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Sunday 31 October 2010

Bat Yam, Israel - Only 2 Survivors Remain From Nazi Camp Treblinka

Holocaust survivor Kalman Teigman, center, is seen in a family picture in his house in the city of Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)Holocaust survivor Kalman Teigman, center, is seen in a family picture in his house in the city of Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
Bat Yam, Israel - They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in occupied Poland.
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Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, are devoting their final years to trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people systematically murdered in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. Almost all of them were Jews.
Only 67 people are known to have survived the camp, fleeing in a brazen revolt shortly before Treblinka was destroyed. Following the recent death of a prominent chronicler, Israel’s national Holocaust memorial says the two Israeli men are now the final living link to one of the most notorious death camps in human history.
“The world cannot forget Treblinka,” said Willenberg.
“Soon there will be no one left to tell,” added Taigman.
Treblinka holds a notorious place in history as perhaps the most vivid example of the “Final Solution,” the Nazi plot to rid Europe of Jews.
Along with the lesser known Belzec and Sobibor camps, it was designed with the sole intention of exterminating Jews, and Treblinka was by far the deadliest. Victims, transported there in cattle cars, were gassed to death almost immediately upon arrival.
Only a select few — mostly young, strong men like Willenberg and Taigman, who were both 20 at the time— were spared an immediate trip to the gas chambers and assigned to maintenance work instead.
Holocaust survivor Samuel Willenberg displays a map of Treblinka extermination camp during an interview with the Associated Press at his house in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)Holocaust survivor Samuel Willenberg displays a map of Treblinka extermination camp during an interview with the Associated Press at his house in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
On Aug. 2, 1943, a group of Jews stole some weapons, set fire to the camp and headed to the woods. Hundreds fled, but most were shot and killed by Nazi troops in the surrounding mine fields or captured by Polish villagers who returned them to Treblinka.
The survivors became the only source of knowledge about Treblinka, because the Nazis all but destroyed it in a frantic bid to cover their tracks.
Willenberg said he was shot in the leg as he climbed over bodies piled at the barbed wire fence and catapulted over. He kept running, ignoring dead friends in his path. He said his blue eyes and “non-Jewish” look allowed him to survive in the countryside before arriving in Warsaw and joining the Polish underground.
Later in life, he took to sculpturing to describe his experiences. His bronze statues reflect what he saw — Jews standing on a train platform, a father removing his son’s shoes before entering the gas chambers, a young girl having her head shaved, prisoners removing bodies.
“I live two lives, one is here and now and the other is what happened there,” Willenberg said in an interview at his Tel Aviv apartment. “It never leaves me. It stays in my head. It goes with me always.”
Holocaust survivor Kalman Teigman poses for a picture at his house, during an interview with the Associated Press, in the city of Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)Holocaust survivor Kalman Teigman poses for a picture at his house, during an interview with the Associated Press, in the city of Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
His two sisters were murdered there. He described his survival as “chance, sheer chance,” choking back tears. “It wasn’t because of God. He wasn’t there. He was on vacation.”
In all, the Nazis and their collaborators killed about 6 million Jews during the Holocaust. The death toll at Treblinka was second only to Auschwitz — a prison camp where more than a million people died in gas chambers or from starvation, disease and forced labor.
Taigman said he recalls the uprising vividly, and that resisting the Germans was a “dream” for the prisoners.
He entered Treblinka holding the hand of his mother, who was quickly pulled away from him and murdered. He left watching a Nazi flag burning in the distance from a blaze they had set — a small piece of revenge after nearly a year of torment.
“It was hell, absolutely hell,” said Taigman, who lives in a retirement home south of Tel Aviv. “A normal man cannot imagine how a living person could have lived through it — killers, natural-born killers, who without a trace of remorse just murdered every little thing.”
Taigman, who wandered in the Polish countryside for nearly a year after his escape, said his most lasting memory of Treblinka is fellow prisoners who had to remove bodies — often their own relatives — from gas chambers.
Treblinka holds such a powerful grip on the Jewish psyche that the will of a recently deceased Holocaust survivor in Israel instructed her children to cremate her body and sprinkle her ashes at the Polish memorial site — so that she could finally be reunited with her relatives who perished there.
After the war, Willenberg and Taigman made their ways to Israel, where they pursued careers and raised families. Willenberg became a surveyor in Israel’s Housing Ministry, while Taigman was an importer. The survivors have maintained their special connection, meeting each other often over the years.
David Silberklang, a senior historian at Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, said that in contrast to other camps where Jews were also used for industrial labor, Treblinka truly represented the essence of the Nazi Final Solution.
“Treblinka had nothing, just killing, and they almost finished the job. These camps left us almost nothing,” he said.
Without the survivors, he said “it would just be a black hole, we would know nothing. With them, we know quite a lot,” he said.
Holocaust survivor Samuel Willenberg washes dishes as his wife Ada speaks on the phone at their house in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)Holocaust survivor Samuel Willenberg washes dishes as his wife Ada speaks on the phone at their house in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010. They are believed to be the last two survivors of the most chillingly efficient killing machine of the Nazi Holocaust: the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland. Samuel Willenberg and Kalman Taigman, 87-year-old Israelis, escaped the death trap and are now devoting their final years trying to preserve the memory of the 875,000 people who were systematically murdered at Treblinka in a one-year killing spree at the height of World War II. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
One of the men most responsible for documenting the atrocities was Eliahu Rosenberg, who was tasked with removing bodies from gas chambers and dumping them into giant pits. He passed away in September, but before his death recounted his experiences in a video testimony to Yad Vashem.
“It poisoned, choked people within 25 minutes, all would suffocate. It was terrible to hear the screaming of the women and the children. They cried: “Mama!” ‘‘Tata! (Dad)” but in a few minutes they choked to death,” he said.
“The crematoriums were train rails which lay on a concrete base. On them were wood planks, we called it ‘grills.’ We threw the body parts onto those ‘grills,’ and with a match everything burnt. And we stood there ... and it burned all night, all night long.”
After the revolt, the Nazis attempted to destroy all evidence of their atrocities. The camp structures were destroyed, the ground plowed and planted over. Today, all the remains at the site are a series of concrete slabs representing the train tracks, and mounds of gravel with a memorial of stone tablets representing lost communities.
The two remaining survivors have returned to lead tours of the site. Taigman made the trip just one time, saying it was too painful to go back again, while Willenberg has gone on several occasions, most recently last week.
“There are only two of us left. After we go, there will be nothing,” said Willenberg. “All I will leave behind are my sculptures and most importantly, my daughter and my grandchildren.”

Some good news for Obama from Israel "Tea Party" Few show up for "Say No to Obama" event

An anti-Obama protest in Jerusalem (File)
An anti-Obama protest in Jerusalem (File)
TEL AVIV (Reuters)
A "Say No to Obama" event in Israel drew only 100 supporters on Sunday to the launch of an Israeli version of the Tea Party movement that is challenging the U.S. President in Tuesday's mid-term elections.

There were no security police outside and parking was easy in the notoriously clogged centre of Tel Aviv, as former Knesset deputy Michael Kleiner, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud bloc, inaugurated the movement.
  Obama will use the next two or three months not to bend Netanyahu's arm but to break it  
former Knesset deputy Michael Kleiner
"This is a message to the United States president that in relations between democracies you do not force people to do things they did not vote for," Kleiner told reporters.

The Israel Tea Party launch did not mark the start of a breakaway right-wing party, he said. It was meant to help Netanyahu reject Obama's pressure to bend to Palestinian conditions for the revival of flagging peace talks.

"Obama will use the next two or three months not to bend Netanyahu's arm but to break it," Kleiner warned.

Like the rest of Likud, his supporters back Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and reject U.S. calls for a continuation of the partial freeze Netanyahu ordered last November to open the door to direct talks. It ended a month ago.

For the moment, Israel's Tea Party is simply a grassroots movement intended to back up Netanyahu, Kleiner said, but it is also ready to break with him if he yields to American pressure.

Balloons

Obama is not popular with many Israelis who believe he sympathizes with the Palestinians, polls show.

Launching their movement in a modest auditorium decked with red and black balloons and seating for 130, however, organizers clearly did not expect a massive turnout to the "Say No" event.

But it was early days, said Tea Party member Boaz Arab, of the Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies (JIMS).

Obama's drive for a Middle East peace agreement that would create a state for the Palestinians living alongside Israel was the target of the launch, he said. But there were further goals.

"Our perspective is much wider. Israel needs a capitalistic movement to free the economy from its burden of high taxes, high government spending and a bloated administration," he said, in a message American Tea Party supporters would recognize.

An index calculated by the institute shows that after annual taxes are paid Israelis "start working for themselves only after June 22 this year", said Arad, a research fellow at JIMS.

"We need this movement, to remind government that they are here to serve the people and not the other way around."

Polls in the United States indicate this same sentiment among Americans could deliver bad results for Obama's Democratic party in Tuesday's mid-term elections for the House of Representatives and one third of the U.S. Senate.

Netanyahu said on Sunday he would meet U.S. Vice President Joe Biden after the results are known next week, at the Nov. 5-9 General Assembly of The Jewish Federations of North America. He said he would discuss how to revive stalled peace negotiations.

A new round of direct talks between the Israelis and the Palestinians got under way in Washington on Sept. 2 only to stop a few weeks later when his government refused to extend the curb on West Bank settlement building he had imposed for 10 months.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas wants a construction freeze before going any further.

Brothers in Arms, Fatah and Hamas Agree to Resume Talks Again!

Fatah, Hamas Agree to Resume Talks
The Hamas and Fatah movements have agreed to hold the second round of talks in a bid to iron out their disagreements on inter-Palestinian reconciliation.
The Fatah-Hamas negotiations "might be held in Damascus following indirect contacts with the Syrians to overcome a dispute with (acting Palestinian Authority Chief) Mahmoud Abbas," Xinhua quoted senior Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmad on Sunday.

The Fatah official further pointed out that the summit is expected to be held next week.
The negotiations would focus on an Egyptian plan that was introduced to the two factions last year to put an end to the current political brawls and duels in the Palestinian territories.
The leaders of the two main political factions in the Palestinian territories had previously agreed to hold their second meeting in the Syrian capital on 20th October. But the scheduled timing was delayed due to Hamas' rejection of Fatah's request to hold the negotiations in another Arab country.
Meanwhile, Salah Bardaweel, a Hamas lawmaker in the Gaza Strip, brushed aside speculations that the recognition of Israel's existence on the part of Hamas movement would resolve the conflict and pave the way for reconciliation.
“Fatah leaders should not waste their time searching for similarities in the political platforms of Hamas and Fatah,” Bardaweel said.
Earlier this month, Abbas and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad traded barbs during the recent Arab summit in Libya, wherein the PA chief was accused of acquiescing to Israel and US demands to return to the negotiating table with Israel.

Jewish conductor Barenboim awarded German Peace Prize

The Argentine-Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim has been awarded Germany's Westphalia Peace Prize for his efforts to promote reconciliation in the Middle East with his Israeli-Arab West-Eastern Divan orchestra.

 
Daniel Barenboim, the Israeli-Argentine conductor, pianist and general music director at Berlin's State Opera, has been awarded Germany's Westphalia Peace Prize for promoting understanding and reconciliation through music.
The 67-year-old musician founded the West-Eastern Divan orchestra, made up of young Jewish and Arab musicians, in 1999. He shares the prize, worth 50,000 euros ($70,000) with the members of the orchestra.
At the ceremony in the western German town of Muenster on Saturday, Barenboim said the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians was no ordinary one.
"It's not a military or a political conflict, but a human conflict, a conflict between two peoples," he said.
Building bridges and moving on
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle on Saturday honored Barenboim as a "peace activist in the best sense of the word."
"Often, it's ordinary people like Barenboim, whose activism builds bridges and sets the foundations for peace," he said.
Barenboim is also known in Germany for promoting German composer Richard Wagner's work, saying Wagner’s work had nothing to do with the Holocaust.
Two weeks ago, at a symposium held by the Berlin State Opera ahead of the premiere of German composer Richard Wagner's work, "Das Rheingold", which Barenboim will conduct, the musician said it was time to move on from the long-standing taboo of boycotting Wagner's work in countries like Israel.
"I do not believe that one can connect Wagner with the Final Solution," he said. Wagner, who created the opera cycle "The Ring of the Niebelungen" and other central works of the German canon, has long been stigmatized because of anti-Semitic attitudes, and the fact that he was Hitler's favorite composer.
Barenboim was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on November 15, 1942 to Russian-born Jewish parents. He and his family moved to Israel in 1952.
The Westphalia Peace Prize was last awarded in 2008 to former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, and in earlier years to conductor Kurt Masur. The prize is named after the Peace of Westphalia Treaty from 1648, which ended the Thirty Years' War in the Holy Roman Empire.
Author: Nicole Goebel (dpa, EPD)
Editor: Andreas Illmer

Outspoken Sahrawi Leader Reported Shot by Polisario in Algeria 25 Days After Promised Release

Outspoken Sahrawi Leader Reported Shot by Polisario in Algeria 25 Days After Promised Release

 
Urgent appeal goes out to Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and UNHCR to demand immediate access by outside medical specialists to ensure his safety, survival
WASHINGTONOct. 31 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Almost a month after the Polisario Front promised his release, the family of Mustapha Salma Ould Sidi Mouloud late yesterday received information that he has been shot and possibly very seriously injured by his Algerian security and Polisario militia captors who have kept him imprisoned in close confinement sinceSeptember 21.
The Polisario said October 6 it would free the outspoken Sahrawi leader to international human rights groups after an outcry from Amnesty InternationalHuman Rights WatchLeadership Council for Human RightsUN High Commissioner for RefugeesUS Senate and House members, and others criticizing his arrest.  There has been no public confirmation of the former Polisario police chief's whereabouts since he was charged with "treason" and "espionage" as he tried to rejoin his family in the Polisario-run Tindouf refugee camps in Algeria and speak out for Morocco's autonomy compromise to end the 35-year-old Western Sahara conflict.  
News of the shooting was reported by the Action Committee for the Release of Mustapha Salma Ould Sidi Mouloud. Earlier, Moulay Ismaili Ould Sidi Mouloud, the Sahrawi leader's father, urged the international community to intervene to end the suffering inflicted by the Polisario and Algeria to make his son give up his support of Moroccan autonomy to bring peace to the region and "freedom and dignity" to Sahrawis.
"Twenty-five days ago the Polisario promised the world they would free Mustapha Salma, but they did not," said Robert Holley, Executive Director, Moroccan American Center for Policy. "Now, our worst fears have been realized.  It is clear Algeria and the Polisario can't be taken at their word, nor can they be trusted with Mustapha Salma's safety.  This man's life is at risk.  He needs immediate attention by outside medical specialists to ensure his safety and determine the extent of his wounds.  International human rights advocates, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, need to hold the Polisario and Algeria accountable for this outrageous conduct. They need to insist Mustapha Salma be freed, now, and get immediate outside medical care to protect and save his life."
The Sahrawi leader was kidnapped as a boy from Smara, southern Morocco by Polisario raiders who killed four family members. He was reunited with his father for the first time in 31 years on a UN-sponsored family visit to southern Morocco this summer.  Seeing the progress in Morocco's Sahara provinces, he vowed to return to the camps and voice his support to refugees for Morocco's autonomy plan to end the Sahara dispute.
The Moroccan American Center for Policy (MACP) is a non-profit organization whose principal mission is to inform opinion makers, government officials and interested publics in the United States about political and social developments in Moroccoand the role being played by the Kingdom of Morocco in broader strategic developments in North Africa, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East.  For more, please visit www.moroccanamericanpolicy.org
This material is distributed by the Moroccan American Center for Policy on behalf of the Government of Morocco. Additional information is available at the Department of Justice in Washington, DC.
SOURCE Moroccan American Center for Policy

Disbelief in Vatican Vows to Combat Money Laundering

in Vatican City
THE VATICAN bank has broken with hundreds of years of convention by taking steps to satisfy tough EU and international norms on money laundering and terror financing.
But the move only came after the bank was confronted with an unprecedented crackdown by Italian prosecutors.

The bank has made written and in-person pledges to pass anti-money laundering legislation, report and investigate suspicious transactions,
 identify customers to law enforcement and create a compliance authority.

Italian prosecutors previously placed Vatican bank chairman Ettore Gotti Tedeschi and his deputy Paolo Cipriani under investigation and police seized ¤23 million from a Vatican bank account in recent weeks. The Vatican reacted furiously, insisting any gaps in its records were a "misunderstanding" that could be easily clarified. It also tried to get the seizure lifted, but the court refused.

Now the Vatican has given its commitments to some of the key institutions involved in the fight against money laundering, officials said.

Vatican bank bosses have now made a written commitment to the Financial Action Task Force - the Paris-based policymaking body that develops anti-money laundering and anti-terror financing legislation - to do whatever is necessary to come into compliance with its norms, a senior FATF official said.

The FATF requires the Vatican to pass legislation making money-laundering a crime; to establish an entity to report suspicious transactions and then investigate them; and to pass legislation requiring that the bank identify its customers properly and make that information available to law enforcement agencies, the official said.


Separately, on 15 October, Vatican bank officials met with European Commission officials and agreed that Pope Benedict XVI would act to bring into Vatican law European Union directives on money laundering that are required of Eurozone countries, said Amadeu Altafaj i Tardio, spokesman for the European commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, Olli Rehn.

The bank, formally known as the Institute for Religious Works, also pledged to establish a compliance "authority" headed by a Vatican cardinal on 1 January to implement the anti-money laundering legislation, he said. The authority will be the contact for all EU and international agencies working to fight money-laundering.

DFM Ayalon to hold live web conference

DFM Ayalon to hold live web conference

28 Oct 2010
Deputy  Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon is scheduled to hold a live web conference  on November 2 2010 at 20:00 Israel Standard Time (GMT+2)
  
  MFA archive photo
Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon will be holding a live web conference on 2 November 2010 at 8PM Israel time (GMT+2). In the conference, Mr. Ayalon will be fielding questions relating to Israeli foreign policy issues and recent regional developments.
Questions may be emailed prior to the conference to QandA@israel.org and will also be taken on-line during the conference atwww.facebook.com/IsraelMFA.
The live conference can be accessed at:http://switch5.castup.net/frames/mfa_live_archive/
The recorded conference will be made available after the event at the following sites:
www.Israel.org
www.youtube.com/israelmfa
www.facebook.com/israelmfa
www.facebook.com/dannyayalon

Israeli Cabinet Communique'


Cabinet communiqué

Next week I will meet I will meet with US Vice President Joe Biden and other senior administration figures, and will discuss with them a series of issues, including the resumption of the diplomatic process in order to reach a peace agreement with security for the future of the State of Israel
(Communicated by the Cabinet Secretariat)
http://www.mfa.gov.il/NR/rdonlyres/18EAC30C-BCFB-4D91-ACA8-9BE2F19F157E/0/reuterscabinetjun27.jpg
Reuters archive photo
At the weekly Cabinet meeting today (Sunday, 31 October 2010):
 
1. Prime Minister Netanyahu made the following remarks:
 
"Several weeks ago, I visitedLod.  I said that we could not let the city continue to deteriorate and become the wild west in the heart of the country.  I said that we would act so that Lod would continue to attract new residents, young couples and tourists.  Immediately after the tour, I asked Prime Minister's Office Director-General Eyal Gabai to prepare a comprehensive plan for the city.  This plan will be submitted for Cabinet approval today.  It costs NIS 130 million and is designed to bolster the personal security of Lod'sresidents and raise their standard of living.
 
This comprehensive plan  includes – inter alia – the collection of illegal weapons, community policing, the renovation of infrastructure, marketing the city's new neighborhoods, making transportation more accessible, building sports facilities, developing tourist infrastructures, upgrading social welfare services, strengthening culture, etc.  I point out that this plan follows on the Education Ministry's NIS 44 million plan to strengthen education in the city.  I believe that this comprehensive plan will bear fruit in the very near future and I expect all ministers to do their part for this important goal, which is both a local and a national goal, vis-à-vis our perspective on how a city with various ethnic communities, and with problems and troubles that can be overcome if we work together, should appear.
 
Next Sunday, I will leave for the annual Jewish Federations of North America General Assembly.   I will meet there with US Vice President Joe Biden and other senior administration figures, and will discuss with them a series of issues, including – of course – the resumption of the diplomatic process in order to reach a peace agreement with security for the future of the State of Israel.
 
This General Assembly will be held against the background of reports about the attempt to attack the Jewish community in Chicago, and the truth is that it does not matter if the target was a synagogue in Chicago or a railway station in Madrid, or London, or Mumbai, or Bali.  We are facing a growing wave of terrorism by extremist Islam.  It is growing in the scope and brazen gall of its attacks, in the weapons with which it is arming itself and in the sweeping objectives of the leaders of global terrorism.  Therefore, one of the main issues that I will address at the General Assembly is the steps that the civilized and free world must take in order to stop this wave that threatens us all."
 
2. The Cabinet approved the 24.10.10 Ministerial Committee on Legislation decision regarding the amended 2010 Bailiff's Law.  
3. Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch and Prison Service Commissioner Benny Konia briefed ministers on the Prison Service.  The latter noted that the Service currently holds 23,620 inmates in 32 prisons, employs 8,400 personnel and has a budget of NIS 2.3 billion.
 
4. The Cabinet, in continuation of its 22.8.10 decision and in light of the special situation in  Lod, decided to declare the city a national priority community and to approve a unique Government plan for the city.  Clickhere for further details.