January 1991, Page 44
Issues in the News
Compiled by Parker L. Payson
From the Arab Press:
US Embassy in Lebanon Reopens:
The new US ambassador to Lebanon, Ryan Crocker, in November reopened
the US Embassy in East Beirut, which was closed in September 1989
because of deteriorating security conditions within territory controlled
by Christian militia leader Gen. Michel Aoun. The decision to reopen
the embassy despite continued fighting in the region came only two
months after Aoun's troops surrendered in East Beirut, and, according
to analysts, reflected a US desire to demonstrate support for the
Lebanese government of Elias Hrawi.
Yemen Struggles to Absorb Returnees:
Most of the estimated 650,000 Yemenis who left Saudi Arabia because
of increased tensions between the two countries over the Gulf crisis
"have few skills " and will not be able to find jobs in
Yemen, according to Yemeni Labor Ministry Director Mohammed Aish.
According to Aish, fewer than 1 out of 20 emigrants have received
jobs. Many returning Yemenis have called for a drastic reduction
in the number of foreigners working in Yemen, who number fewer than
43,000, the Yemeni edition of the Middle East Times reported.
Talks on Kashmir:
The newly installed prime ministers of Pakistan and India, Nawaz
Sharif and Chandra Shekhar, respectively, met in November, only
three weeks after each took office, to discuss border issues and
reducing the differences over the province of Kashmir which last
spring nearly led to war between the countries. Although neither
leader altered his position, the two pledged to meet regularly to
discuss the disputed territory, over which the two countries have
fought three wars, the Saudi Gazette reported.
Elections in Egypt:
Egypt's National Democratic Party maintained control of Egypt's
454-seat People's Assembly following nationwide elections in November.
Although Interior Minister Abdel-Halim Moussa claimed a 70-percent
voter turnout, independent observers claim that fewer than 20 percent
of Egypt's voters participated in the elections, which were boycotted
by Egypt's two main opposition parties, the Muslim Brotherhood and
the Wafd party. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak called for the
elections following a decision by Egypt's Supreme Court in September
that the previous parliamentary elections gave unfair advantage
to incumbent candidates. The opposition refused to participate in
the elections unless parliament received greater legislative power,
elections were held under court supervision, and the emergency laws
imposed after the assassination of President Anwar Sadat in 1981
were lifted, the Middle East Times reported.
Ships Avoiding Aqaba:
In trying to enforce the international embargo against Iraq, the
US Navy has routinely harassed and diverted vessels headed for Jordan's
only port, Aqaba, Jordanian shipping authorities claim. On Nov.
5, for example, a Polish ship was forced to leave its contents in
Port Sudan because it contained agricultural diesel generators while
its cargo manifest listed agricultural diesel engines, Tewfig Kawar,
the president of the Jordan Shipping Agent's Association, told the
CABU Bulletin. According to Kawar, the actions threaten to
destroy the port, which is already suffering from severe equipment
shortages because of the embargo.
Iran Will Not Accept Land Deal:
Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani announced in October
Iran's opposition to any settlement in the Gulf crisis that would
transfer Kuwaiti territory, including the strategic island of Bubiyan,
to Iraq, the Saudi Gazette reported. Interviewed in the French
daily Le Monde, Rafsanjani declared: "We have warned
the Kuwaitis that if, to reach a settlement, you accept ceding the
island of Bubiyan to the Iraqis, we will be absolutely opposed,
even to a minimal change of the existing frontiers. " If Kuwait
were to cede territory over Iran's objections, then "we would
act within our means to stop it," Rafsanjani said.
Tunisia's Opposition Calls for Elections:
Responding to charges by Tunisian President Zine Al Abidine Ben
Ali that Tunisia's opposition was an obstruction to democratic reform,
opposition leader Mohammed Moada called on the Tunisian president
to set a firm date for nationwide elections. Moada accused Ben Ali
of allowing "the state security apparatus to use the same violent
methods against political opponents as [former Tunisian President
Habib] Bourguiba used," the Middle East Times reported.
Zine Ali replaced Bourguiba as president in November 1987, pledging
to move his country towards democratization.
Oman to Form Assembly:
Sultan Qaboos bin Sa'id, the ruler of Oman, announced plans in
November to form a representative consultative assembly within a
year, the Middle East Times reported. "We have decided
upon the formation of a consultative assembly in which all the communities
of the Sultanate are to be represented, " he said. Unlike the
existing consultative council made up of 52 appointed members, "There
will be no government membership of this majlis (parliament),"
the Sultan added. The decision to form an assembly, which, according
to government officials, will be popularly elected, will be the
first elected body in Oman and follows a recent decision by Saudi
Arabia to form a legislative assembly and an announcement by the
Emir of Kuwait to establish an elected parliament in Kuwait following
an Iraqi withdrawal.
Ershad Resigns:
After months of political unrest, Bangladeshi President Hussein
Mohammed Ershad resigned in December and asked opposition parties
to nominate an interim leader to prepare for national elections.
According to analysts, Ershad's decision was an attempt to split
the coalition of opposition parties, which include both communist
and freemarket groups, before the planned 1991 elections. Opposition
groups in Bangladesh, the fifth poorest country in the world, have
been fighting to oust Ershad since he came to power in a bloodless
coup in 1982, the Middle East Times reported.
Coup in Chad:
Rebel forces, believed to be backed by Libya, launched an attack
into Chad from Sudan in November and, three weeks later, ousted
Chadian President Hissene Habre, the Middle East Times reported.
France, which had previously supported Habre in battles against
Libyan-backed insurgents, refused to defend Habre's government,
calling the fight an "internal affair of Chad." The US,
which has been critical of Libyan attempts to destabilize Chad in
the past, announced plans to meet with rebel commander Idriss Deby
to discuss future relations.
UK Restores Ties with Syria:
England announced in November that it was resuming relations with
Syria, the Middle East Times reported. The announcement followed
the resignation of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who
earlier in the month rejected British government efforts to restore
relations with Syria after Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Al Shara,
in an attempt to encourage reconciliation, announced that "the
release of British hostages [in Lebanon] would be easier if there
is a diplomatic relationship between Syria and Britain." Thatcher
considered the statement a violation of her "no trade for hostages"
position.
From the Jewish Press:
US Military Equipment Buyer Arrested:
Israeli Brigadier General Rami Dotan was arrested on charges of
mass fraud and bribery, the Forward newspaper reported in
November. Dotan, who was responsible for purchasing tens of millions
of dollars worth of American military equipment for the Israeli
Air Force, was accused of circumventing standard purchasing channels
and funneling millions of dollars worth of kickbacks from US companies
and independent arms dealers into personal accounts abroad. In connection
with the scandal, Israeli prosecutors are investigating the role
of General Electric, Israeli arms agent Ofer Pail, and former Israeli
Defense Ministry official Harold Katz, who now serves as legal advisor
to Pratt and Whitney. Katz, a US citizen from Boston suspected of
involvement in Israeli espionage in the US, was the owner of record
of a Washington, DC apartment used by the Israeli Embassy to backstop
the espionage operation of Jonathan Jay Pollard, a US Navy counterintelligence
agent who stole thousands of US secret documents and sold them to
Israel.
Kahane's Legacy:
Following the assassination of Rabbi Meir Kahane in New York, three
members of Kahane's anti-Arab Kach movement, including Kahane's
son, were arrested in November for the alleged West Bank murder
of two Arabs, Mohammed El-Khatib, 65, who was gunned down while
riding his donkey to work, and Marian Hassan, 60, who was killed
in the same village as she walked out of her home. Three other Kach
members were arrested later in the month on charges of arson and
violence against Israeli shopkeepers who employ Arabs. Several Jewish-owned
shops employing Palestinians in Israel have been burned down since
Kahane's murder, and many have posted signs reading, "No Arabs
employed here." US State Department officials urged Israeli
authorities to "take steps to deal ... with vigilante groups
that are forcing Israeli employers to fire Palestinian workers,
" and the Israel Peace Now organization has called on Israel's
Justice Department to classify Kach as a terrorist organization
and confiscate weapons belonging to its members, the Jewish Week
of Queens, NY, reported.
Police Chief Given Raise:
Jerusalem Police Chief Aryeh Bibi, who oversaw the police killing
of at least 18 Palestinians on the Temple Mount/Haram AlSharif in
October, was given a promotion, in rank and salary, the Detroit
Jewish News reported. Although an Israeli investigation commission
rebuked the police for firing uncontrollably, no disciplinary action
was taken. Israeli cabinet ministers Ariel Sharon and Rafael Eitan,
who both faced reprimands for their roles in the 1982 massacre of
Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon,
reportedly opposed any action against the police, while cabinet
ministers Arye Deri and Raphael Pinhassi, who are both under police
investigation for corruption, called for a restructuring of the
entire police force.
New IDF Leader Wants Talks:
Israeli Major General Ehud Barak, who holds Israel's highest military
rank and is scheduled to replace General Dan Shomron as chief of
staff of the Israeli Defense Forces at the beginning of the new
military year on April 1, has called for direct negotiations with
Palestinian elected representatives. "We currently struggle
with the Palestinians. A long, bitter and continuing struggle. A
man does not choose his parents, and a people cannot choose its
neighbors ... We will have to talk to the Palestinians, " he
told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
Sharon's Housing Program:
Israeli Housing Minister Ariel Sharon announced plans in November
to house 1,400 Soviet Jews in Nazareth, the largest Arab city within
Israel. Under the plan, immigrants will occupy an army camp in the
middle of a densely populated Arab community until sufficient housing
is built. Local Palestinian leaders have called Sharon's plan a
deliberate provocation and have asked the army not to abandon the
camp, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported. Sharon also called
on the government to increase Jewish settlements in Arab East Jerusalem
and to expand Jewish control over all of Jerusalem's Muslim and
Christian holy places, including the Al Aqsa Mosque, the Dome of
the Rock, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
IDF Unveils New Gun:
The Israeli Defense Forces in November deployed a new weapon against
Palestinians in the intifada: a gravel gun that can fire 600 egg-size
rocks per minute up to a range of 250 feet, the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency reported.
Shamir's Intentions:
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir in November reiterated his
call for a "Greater Israel," saying, "The past leaders
of our movement left us with a clear message to keep the land of
Israel from the sea to the River Jordan for generations to come,
for the mass immigration and for the Jewish people, most of whom
will be gathered into this country," the Detroit Jewish
News reported. PLO leader Bassam Abu Sharif called Shamir's
statement "no more than an affirmation of his colonialist policy,
which violates international law, the Geneva conventions and resolutions
of the United Nations
Parliamentary Immunity Upheld:
The Knesset in November voted not to strip parliamentary immunity
from Arab Knesset member Mohammed Miari for his connections with
the Palestine Liberation Organization. A Knesset panel previously
had recommended Miari's prosecution for his alleged involvement
in a PLO-backed plan to charter a ship to transport Palestinian
deportees back to Israel. Seven members of the Likud party, which
had fought for Miarils ouster, either absented themselves or abstained
on the secret vote, which failed by a 49-29 margin after several
hours of emotional debate. Several Likud leaders "demanded
a thorough soul-searching" to determine why the vote failed,
the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported.
Klein Pleads Guilty:
Israeli Lieutenant Colonel Yair Klein in November pleaded guilty
to three counts of illegal exportation of military equipment. He
faces up to three years in prison. Klein, who sent arms shipments
through Antigua and Barbuda to members of the Medellin drug cartel
in Colombia, is also wanted in Colombia on conspiracy charges for
his alleged role in the assassination of presidential candidate
Luis Carlos Galan in 1989. Israel refused a Colombian request for
extradition on grounds that the two countries have no extradition
treaty. Antiguan prosecutors have filed additional charges against
Klein in the Israeli courts, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported.
No Habeas Corpus:
Israel placed three prominent Palestinians under administrative
arrest: Radian Abu Ayyash, chairman of the Palestinian Journalists'
Association, and Ziad Abu-Zayyad, editor of the Hebrew-language
weekly Gesher (The Bridge), were given six-month sentences,
while Dr. Ahmad Yaziji, board member of the Gaza Medical Association,
was given a one-year sentence. Under Israeli law, people thought
to be security risks can be imprisoned for up to one year without
trial or specific charges being filed, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
reported. The US State Department protested the arrests, stating,
"We have long been opposed to Israel's practice of detention
without charges or trial. " Palestinian leader Faisal Husseini
claimed the arrests were political and made only "to calm the
extremists in Israel. " According to Labor party leaders, several
Israeli right-wing Knesset members lobbied Prime Minister Shamir
for the arrests, circulating a letter which listed 11 Palestinian
activists, including Ayyash, Zayyad and Yaziji. |