Tomorrow is another Zundel Hearing Day. Mark Weber of the
Institute for Historical Review did a quick summary for media:
There have been important developments in the Zundel
case, both outrageous and encouraging:
-- QWest Communications, the US service provider of the
US-based Zundelsite, caved in to complaints from the "Canadian Human
Rights Commission," and pulled the plug on the site. (Luckily, an
alternative service provider was found pretty quickly.) This is both
outrageous and dangerous. Imagine if US-based service providers were to
routinely bend to pressure from foreign governments (China?, Iran?), and
pull the plug on undesirable web sites. Of course, the only web sites that
have actually been affected are those that Jewish groups don't like.
-- At least one or two newspapers in Canada are now
expressing opposition to the absurd charge by CSIS -- Canada's counterpart
of the FBI -- that Zundel is a threat to national security. This
groundless accusation is the pretext used by Canadian authorities to keep
Zundel behind bars. With the passage of time, more and more people are
realizing that this is a mere pretext to imprison him. In fact, Canadian
authorities are doing the bidding of the powerful Jewish-Zionist lobby.
-- Happily, Zundel now has capable and determined legal
teams in place in both the US and Canada fighting on his behalf. His US
attorney is making a strong case that Zundel was illegally arrested and
deported from the US, and his Canadian attorneys are similarly working
effectively on his behalf.
Yesterday I was interviewed about the Zundel case (again)
by Kevin Strom for "American Dissident Voices." This interview
will probably be broadcast on Friday.
Just a few minutes ago I spoke by phone with Ernst Zundel,
who phoned collect from jail. He is optimistic and encouraged. Certainly
the situation is better than it was a week ago, when it seemed that his
deportation to Germany was inevitable.