News | Tammuz 12, 5769 / July 4, '09 | |
![]() Marla Bennett. ![]() Check It Out More ![]() | Published: 09/11/07, 10:17 PM US Court: Iran to Pay Family of Hebrew U. Terror Victim $13Mby Gil Ronen (IsraelNN.com) A U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., has ordered the government of Iran to pay $12,904,548 to the estate and family of Marla Bennett, who was killed in a terrorist attack at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem five years ago. The Hebrew University administration expressed satisfaction at the court decision: "Perhaps it will ease, if only slightly, the sorrow of the family," the university stated. "Extremely difficult" to receive payment Muhammad Ouda, a resident of eastern Jerusalem's Silwan neighborhood, who planted the bomb that murdered Marla Bennett, worked as a construction worker at the university. He concealed the explosive charge a day before the attack without arousing suspicion. The day after the blast he came to work at the university as usual. Despite the verdict, it will be "extremely difficult" for Marla Bennett's family and estate to receive payment from Iran or any other source, according to Mordechai Haller, an Israeli attorney who has represented victims of terror in similar suits. "The US government has consistently interfered with enforcement" of this kind of judgment, he explained. Instead of watching out for the victims' interests, "they intervene in proceedings in such a way that they take the side of the Iranians," Haller said, "and effectively defend Iranian assets." US Hypocrisy Some of the lawsuits filed against Iran in the past did end with large sums being paid to the victims of terror. “My friends and family talk about how dangerous it is here and I have to agree with them," Marla Bennett wrote in an open letter a short time before her death. "It is dangerous. But I remain unconvinced that the rest of the world is such a safe place…" "I have a front-row seat for the history of the Jewish people. I am a part of the struggle for Israel's survival." Marla Bennett's death was followed by a tremendous outpouring of grief and comforting. A ninth-grader from Bonita, California, who had never met Marla, wrote to her parents: “I’ve watched the news and listened to the radio and have learned to know the kind of person your Marla was. It hurts me to know that someone with so much good in them could have something like this happen… I admire the person she was. And I want to live my life as she did. Marla will always be a role model for me… It is too bad there aren’t more people in this world like your precious daughter.” Sign up to receive the Daily Israel Report by email (Free) © IsraelNN Syndications - This article may not be republished freely. Review what you can publish free of charge and what requires a syndication payment on the Syndications Page.
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