*************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; CRTC.005 = 1993-02-13 letter to Romanica/CBC; 1993-10-19 *************************************************************************** Dear Subscribers: This is my second response to Ms. Romanica: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- February 13, 1993 Rachel Romanica Corporate Communications CBC Head Office P.O. Box 8478 Ottawa, Ontario K1G 3J5 Dear Ms. Romanica: Your letters dated Nov. 13, 1992 and Jan. 27, 1993 re the Demjanjuk (please note spelling) case and war crimes issues confirm the accusations I have made in my previous letters dated Aug. 20 and Dec. 4, 1992. (Although I specifically refer to the CBC, these accusations also apply to the Canadian news media, in general.) (1) The CBC has not kept the Canadian public adequately informed of developments in the John Demjanjuk case. This applies to both the substantial evidence as to Mr. Demjanjuk's innocence, as well as to the criminal culpability of the Office of Special Investigations (OSI) and Israeli prosecutions in suppressing this evidence. Your meagre coverage of evidence indicating Mr. Demjanjuk's innocence does not at all compare in volume to the extensive coverage of the denaturalization, extradition and Jerusalem Show Trial. Even your latest item on The National, June 9, 1992, was eight months ago and there have been substantial developments since then. [Even on this June 9, 1992 item, your Israeli correspondent, Paul Workman, inappropriately interviewed Ephraim Zuroff who, while conceeding Mr. Demjanjuk's innocence on the Treblinka charges, implied that he is nevertheless guilty of something else. This is the same Ephraim Zuroff with connections to the OSI, Weisenthal Centres and Yad Vashem, who supplied the names of 29 innocent Canadians to the Deschenes Commission. And it is the same Ephraim Zuroff who made Ukrainophobic comments during an interview by Marc Levy broadcast on the 6:00 p.m. CBC Radio National News, Jan. 12, 1993.] (2) You assure me that the CBC does not have "a deliberate policy of censorship" regarding the inquiry of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeal into the conduct of the OSI of the U.S. Justice Department in the case of John Demjanjuk. And yet you state: "Our senior news officers are well aware that Judge Thomas Wiseman has been appointed to inquire into John Demjanchuk's (sic) extradition to Israel in 1986. ... We are following these proceedings and will report on the deliberations if and when developments warrant." To my knowledge, the CBC has never informed the Canadian public of this inquiry initiated by Judges Merritt, Keith and Lively of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeal, nor of Judge Wiseman's continuing interrogations of the OSI personnel involved in the case. Why has the Canadian public not been informed of these proceedings? If this does not constitute censorship, then what does? (3) You once again justify the CBC's interview of Sol Littman, despite my rejection of your explanation in my last letter. [Mr. Littman was at the forefront in orchestrating a disinformation campaign concerning Mengele to induce the Mulroney government to establish the Deschenes Commission. He supplied the Commission with 171 names plus 3 lists slandering innocent Canadians with being war criminals. Documents from the John Demjanjuk case indicate that Mr. Littman was corresponding with the criminal element in the OSI and submitting disinformation to the Deschenes Commission.] (4) You have not responded to my complaint of the CBC interview of Mr. David Matas, Nov. 27, 1992. [Mr. Matas, acting on behalf of Bnai Brith Canada, slandered 100 innocent Canadians of being war criminals to the Deschenes Commission.] (5) With regard to the Luitjens case, could you give me the particulars and the date when Ian Hanomansing's interview with Mr. Luitjens lawyer was telecast? Similarly, can you give me the particulars and date when The National reported "on why Mr. Luitjens was not charged with crimes here in Canada"? You state that the Justice Department claimed that deportation was "the better legal strategy". I would like to point out that deportation cannot be equated with justice and, indeed, as indicated by several cases of the OSI, is often a blueprint for injustice. In Mr. Luitjens case, I understand that he has been incarcerated in the Netherlands without ever having had an opportunity to defend himself in court. After the Deschenes Commission Report was released to the public in the spring of 1987, then Justice Minister Ray Hnatyshyn publicly proclaimed that the government had opted for a made in Canada solution. All cases would be treated in Canada. There would be no denaturalizations, deportations or extraditions. To my knowledge, the federal government has never publicly proclaimed a change to this policy, nor has the CBC challenged the government to explain itself. Yours sincerely William Zuzak, Ph.D., P.Eng. cc: CBC Ombudsman; CRTC *************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; CRTC.005 = 1993-02-13 letter to Romanica/CBC; 1993-10-19 ***************************************************************************