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November 15, 1991 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-11-15

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

BAC KG ROU N D

C A D I

L L AC

L E

Settlements

Continued from preceding page

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"It is just another housing
project in the suburbs of the
central areas of Israel," said
Yossi Ben-Aharon, director-
general of the prime min-
ister's office and a key mem-
ber of Israel's Madrid nego-
tiating team.
"Arabs and Jews have liv-
ed and moved through these
areas for thousands of years,
so the Green Line is non-
existent. It is irrelevant if
we build on the line, west of
the line or east of it," he in-
sisted.
But it is relevant to the
Bush administration, which
has already delayed the $10
billion loan guarantee to
Israel and is expected to link
future aid to an Israeli com-
mitment to freeze Jewish
settlement activities in the
occupied territories, at least

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while the peace process is in
progress.

Washington appears to
agree that the old Green
Line represents an indefen-
sible border and it is unlike-
ly to push Israel all the way
back. But until the ter-
ritorial issue is resolved at
the negotiating table, the
Bush administration is ex-
pected to hold back on aid
and loans that could be spent
across the old border — or
free other funds for this pur-
pose.
Ironically, however, a cur-
tailment of U.S. aid could ac-
tually spur Jewish set-
tlement growth in the ter-
ritories because it is cheaper
to acquire land and build
there than within the Green
Line. 0

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Lawyers Condemn
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991

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Sat. 10.3

Franklin Plaza
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29107 Northwestern Hwy.
Southfield (2nd entrance from 12 Mile in rear)

Brussels (JTA) — The
international community
was urged at a weekend con-
ference here to unequivocal-
ly condemn "anti-Semitism
without frontiers," the
rapidly spreading phenom-
enon of Holocaust denial and
Jew-baiting in countries
with few or no Jews.
"Burgeoning racism and
anti-Semitism worldwide"
and in various guises was
the subject of many of the
resolutions adopted at the
three-day meeting here of
the International Associ-
ation of Jewish Lawyers and
Jurists World Council.
The Israel-based associ-
ation has about 3,000 mem-
bers worldwide. The meeting
in Brussels, seat of the Eu-
ropean Community, was at-
tended by 200 delegates
from 20 countries and con-
vened under the patronage
of the European Executive
Commission.
Its sponsor was the Euro-
pean, the English-language
weekly founded recently by
the late Robert Maxwell, the
British publishing tycoon
who died mysteriously at sea
Nov. 5 and was buried in
Jerusalem.
One resolution demanded
that all states which have
not yet done so enact legisla-
tion immediately to prohibit
incitement to racial hatred.
Those states which have
such legislation should
make sure it is enforced, the
resolution stated.
The lawyers also called on
the international commun-
ity to repeal the 1975 U.N.
General Assembly resolu-

tion denigrating Zionism as
a form of racism.
The president of the
association, Israeli Judge
Hadassah Ben-Itto, called
the resolution "a libel
against the Jewish people,
which is being used not only
against Israel but against
Jews everywhere."
Judge Ben-Itto, who is
retiring from the bench after
31 years to fight anti-
Semitism full time, observ-
ed, "Although world leaders
are on record for the erasure

The lawyers called
on the
international
community to
repeal the 1975
U.N. resolution.

of this libel, the correction of
this evil is now cynically be-
ing linked to the peace pro-
cess."
The meeting also called on
the United Nations to
release the names of the 140
companies worldwide found
to have supplied Iraq with
materials and technology for
the development of weapons
of mass destruction.
International measures
were called for to bring Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein
to justice.
The jurists condemned the
"blanket exoneration and
rehabilitation" of suspected
war criminals by Lithuania
as soon as it gained in-
dependence from the Soviet
Union.
They expressed "alarm"
that passage of time combin-

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