Hebrew Univ. to Readmit Convicted Terrorist to Chemistry Lab He Stole Bomb Making Material From
Monday, July 14, 2008by Gil Ronen 14 July 2007
www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/126827[For Channel 2 TV report:
www.keshet-tv.com/VideoPage.aspx?MediaID=40798&CatID=330&CurrentCatID=330 ](IsraelNN.com) A professor at Hebrew University wants to allow a convicted
Arab terrorist who stole bomb-making materials from his chemistry lab to be
allowed back to the lab, Channel 2 TV reported Sunday.Six years ago, 160 liters of acetone - a chemical which is used for making
the common explosive acetone peroxide - disappeared from the Laboratory for
Medicinal Chemistry at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The theft led to an
investigation by the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet), which in turn led to
the arrest of Adel Hadmi, a doctoral student at the laboratory.According to Channel 2, Hadmi was convicted of being a member of a terror
cell that planned suicide attacks against Israelis. In addition, he
recruited other Arabs to the cell. He was convicted and jailed but is now
free again, and would like to complete his doctoral studies in the very same
laboratory the acetone was stolen from.Prof. Goldblum thinks otherwise
The laboratory's previous director, Prof. Avi Domb, adamantly vetoed the
idea of Hadmi's return, but his successor, Prof. Amiram Goldblum, thinks
otherwise. Goldblum, one of the founders of radical leftist group "Peace
Now," said that the university has no grounds to refuse to readmit Hadmi and
allow him to finish his doctorate, because he has already been punished and
served his jail sentence. Last week, the lab's students were told to free a
table in the lab for Hadmi.Domb, who was shocked to hear of Goldblum's decision, wrote a letter to the
university in which he said that allowing the convicted terrorist back to
the scene of his crime was both irresponsible and immoral. Students in the
lab also protested but as of now, the university has not rescinded the
decision to let the terrorist back in. The university did say, however, that
he will probably not be allowed near dangerous substances because of his
terrorist past.According to watchdog group CAMERA, Prof. Goldblum was considered a radical
even by his colleagues in Peace Now "after he explained away Saddam Hussein's
Scud attacks and threats of annihilation as due only to Israel's alleged
failure to make concessions to the Palestinians." In 1990, after an Arab
stabbed and killed three Israelis in the Baka neighborhood of Jerusalem
where Goldblum lives, "even his own neighbors began to stone his house in
frustration at what they saw as his outspokenly pro-PLO views."
I can't even respond to this for fear of offending my readers.
