The U.S. House of Representatives
weighed in this spring with substantial support for anti-nuclear prisoner
Mordechai Vanunu with an appeal to President Clinton to intercede with
Israel for his release on humanitarian grounds.
Thirty-six Members of Congress--some
17 per cent of House Democrats--signed a letter initiated by Rep. Lynn
Rivers of Michigan. The total was almost three times the number who issued
a similar appeal two years ago.
"We believe that Mordechai
Vanunu has suffered enough for his crime of conscience," the letter declared.
"Mr. Vanunu stands for the ideal that every child has the right to live
in a world that is free of nuclear destruction."
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| Free Mordechai Now:
Adoptive parents Mary and Nicholas Eoloff
with Rep. Lynn Rivers (right) at March 18 Congressional news conference. -Jim Byrne |
With Representative Rivers
at a March 18 Washington news conference were Nicholas and Mary Eoloff,
the St. Paul, Minnesota couple who have adopted the 44-year-old Vanunu,
imprisoned in Israel since 1986 for blowing the whistle on Israel's unacknowledged
nuclear weapons reactor at Dimona, where he once worked as a technician.
The Eoloffs were joined
by their congressman, Rep. Bruce Vento of Minnesota, who said, "Mr. Vanunu's
commitment to global peace and to living in a world free from the threat
of nuclear devastation should be commended, not condemned. Yet, ironically,
Mr. Vanunu's commitment to human rights has cost him his freedom. He has
paid too high a price for his act of conscience. It is time to right the
scales of justice by allowing for his immediate release and return to his
adoptive home of St. Paul."
Signers of the letter, mostly
Democrats, represented all regions of the United States. There were nine
from California (including half the congressional delegation from the San
Francisco Bay area), five from Michigan, four from Minnesota, two each
from Oregon, Illinois, and New York, and one each from Ohio, Vermont, Massachusetts,
North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, West Virginia, Wisconsin,
Hawaii, Guam, and the Virgin Islands.
In 1997 a lobbying effort
by the U.S. Campaign to Free Mordechai Vanunu secured 13 House signers,
most of whom signed on again this year. The 1999 effort, conducted with
the help of Washington-based Women Strike For Peace, brought volunteers
to the Capitol from California, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Maryland,
and Virginia. In addition, hundreds lobbied their Representatives by mail,
telephone, fax, and on the internet.