July/August 1995, pgs. 22-24
Issues in the News
Compiled by Shawn L. Twing
FROM THE ISRAELI AND U.S. JEWISH PRESS:
Perry Supports Israeli Military "Edge":
Speaking before a meeting of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations, U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry
said he is "personally committed to ensuring that Israel continues
to maintain a qualitative edge" militarily compared to its
neighbors in the Middle East. Discussing U.S. military policy in
the region, according to the Queens [NY] Jewish Week,
Perry said that the Gulf Cooperation Council "is not and never
will be a NATO," because of "mistrust and suspicion of
the nations there toward each other and their unwillingness to work
together." He did, however, say the U.S. decision to pre-position
military equipment in GCC countries had allowed the United States
to respond to Iraq's military maneuvers near Kuwait in the fall
of 1994 in three days instead of the six months it took to get troops
on the ground and ready to fight in 1990.
Israeli Soldier Opens Fire In Church:
On May 22, Israeli soldier Koren Haniel opened fire in a Christian
church courtyard in Jaffa before barricading himself inside the
church until security forces arrived and took him into custody.
According to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Haniel entered the church
courtyard and "began firing wildly from his M-16 assault rifle
and throwing concussion grenades," forcing a nun and other
women in the church to flee.
IAF Magazine Distributes Osiraq Simulator:
Israeli Air Force Magazine recently released a computer
disk containing information, graphics, and video clips of the June
1981 Israeli attack on Iraq's Osiraq nuclear reactor. According
to the Queens Jewish Week, the disk allows computer users
to re-enact the Israeli attack and gain insight into the planning
while the pilot narrates. Plans for future computer simulations
include the 1985 Israeli raid against a PLO headquarters in Tunis,
and Apache helicopter attacks in Lebanon. Until recently, information
surrounding these operations, especially the Osiraq bombing, was
censored by the Israeli government.
Israeli Minister Attacked By "Salute to
Israel" Parade Sponsor:
Israeli Minister of Culture Shulamit Aloni charged that
she was punched in the stomach by pro-Israel activist Jacques Avital
at a pre-"Salute to Israel" parade breakfast on May 21
in the New York Hilton Hotel. After hecklers in the audience refused
to give Aloni, a member of Israel's dovish Meretz party, a chance
to speak as scheduled, Avital suddenly jumped on stage and allegedly
punched the culture minister while apparently seeking to seize the
microphone. Although Avital denied that he had struck Aloni, she
filed assault charges after the incident. The Queens Jewish Week
said what it called the first physical attack on an Israeli official
by an American Jew "represents an escalation of a battle [about
the peace process] that until now had been primarily a war of words."
Germany May Give Israel Aid to Palestinians:
The German government is considering shifting its present aid to
Israel, approximately $100 million per year, to the Palestinian
National Authority, a German official told the Jerusalem Post.
Senior German officials have recommended to Chancellor Helmut Kohl
that the aid should be transferred to the Palestinians because it
is set aside for developmental assistance and Israel no longer is
a developing country.
U.S. Won't Give Jordan Any "Big Ticket"
Items for Its Defense:
In an interview with an unnamed senior Pentagon official, the Jerusalem
Post announced on May 20 that the United States will not give
Jordan any heavy weapons to help modernize its armed forces, but
will supply small amounts of surplus items and training ammunition.
The official is quoted as saying that "Jordan will not be receiving
any big-ticket items," apparently in compliance with a request
by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Greenpeace Stops Israeli Dumping:
Greenpeace activists in Zodiac rubber boats surrounded the Israeli
ship Aribel and prevented it from dumping 350 tons of toxic
waste from a Haifa chemical plant into a Mediterranean dumping area
36 kilometers from the port of Haifa on May 16. Danny Rabinowitz,
a Greenpeace volunteer and anthropologist at Hebrew University,
told the Jerusalem Post that more than 50,000 tons of toxic
waste are dumped into the Mediterranean every year by Haifa Chemicals.
The Israeli government's response was given by Environment Minister
Yossi Sarid, who claimed that "the situation in Haifa Bay is
like paradise compared with other places in the region."
Jews in Syria Want to Stay:
A senior source in the Israeli prime minister's office told the
Knesset's Aliya and Absorption Committee that the 250 Jews who remain
in Syria do not want to leave because "they believe peace is
imminent and hope to be able to exploit the situation for business
purposes," according to the Jerusalem Post. The joint
U.S.-Israeli operation to "rescue" the Jewish community
in Syria resulted in the emigration of 4,500 Jews from Syria. Of
these, 1,900 now live in Israel while 2,500 live in the United States,
primarily in New York and New Jersey.
FROM THE MIDDLE EASTERN PRESS
Palestine
Israel Trains PLO Police in Riot Control Techniques:
A group of 25 Gaza police officers underwent riot control training
at Israel's national police training center in Shafaram, Israel
on May 18, according to the Khaleej Times. The newspaper
said the training program was to be kept secret to prevent opposition
in Gaza, but was leaked to the press by Israeli sources just before
it occurred. Palestinian deputy police chief Gen. Mohamad Asfur
denied the program involved riot training and said, "It's a
study day to improve communications and to get to know each other
better."
Iraq
Iraqi Kurds Postpone Elections:
Iraqi Kurds meeting May 27 in Daraban, Iraq postponed elections
in Kurdish northern Iraq until June 4, 1996, one year after their
planned date. In a unanimous vote, representatives of the Kurdish
Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) extended
the deadline for elections in order to explore ways to resolve their
differences before the Kurdish democratic experiment collapses.
Since May 1994, fighting between the KDP and PUK has cost 2,000
lives.
Lebanon
Hariri Promises "United and Cohesive"
Government:
Two days after resigning from the post, Rafiq Hariri accepted reappointment
as Lebanon's prime minister and promised to continue his $18 billion
reconstruction plan for Lebanon. Hariri resigned on May 19. Two
days later, he was reappointed by Lebanese President Elias Hrawi,
who requested him to form a new cabinet. Mr. Hariri, a 50-year old
businessman, has, according to the Khaleej Times, an estimated
$5 billion fortune, most of it earned as a contractor in Saudi Arabia.
Israel
Israeli Comptroller Documents "Unwarranted"
Arrests:
In a comprehensive study of 64,000 arrests made by Israeli police
in 1992-3, Israeli Comptroller Miriam Ben-Porat found that 40 percent
were "illegal, unjustified or downright pointless." Ben-Porat
also criticized the Religious Affairs Ministry for failing "in
its role. . .as a trustee for public funds," and the Lands
Administration for selling only 8 percent of the land it had earmarked
for immediate construction during 1992-3. Economics Minister Shimon
Shetreet responded to Ben-Porat's criticisms by saying "there
are many fewer grave items in this report than in previous reports."
Vatican Criticizes Israeli Society:
In an interview with Corriere Della Sera, Vatican representative
Andrea de Montezemolo said that "Israelis cannot continue to
ask the Church to condemn anti-Semitism and then do nothing against
the local anti-Christian sentiment." An Israeli government
official was quoted in the Arab News of Jeddah as saying
that Israel was "extremely surprised" by Montezemolo's
comments, made in reference to Christian-Jewish tensions that included
the May 22 shooting by an Israeli soldier in a Jaffa church compound.
Jordan
Jordanian Police Disperse Anti-Israel Demonstration:
Jordanian authorities dispersed a group of marchers protesting
the third time the government has prevented the convening of an
Islamist-sponsored conference against normalizing relations with
Israel. Jordanian authorities cancelled the conference five hours
before it was scheduled to begin. Some 500 activists arrived for
the event, many of whom marched in the subsequent protest. The conference
organizers had planned to propose measures to ban political, cultural,
and economic links with Israel.
Pakistan
USAID Closes Pakistan Office:
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
officially closed its office in Islamabad, Pakistan, and handed
it over to the Pakistani Economic Affairs Division on May 28. The
U.S. has spent a total of $8 billion since 1952 on the aid program
in Pakistan, which employed 1,615 people, of whom 215 were Americans,
Pakistan AID director John Blackton told the Khaleej Times.
Nuclear Program 'Intact':
Despite U.S. pressure on Pakistan's government to abandon the nuclear
weapons program it began after India detonated a nuclear weapon
in 1976, Pakistan's nuclear program "is going on as it was,"
senior scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan told Agence France Press. Khan
said "all Pakistani leaders have been staunchly committed to
the program."
The Arabian Peninsula
Qatar Looking for Investors:
Qatar's Energy and Industry Minister Abdullah Bin Hamad Al-Attiyah
conducted a May 30 seminar in London to help raise foreign capital
to develop the largest gas deposit in the world in its North field.
Tiny Qatar's total gas reserves are exceeded only by those of Russia
and Iran.
Saudi Arabia Repays Loan:
Saudi Arabia made the final $900 million repayment on the $4.5
billion loan it took to help pay for the 1991 Gulf war, on May 22.
Repayment of its Gulf war loan and a rise of $1 to $2 per barrel
in world oil prices lifted a heavy burden from the Saudi government
and likely will make up a deficit of $4 billion in last year's $40
billion budget. A Western banker interviewed by the Saudi Gazette
claimed that if this trend continues, Saudi Arabia could conceivably
run a budget surplus this year.
Aramco to Develop New Oil Field:
Saudi Aramco has announced that it will invest $2.5 billion to
develop an enormous oil field in the Empty Quarter, the company's
biggest oil field project in four years. The Shaybah oil field is
projected to produce 500,000 barrels per day when it is in full
production, according to the Middle East Economic Survey,
and is part of Aramco's program to diversify its crude oil output.
Arab League Reaffirms Emirates' Claim to Gulf
Islands:
The Arab League reaffirmed on May 22 its support for the restoration
of UAE sovereignty over the Iranian-occupied islands of Abu Musa
and Greater and Lesser Tunbs. Arab League Secretary-General Dr.
Esmat Abdel-Meguid praised UAE President Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan
Al-Nahyan for his handling of the crisis and criticized Iran for
not returning the islands to the Emirates. On display at League
headquarters in Cairo is documentation of the UAE's case, which
it has taken to the International Court of Justice.
Yemen Yields Suspected Terrorist:
The Yemeni government turned over Johannes Weinrich, a German national,
to German authorities on June 4 for his alleged involvement in international
terrorism and support of the notorious international terrorist "Carlos
the Jackal." Weinrich was wanted in connection with the 1983
bombing of a Berlin cultural center where 22 people were wounded.
Yemen and Oman Finalize Border:
Yemen and Oman completed demarcating their common 3,000-kilometer
border on June 2. Under the agreement, the border will extend along
a straight line, eliminating the zigzags that existed before the
settlement.
North Africa
Islamists Clash in Algeria:
Heavy fighting between Islamist rebels, the Armed Islamic Group
(GIA) and the Islamic Salvation Army (AIS) around a mosque at Ben-Yadjis,
30 kilometers southeast of Jijel, on May 10 claimed dozens of lives.
The attacks began just as AIS leader Madani Mezrag was preparing
to begin the Eid Al-Adha feast with prayers at Ben-Yadjis. Other
skirmishes were reported in Taher, Chehna, and Larbaa.
President's Assassin Sentenced to Death:
The Algiers criminal court sentenced Lembarek Boumaarafi, the convicted
assassin of Algerian President Mohamed Boudiaf, to death on June
3. The 29-year-old army lieutenant was found guilty of Boudiaf's
murder and for plotting to overthrow the Algerian government as
a result of his 1992 attack. The motives for Boumaarafi's attack
remain a mystery.
Egypt
Egyptian Government Curbs Press:
A bill passed by the Egyptian parliament to punish journalists
who spread libel and misinformation broadens the scope of Egypt's
existing libel law in effect since 1937. A parliament official told
Reuters that the bill prescribes sentences of at least five years
in jail and maximum fines of 10,000 Egyptian pounds ($2,900) for
"the publication of rumors, false or opposing information and
aggravating publications that affect the status quo or cause undue
panic or harm any public office or the country's economy."
Opponents described the bill as an attempt to circumscribe free
speech. Al-Wafd newspaper called it "The Assassination
of Freedom of the Press."
Iran
Iran Distances Itself From Rushdie Death Sentence:
Although it will not rescind the death sentence issued by the late
Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989 against author Salman Rushdie for his
controversial book The Satanic Verses, the Iranian government
is seeking to normalize relations with Britain and the European
Union by encouraging Muslims to abide by the rules of the individual
countries in which they reside. In an interview with the London
Sunday Telegraph, a senior Iranian official said that "nobody
can touch the theoretical aspect of the fatwa [Islamic legal
decree] unless he wants to commit suicide," but "the Iranian
government is not going to send anyone to assassinate Salman Rushdie."
Since Khomeini issued the fatwa, Rushdie has been in hiding
and living under 24-hour police protection.
"Novel Prospects" for Iran-Iraq:
After members of an 11-man delegation from Iran met with counterparts
in Iraq, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati's top adviser
praised the "novel prospects" for future relations between
the two countries. After the May visit, comments coming from Tehran
have been very optimistic about the future of Iran-Iraq relations,
but several issues remain unresolved. Despite the residual tensions,
an editorial in the English-language daily Iran News stated
that the U.S. government's policy of "dual containment of Iran
and Iraq...has left the two countries with little choice but to
opt for bettering relations." |