Copyright (c) 2000 - Ingrid A. Rimland


ZGram: Where Truth is Destiny

 

November 7, 2000

 

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:

 

Four days ago, BBC did something extraordinary - it ran a special titled "Israel Accused". Unfortunately, I could not watch it, and so far I haven't had anyone send me an evaluation. However, you will get the flavour of this brave report by reading an op ed written by Canada's Paul Fromm, followed by BBC's own program description.

 

First Fromm:

 

Dear Canada Firster:

 

Jewish lobby groups in Canada and their Israeli allies are the loudest in demanding the never-ending pursuit of octogenarian Germans and East Europeans for having served in the shock troops of the losing side in World War II. We have steadfastly opposed the prosecution of old men for deeds done in another country, against persons who were not Canadians, all before the alleged perpetrators had ever come to Canada, especially when much of the evidence is circumstantial or forged by the former Soviet KGB.

 

However, it is doubly rich that those who most loudly cry for the blood of these old East Europeans are now, in the present time, perpetrating the sort of horrors THEY tell us were done by the Gestapo. You know, electrodes on the genitals, brutal solitary confinement, torturing a man's wife, making her lose her baby, to make the man talk. The following article is truly sickening. Don't read it, if you don't have a strong stomach.

 

It helps emphasize the importance of neutrality in the Middle East. It's a snakepit, with horrific people on all sides: Saddam, Hafez Azad, Shamir, Sharon -- they're ALL despicable. That's why we insist: Trade with all; aid to none. This article shows why Stockwell Day's new Israelophilia is misguided, to say the least.

 

Paul Fromm Director

 

Canada First Immigration Reform Committee

 

 

_______ BBC News | Friday, 3 November, 2000, 18:04 GMT

 

Israel accused

 

Israel Accused is a BBC Correspondent programme, and will be shown at 1850 GMT on Saturday 4th November on BBC Two.

 

Khiam prison was a detention and interrogation centre during the years of the Israeli occupation in Southern Lebanon. From 1985 until the Israeli withdrawal this May, thousands of Lebanese were held in Khiam without trial. Most of them were brutally tortured - some of them died.

 

Israel has always sought to escape responsibility for what was done in Khiam; Israel Accused asks where the blame for what Amnesty International calls war crimes really lies.

 

To help secure its hold on Southern Lebanon, Israel armed and financed a local Lebanese militia, the South Lebanon Army or SLA. In theory the SLA was there to protect the interests of the Lebanese community - in practice it did Israel's work by proxy. The SLA provided Khiam's guards and interrogators.

 

Children tortured

 

Ali Kashmar was fourteen when arrested and detained in 1988. Although he had voiced anti-Israeli opinions in school (his own father was killed fighting the Israeli invasion ten years earlier) there is no evidence to suggest that he was guilty of any crime.

 

Ali was tortured for eleven days and says he started making up stories to please his interrogators. Ali Kashmar was kept in Khiam for ten years. He grew up from a boy to a man within the prison walls - without even a mirror to use as his appearance changed, and spent time in solitary confinement. Ali was eventually released after a decade as part of a hostage exchange - fifty-five Khiam prisoners and the bodies of 44 Lebanese were traded for the remains of three Israeli soliders in 1998. Terribly damaged by his years in Khiam, he is still fighting severe psychological difficulties - and there is nowhere in Lebanon that provides treatment for this kind of trauma.

 

Ryadh Kalakesh was 17 when he was detained in Khiam. He comes from a family that was deeply involved with the Islamic group Hezbollah - one of his brothers was a suicide bomber - and he was picked up by Israeli troops on a sweep through his village in 1986.

 

Ryadh was tortured for eleven months, and gives a graphic account of what it was like; the use of electric shocks administered through wires attached to the finger tips or the genitals, the beatings, the dousings with hot then cold water, and what was known as "the pole", where prisoners - often after being striped naked - were handcuffed and suspended for hours at a time.

 

Ryadh's brother Adel was detained in Khiam too; when Adel refused to tell the interrogators what they wanted to hear they hauled in his wife Mona and tortured her so that he could hear her screams. Mona suffered electric shocks - through wires attached to her nipples - spent three months in solitary confinement and lost her baby while she was in the prison.

 

There is a compelling body of evidence about Israel's involvement in Khiam. Former detainees all say that in the early days of Khiam's time as a detention centre Israeli interrogators worked alongside their SLA counterparts, and their evidence is corroborated by that of those guards who worked in the prison.

 

In 1988 the Israel seems to have decided on a change of policy in Khiam, and the Israeli presence in the gaol became less obvious. But in a court case brought by Isreali human rights lawyers, the Defence Ministry has admitted paying all the staff at the gaol, training the interrogators and guards, and providing assistance with lie detector tests.

 

Israel denied war crimes in Khiam

 

In May, when Israel withdrew from Lebanon, many of Khiam's guards and interrogators fled across the border among the six thousand members of the SLA and their families who took refuge in Israel, living under Israeli government protection at the expense of the Israeli taxpayer.

 

No one from the Israeli government was willing to agree to an interview. When pressed to admit Israeli responsibility for the gaol, a man who commanded Israeli forces during the late 1980s finally concedes, "maybe".

 

Broadcast in the midst of one of the gravest Middle East crises of the past decade, Israel Accused is a timely reminder that there is still unfinished business from Israel's recent past.

 

This week, military prosecutor, Riad Talih demanded the death penalty for 11 former SLA officials who worked at the Khiam camp, and who will be tried in absentina.

 

Reporter: Edward Stourton

 

 

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Thought for the Day:

 

"A man may build himself a throne of bayonets, but he cannot sit on it."

 

(William Ralph Inge)

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