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Thursday, May 21, 2015
130 arrested over Jaffna violence remanded


The 130 persons arrested for unlawful protest, damaging public property and assaulting police officers near the Jaffna Magistrate’s Court have been ordered remanded.
The suspects were produced at the Jaffna Magistrate’s Court today in 3 batches and remanded separately until June 01, 03 and 04.
Police said that 47 suspects were remanded till June 01, another 43 till June 03 and the remaining 40 persons until June 04.
A large group yesterday (20) staged a protest outside the Jaffna court demanding that the 9 suspects, arrested over the gang rape and murder of an 18-year-old student in Punkudithivu, be sentenced to death.
Police resorted to suing tear gas to disperse the protest, which had turned violent with many of them behaving disruptively, pelting stones at the court premises and assaulting police officers on duty.
Five police officers were injured and hospitalized following the incident.
Sports Ministry finds evidence of sexual harassment

2015-05-21
The committee to investigate allegations of sexual harassment in Sri Lanka women's cricket found evidence of sexual harassment by the management team.
A statement by the ministry said that they intended to take disciplinary action against the guilty parties and had forwarded the recommendations of the said committee to the interim committee of the Sri Lanka Cricket Board, with strict instructions to follow the recommendations.
Full Release
The committee to investigate allegations of sexual harassment in Sri Lanka women's Cricket team was handed over to Minister of Sports Navin Dissanayake.
The Minister thanked the members of the Committee for doing a thorough investigation on the said matter.
The Committee report found evidence of sexual harassment by members of the Sri Lanka Cricket Women's management team against several members of the Sri Lanka Cricket women's team and the Minister intends to take disciplinary actions against those members where evidence has been found.
The Sports Ministry will also forward the recommendations of the said committee to the interim committee of the Sri Lanka Cricket Board with strict instructions to follow the recommendations of the said Committee. - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/73375/sports-ministry-finds-evidence-of-sexual-harassment#sthash.mKTsAO0M.dpuf
2015-05-21The committee to investigate allegations of sexual harassment in Sri Lanka women's cricket found evidence of sexual harassment by the management team.
A statement by the ministry said that they intended to take disciplinary action against the guilty parties and had forwarded the recommendations of the said committee to the interim committee of the Sri Lanka Cricket Board, with strict instructions to follow the recommendations.
Full Release
The committee to investigate allegations of sexual harassment in Sri Lanka women's Cricket team was handed over to Minister of Sports Navin Dissanayake.
The Minister thanked the members of the Committee for doing a thorough investigation on the said matter.
The Committee report found evidence of sexual harassment by members of the Sri Lanka Cricket Women's management team against several members of the Sri Lanka Cricket women's team and the Minister intends to take disciplinary actions against those members where evidence has been found.
The Sports Ministry will also forward the recommendations of the said committee to the interim committee of the Sri Lanka Cricket Board with strict instructions to follow the recommendations of the said Committee. - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/73375/sports-ministry-finds-evidence-of-sexual-harassment#sthash.mKTsAO0M.dpuf
Commission from emission certificates given to JHU - Wegapitiya
The previous Rajapaksa regime introduced a law that makes annual emission certificates mandatory for all vehicles. Without that certificate, no legal matter relating to vehicles was possible. Accordingly, the private sector was allowed to open centres to issue emission certificates.
Several companies opened their centres to issue emission certificates, and Akbar Brothers and Laugfs Lanka are having the monopoly. That was no automatic happening, but that was done with the mediation of MP Namal Rajapaksa. As a mark of gratitude, Akbar Brothers and Laugfs Lanka gave him a Ferari and a Lamborghini. Under the present ‘Yaha Paalana’ government, this process comes under the purview of minister Patali Champika Ranawaka, who spoke at the election platform about robberies at the last presidential election and mega deals. However, the two companies are still enjoying the monopoly. There is suspicion that the minister has given into commissions offered by Akbar Brothers and Laugfs Lanka. Meanwhile, Laugfs Lanka owner Wegapitiya has said publicly on several occasions that just like in the past, they were treating the successors well, and that the monopoly of issuing emission cerficiates cannot be ended.
However, minister Ranawaka is yet to make any response to this claim. We are asking the minister to reject Wegapitiya’s claim. We also ask him to reveal the reasons, if he cannot reject, whether the president or any other top person in the government is exerting pressure on him.
Ukraine says it wants a missile shield to protect against Russian aggression
Troops from the United States and Ukraine conduct joint training exercises intended to help bolster Ukraine’s defense against incursions from Russian-backed separatists in the Lviv region of western Ukraine on May 14, 2015. (Evgeny Kraws /AP)
MOSCOW — Ukraine wants a nuclear missile shield, according to the country’s security chief, something that would almost certainly provoke an aggressive response from Russia.
Ukraine is “rebuilding our missile shield, the main task of which is to defend against aggression from Russia,” Oleksandr Turchynov, the head of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council, said Wednesday in an interview published by the Ukrainian news agency Ukrinform.
Turchynov explained that the new objective is part of a play to strengthen Ukraine’s defenses through “economic, political and military measures” as Kiev continues to fight a war against pro-Moscow separatists in the east. It also comes during a period in which Russia has said that it could deploy nuclear weapons to the recently annexed territory of Crimea. He called on “all leading countries” to help Ukraine defend itself against the potential nuclear threat from Russia through “interaction and systemic coordination.”
But if Ukraine is asking to host Western missile defense systems on its soil, the West isn’t necessarily going to go along.
“There’s no offer or plan to place U.S. or NATO ballistic missile defense systems in Ukraine. I don’t think we’re exactly sure what they’re referring to,” State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said at a briefing Wednesday when asked about Turchynov’s comments. “All existing and planned elements are on NATO territory, for example. And certainly, NATO missile defense is not directed against Russia, but against threats from the Middle East.”
Russia also expressed its pointed opposition to the idea Wednesday.
“The deployment of missile defense elements in Ukrainian territory would entail the need for Russia to take countermeasures,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, adding that if Ukraine hosted U.S. missile defense systems, “this can certainly be viewed only negatively.”
When President Obama took office, he scrapped plans to build a missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic, replacing them with a phased program to deploy defensive systems in Poland and Romania.
Since Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the start of hostilities in eastern Ukraine last year, Poland and the Baltic states have called on NATO to focus its anti-ballistic missile defense system against Russia. Poland alsoannounced last month that it would spend $8 billion on missile defense and military helicopters.
It is difficult to see how cash-strapped Ukraine could procure a similar missile shield if it were not provided by the West.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov dismissed Turchynov’s comments as belonging to a category of statements that are “absolutely futile, counterproductive and nothing more than shaking the air.”
Lavrov also was skeptical that Ukraine would ever join NATO or the European Union, noting that “the European countries themselves are talking about this very reluctantly.”
The subject of missile defense in Ukraine is fraught with competing emotions of pride and regret. Ukraine once held the world’s third-largest arsenal of nuclear weapons, but dismantled it and joined the ranks of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty after the breakup of the Soviet Union, in exchange for security assurances from both Russia and the West.
Those assurances were written in the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, which Ukraine called upon repeatedly, but unsuccessfully, after Russia annexed Crimea and the West did little to intervene beyond threats and later by imposing sanctions. Ukrainian policy experts and government advisers have since opined that if Ukraine had maintained even part of its nuclear arsenal, Russia would never have annexed Crimea or supported an uprising of pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Turchynov’s interview comes just days after U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry and Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland visited Russia for the first time in months, for discussions with their counterparts and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The talks, aimed at coordinating the two countries’ efforts to rein in the conflicts in Ukraine and Syria, were not immediately conclusive. But they marked a notable shift in tone, as Russian and U.S. diplomats traditionally at loggerheads spoke of working together. On Wednesday, Lavrov added that Russia is ready to resume cooperation with NATO when the security alliance decides to resurrect “practical cooperation” activities with Russia.
Yet as the United States and Russia take tentative steps to work more closely together, the diplomatic gap between Ukraine and Russia seems to be widening.
This week, Ukraine’s cabinet terminated a military-technical cooperation agreement with Russia that has been in place since 1993, while Ukraine’s parliament voted to freeze payments on its foreign debts until they can be restructured. Ukraine owes a significant portion of its foreign debt to Russia, which said Wednesday that the new law is tantamount to a default.
Isis 'controls 50% of Syria' after seizing historic city of Palmyra
Kareem Shaheen in Beirut-Thursday 21 May 2015
Islamic State is thought to be holding sway over half of Syria’s landmass after its seizure of Palmyra, where it has reportedly begun massacring a rebellious tribe and faces no opposition to sacking the city’s ancient ruins.


A plume of smoke rises in Palmyra, Syria, amid shelling by Islamic State fighters. Photograph: Reuters
Islamic State is thought to be holding sway over half of Syria’s landmass after its seizure of Palmyra, where it has reportedly begun massacring a rebellious tribe and faces no opposition to sacking the city’s ancient ruins.


A plume of smoke rises in Palmyra, Syria, amid shelling by Islamic State fighters. Photograph: Reuters
Amateur video purports to show people burning a portrait of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in Palmyra after the historic city fell under Isis control
Do west diplomats really understand Bangladesh’s political features?

( May 20, 2015, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) Not only the western world, are some Asian countries a little bit confused with the present problem of Bangladesh. Most powerful political and economic weekly the Economist has been repeatedly publishing articles on the problem of Bangladesh for the last four or five years. It is not only impartial but sometimes also crosses the ethics of journalism. The International War Crime Tribunal (ICT) of Bangladesh already has issued summon against the Economist; which is on trial in the ICT. The intellectual people those who are very much vocal for war crime trial, they have issued statement several times that, the role of Economist is the part of propaganda in favor of war criminals of Bangladesh. It is true that, the war criminal organization Jammat-E – I slam is spending huge amounts money for propagandas against the trial of war criminals. They have engaged lobbyists in western world for this purpose, was also published and telecasted in Bangladeshi media with proper document. However, the Economist is trying to establish that all are political issues; and the sitting government is trying to destroy the opposition. They also have a weapon, because one of the main political parties in Bangladesh is the ally of the war criminal organization. On the other hand, only three and half years after the liberation war of Bangladesh through the military coupe d’état the anti liberation force occupied the state power. They changed the fundamental rules of the constitution, of the country and gave the constitutional right to do politics to the war criminal organization in Bangladesh. The then bipolar world, United State of America hailed the political and constitutional change of Bangladesh. In the bipolar world USA hailed the coup but reality is that the army leader of the coupe d’état and the war crime organizations leaders were the birds of the same feather. The coupe d’état leader Ziaur Rahman made a political party which is now one of the main political parties in Bangladesh and this party is the ally of the war crime organization. In spite of that, unfortunately, a part of world media and part of the Bangladeshi media illustrate the party of military leader, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is a conservative party of Bangladesh and the present power party Awami league is a liberal Party.
A huge number of political analysts and the intellectuals of Bangladesh also illustrate BNP in the same way. The West does it for the two reasons, one USA and some other western countries helped to overthrow the liberation force of Bangladesh through the army coupe d’état. On the other hand, a group of the political analyst and intellectuals briefs most of the western diplomats in Bangladesh. They tactfully brief that BNP is a political force. A question can arise, why does the west and other diplomats who come to Bangladesh, like to take the brief or discuss with those people? Normally, it is duty of a diplomat to take a brief from a non-partisan person. However, in Bangladesh, the liberation- force got the chance to run the country for a very short time; in various forms, the war criminal forces have enjoyed the power for a longer time. So, they have been successful to make up a mind set in the country.
That being, those people who upholds the leader of the liberation and the spirit of freedom struggle of Bangladesh and the original constitution, they are the supporter of Awami league. So the western diplomats think that the people who does not uphold the freedom struggle of Bangladesh and its main leader, he is a non-partisan man. Unfortunately, they do not think, in USA the man who does not respect the American civil war and Washington or Abraham Lincoln, is he a respectable or sensible citizen of America? Despite, western and other diplomats who work in Bangladesh should try to understand the real picture and the history of the country. We do not know what they do, it can be said most of them come from democratic country, but what they do here- it does not help the real democracy of Bangladesh rater their works have a more similarity with the work of diplomats of Pakistan and the Arab World. However, either the shortcomings of their information or some hidden cause, the west and few other diplomats in Bangladesh, they always discuss with that so called non- partisan people, who do not uphold the freedom struggle and sprit of the country. Even they could not understand, those intellectual groups are with veils, they are the people of the intellectual front of the war criminals those who havenow taken turn in Islamic terrorism. This intellectual front of the Islamic terrorist are in Bangladesh is leading many professions, they have occupied it by the help of state power and the terrorist money, which comes from Pakistan and Arab world regularly. Recently a Pakistani diplomat was forced to leave from Bangladesh; because he was pumping money to the terrorists of Bangladesh. That is why, sometimes the journalist and the researchers who come from abroad get confused by them. One of the examples is that 16 March Japan time published an article regarding the present situation of Bangladesh, but it was a confusing write-up. The writer shows that the present situation of Bangladesh is a political crisis and its main cause is the election 5 January 2014; which was not a good inclusive election; and the political party who are in movement they want a inclusive election under a non party care taker government. The writer who has written the article he does not mention that to set up a non party care taker government in Bangladesh is not possible under the constitution of the country. It cannot be done even with changing the constitution; because the Supreme Court of Bangladesh has given verdict that it is not go with the fundamental spirit of the constitution. Therefore, if the parliament put it in the constitution, according to the verdict of the Supreme Court it will be unjustified further.
However, for a good inclusive election in 2013, the then Prime Minister offered for all parties to join the government for making an election time government. The war criminal party’s main ally BNP did not accept it. They tried to illustrate that under the leadership of Prime Minister Sheik Hasina, the election will not be free and fair. When they were telling this then they won major five-city corporation to participate in election under that government. To boycott this election and in the name of prevent election they took the way of Islamic terrorist like the present IS of Iraq and once the Taliban did in Afghanistan. They tried to occupy many areas of the country by militants and they used handmade bombs, petrol bombs and other weapons against people like IS. In the name of demanding election, they are doing same thing now. From last 5 January, like IS they have killed one hundred people by petrol bombs. Western media published few years ago Al Qaeda leader, Ayman al -Zawahiri came two times in Bangladesh under the coverage of this ally who are now engaged in terrorism. And few months ago Zawahiri called to start IS revolution in this area. If the west and their diplomats in Bangladesh become serious they can find out easily that there is a good link with IS and the BNP- Jammat ally. So it is completely terrorism to destroy the structure of the government and in this situation they will attack the Jail and successful to come out their leader who are awarded death penalty by the court for war crime. If BNP participates in the election and if they win they will not be able to free the war criminal. That is why, their leader Khaleda and Trarek Rahaman is using their organization by the instruction of Jammat and the international terrorist organization for this terrorism. Here is to mention that Tarek is a member of terrorist organization when his mother was in power. However, a huge number of BNP supporter do not support the terrorism and the majority people of Bangladesh are Muslims but they are not like Arab Muslims. They are first obedient to their country because through a bloody sacrifice, they made their country and there life is guided by the geographical culture though their belief is religion Islam. So the leader of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina is going to win with in very short time against the Islamic terrorism of Bangladesh. From the very beginning, she is saying it is not a problem of politics, it is terrorism and government will solve it by the law enforcement. Now, the foreign secretary of USA, Mr. Jon Kerry has hailed the law enforcement department of Bangladesh for their success of control the Islamic terrorism.
Swadesh Roy, Executive Editor, the Daily Janakantha, Dhaka, Bangladesh he can be reached at swadeshroy@gmail.com
A composite image of handout booking images made available this week by the McLennan County Sheriff's Department shows scores of men arrested and charged with crimes stemming from a large shootout and fight among biker gangs outside the Twin Peaks bar and restaurant in Waco, Texas.
(McLennan County Sheriff / EPA)
Police in Waco, Texas, have sharply revised downward the number of weapons seized after a deadly brawl in a shopping center parking lot that left nine people dead, 18 wounded and 177 facing criminal charges of engaging in an organized criminal activity.
Police said earlier this week they expected to recover 1,000 weapons but now put the number at about 320.
“I have asked the Crime Scene Supervisor to give me a more firm count of weapons discovered from the Twin Peaks Restaurant so far,” police Sgt. W. Patrick Swanton said in a posting on Facebook.
He described the 1,000 figure as “a best-guess estimate from looking at the overall crime scene and was over estimated. My apologies for the confusion and I should have waited to release a more specific count not estimate.”
According to the statement, the total was 318 weapons “and still counting. We do expect the numbers to continue to rise.”
The weapons recovered include 118 handguns, 157 knives and 43 others, which includes brass knuckles and chains. Some weapons had been quickly stashed -- under seat cushions and even in a toilet. Police also said an AK-47 assault rifle was recovered.
Swanton blamed the complexity of the crime scene for some of the confusion about the number of weapons.
On Sunday, members of five motorcycle gangs met at the Twin Peaks restaurant in a shopping center in Waco for what participants have said was a previously scheduled meeting to discuss common issues, such as pending motorcycle safety legislation.
Police have said that an uninvited gang attended and have blamed the subsequent violence on a rivalry between the Bandidos, the state’s largest motorcycle group, and the Cossacks, an up-and-coming group. Police have said the two were going to discuss turf issues.
According to police, one of the motorcyclists had an accident in the parking lot, running over the foot of another biker. There was also a confrontation in a bathroom inside the restaurant, police have said.
The fight, which began with fists and chains, escalated to knives and guns in the parking lot, where 18 Waco police and four state cops were stationed. The police rushed to the shooting in less than a minute and at least four officers fired weapons.
Preliminary autopsy findings show the nine dead men ranged in age from 27 to 65. All died from gunshot wounds, mainly in the head, neck or torso.
Three of the dead were found in the parking lot just outside of the Twin Peaks restaurant, four were found in front of the building and one had been dragged behind a neighboring restaurant, Sgt. Swanton said on Monday. The ninth person died at the hospital.
Officials are awaiting forensic tests on the recovered weapons before they can decide who fired the fatal shots.
Police have arrested 177 people in connection with the shootings. All face a charge of engaging in an organized criminal enterprise -- the fatal shootings. No one has yet been charged with capital murder, though officials have said such a charge is possible.
All of the defendants are being held in lieu of $1 million bond. At least one person has posted bond and was released; a second person is expected to be released, according to jail officials. There have been at least eight requests for bond reduction hearings and all have been scheduled for early June.
Follow @latimesmuskal for national news.
Stranded at sea: Rohingya migrants offered shelter
Indonesia and Malaysia agree to end their policy of pushing migrants boats back out to sea, and instead say they will provide temporary shelter to thousands stranded at sea.
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In what could be a breakthrough moment in South-East Asia's migrant crisis, the two countries issued a joint statement saying they will continue to offer international assistance to 7,000 migrants adrift at sea and assist them with "resettlement and repatriation" within a year with international help.
They've got to be reached, they've got to be got on shore.Joe Lowry, IOM
"I urge all NGOs, of all races and religions to step forward to volunteer to help these Rohingya migrants," Malaysian Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said, following a meeting with his Indonesian and Thai counterparts.
"Even though they are a migrant community that is trying to enter the country illegally, and breaking immigration laws, their well-being should not be ignored."
'Maritime ping-pong'
The two countries, as well as Thailand, had been criticised by humanitarian organisations for playing "maritime ping-pong" with boats crammed full of migrants.
The countries were assisting boats with supplies and repairs, but refusing to let them land in their respective countries.
However, the new statement signals an end to this policy.
On Wednesday Joe Lowry, spokesman for the International Organisation for Migration, said rescues are not happening "fast enough" and "the talking as to stop".
"There are people at sea who are in grave peril of losing their lives - yesterday, today and tomorrow," he said. "And they've got to be reached, they've got to be got on shore."
Rescued
Whilst political leaders have hesitated over what to do about the large number of Rohingya Muslims and Bangladeshis in need of help, Indonesia's fisherman have stepped in.
Early on Wednesday Indonesian fisherman brought hundreds more migrants to shore in Indonesia's north western Aceh province, a search and rescue official said.
Fears had been growing for one boat that aid agencies had lost contact with on Saturday, but the more than 300 migrants on board were among those rescued on Wednesday.
The migrants have been landed in the town of Kuta Binje.
The latest group brought to shore adds to the nearly 1,400 who have managed to land in Indonesia after weeks of drifting in the Andaman Sea - either through swimming to shoe or being rescued by fisherman.
_LRG.jpg)
Fears had been growing for one boat that aid agencies had lost contact with on Saturday, but the more than 300 migrants on board were among those rescued on Wednesday.
The migrants have been landed in the town of Kuta Binje.
The latest group brought to shore adds to the nearly 1,400 who have managed to land in Indonesia after weeks of drifting in the Andaman Sea - either through swimming to shoe or being rescued by fisherman.
The Solution to Southeast Asia’s Migrant Crisis That Is No Solution At All

After weeks stranded on Southeast Asian seas, bouncing between countries all refusing to let them land, some 7,000 Muslim migrants have finally found relief — at least for now. On Wednesday, in the face of growing outcry from the United Nations and other observers, Indonesia and Malaysia announced that they would allow the migrants’ boats dock on their shores and offer them temporary shelter.
The announcement came after a meeting in Kuala Lumpur between Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand, all of which border the Andaman Sea where the migrants are adrift, and all of which previously had refused to let most of them land.
While Malaysia and Indonesia’s offer may save the lives of the thousands of Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants who have been starving on over-crowded boats as monsoon season ramps up, it does nothing to resolve the broader issues behind the crisis. Both Indonesia and Malaysia were quick to stress that they’re only offering temporary relief and shelter, and expect the international community to step in and help find more permanent settlement for the migrants.
The deal won’t improve the dire conditions in Myanmar and Bangladesh pushing migrants to leave. On Wednesday, the Myanmar government said it was making “serious efforts” to stop illegal migration, including sea patrols around its coast. But the problem starts long before migrants make the decision to leave, with a stifling lack of economic opportunity, Buddhist mobs’ ongoing attacks against the Rohingya minority, and Myanmar government’s denial of citizenship and other rights for the Muslim group.
The United Nations estimates that some 100,000 Rohingya have undertaken dangerous sea voyages in recent years to flee persecution, and some say the campaign against them in Myanmar amounts to genocide.
Neighboring countries have been hesitant to admit the Rohingya, despite perilous conditions on the boats, partly because they worry that this would just increase the flood of migrants. Now, Indonesia and Malaysia are emphasizing that their offer won’t extend to anyone coming on boats in the future.
The choice to take in the currently stranded migrants puts their approach somewhere between that of the European Union, which has stepped up search and rescue efforts and says it will launch military operations against traffickers after the recent spate of Mediterranean shipwrecks, and Australia’s, which since September 2013 has prevented any migrant boats from reaching its mainland in favor of holding them in dismal offshore detention facilities. Australia’s government has touted its success at “stopping the boats” — and downplayed the fact that the strategy has left migrants in permanent offshore limbo, or driven them back to Southeast Asia, adding to the current crisis there.
Thailand, for its part, said Wednesday that it will clarify whether it, too, will take in migrants at a regional meeting in Bangkok next week.
“We maintain our stance that we are a transit country,” Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said after Malaysia and Indonesia’s announcement. “Our country has more problems than theirs.” After uncovering several mass graves of trafficked Rohingyas, Thailand recently has cracked down on migrant smuggling, blocking overland routes and pushing smugglers’ boats back out to sea.
It’s not clear if the meeting in Bangkok will bring any long-term solutions. The regional grouping, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, is famous for its focus on “consensus building” — which often isn’t the best way to get countries to make tough choices.
Some others already have stepped up to help — compassionate Indonesianfishermen, the Turkish navy, international organizations like theInternational Organization for Migration, and the Philippine government. But while godsends for the individual migrants they manage to pull out of the seas, these moves are far from ending the larger crisis.
ROMEO GACAD/AFP/Getty Images
10 Ways To Use Aluminum Foil You Didn’t Know
Every woman has an aluminum foil in a drawer in the kitchen. It is a part of every kitchen, because it can be used in many ways. We bring you some of the best.
- Soften brown sugar so that you wrap it in aluminum foil. Put it in the oven for five minutes at 150 degrees. The sugar will return to its original state and you can use it for coffee or for your favorite cakes.
- To keep you bread, pastry or strudel fresh until the arrival of your guests, after baking them, wrap them in aluminum foil.
- Give back the glow of your favorite silverware: cover the bottom of the pan with aluminum foil, pour some water and add two tablespoons of salt. Put the silverware into this mixture and wait three minutes. Wait for it to dry and give it a shine with a cotton cloth.
- Make a “ball” from aluminum foil and scrub pots, pans and the grill with it.
- Clean your jewelry by covering the bottom of a pot with aluminum foil and adding laundry detergent. After that just wash it and leave it to dry off. Your jewelry will be like new.
- Make ironing easier by covering the board with aluminum foil. Then put a cloth over the foil. This way you iron both sides at the same time save valuable time.
- Clean your iron by going over an aluminum foil with it a few times.
- Fold the foil a few times and cut it with scissors. This will sharpen the scissors nicely.
- To protect plants from insects, insert pieces of aluminum foil among them.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Tamils in North & East Sri Lanka remember those killed despite intimidation and surveillance

- by Ruki
- - on 05/20/2015
Several remembrances events were held across the North and East in Sri Lanka on 18th May 2015 (the day the war ended in Sri Lanka in 2009) by Tamils to remember those killed during the war[1]. They were organized by Tamil politicians, religious clergy, civil society and women’s groups. Many were religious events. Most appear to commemorate civilians killed or all those killed. None that I saw had attempted to commemorate the government military or LTTE cadres that have been killed. In contrast, the government’s commereation of the end of the war was a “War Heroes (Ranaviru) Day” presided over by President Sirisena on 19th May was focused on the military, despite references having made to remember all those killed during the war[2].
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