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Monday, July 13, 2015
Maithri’s Options: From Sensation To Reality

By Harindra B. Dassanayake –July 13, 2015
Since the last presidential election, fun begins from the nominations stage. This time round, however, nominations of both sides exceed mere ‘fun’ and borders on black humour – would you imagine Mahinda Rajapaksa runs under Maithri’s list and fiery Champika Ranawaka to camp in Ranil’s backyard? So, the proverbial ‘desperate situations call for desperate solutions’. May be. The central plot of the drama so far is the nomination for the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa from the UPFA list. And it was given. However, those six million odd voters who lifted the challenger Maithripala to the throne by ousting its incumbent seem hardly satisfied. Interestingly, even some of the Rajapaksa fans too are bitter-tongued as their hero gave into a trap instead of becoming a true avenging rebel leader against the Maithri’s UPFA: ‘once a Judas is always a Judas!’, so they say of Maithripala Sirisena, a name that increases blood temperature of those who upheld him as well as withheld him just six months ago. Did he not have better options? This short piece will explore some of three other options he could have adopted, each, with devastating consequences.
- Maithri should have taken a leaf out of Mahinda’s book and do what he did to Sarath Fonseka in 2010 – Cut the cancer.
- Maithri could simply remained the President and leave the rotten SLFP and UPFA to those who deserve it – Nobody wanted him to become the leader of SLFP
- Let the Rajapaksa clan break away from UPFA and contest, if he desired, on his own from his own party – Purify the great Party
Let’s examine the possible outcomes of each of these options briefly.
Cut the caner
What goes around comes around. But, what the then-president Mahinda Rajapaksa did to his challenger,Sarath Fonseka, in 2010 was a sorry scene in the eyes of someone who admires the right to differ. The essence of the January 08 mandate was to bid a permanent ‘Rest-in-Peace’ to that very kind of politics of destroying one’s opponents. Probably, the investigation process could have been fast-tracked. More thieves could have been caught, and put in jail. Yet, as the controversial resignation and resumption of duties of on member of the Bribery Commission (bringing the work of the institute to a stand-still) vividly exemplified, fighting a system that grew over a decade with months needs democratic patience or, yes, a guillotine. The second is not an option in our country, and it should never be anywhere. In order to protect and respect the essence of the January 08 mandate, democracy should prevail. Going by the standards that Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa has set as the President, he should be thankful to his counterpart Mr. Sirisena for allowing him live a normal life, let alone doing politics.
Death threats to Dullas

Death threats to Dullas

2015-07-13 14
Former parliamentarian Dullas Alahapperuma has received a death threat today (13) while returning from the District Secretariat after handing over the Matara district nominations for UPFA, Southern Provincial Councilor Kanchana Wijesekara told Ceylon Today Online.
Former Chairman of the Weligama Pradeshiya Sabha Dikkumburage Kulaweera has threatened Dullas saying that he will be dead by tomorrow morning if he does politics in the Matara district.
Mr. Wijesekara further said that this threat was made in front of police and media personnel. He further said that he made a complaint to the Matara police regarding the incident.
Video confirms Palestinian teen was fleeing before Israeli killed him
Ali Abunimah Rights and Accountability 13 July 2015
At about 6:30 am on Friday, 3 July, Israeli colonel Yisrael Shomer shot dead Muhammad Sami Ali al-Kasbeh, a 17-year-old resident of Qalandiya refugee camp, near Qalandiya checkpoint in the occupied West Bank.
At about 6:30 am on Friday, 3 July, Israeli colonel Yisrael Shomer shot dead Muhammad Sami Ali al-Kasbeh, a 17-year-old resident of Qalandiya refugee camp, near Qalandiya checkpoint in the occupied West Bank.
This security camera video from a nearby gas station, obtained by the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, confirms earlier findings that Shomer killed al-Kasbeh as he ran away and that the Israeli army version of the incident is false.
Muhammad had been among a group of Palestinians denied entry to occupied Jerusalem for Ramadan prayers.
As the video shows, an Israeli military vehicle then drives through the area. Muhammad runs towards it, throws a stone, and then runs away.
The video shows that the vehicle immediately stops. Two soldiers get out and chase the teen, while a third remains near the vehicle. The video shows no further stonethrowing.
The rest of the pursuit and the actual shooting take place outside the frame of the video. A short time later, the soldiers can be seen returning into the camera’s field of vision, getting into the vehicle and driving off.
But eyewitnesses to the killing told B’Tselem (Hebrew press release), and previously the human rights groupsDefence for Children International–Palestine and Al-Haq, that Shomer shot Muhammad from a distance of around 10-15 meters.
Muhammad was hit three times in the head and upper body. B’Tselem confirms that two of the entry wounds were in his back.
After the shooting, Shomer approached Muhammad’s body and pushed it with his foot.
Then Shomer and the other occupation soldiers got in their vehicle and drove away without calling for medical help.
Muhammad was evacuated in a private car, then transferred to a Palestine Red Crescent Society ambulance. He was pronounced dead in a Ramallah hospital.
Justifying killing
B’Tselem points out that immediately after the incident, the Israeli army claimed that Shomer acted because he was in real and imminent mortal danger.
Israeli army central command chief General Roni Numa and several government ministers praised the colonel and gave him their full backing.
But B’Tselem says the video shows that a teenager fleeing after throwing a single rock presented no life-threatening danger when he was shot and contradicts the army’s account of the incident. It says its investigation found that the shooting was “unjustified and unlawful,” and that the “official version presented did not accord with the facts of the incident.”
It adds that the video shows that Shomer’s actions violated even the occupation army’s own lax policies permitting brutal violence against Palestinians.
It says that the army’s “open-fire regulations,” allow occupation forces to shoot a fleeing Palestinian “suspect” in the legs in order to capture him. They do not allow shooting to kill with three bullets to the upper body.
The fact that the gunman and his accomplices left the scene of the shooting without calling for medical assistance is, according to B’Tselem, a “violation of basic human morality, as well as of military orders that require, in any case where a person is shot, to provide the victim with medical care as far as possible.”
“Unlawful message”
The praise ministers heaped on a senior commander for killing a teenager sends an “unlawful message” to occupation soldiers that they are, according to B’Tselem, “allowed and even encouraged to shoot to kill a Palestinian stonethrower, even if he’s running away and does not constitute a danger.”
One the one hand, Palestinians use stonethrowing as a form of protest and resistance against Israel’s violent, decades-long military occupation.
Israel, on the other hand, believes that it should have the right to occupy and kill Palestinians, deny them entry to their largest city Jerusalem, raid their homes in the middle of the night, jail them without charge or trial, impose all sorts of brutal restrictions on every aspect of their lives and confiscate and colonize their land, all without facing any resistance whatsoever, not even stones.
The Israeli government recently put forward a bill that would allow Palestinians accused of throwing stones to be sentenced by military tribunals to up to 10 years in prison.
Although a military police investigation was opened into the killing of Muhammad al-Kasbeh, B’Tselem says that with the automatic support given to Shomer, “there are serious doubts” that the investigation would be “effective and impartial” and could ever lead to justice.
Such “doubts” exist in any case. Israeli occupation soldiers enjoy routine, blanket impunity for killing Palestinians, whether or not they are high-ranking officers and whether or not they have been praised by ministers.
Note: Since initial publication of this article, B’Tselem has released an English-language report about the video.
Jeremy Corbyn: 'I wanted Hamas to be part of the debate'
MONDAY 13 JULY 2015
Labour leadership candidate Jeremy Corbyn explains why he described the Islamist militant organisations Hamas and Hezbollah as "friends" and says he does not agree with them.
Labour leadership candidate Jeremy Corbyn explains why he described the Islamist militant organisations Hamas and Hezbollah as "friends" and says he does not agree with them.
Mr Corbyn told Channel 4 News he had used the word "friends" in a "collective way" at a meeting in parliament. "I'm saying that people I talk to, I use it in a collective way, saying our friends are prepared to talk.
"Does it mean I agree with Hamas and what it does? No. Does it mean I agree with Hezbollah and what they do? No. What it means is that I think to bring about a peace process, you have to talk to people with whom you may profoundly disagree.
"There is not going to be a peace proccess unless there is talks involving Israel, Hezbollah and Hamas and I think everyone knows that."
'Welcomed our friends'
"I spoke at a meeting about the Middle East crisis in parliament and there were people there fromHezbollah and I said I welcomed our friends from Hezbollah to have a discussion and a debate, and I said I wanted Hamas to be part of that debate. I have met Hamas in Lebanon and I've met Hezbollah in this country and Lebanon.
"The wider question is Hamas and Hezbollah are part of a wider peace process. Even the former head of Mossad says that there has to be talks involving Hamas.
"I've also had discussions with people from the right in Israeli politics who have the same view possibly that the state of Israel should extend from the river to the sea, as it is claimed people from the Palestinian side do.
Mr Corbyn was also questioned about his views on British military intervention in Syria, and said he opposed it.
'No solution'
"I don't think British intervention by military means is going to bring about a solution. I think there has to be ultimately a political solution.
"I think the issue has to be choking off the arms supply and the money that goes to Isil, recognise where Isil have come from and also recognising, I think, there was quite a big mistake in not reconvening the Geneva conference involving Iran, which could have helped to bring about, at a much earlier point, a ceasefire in the other part of this Syrian civil war.
"That is between the government of Syria, Free Syrian Army and the Kurdish forces, as opposed to the Isil forces, which have grown significantly in the last year.
Talking about the super rich in Britain, he said: "My goal is to reduce inequality, to end inequality is a very difficult thing to do. The hundred richest people own as much as a third of the population...we have the very wealthy buying up parts of London to keep it empty and use it as an investment bank for the future.
"Are super-rich people actually happy with being super-rich? I would want the super rich to pay properly their share of the needs of the rest of the community."
Peace move between India and Pakistan necessary and inevitable

By N.S Venkataraman-Mon, Jul 13th, 2015
Many eyebrows were raised in India and Pakistan, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shook hands with Prime Minister of Pakistan Nawaz Shariff and discussed Indo-Pakistan relationship in Russia recently.
While sceptics think that the present peace initiative will end up in an anti-climax, like several other peace initiatives made in the past, at least some people in India and Pakistan think that there is reasonable chance of the present peace initiative being sustained.
The ground reality is that millions of Indians and Pakistanis do not dislike each other and have responded to each other with understanding and goodwill whenever opportunities have been provided.
There are still millions of admirers in India of Pakistani cricketers and they like to see them and hear about them. Imran Khan, a former cricketer and now a political leader in Pakistan, is often interviewed in Indian TV media and has provided expert commentary on cricket matches taking place in India.Many Hindi films produced in India are watched in Pakistan with sustained interest. Occasionally, musicians from India and Pakistan render performance during exchange programmes. Several Indian hospitals receive patients from Pakistan and treat them well, a gesture much appreciated in Pakistan.
There is also regular trade between India and Pakistan; traders in both the countries face no particular problem in dealing with each other. Such conditions only highlight the fact that there are no fundamental and insurmountable issues in India-Pakistan relationship.
It is said that the vexed Kashmir issue is the stumbling block in India Pakistan relationship and there is no immediate solution for this dispute. It is also said that unless the Kashmir issue is resolved, peace move between India and Pakistan will not be successful.
There may be some justification for such a perspective, particularly due to the conflicts and border skirmishes that have been taking place for the last several decades. However, history has repeatedly shown that in many regions, apparently irreconcilable issues have been solved and overcome by change in mindset of the people on both sides.
What is required to achieve this positive change in the mindset is quality of statesmanship and far-sighted outlook on part of the leadership in both the countries. Let us now believe and hope that Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif are capable of exhibiting lofty qualities of statesmanship.
The present time is appropriate for the peace initiative, as both India and Pakistan are victims of frequent terrorist activities and many innocent lives have been lost in both the countries. Both India and Pakistan have common interest in combating terrorism and this cannot happen without mutual cooperation between both the countries.
In recent times, the economy of Pakistan have suffered due to lack of overseas investment inflow, as there appears to be a world-view that terrorism in Pakistan has increased and terrorists and extremists are now well entrenched in Pakistan. This in spite of its efforts to put down terrorism. Certainly, Pakistan can gain a better international image by effective anti-terrorist activities and India’s support can be helpful to achieve this end.
Mr. C.Rajagopalachari (popularly known as Rajaji) who was the first Governor General of independent India and an acclaimed, foresighted statesman, said several decades back that the best way of solving Indo-Pakistan issues would be to focus on positives and ignore the negatives to the greatest extent possible.By focussing on the positives, emotional integration and inter-dependence between the people, peace in both the countries would be established. With the mindset of a considerable section of people in India and Pakistan becoming peaceful and harmonious, there would be pressure on politicians and extremists to further the peace process in both the countries.
Possibly, such view point and approach is weighing in the mind of Narendra Modi and Nawaz Shariff, as they shake hands, smile and pose for photograph in Russia. Modi’s acceptance of the invitation to visit Pakistan in 2016 obviously indicates the fact that he thinks that peace between India and Pakistan is necessary and inevitable.
While extremists and politicians in both the countries with narrow interest will continue to make hawkish statements and shout provocative slogans, millions of peace loving citizens in India and Pakistan who realize the futility of conflict should assert themselves and wage a silent and sustained battle for peace.
Supported by peace loving Indians and Pakistanis with Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif exhibiting mature outlook, peace would happen between India and Pakistan sooner or later, perhaps sooner than later.
China targets lawyers in new human rights crackdown
More than 100 legal professionals and activists have been questioned or detained with strong attacks in state media against those affected

A protest outside the Chinese consulate in San Francisco against the detention of lawyers and human rights activists, who have been denounced as a ‘criminal gang’ in state media. Photograph: Steve Rhodes/Demotix/Corbis
Monday 13 July 2015
More than 100 human rights lawyers and activists have been detained or questioned by Chinese police and denounced in state media as a “criminal gang” in recent days, raising fears of an unprecedented crackdown by the Chinese authorities.
According to human rights groups, a total of 106 lawyers, other staff at legal firms and human rights activists have been detained or questioned and at least three law firms have been searched. Six lawyers from the law firm Fengrui, which has handled a number of high-profile human rights cases, have been detained. Another 17 lawyers and rights activists are missing.
The detentions came as a high-profile Tibetan monk serving a 20-year sentence died in prison and as China was urged to end its two-tier passport system, which restricts freedom of movement for religious and ethnic minorities.
The crackdown began on 9 July when Wang Yu, a Fengrui lawyer, disappeared in the early morning after sending friends a text message saying that the internet connection and electricity had been cut off at her home and that people were trying to break in. Wang’s clients include practitioners of the religious group Falun Gong, which is banned in China.
The firm’s director, Zhou Shifeng, who has also been detained, had representedZhang Miao, a Chinese journalist who worked with a German magazine to report on the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests and was released last week after nine months in detention.
Li Heping, a well-known rights lawyer who represented the blind lawyer and activist Chen Guangcheng and helped victims of forced evictions, is among those who have not been heard from since being detained.
A large number of the lawyers who have been questioned had signed a public letter condemning Wang’s detention, according to the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, which is based in Hong Kong.
There have been previous government crackdowns on human rights activists and lawyers, including in 2011 during calls for a democratic uprising in the wake of the Arab spring. However, analysts believe this crackdown is unprecedented in terms of its scope. Maya Wang, a researcher with Human Rights Watch, said the detention of activists and lawyers was worrying as it was not in response to “any kind of perceivable threat”.
Articles in state media have denounced the Fengrui lawyers and claimed that they illegally organised paid protests and fabricated rumours online to sway decisions in court. A long article in the People’s Daily newspaper, the mouthpiece of the Communist party, detailed how the lawyers and rights activists gain attention for sensitive cases. It accused them of sensationalising ordinary issues, turning “sensitive issues into political issues”, and not following legal principles.
Wang said this kind of public condemnation by state media was unusual, and that activism itself was being used to justify the detentions. Activism “has basically been deemed illegal by the Chinese government”, she said. “I think it is the most concerning part of the crackdown.”
William Nee, from Amnesty International, said Fengrui’s effectiveness in highlighting cases of injustice worried the government. “We’ve seen cases where public opinion seems to have been mobilised and I think they are worried because they don’t want to lose their grip on public opinion.” Protests outside courts by activists had unnerved the government, he added.
“It is something they have never put up with but especially as it looks like social protests are on the rise, strikes are on the rise, there is the potential for economic uncertainty. I think all these factors have together in the government’s mind made them want to crack down on human rights lawyers.”
The US State Department condemned the detentions and said it was concerned that the new national security law was being used as a “facade to commit human rights abuses”. It called on China to “respect the rights of all its citizens and to release all those who have recently been detained for seeking to protect the rights of Chinese citizens”.
Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has called on China to ends its use of a two-tier passport system. Under the system, residents from areas that have large Tibetan and Muslim populations have to provide more extensive documentation than other Chinese citizens.
According to HRW, there is a fast-track passport application process for residents in areas populated by the majority Han Chinese that is denied to people in areas populated predominately by Tibetans and Muslims. An HRW report identified cases where members of religious minorities faced delays of five years in getting a passport or were refused one.
“The restrictions also violate freedom of belief by denying or limiting religious minorities’ ability to participate in pilgrimages outside China,” said Sophie Richardson, the China director at HRW. Extra restrictions in Tibet since 2012 have stopped most residents travelling abroad, while attending any events in other countries, such as teachings by the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of the Tibetan people, is considered to be subversive political activity.
A Tibetan lama, Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, has died in prison, 13 years into a 20-year sentence for what human rights groups say were false charges that he was involved in a park bombing. He was 65. The cause of death was not clear, but according to a statement by the group Students for a Free Tibet, he had been suffering from serious health problems and had been refused medical parole.
Tenzin Delek Rinpoche was arrested in 2002 for alleged involvement in a bomb attack in Chengu, the capital of Sichuan province, and was initially sentenced to death. His sentence was later suspended and changed to life imprisonment.
Tenzin Dolkar, the executive director of Students for a Free Tibet, said: “His death is a harsh reminder of the violent and brutal reality of Chinese-occupied Tibet.”
Looking Into the Black Box of Venezuela’s Economy

Spotting evidence of the destruction that Venezuela’s politicians have inflicted on the economy isn’t terribly hard. In fact, you start to see it as soon as you get off the plane.
The terminal of Caracas International Airport, a cavernous building built in the 1980s, is mostly empty. International carriers have largely abandoned the country. The combination of foreign exchange controls and the government’s refusal to let airlines repatriate earnings means that long-haul flights into the country have all but disappeared.
The picture is the same on the streets of the city. The local currency, thebolÃvar, has lost 70 percent of its value in the black market this year, and “legal” dollars are hard to find. Price controls and regulations on imports have made many basic staples disappear from the shelves. What remains is often unaffordable to most, as purchasing power in dollar terms has plummeted. (The photo above shows a worker walking past banners depicting Venezuelan currency.)
The picture is bleak, but you wouldn’t know it from official sources. The government has long since stopped releasing figures on everything from inflation to growth to the budget deficit.
A few days ago, I spoke about this with Asdrúbal Oliveros, one of the country’s most widely cited local economists. Oliveros heads EcoanalÃtica, a firm that provides consulting services to foreign banks as well as Venezuelan companies. His office, ironically enough, is located next to the headquarters of the national tax collection agency. When I point out the coincidence, Oliveros laughs.
“An economist in Venezuela is like a detective. You have to be technically solid, of course, but the dearth of public information means you also have to be creative,” he says.
According to his estimates, inflation in the past 12 months is already up to 128 percent. The budget deficit is roughly 20 percent of GDP, and the balance of payments has a deficit of $17 billion. The Economist forecasts that GDP will contract by 4.2 percent this year. Oliveros thinks that is conservative.
In order to come up with his numbers, Oliveros relies on a web of contacts – colleagues, former classmates, and the businesspeople he advises all provide clues about what’s really happening.
Even bureaucrats sometimes turn to him to find out what is going on. Civil servants in government departments such as the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank are simply being ignored by their government. “They ask me for help in figuring out what the government is thinking, or planning on doing,” says Oliveros. “They’re as much in the dark as the rest of us.”
Venezuelans are used to macroeconomic chaos, but the combination of a deep recession with the highest inflation rate in the world (not to mention Venezuelan history) is new.
Perhaps more importantly, prices have largely stopped signaling what things are worth. This is a country where a dollar may cost very little or very much, depending on whom you know. A kilogram of grapes (price not regulated) costs ten times more than a kilo of price-controlled beef. The grapes are practically unaffordable, and the beef has disappeared from store shelves.
I ask Oliveros if he thinks Venezuelans are aware of just how badly they are doing. “They feel it, but they don’t understand it much. The Romanian writer Emil Cioran once wrote, ‘Only those are happy who never think.’ I think Venezuelans are trying to not think too much about how poor they have become. They’re too busy queuing and trying to make ends meet.”
In such an environment, I ask him what he tells his clients. “In a hyperinflationary context, companies need to focus on cost containment and on protecting their assets. They also need to do whatever it takes to retain talent, because human capital becomes all the more valuable in an economy such as this.”
I wonder – does Venezuela’s private sector have what it takes to survive, and thrive when the tide turns? He sounds cautiously optimistic.
“The current governing clique has a Freudian problem with private business. Ever since 2003, when the private sector staged a national strike against the government, they have been intent on clamping down on business groups that might threaten them.”
“In the last few years, many businesses in Venezuela have managed to survive the onslaught from the government. They live in constant crisis mode. I’m afraid that if we ever reached calmer waters, they would not know what to do!”
Oliveros thinks that is why private businesses are viewed as “mercenaries,” looking for a quick return in the face of a highly uncertain – even dangerous – environment. “They want to survive while they can.”
In spite of everything, he doesn’t see them throwing in the towel. “I travel all over the country, and I have never met a defeatist businessman. They all want to work hard, and they want clues on how to go about doing so.”
Oliveros frequently travels to San Cristóbal, a city of 600,000 people in the western edge of the country, bordering Colombia. Last year, the city was theepicenter of student protests that were violently repressed. Since then, the city has suffered acutely from shortages of basic staples. Price controls mean everything from gasoline to milk is smuggled to neighboring Colombia, where they fetch market prices. This leaves the city starved.
“Even in places such as San Cristóbal or Maracaibo [also on the border] private business is still standing. In spite of everything going on, in spite of the fact that they cannot get raw inputs, or that basic services are hard to find, you see hundreds of people in a hotel room meeting to talk about possible solutions, and about what they can do to flourish in an environment such as this.”
“And that,” he says with a smile, “should give us all a bit of hope.”
FEDERICO PARRA/AFP/Getty Images
Greek leader home with bailout deal but faces dissent over deep cuts ahead
A deal has been reached with Greece to negotiate a bailout that will keep the near-bankrupt nation in the euro zone. (Reuters)
[What everybody needs to know about the deal to save Greece — and what happens next]
By Anthony Faiola and Ylan Q. Mui-July 13
ATHENS — Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras capitulated in Brussels to keep his country part of the euro. He returned home hours later Monday to find a nation split apart with the difficult task ahead of uniting lawmakers behind a deal they once denounced.Treat climate change as seriously as national security - report
A view shows a damaged sand dune due to the erosion on the Atlantic Ocean coastline in Montalivet, southwestern France, February 19, 2015.
Governments should treat climate change as seriously as threats to national security or public health, partly by focusing more on the worst scenarios of rising temperatures, an international report said on Monday.
Crop failures, extreme heat waves or high rates of sea level rise could be so harmful that governments should examine even small chances of the most severe impacts, according to the study by about 60 experts from 11 nations.
"The risks of climate change should be assessed in the same way as risks to national security or public health," according to the experts from countries that included Britain, the United States, China, Russia and India.
"When we think about keeping our country safe, we always consider the worst case scenarios," British Foreign Office Minister Joyce Anelay, whose government was among the report's sponsors, said in a statement.
"That is what guides our policies on nuclear non-proliferation, counter-terrorism and conflict prevention. We have to think about climate change the same way," she said.
Too often, risks of climate change are viewed more narrowly, "as if it were a long-term weather forecast", she said.
Almost 200 governments will meet in Paris in December to try to work out a global deal to slow climate change.
The study said U.N. reports about climate change focused mainly on moderate warming and rarely mentioned the impacts of five degrees Celsius (9 Fahrenheit) or more, which are far less likely but would be far more damaging.
The Greenland ice sheet, Arctic ecosystems and tropical coral reefs are systems vulnerable to big rises in temperatures.
Governments have long been at odds about how to present the risks of climate change, partly because some voters doubt scientific findings that warming is man-made. Spending on national security or health is less controversial.
The report said the world was not on track to limit greenhouse gas emissions to keep temperatures within a U.N. goal of two degrees Celsius (3.6 F) above pre-industrial times.
"It is very likely that the world will continue to follow a medium to high emissions pathway for the next few decades," the authors wrote.
(Reporting By Alister Doyle; Editing by Gareth Jones)
HEALTHY LIFE BASE
July 10, 2015
The dandelion root is known for its healing properties. Being fully aware of this, our grandmothers have prepared dandelion syrup and used it for many diseases. However, they didn’t know that this plant can be very effective for cancer patients as well. Additionally, many studies have shown that the dandelion root is even more effective than chemotherapy. The chemotherapy, as one of the most popular medicines for treating cancer, kills all cells in comparison to the dandelion root that kills only the affected ones.
According to the findings of an initial research done by at the University of Windsor, at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, the dandelion root gives hope to the cancer patients. The results from the research have shown that the root from this plant kills the carcinogenic kills without affecting the healthy ones.
By now, you are probably wondering how the dandelion root works. It works on the carcinogenic cells by making them disintegrate within 48 hours. The research showed that during these 48 hours, none of the healthy cells can become damaged. If the treatment with dandelion root continues, it can eliminate all the carcinogenic cells. This positive outcome encouraged the experts to continue exploring the properties of this plant.
John Carlo, a 72-year-old cancer patient, has tried and praised the healing properties of this amazing plant. He had undergone aggressive chemotherapy treatments and spent 3 years of his life on different medical treatments. None of the treatments showed any results and as a result, he was released from the hospital and sent home in order to spend his days with the family.
The doctors didn’t have any other functional and effective solution to offer and all the options were already tried. However, they advised him to try the dandelion root tea as the last, alternative tool. He did so and after 4 months something unbelievable happened. He experienced a remission of the disease, referring to complete or partial withdrawal of the cancer.
What The Bacteria In Your Gut Have To Do With Your Physical And Mental Health

Strange but true fact: Our bodies are made of more bacteria than human cells, and the gut alone contains trillions of microbes (bacteria and fungi). In fact, it's estimated that the body is composed of 10 times more bacteria than human cells.
And the intestines are home to more bacteria than any other part of the body, including the skin. Now, scientists are devoting increasing amounts of time and resources to understanding the gut 'microbiome,' as the massive collection of bacteria and microbes is called -- and the influence it may exert on the brain and body. The National Institute of Health's Human Microbiome Project, for instance, is devoting millions of research dollars to understanding the microorganisms living within the human ecosystem.
Of particular concern among scientists and the public is the effect that gut flora may have on mental health, as a mounting body of researchsuggests that gut bacteria can have a significant impact on the way we think, feel and behave, and also on the development of neurological conditions. Last year, a major neuroscience symposium called the investigation of gut microbes a "paradigm shift" in brain science.
A number of diseases and disorders have been linked to abnormalities or instability in gut flora, and the microbiome is an important area of research for these conditions. However, it's important to note that while research has linked these conditions to alterations in the microbiome, it does not mean that in every case gut bacteria is the cause of the problem.
Here are a handful of physical and mental health problems that have been linked to imbalances and abnormalities gut bacteria.
Infographic by Jan Diehm for The Huffington Post.
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