Zuzak
GRC Report; Wed., Nov. 01, 2006
(1)
Holodomor: In an
article reproduced in AUR#781, Oleksandr Kramarenko states
that the 1926 census recorded 80,095,000 Ukrainians in the USSR. In the
1939
census, following the Holodomor of 1933 and the Great Terror of the
1930s, only
28,100,000 residents of the USSR admitted to being Ukrainian. This and
two
other long articles by Roman Serbyn and Stanislav Kulchytsky are
archived at my
Holodomor link
http://www.willzuzak.ca/tp/holodomor/holodomor.html
(2)
Anti-"hate" legislation as
a threat to freedom:
This unpublished letter by
Wallace Klinck, submitted to the Calgary Herald (and earlier the
Edmonton
Journal), illustrates how the protections inherent under British Common
Law are
being eroded and being replaced by tribunals reminiscent of Bolshevik
Peoples'
Courts. It is archived under the CHRC link at
http://www.willzuzak.ca/tp/chrc/chrc.html
(3)
Israel - Palestine Solution:
Letter to eight Liberal Leadership aspirants archived at
http://www.willzuzak.ca/tp/
under Will
Zuzak Letters in centre column.
*****************************************************
Scott Brison [email protected]
Stéphane Dion [email protected]
Ken Dryden [email protected]
Martha Hall Findlay [email protected]
Michael Ignatieff volunteer@michaelignatieff.ca
Gerard Kennedy [email protected]
Bob Rae [email protected]
Joe Volpe [email protected]
Dear
Liberal Leadership contenders:
Several
revealing incidents concerning
Israel and the situation in the Middle East occurred within your
leadership
campaign this past summer.
One
such incident involved your associate
critic for foreign affairs, Borys Wrzesnewskyj, recommending that the
Canadian
government enter into discussions with Hezbollah, one of the
protagonists in
the 34-day Israel-Lebanon war of 12 July - 14 August, 2006. The
response of all
ten of the leadership contenders to this reasonable suggestion was to
demonize
Mr. Wrzesnewskyj and force him to resign his critic position.
The
other ongoing controversy involves the
leading contender, Michael Ignatieff, who initially made the
unfortunate remark
that he was not losing sleep over civilian deaths in Lebanon. More
recently,
while attempting to clarify his remarks, he was assailed for suggesting
that
Israel had perpetrated war crimes in bombing the village of Qana.
It is
incontrovertible that Israel did,
indeed, perpetrate crimes during the Israel-Lebanon war. This includes
bombing
of United Nations outposts, pin-point bombing of civilian apartments,
bombing
Red Cross vehicles, bombing vehicles carrying refugees attempting to
escape the
slaughter, deliberately destroying civilian infrastructure, and,
especially,
dispersing tens of thousands of cluster bombs such that millions of
unexploded
cluster bomblets now
proliferate the
Lebanese countryside.
In my
opinion, the aspiring leadership of
the Liberal Party of Canada should not be sanctioning crimes against
peace, war
crimes and crimes against humanity. The present situation in the Middle
East --
including Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan -- is likely to
escalate
into an attack on Iran and a broad conflagration in that region and,
perhaps,
the world. The Palestinian-Israeli conflict dragging on for some 60
years is at
the root of the problems in the Middle East. It is time that this
conflict be
resolved.
==============================================
Solution to Palestinian Intifada
Report Newsmagazine
17327 106A Ave.
Edmonton, AB T5S 1M7
[email protected]
Dear Editor:
In the Oct. 22, 2001 issue of the Report, Jeff White labels the Zionist
leaders
involved in the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 as
terrorists. I
am amazed that none of the myriad of letters in response to his
provocative
essay refer to the Israeli settlement policy of the occupied
territories as the
reason for the year-long Palestinian Intifada. The continuing
confiscation and
settlement of Palestinian land by Jewish settlers indicates that the
hard-line
Zionist leadership does not want peace and has no intention of
abandoning their
Greater Israel plans. The Palestinian people finally realized that they
were in
a no-win situation and turned to extreme violence in desperation.
The interim solution is brutally straightforward. It involves
separating the
two sides by stationing United Nations peace-makers on the 1948
U.N.-designated
borders. The Israelis could carry on their affairs unmolested within
their
internationally recognized borders. The Palestinian areas would remain
under
U.N. control until such time as a viable social and economic
infrastructure
could be established.
Under such a scenario, which only George Bush could initiate, serious
peace
negotiations between the two parties would finally be possible.
==============================================
(1)
The United States will establish
control of the skies over Palestine - Israel and will set a deadline by
which
all Israeli military equipment and personnel will be removed from the
Palestinian, Lebanese and Syrian territories into the 1948
U.N.-designated
borders of Israel.
(2)
By this date, an international military force under the control of the
United Nations will occupy Palestine (as well as Israeli-occupied
Lebanese and
Syrian territory) until such time as a viable
Palestinian State can be established.
(3) Realistic negotiations between all parties would be carried out,
under the
auspices of the United Nations, to establish realistic borders and
relations
between the States in the region. Any future changes to these borders
would be
first approved and then guaranteed by the United Nations and the United
States.
It is
not clear what the optimum
"final solution" for the Israeli - Palestinian State(s) would be.
Some prefer a unitary one-man-one-vote state in which Palestinians and
Jews
would have equal rights and responsibilities. Others prefer a two-state
solution to keep the two peoples separate. That is for the inhabitants
of the
region to decide.
Hard-line
Zionists, who do not want peace
and who have never negotiated with the Palestinians in good faith, will
probably oppose this proposal. However, I would expect that most
Palestinians
in the West Bank and Gaza would be supportive. Within Israel, I would
expect
that a large fraction of citizens, of Arab and Jewish backgrounds,
would be
supportive. Indeed, there is a very large peace movement both within
and
outside Israel that would be supportive of this proposal.
As
aspirants to the leadership of the
Liberal Party of Canada, I would urge each of you to discuss this issue
publicly in your campaigns.
Respectfully submitted
William Zuzak, Ph.D., P.Eng. (retired); 2006-10-30