he
worked as a carpenter and
became a respected figure in
Latvian groups. He was the
leader of several emigre
associations and active in
the Catholic Church.
Maikovskis' wartime
superior, Albert Eichelis,
was tried in West Germany
in 1984.
Some time afterward, the
U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service in-
itiated deportation pro-
ceedings on the grounds that
Maikovskis lied about his
past when he applied for en-
try into the United States.
The INS intended to deport
him to the Soviet Union,
where his alleged crimes
were committed.
But Maikovskis slipped
out of the country in 1987,
entered West Germany as a
tourist and applied for polit-
ical asylum. He was arrested
in Munster in October 1988
and has been in custody
since then.
His trial is expected to last
at least a year and may re-
quire the judges to visit
Israel and the Soviet Union,
where some of the elderly
witnesses live.
Two American survivors of