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Mordechai Vanunu, Israeli Nuclear Whstle Blower, Released From Jail Early Sunday After Being Held 36 Hours in Isolation for Suspected Parole Violations |
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by Greg Szymanski The Artic Beacon Entered into the database on Tuesday, November 22nd, 2005 @ 14:22:03 MST |
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Vanunu said authorities are looking for 'any little thing' to put him
back in jail after serving 18 years for blowing the whistle on Israel's nuclear
stockpile. Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear whistle blower, was released from jail
early Sunday morning after being held in isolation for 36 hours by Israeli authorities
on suspicion of parole violations. Vanunu, 51, a former nuclear technician, originally spent 18 years in an Israeli
prison for telling the world in a London Sunday Times article in 1986 about
Israel’s nuclear capability, including a stockpile of more than 200 nuclear
weapons. Released in April 2004, he has been strictly prohibited under the terms of
his parole to leave Israel, including traveling to the occupied territories.
Early Friday afternoon he was detained by Israeli police at the A-Ram border
station as he was traveling on a bus near Jerusalem. “It was the first time I sat alone in prison since being released and
it was very difficult as it brought back terrible memories,” said Vanunu
in a telephone conversation with the Arctic Beacon from his home in Israel.
“I think they are looking for any reason to put me back in jail. “After being held in isolation for 36 hours, when I finally saw the judge,
the prosecution wanted to detain me under house arrest for two weeks and give
me a stiff fine. But my lawyer successfully argued that where I was detained
was not in an unoccupied territory and that the terms of my parole are vague. “He also told the judge authorities needed to provide me with a list
of checkpoints that are off limits, which they haven’t done. I was just
trying to travel to a small village and felt I shouldn’t have been detained.” After his lawyer successfully argued the legal points, Vanunu was released
without charges being filled or a fine being levied. Authorities also did not
give any specifics regarding his detention, merely saying Vanunu was required
to notify authorities anytime he planned on leaving Jerusalem. Under the terms of parole, he has also been prohibited from talking to the
press, something he has openly disregard, adding in past public statements he
was “not going to allow the Israeli authorities to stop his freedom of
speech.” “They never mentioned anything this time about talking to the foreign
press, but like I said I think they are looking for anything little thing to
put me back in jail,” said Vanunu, who spent 11 of his 18 year prison
term in solitary confinement for going public about Israel’s nuclear program.
Vanunu was released from an Israeli prison near Tel Aviv in 2004 for divulging
what authorities claimed was classified information regarding Israel’s
nuclear weapons program and its nuclear reactor in Dimona, where he worked for
nine years as a scientist. The Sunday Times of London published a full account of Vanunu’s story,
calling the attention to the world in 1986 that Israel has already constructed
200 nuclear atomic bombs. He verified his claim with photographs of the Dimona
site, verified by experts who eventually confirmed that Israel had nuclear weapons. Vanunu was arrested in Rome at the time the article was being published to
Italy by a combination Mossad and CIA undercover kidnapping. Once he returned,
Vanunu claimed he was not given a fair trial and quickly sentenced to a maximum
term for treason as well as being termed a foreign spy. He also appeared last Monday, four days before his arrest at the checkpoint,
in his only U.S. radio interview on Greg Szymanski’s “Investigative
Journal” on the Republic Broadcasting Network where he said Israel’s
nuclear arsenal now had at least doubled to 400 nuclear weapons. His entire
interview can be heard at www.rbnlive.com in the archives section. “If President Bush wants to find nuclear weapons in the Middle East,
all he has to do is come to Israel. I am not going to let Israel keep me from
exercising my freedom of speech,” said Vanunu during the radio interview.
“I am waiting for my January hearing where the Israeli judge will determine
if I go back to jail for talking to the foreign press. “But I will not stop talking as what else can they do to me after spending
18 years in jail, 11 years in solitary confinement, for doing nothing wrong.
All I ever wanted to do was alert the world to the terrible nuclear threat Israel
presented to the whole Middle East and the world.” The Friday arrest hasn’t been the first time Vanunu has been detained
by Israeli authorities since being released from prison. Last November 11, Israeli
police entered St. George's Cathedral, arresting Vanunu. He was questioned about
his interviews with foreign press, which he conducted in open defiance of the
restrictions, believing they were in violation of his freedom of speech. Vanunu was also detained last Christmas Eve, as he attempted to enter the off-limits
West Bank city of Bethlehem for worship at the Church of the Nativity. He was
released several hours later being given five days of house arrest. Vanunu’s case was then reviewed by the Israeli court last April where
the charges were dropped but then immediately prosecutors filed new charges
under a different law prohibiting contact with the media concerning matters
of national security. Prior to his Friday arrest, Vanunu was scheduled to appear for a January hearing
where he faces a possible six months in prison if convicted on other alleged
parole violations, charges specifically concerning his alleged disregard for
the Israeli order not to talk to the foreign press. |