April/May 1995, Pages 57, 94
Canada Calling
By Faisal Kutty
Ostrovsky Files Lawsuit Against CTV Network and Others
Victor Ostrovsky, a former Israeli intelligence officer
and author of two books exposing Mossad secret operations (see review
of his The Other Side of Deception on p. 58 of this issue)
filed a lawsuit against the CTV Television Network, its popular
morning show "Canada AM" hostess Valerie Pringle, and
producer Ron Fine, for airing a solicitation for his murder.
Edward Corrigan, a lawyer with Loebach, Corrigan & Al-Sewaidi
in London, Ontario, the law firm representing Ostrovsky, told the
Washington Report that CTV has retained a high-profile Toronto
law firm for its defense. Scott Gibson of the CTV Legal Department
responded that the CTV had "no comment."
Ostrovsky's Statement of Claim, filed with the Ontario Court (General
Division) in Ottawa on Feb. 7, 1995, also names as defendants Ma'ariv
Productions Ltd., the New York-based North American publisher and
distributor of the Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv; Mary Winfield,
the representative for Ma'ariv Productions in Canada; and Josef
Lapid, an Israeli journalist and commentator who made the calls
for Ostrovsky's death.
Ostrovsky's first book, released in 1990, was entitled By Way
of Deception: An Insider's Portrait of the Mossad. It caused
an uproar, particularly after the Israeli government tried unsuccessfully
to prevent its publication in Canada. Ostrovsky's new book, The
Other Side of Deception: A Rogue Agent Exposes the Mossad Secret
Agenda, published in October 1994, also has created controversy.
The suit alleges that in the wake of Ostrovsky's publication of
his second book on Oct. 3, 1994, Josef Lapid, a leading political
commentator, went on Israeli television and requested that the Mossad
agency kill Ostrovsky. According to Corrigan, on Oct. 7, 1994 Ma'ariv
then published an article written by Lapid in which he wrote "Yes,
I think Victor Ostrovsky should be eliminated."
The suit further alleges that Lapid, the former general manager
of the Israeli Broadcasting Corporation, then was invited to appear
on "Canada AM" on Oct. 15, 1994 and that this provided
him with a forum to call for "a decent Jew in Canada"
to assassinate Ostrovsky (see "The Contrasting Media Treatment
of Israeli and Islamic Death Threats" by Victor Ostrovsky in
the Jan./Feb. 1995 Washington Report). Corrigan told the
Washington Report that CTV owed a Duty of Care to Ostrovsky
and that "the CTV breached this duty by putting him under the
threat of murder and publicizing Lapid's call for his death."
To date, mainstream Canadian media and commentators, who vociferously
supported British author Salman Rushdie after the call for his death
by Iran's late Ayatollah Khomeini, have been conspicuous only by
their silence. Aside from a small article in the Law Times,
a trade newspaper, reporting the lawsuit in February, there has
been virtually no coverage. Ostrovsky credits the fear of being
labeled anti-Semitic and of retaliation by Israel's highly emotional
friends in Canada for the news blackout.
In fact, a leading lawyer in Ottawa declined to continue after
spending more than a month on the case. According to Ostrovsky,
the lawyer cited concern for the safety of his mailroom staff as
the reason for taking himself off the case. Ostrovsky has filed
a complaint against this lawyer with the Law Society of Upper Canada,
the governing body of the profession.
Not all Canadians are equally cowed, however. William Deverell,
chair of the Writers' Union of Canada, termed Lapid's incitement
to murder "undemocratic, immoral and, certainly in Canada,
illegal." Deverell has called on Lapid to retract his statement
and "publicly announce that Mr. Ostrovsky should not be harmed."
The Union also made its objection known to the Honorable Marion
Boyd, the attorney general of Ontario.
Ostrovsky and his wife Bella seek damages in excess of $2.5 million
from CTV and Valerie Pringle for mental anguish, fear, economic
loss and security and protection. They also seek damages in excess
of $200,000 from Ma'ariv Productions, Mary Winfield and Josef Lapid.
Professor Bassiouni Addresses Toronto Audience
Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni delivered the keynote address at
a fund-raising program for Bosnia and Chechnya on Jan. 28 in Toronto.
The dinner, organized by Human Concern International (HCI), raised
well over $50,000 to support HCI relief and development work in
these two war-torn states.
Bassiouni, the former chairman of the United Nations' Commission
of Experts to Investigate Violations of International Humanitarian
Law in the Former Yugoslavia, spoke about the brutality of the war
in Bosnia, and the silence of the international community. Bassiouni,
who served as an officer in the Egyptian army during the 1956 Israeli-French-British
attack on Sinai and the Suez Canal, related that in more than 60
years of Arab-Israeli wars in a region encompassing more than 50
million people, cases of rape were almost unheard of. By contrast,
in Bosnia, "in a period of a year and a half, over a population
base of about five million," he noted, "we can easily
estimate over 20,000 rapes, mostly by the Serbs."
Bassiouni and his Commission of Experts spent more than two years
investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity in the former
Yugoslavia (see "Britain and Its Allies Stall U.N. Probe of
Serb Atrocities" in the March 1995 issue of the Washington
Report). He said that the wholesale nature of the violations
is beyond description.
Professor Bassiouni cited the existence of 800 detention facilities
and 150 mass graves that cover the country. "What went on in
these facilities," he said, "were the types of things
you all see on television 50 years later about the Jewish Holocaust."
The president of DePaul University's International Human Rights
Law Institute told the audience: "The degree of indifference
shown by the world is probably one of the most shocking things I
can think of." He noted that many of the most vocal defenders
of the Bosnian Muslims have been Jewish individuals and organizations.
Bassiouni concluded his address by pointing out that these are
difficult, traumatic times for the Bosnians and that the world must
reach out to them and "tell them that the world knows, that
the world cares, that they are not abandoned."
The description by Imam Muharram, a survivor of a Serbian concentration
camp, of the torture he saw and personally underwent had a profound
impact on the crowd of more than 600 persons packed into the TARIC
Islamic Center. Imam Muharram, a graduate of the Islamic University
of Sarajevo, told the crowd; "If you think that the U.N. peacekeepers
are helping us [Bosnians], you are fooled. If you think the European
Community is helping us, you are fooled."
Two Canadians, Abdurahman Lawendy, 19, and Bilal Ibrahim, 17, presented
slides and related their experiences during a month-long relief
mission to Bosnia last summer (see their story in the Nov./Dec.
1994 Washington Report).
Other speakers at the function included Abu Nazir, the chairman
of HCI, Sheikh Hamid Djabir and Sheikh Ahmad Kutty, who was instrumental
in fund-raising.
Human Rights Commission Releases Policy Paper on
Hijab
The Quebec Human Rights Commission in early February released its
long-awaited policy paper on the wearing of the hijab, the
scarf worn by Muslim women to cover their hair. The document, entitled
"Religious Pluralism in Quebec: A Social and Ethical Challenge,"
was prepared in response to controversies surrounding the expulsion
from school of 13-year-old Emilie Ouimet, the transfer under pressure
of 15-year-old Dania Baali, and the order of a private Montreal
Muslim school that its non-Muslim teachers observe hijab
as a condition of employment.
The commission presently is investigating complaints filed by Baali's
parents as well as a complaint against the Montreal Muslim school.
The commission noted that the document should not "be used
as a basis for any conclusion as to the eventual outcome of a thorough
investigation of the particular facts of each of these cases."
The 51-page report states that prohibition of the Islamic veil
as such "would not be compatible with the Quebec Charter
of Human Rights and Freedoms." Neither, the report states,
can schools prohibit the Islamic veil under a generally applicable
dress code. The commission is of the view that schools must strive
reasonably to accommodate Muslim students who are discriminated
against by the application of such dress codes. The report concludes:
"The wearing of the Islamic veil should, in principle, be considered
to be licit, except in a context where the students are pressured
into wearing it, or where wearing the veil is designed to provoke
or incite discrimination on the basis of sex. The veil may also
be restricted where necessary for reasons of safety."
Quebec Muslims welcomed the overall conclusions of the report but
were uneasy about the suggestion that the hijab might be
considered a provocation or an incitement to discrimination.
The commission also made public its position on schools requiring
teachers of another religion to wear an item of clothing associated
with the institution's religious affiliation. According to the commission's
interpretation of Section 20 of the Charter, a private religious
school may hire only teachers who adhere to its "official"
religion, but this provision cannot be used to compel (as a condition
of employment) "teachers of another religion to wear an item
of clothing associated with the institution's official religion."
Chechen-Ingush Society Speaks Out
Dr. Mohammad Shashani, president of the New Jersey-based Chechen-Ingush
Society of America, says that since Dec. 11, more than 25,000 Chechens
have been killed, tens of thousands injured and well over 400,000
of the 1.3 million pre-invasion population uprooted.
The Russian attack, 15 years after the invasion of Afghanistan,
in response to President Dzhokar Dudayev's declaration of independence
on Sept. 6, 1991 has created widespread human misery. Dr. Shashani
told an audience at the Islamic Foundation of Toronto on Feb. 26
that the world community has fallen short of its responsibility
to provide humanitarian assistance.
The Clinton administrationalong with others, including Canadadeclared
it an internal problem. Both administrations have accused Moscow
of human rights abuses, though they could be a lot more assertive
against the growing civilian casualties.
The Council of North Caucasian Associations in American and the
Chechen-Ingush Society of America have been lobbying persistently
to change this complacent attitude. They are striving to place the
plight of Chechens on the political agenda.
Dr. Shashani says the United Nations has also taken a hands-off
policy. U.N. Secretary-General Boutrous Boutrous-Ghali declared
it an internal dispute, and pledged humanitarian support. Unfortunately,
the U.N. has fallen short on its promise.
Dr. Shashani, a Chechen brought up in Jordan and the U.S., also
shared the grim findings of a delegation from the Saudi Arabia-based
World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY). According to their report,
Grozny is a virtual ghost town. There is a severe shortage of food
and medicine throughout Chechnya. The understaffed hospitals are
bursting at the seams with seriously injured civilians.
Dr. Mohammad Shashani pointed out that the Russian tactic is a
simple one. "They [Russians] are bombarding them and ensuring
that food and medicine do not reach the civilians."
"They are especially targeting food sources, such as cattle
which are the sole source of foodmeat and milk," claims
Dr. Shashani, a professor of electrical engineering at Pennsylvania
State University.
In a press release dated Feb. 22, 1995 the UNHCR identified an
acute shortage of food, clothing and medicine. Dr. Shashani pointed
out that if such was the case in the refugee camps outside of the
battle zone, one cannot begin to grasp the deplorable conditions
inside Chechnya. He noted that according to the WAMY delegation,
the only signs of assistance inside the country were a few International
Committee of the Red Cross jeeps patrolling the streets, and they
are seriously restricted. The Russian authorities are not open to
foreign humanitarian operations, though officially they have not
voiced their objections. According to WAMY, the few relief supplies
that have reached the battered civilians were brought in through
secret paths in the mountainous terrain with the assistance of sympathizers
in neighboring territories.
Dr. Shashani concluded that the billions in economic assistance
promised by the West are the most effective weapons to put an end
to the misery of the Chechens.
Faisal Kutty is a free-lance writer based in Toronto, Canada. |