Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, July 11, 1972 Pag.Eiht.HE7ICHGA ALY'uesaJu , 1972 14,000 ARRESTED MONTHLY Thieu rounds up deserters, govt. critics By THOMAS FOX Dispatch News Service Editor's Note: Mr. Fox, until re- cently a Saigon correspondent with the The New York Times, is now reponitg exclusively fone DNS SAIGON - The Vietnamese National Police, under orders from President Thieu, have cracked down on all forms' of political dissent since a bill went into effect June 27 authorizing Thieu to rule by decree. His opponents, however, charge that the South Vietnamese Sen- ate passed bill, which a 11 a w s Thieu to act on all matters with- out consulting the National As- sembly, has actually been put into effect before it was passed. The country has been under martial law since April, and poli- tical arrests have been common- place, with unknown thousands arrested during the past two and a half months. Nearly everyone known to have been an outspoken critic of the Thieu government - but not protected by international re- cognition - has suffered at the hands of the powerful National Police in recent weeks. In Hue alone, more than 1500 have been arrested and m o s t have been taken to Con Son pri- son island, an island which for decades has confined critics of French and American supported governments. Women and child- ren have been rounded up among the "politically suspicious" - and taken by police to Con Son. "We've arrested the entire student body of Hue," Hoang Duc Nha, President Thieu's press secretary recently stated flatly. Hundreds of students h a v e beenarrested. Scores of Uni- versity and highchool teachers and other intellectuals h a v e been carried from their homes by the National Police. In the Mekong delta more than 5000 "political suspects" h a v e been arrested by the National Police during the past e i g t weeks. Under present operaing rules, any information received by police on alleged NLF ac- tions, contacts or sympathies is TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEW TV RENTALS 662-5671 -r etio tw Moden Cooln DIAL 5-6290 ENDING THURSDAY SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 Fromthe Master of Shockj A Shocking Masterpiece enough to place a Vietnamese peasan in Con Son prison. One high ranking American police advisor said 14,000 Viet- namese -- including draft dodg- ers and deserters - are being arrested monthly. He a d d e d that the majority have been re- leased after interrogation, but many were being held "to keep them out of the way during the time of crisis". The arrests have been offic- ially termed "preventive ar- rests". "We want to take the sting out of the bit of the V C.", the advisor added. It is widely held here by Wes- tern observers that Thieu is us- ing the police crackdown to round up all critics of his polic- ies - whether they be commun- ist, or simply non-communist members of the opposition. it is the job of the National Police - who now number near- ly 125,000 - to find the boys, arrest them, and return them tc their units. In many cases people have been arrested solely because they have relatives in the NLF or in North Vietnam. In some prov- inces arrests have backlashed. However, a few cadre units which were content doing little or nothing in towns have left the urban areas to join the moe active rural based NLF units. One rather a-political V i e t- namese was picked up by police when they suspected his car might have been used to trans- port NLF agents. He was taken to an interrogation ce er in the Delta city of Can Tho where he witnessed the torture tactics of the police for the first. time "The police beat them w it h clubs on the bottoms of t h e i feet and forced them to drink soapy water until they were nearly dead," he said. "Now I understand more clearly wha! the Viet Cong speak about." he concluded. A lower house Deputy from a Delta province said ,he police have come into villages and picked up men in their eighties who have not left their homer for years, forcing teem into small prison cells. "Eve village and hamlet chiefs and office-sin the Saigon army are being ar- rested and interogated," he add- ed. Those who have been airested go to police interrogation cat - ers where they are pressured by police to confess their "political crimes". Since statements gain- ed by police during interrogation, under the French legal system, can be used as evidence during subsequent trials, police h a v e been known to use torture when necessary.k One thirty year old woman re- leased this week from a police interrogation center in Saiton, said more than 90 pr cent of those arrested faced violent in- terrogations, including club- bings, electric shock treatments the pulling of finger nails, and the forceful drinking of s o a p y water. American police advisors, re- sponding to the allegations this week, stated that "abuses" might take place, but that as Vietnam "is a sovereign nation" they are unable to do anything to stop police violence. The Vietnamese constitution provides Vietnamese citizens a lawyer "during all periods of interrogation". In practice, how- ever, it is widely known no law- yers are allowed to witness in- terrogations. President Thien "President Thieu appears eag- er to show the world that no one dissents from his policies, and that all have rallied around him," Tran Van Tuyen, a prom- inent Deputy in the lower house stated, trying to explain w h y so many non-communists w e r e being arrested. Any mention of the police ar- rests by Vietnamese newspapers is considered grounds for censor- ship and seizure. As a result, there exists in Saigon an on- normally quiet - but strained - political atmosphere. Government opposition is lim- ited and often confined to quiet conversations or debates among the Congressmen who oppose the decree that Thieu exercise un- limited power for a six month period. Besides the "politically suspic- ious", thousands of draft dodg- ers and deserters have been hunted by the National police. SOUTH VIETNAMESE MILITARY police search for deserter's who may be hiding on buses carrying civilians. They are checking for men fleeing south to escape fighting on the northern front. 150,000 SHORT: Pot rive obtain Sigi By DAN BIDDLE Although the Michigan Mari- juana Initiative (MMI) has failed in its effort to place a marijuana legislation question on the statewide November bal- lot, it announced plans yester- day to continue the drive. MMI's petition drive fell'some Mieh. faetory eharged with hiring bias The Department of Justice filed a civil suit today charging a Michigan chemical company with discriminating against black job applicants. Attorney General t i c h a r d Ileindienst'said the suit w a filed in U.S. District Court in Detroit against BASF Wyandotte Corporation. The Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers' International Union (AFL-CIO) and its Wyandotte, Michigan, local also were chang- ed in the suit with encouraging discriminatory practices against blacks through its contract agree- ment with the company. fails to natures 150,000 short of the 265,000 needed. by yesterday's deadline for placement on the ballot. The organization now aims to put the "weed question" before voters on the next state-wide ballot in 1974. Linda Ross, co-ordinator for MMI blamed lack of time and registered voters for the failure of the petition drive, which be- gan on May 8. "People all over the state didn't realize they have to be registered voters to sign the petition," she added. "More than half of our potential support couldn't sign because they weren't registered." Ross said MMI will incorpo- rate a voter registration drive with its continuing signature campaign. She added that the voter drive will be coordinated with "all other interested groups groups in the state," including the McGovern for President campaign, which may conduct a massive registration effort in September aimed at 18 to 21- year olds. The MMI petition calls for legalization of "the possession, use, transportation, harvesting, and distribution" of marijuana, but specifically excluded legal- ization of sale of "the weed." JOBS? Pilot Program is seeking graduate students for resident fellow positions. We need cre- ative people who can teach a course and want to participate in an exciting experi- mentl educational program. Contact Danny Willbach, 764-7521, Alice Lloyd Hall, Univ. of Mich. Everyone Welcome! GRAD COF FE E HOUR Wed., July 12 8-10 p.m 4TH FLOOR, RACKHAM Fun, Food, People NEW PEOPLE WELCOME! F Are Yu'Color Blnd WE NEED YOU As subjects for Color Vision Experiments WE WILL PAY YOU A deadly new twist lrom the original Hitchcock! ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S "FRENZY" CALL FRED 764-0574