The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 12, 1987-Page 5 Former South African prisoners recall torture By PETER MOONEY Nomgcobo Sangweni organized a women's rights group at the University of Natal in South Africa. In December 1986 she was arrested. She was kept in prison under a law that allows prisoners to be held indefinitely for interrogation. Prison guards forced Sangweni to stand for 14 straight hours during one interrogation and, in another instance, beat her so badly that she was unable to walk. After she was released in May, 1987, she was taken to the hospital and doctors found a substance that they were unable to identify but which Sangweni believes was used to debilitate her. Sangweni and Father Casimir Paulsen spoke before an audience of 150 in the Michigan Union last night in an event sponsored by Amnesty International USA, which lobbied for the release of both. Sangweni now lives in the United States and attends Hunter College in New York. She said that she was never told why she was im- prisoned. "Either you fight or you submit, and I was not pre- pared to submit," she said. Paulsen was arrested in December of 1986 and held for three months. Guards tortured Paulsen during his imprisonment, he said. "They had reason to suspect I'm a subversive be- cause I said (the South African) government is for the birds," Paulsen said. Paulsen works with Black South Africans in Transkei, one of several tribal homelands created by the South African government. Because of a lack of jobs in the homelands, Paulsen said, many Blacks are forced to find work far from their homes. "Seventy percent of the men I work with had to leave their families under the migrant labor system to work in the mines," he said. Paulsen went to South Africa in 1966 to work as the chaplain at the University of Transkei and was de- ported in 1971. He lived in the Detroit area and worked in a Ford plant before returning to South Africa in 1978. The efforts of Amnesty International, Polish- American organizations, and Michigan Democratic senators Don Riegle and Carl Levin were instrumental in achieving his release, Paulsen said. Tom Algeo, a member of Amnesty Group 61, said that though the group's efforts don't always result in the release of prisoners, it "almost always has the effect of improving the conditions of imprisonment." Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Nomgcobo Sangweni relates her experiences as a South African political prisoner in a speech yesterday in the Michigan Union's Anderson Room. Citizens honor veterans and i By The Associated Press Former soldiers struggled into their old uniforms to march in pa- rades, and monuments were dedicated to fallen servicemen yesterday as the nation observed Veterans Day, a day of pride for some, of remembrance for others. And for some, it was a day of learning. Across the San Francisco Bay area, children met with inpatient and outpatient veterans at the Veter- ans Administration Hospital to learn the meaning of the holiday. The annual Veterans Day parade in Boston went on as scheduled, de- spite temperatures in the low 30s and a glaze of ice on the streets, al- though in western Massachusetts parades at Pittsfield and North Adams were canceled because of the season's second widespread snow. Boston Patrolman Jack Kervin said veterans in the city's parade weren't going to let the cold stop them from marching. "Soldiers fight in all types of weather," he said, "It'll give those marchers flashbacks of their miserable days in boot- West Bank lawyers blast Israeli policies (Continued from Page 1) the intelligence agency did in fact lie in court in the past. Both speakers said that no old decisions were being reversed as a result of the finding. Qubty also condemned the Israeli government for destroying Palestinian houses. "Sometimes people are accused with military offenses and before they are brought to court, before they are charged, their houses are demolished," he said. The two speakers focused their discussion on the treatment of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which are not considered a part of Israel. The occupied territories are currently under Israeli militafy rule and subject to military courts instead of regular Israeli courts. "The Israeli law doesn't apply to the people in the occupied territory," said Qubty. However, both lawyers stressed that -discrimination occurs against Arabs inside Israel as well. They said subtleties in the law enabled the government to differentiate between Arabs and Jews. According to Qubty, every Israeli, whether Arab or Jewish, must enter 4the army at age 18. However, the Israeli Defense Minister can prohibit people from entering the army, and Qubty said that currently no Arabs are admitted. Qubty said this allows Israeli r lawmakers to differentiate between camp." In pittsburgh sunshine in tim to turn out to c George Bush as city's parade. "O do anything bu newed sense of. newed sense of h United States missing soldiers those who have defended our values h, snow gave way to in peace. e for several people "We honor both living and dead, heer Vice President and those whose fate is still not re- s he marched in that solved - our missing in action, )nce a year, it dosen't countrymen whom we swear never t good to have a re- to forget." patriotism and a re- In Washington at the Vietnam honor," Bush said. Veterans Memorial, special tribute 'We honor both living and dead, and those whose fate is still not resolved - our missing in action.' -Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger A driving rainstorm put a chill on observances at the Tomb of the Un- known Soldier at Arlington Ceme- tery outside Washington. "On this day, our nation pauses to honor all her veterans, past and present," said Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in prepared re- marks. "We remember both those who helped us prevail in war, and was paid to 24 men whose names have just been added to the more than 58,000 war dead listed on the memorial's granite walls. Cold, blustery wind greeted parade marchers across Georgia, but World War II veteran Lou Atterberry Jr. didn't seem to mind as he snapped salutes at the passing ROTC and military units in Savannah's parade. Tice alksDoily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Tice talks Frank Tice stops to talk yesterday on State Street, where his son owns a convenience store. 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