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August 09, 1991 - Image 98

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-08-09

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

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Bomb Scare In Turkey
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98

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1991

Al steward she had failed to
mention that she carried "a
gift from an Arab acquain-
tance" in her baggage.
The woman said she grew
increasingly uneasy over the
subterfuge and about an
hour into the five-hour flight
decided to confess.
The El Al plane was met
by Turkish security per-
sonnel at Istanbul and the
woman and her baggage
were taken from the plane.
The plane resumed its flight
after about an hour's delay.
An inspection of the
woman's luggage yielded
nothing of a suspicious na-
ture, but the passenger,
whose name was withheld,
was detained by airport au-
thorities for questioning.
She reportedly continued
her journey a day later on a
Scandinavian Airlines jet.
An El Al spokesman said the
airline was considering
whether to take legal action
against the passenger.

New Settlement Stirs
Diplomatic War

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Tel Aviv (JTA) - A bomb
scare forced an El Al plane
with 224 passengers aboard
to make an emergency lan-
ding in Istanbul, Turkey,
last week.
The captain of Flight 377,
bound from Tel Aviv to
Copenhagen, made the deci-
sion to land in consultation
with El Al headquarters in
Tel Aviv, after a passenger
confessed to a flight atten-
dant that she had not told
the truth about the contents
of her luggage.
El Al passengers are sub-
jected to the most stringent
security checks of any
airline. They are asked by
security personnel, among
other things, whether they
packed their own luggage
and whether it was left un-
attended.
The passenger, described
as a 20-year-old Swedish na-
tional returning from a
Variety International con-
vention in Israel, told the El



<


Jerusalem (JTA) - Opening
salvos in what seems to be a
new "war of attrition" over
the peace process were fired
even before U.S. Secretary of
State James Baker returned
to Washington from his suc-
cessful peace mission.
While Mr. Baker was still
in North Africa, raising ad-
ditional political capital for
a proposed Middle East con-
ference, six Jewish families
settled into a former
military outpost in Eshkolot,
in the southern Hebron
Mountains.
The latest West Bank set-
tlement was set up to the
cheers of the right wing and
the growing frustration of
the left.
The Israelis were letting
the Americans know they do
not intend to slow down the
construction of settlements
— despite criticism from the
Israeli left, some quarters of
the American Jewish com-
munity and, most clearly,
the Bush administration.
In the Palestinian camp,
the uprising's Unified
Command, guided by the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization, succeeded in
waylaying Israeli plans to
hold free elections for the
Bethlehem Chamber of In-
dustry.
Under pressure from the
PLO, local industrialists in-

formed Israel's Civil Ad-
ministration in the West
Bank that they would all
resign unless it called off the
elections. The military gov-
ernor had no choice but to
postpone the elections for
two weeks.
Danny Naveh, media ad-
viser for Defense Minister
Moshe Arens, stressed Tues-
day that the timing of the
settlement had nothing to do
with diplomatic develop-

The settlement
was set up to the
cheers of the right
and frustration
of the left.

ments and that there is "no
change in the settlement
policy of the government."
But former Defense Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin of the
Labor Party told army radio
the timing of the settlement
was "strange." He said that
as defense minister, he had
prevented turning Eshkolot
into a civilian settlement,
because it had no security
significance and "would not
contribute to peace."
Health Minister Ehud
Olmert of Likud told
reporters that anyone seeing
the new settlement as an
obstacle to peace was exag-
gerating.

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