Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Death THreats on Sajith and MR


BY RATHINDRA KURUWITA-2015-08-04

United National Party (UNP) candidate for Hambantota District Sajith Premadasa has written to the IGP requesting for additional security for his rallies in Hambantota stating that he is facing severe threats.
"There is a prevailing culture of violence in Hambantota and my life is under threat. I have organized a number of rallies in the district targeting the 17 August general election and I request you to provide special security to the main rallies," Premadasa said.
The UNP candidate requested the IGP to provide STF and additional Police contingents to the main rallies. Premadasa also attached a list of 13 main rallies which he will attend.
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa has written to the IGP, N.K. Illangakoon requesting him to conduct an investigation on whether a person was hovering around his office in Kurunegala with the intention of causing harm to him .
UPFA earlier said that they apprehended a suspicious person near Rajapaksa's office and handed him over to the police.
Following the request the IGP has asked Senior DIG Ravi Wijegunawardane, in charge of Kurunegala division to conduct an investigation into the matter.

Wijegunawardane has immediately initiated an inquiry into the matter yesterday itself.
The Senior DIG has instructed DIG Sarath Kumara and SSP S. Senaratne to conduct the investigation.

Litro sends letter of demand to Bandula

Litro  sends letter of demand to BandulalogoAugust 4, 2015
The Litro Gas Lanka Ltd sent a letter of demand to former Minister Bandula Gunawardena demanding Rs. 1 billion in damage over several remarks made against it.

Litro Gas Lanka Executive Chairman Shalila Moonesinghe has sent the letter of demand through his Attorney at Law on Tuesday (04).

In a statement issued recently, the Litro Gas said, “Bandula Gunawardene who was silent on the corrupt practices of ex-President now sheds crocodile tears ostensibly for LP gas consumers. The Chairman M/s Litro Gas Lanka Ltd today put the records straight with regard to the procurement of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LP Gas) by the sole distributor M/s Litro Gas Lanka Ltd. Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake  had earlier refuted the claims by the former minister Bandula Gunawardena that the Government has approved the privatization of the Litro Gas Lanka Ltd.

The Minister Ravi Karunanayake has categorically said that the Litro Gas Lanka Ltd a house hold name in the country will never be privatized and the government would take every efforts to pass the benefit of the market fluctuations to the consumers as previously done twice within the six months of the new government came in to office.

Mr Bandula Gunawardena had leveled allegations that the government has also signed a MoU with Shell Gas Ltd to purchase Gas at US D 105 per MT, contrary to international tender procedures.

Mr Shalila Moonesinghe Executive Chairman of the Litro Gas Lanka Ltd said that it was the previous government that purchased LP gas without even calling for tenders at higher price for the last two years from a single supplier in a questionable manner. The previous management of the Litro Gas Co headed by Mr Gamini Senarath, who was also the then Chief of Staff of the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had entered into a direct contract agreement with a Dubai based company to supply LP gas to Sri Lanka for a period of two years up to May 2015, with an additional price increase of USD Nine per MT in the first year and USD Five in the second year.

Sri Lanka purchases an estimated 190,000 MT + 10 %  of LP gas annually and this  abnormal increase by US Nine dollar in 2013/2014  to  USD 135 and to USD 140 in the second year. This questionable action by the previous government incurred a  loss of  Rs 576 Million ( USD 4.37 million) to the Litro company.. The current prices being negotiated are in the range of USD 105/MT and accordingly there will be a savings of Rs 1,716 million (USD 13 Million) within the next two years under the new government new government has been able to 

It is pity that Minister Bandula Gunawardena who was a powerful minister in the Cabinet of the then President Mahinda Rajapaksa could not utter a word against this authoritarian and contradictory action of the all powerful chairman Gamini Senarath. If not for this high handed arbitrary action which incurred a  revenue loss of Rs 576 million, the benefit could easily be passed on to the consumers by reducing the selling price of LP gas in the market. 

On the contrary, the present Chairman of the Litro gas Mr Shalila Moonesinghe said that the management appointed by Minister of Finance Ravi karunanayake called for international tenders for the procurement of Gas for the next two years under a competitive market price. 12 would be suppliers, shortlisted were evaluated and since the lowest evaluated bidder did not furnish the required document within the stipulated time period, the tender committee has started the process of negotiation with the other short listed suppliers as per the procurement guidelines.

Apart from the technical and financial feasibility, the tender committee, as per the procurement guidelines, will also consider the reliability, dependability, consistency and the availability of tankers at the disposal of the suppliers in addition to their past experiences in dealing with such a vast quantity of 190,000 MT per year. 

The chairman Litro gas Lanka Ltd assured that under the existing procurement process, which is under negotiation, it will be possible to negotiate the best market price which is around USD 34.25 less per MT than the previous negotiated price of USD 140 and the cumulative savings from the Gas supplies to Litro Gas Co in the next two years is expected to exceed Rs 1,716 million (USD 13 million). 

Due to best market practices adopted by the yahapalana government under the guidance of Minister Ravi karunanayake in profit maximizing, it will help further pass the benefit to the consumers in future in addition to price reduction of gas already made twice within the six month of the government.”

Suspected Boko Haram militants kill eight, kidnap 100 in Cameroon

 Seven killed, about 20 taken in suspected Boko Haram attack in Cameroon | http://t.co/q0i1M7NYKU
ReutersTue Aug 4, 2015
At least eight people were killed and about 100 others were kidnapped by suspected Boko Haram militants in an overnight raid on a village near Cameroon's northern border, a local government and a military source said.
Tchakarmari, the village targeted early on Tuesday, lies north of Maroua, where dozens of people were killed in a series of suicide bombings by the Nigerian Islamist group last month.
"Residents said the attackers headed back to Nigeria where Cameroon is not allowed to pursue them," the local government source in the Far North region said.
A senior military officer deployed as part of a Cameroonian military operation aimed at curbing the spillover of violence from Boko Haram's stronghold in northeastern Nigeria said the attackers had crossed over from Nigeria shortly after midnight.
After the spate of suicide bombings in July, Cameroon's government announced plans to send an additional 2,000 troops to boost security in the Far North region.
The regional governor has banned burqas since the attacks, which were carried out by veiled female bombers. And over the weekend, authorities rounded up and expelled about 2,800 Nigerians living in Cameroon without the required documents.
Cameroon has already deployed some 7,000 troops as part of a regional force which includes Chad, Niger and Nigeria to try to stop Boko Haram's six-year insurgency.

(Reporting by Sylvain Andzongo; Writing by Joe Bavier and Emma Farge; Editing byLouise Ireland)

Talking Loud and Saying Nothing

Four big problems with the Obama administration’s plan for countering violent extremism.
Talking Loud and Saying Nothing
BY KIM GHATTAS-AUGUST 4, 2015
If the last decade was the age of the GWOT, or Global War on Terror, we’re currently living in the era of CVE. If you’re not caught up with the lingo, that’s countering violent extremism — and just as we had counterinsurgency tactics and counterterrorism experts who specialized in the GWOT, a new cottage industry has sprung up of CVE analysts and officials. The White House even had a summit about CVE earlier this year — mostly notable for the lack of any workable recommendations it produced.

It may not look like it, but a Colombia peace agreement could be within reach

Prison guards escort inmates through a rural area close to Chaguani, Colombia. Human rights advocates and families hope rebels with the FARC will reveal grave sites as part of a peace deal to let them avoid long prison terms. (Jose Miguel Gomez/Reuters)
By Joshua Partlow and Julia Symmes Cobb- 
BOGOTA, Colombia — The process of ending Colombia’s half-century war with leftist guerrillas has been its own multiyear struggle of halting talks, aborted cease-fires, frustration and distrust.
Deadly attacks by both sides and escalating rhetoric threw the process into doubt earlier this year, but experts say recent moves signal that a settlement between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, could be within reach.
Despite springtime violence, President Juan Manuel Santos announced his intention to accelerate talks taking place in Havana, while slowing down military operations against the Marxist-inspired guerrilla group. For its part, the FARC has called a unilateral cease-fire that runs through mid-August, which it says shows its commitment to a negotiated peace.
“Overall, I’m pretty optimistic,” said Oliver Kaplan, a professor at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver, who haswritten about the peace process. “I don’t want to say it’s inevitable, but I think it’s likely to get pushed through.”
Since Santos announced his intention to hold peace talks with the FARC in 2012, negotiators have met for dozens of sessions in Havana. Bombardments have paused and resumed; guerrilla attacks have fluctuated. Polls have shown that a majority of Colombians don’t trust that the FARC wants peace or that the talks will succeed. The government’s lead negotiator, a former vice president, warned just weeks ago that talks could collapse. And yet, many followers of the process, like Kaplan, seem hopeful.
The fact that talks continue after so long shows that neither side “wants to walk away from the table,” said Iván Cepeda, a left-wing senator. “On the contrary, we can observe that there is a very determined will to end these negotiations in success.”
“I believe that ending a 50-year war isn’t going to be simple; surely there will be problems,” he said. “But the general tendency is that we are taking steps, each time more seriously, towards peace.”
Santos said in a speech in July that he, “like all Colombians, began this process with great skepticism.”
“But we want — beyond that natural lack of confidence — to give peace a chance, and do it in a way that doesn’t mean additional risks for Colombians,” he said.
There have been concrete steps toward ending the longest-running conflict in the Americas. In December, the rebels declared a unilateral cease-fire and vowed to stop recruiting child soldiers. Santos announced a ban on bombing FARC camps. This spring, the government agreed to work with guerrillas to clear land mines, which have killed more than 2,000 people in the past 25 years. The FARC has also said it would follow a plan to end its participation in the drug trade, which has been a valuable revenue source. The two sides have agreed to a truth commission to look into past crimes.
But the peace process nearly derailed in April, after a rebel attack killed 11 army soldiers who were taking cover during a rainstorm. The government accused the FARC of breaking its commitments and lifted the ban on bombarding FARC positions, while the rebels said the attack was a defense against military aggression. That violence was followed a month later by an attack by government troops that left more than two dozen rebels dead. Both attacks occurred in the southwestern region of Cauca.
Since then, negotiators have taken steps toward resolving the conflict; the government reinstated its cease-fire, and the rebels released a captured soldier.
 
“I think the FARC has actually made a lot of credible moves so far,” Kaplan said. “If you put all that stuff together, it seems like they do want a deal.”
But others remain skeptical.
“You have to remember that the FARC has already done five unilateral cease-fires that haven’t worked, the last of which was the longest but still failed,” said Alfredo Rangel, a senator from the opposition party of former president Álvaro Uribe. “They continue drug-trafficking, they continue extorting the population, they continue recruiting minors, laying anti-personnel mines, re-arming.”
 
“There is no reason to think that what has failed before will this time succeed,” he added.
The thorniest issues that remain are about whether guerrilla leaders will get punished and for how long — and the process for foot soldiers to lay down their arms and get reintegrated into society. The estimated 7,000 rebels, who have diminishing strength and one-digit popular support, have sought total amnesty, which the government has rejected.
One potential model is a law that helped demobilize thousands of right-wing paramilitaries involved in Colombia’s violence. They confessed to their crimes and in return received maximum eight-year sentences, many of which are ending soon. One of the country’s most notorious right-wing death squad leaders, Freddy Rendón Herrera, known as “the German,” became a free manlast week after finishing his sentence. FARC fighters can already demobilize under the same system, but the government may not have the resources to support reintegration programs if many thousands lay down arms at once.
Santos, who has said he wants a deal by the end of the year, continues to urge people to give the process a chance.
“I invite everyone to believe,” he said last month. “In spite of so many difficulties, we’re on the right path. Follow me on this final stretch. Peace comes from everyone. Peace is in the hands of everyone.”
Read more:
 
Joshua Partlow is The Post’s bureau chief in Mexico. He has served previously as the bureau chief in Kabul and as a correspondent in Brazil and Iraq.

New Taliban leader facing tension as top official quits


Supporters of the religious party Jamiat Nazariyati pray for the late Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, in Quetta, Pakistan, August 2, 2015.  REUTERS/Naseer AhmedSupporters of the religious party Jamiat Nazariyati pray for the late Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, in Quetta, Pakistan, August 2, 2015.REUTERS/NASEER AHMED
PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN Tue Aug 4, 2015
ReutersA top Taliban official announced his resignation on Tuesday amid a growing leadership struggle in the Afghan insurgent movement after the news of the death of leader Mullah Mohammad Omar last week.
The swift announcement that Omar's longtime deputy, Mullah Mohammad Akhtar Mansour would be the new leader has riled many senior figures angry about the implication that Mansour covered up Omar's death for more than two years.
The infighting could split the Taliban and threatens tentative peace talks with the Kabul government to end 13 years of war that began with a U.S.-led campaign after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.
Since Mansour's appointment was announced by the Taliban leadership council based in Quetta, Pakistan, it has been denounced by several top members of the group, including Omar's brother, who has called for an assembly to choose the leader.
On Tuesday, Taliban official Syed Mohammad Tayab Agha announced he was stepping down as director of the Political Office in the Qatari capital Doha, originally set up to enable the Taliban to negotiate in any peace process.
Agha said he considered the decision to conceal Omar's death - generally attributed to Mansour - a "historic mistake by the individuals concerned".
"Now, as the leader is appointed outside the country and from the people who are residing outside the country is also considered as a great historical mistake," he said in a statement.
Considered close to Pakistan's powerful intelligence services, Mansour faces a challenge to hold the movement together with hardline commanders pressing for an end to talks and the continuation of fighting that has been increasingly successful in recent months.
Some reports suggest there have been clashes between rival Taliban groups, although a Taliban spokesman denied that.
Abdul Raouf Ahmadi, a police spokesman in the western province of Herat, said eight fighters, including a commander, were killed on Sunday in a battle over the leadership between two groups in a village in Shindand district.
A Taliban spokesman dismissed the report as baseless enemy propaganda.

'BAD REPERCUSSIONS'
It remains difficult to assess how serious a threat Mansour faces but the tension points at least to a suspension of the peace process while he consolidates his position.
Several commanders are known to have stopped fighting until the situation is clarified and there have been calls for a new council to be summoned to decide the leadership issue.
In his statement, Agha said previous leaders appointed outside the country, going back to the invasion by Soviet forces and the government set up after the Taliban were ousted, had "very bad repercussions" for Afghanistan.
The leader should be appointed "in presence of the courageous mujahideen in their strongholds inside the country", Agha said, referring to Islamist fighters.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said he could not confirm the statement came from Agha but two senior members of the Qatar office said he had resigned on Monday.
"Relations between Mullah Mansour and Tayyab Agha had never been friendly even when Mullah Omar was alive," said another Taliban member, who is close to Agha.
He said Mansour's decision to send his delegation to the first official peace talks between Taliban and Afghan government representatives last month in Pakistan had bypassed Agha, the head of the negotiating team in Qatar.
Perhaps in reaction to the dissent, the Taliban posted videos on Facebook, apparently showing worshippers acclaiming Mansour as leader.

(Additional reporting by Mirwais Harooni in Kabul, Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Robert Birsel)

What You Need to Know About China’s ‘Residential Surveillance at a Designated Place’7

S.A.C.R.E.D. Photo credit: http://cn.wsj.com/gb/20140411/PHO102344.asp
S.A.C.R.E.D. PHOTO CREDIT: HTTP://CN.WSJ.COM/GB/20140411/PHO102344.ASP

By Yaqiu Wang, published: August 2, 2015
During the recent
sweeping crackdown on rights lawyers, Chinese authorities placed lawyers Sui Muqing (隋牧青) and Xie Yang (谢阳), as well as activist Gou Guoping (勾国平), under “residential surveillance at a designated place” (指定居所监视居住), according to official reports. Some observers of China’s human rights practices were relieved upon hearing this. The literal meaning of this coercive measure gives the impression that, compared with formal detention, there must be relatively fewer restrictions on movement under residential surveillance. Gou Guoping’s wife, upon learning that her husband was to be placed under residential surveillance, was, in her own words, “ecstatic.” But after calling the public security bureau to obtain more information, she was told: “The case is under investigation. The whereabouts of the person is a secret.”
There are two kinds of “residential surveillance” in China: enforced at the domicile of the suspect, or enforced at a designated place. Article 73 of the Criminal Procedure Law (刑事诉讼法) stipulates: “Where, for a crime suspected to endanger State security, a crime involving terrorist activities and a crime involving a significant amount of bribes, residential surveillance at the domicile of the criminal suspect or defendant may impede the investigation, it may…be enforced at a designated place of residence.”
The Criminal Procedure Law further stipulates: “Where a criminal suspect or defendant is placed under residential surveillance at a designated place of residence, his/her family shall be informed of the information related thereto within 24 hours upon enforcement of residential surveillance, unless notification cannot be processed.”
But the reality is that authorities usually refuse to tell the individual’s family or lawyer where they’re being held. As a result, the suspect’s lawyer goes from detention center to detention center, from police station to police station, as well as to the Office of Letters and Calls, in a vain attempt to find out where they are.
As Teng Biao (滕彪), a visiting fellow at US-Asia Law Institute, New York University, points out: “The essence of ‘residential surveillance at a designated place’ is pre-trial custody in a place outside of legally designated places of custody. Because it does not need to be subject to the rules of formal detention centers, in reality ‘residential surveillance at a designated place’ is often a more severe form of detention. When a detainee is tortured, it is difficult to obtain evidence.” Furthermore, authorities are allowed to detain “suspects” under this law for six months—no other legal process required.
S.A.C.R.E.D. Photo credit: http://yidianer.com/article/1872
S.A.C.R.E.D. PHOTO CREDIT:HTTP://YIDIANER.COM/ARTICLE/1872
The best known case of “residential surveillance at a designated place” is probably artist Ai Weiwei’s (艾未未) 81-day secret detention in the spring of 2011 in Beijing. At Venice Art Biennale 2013, the artist exhibited a set of six installations called S.A.C.R.E.D. that depicts the scenes of his forced disappearance.
During the pro-democracy protests, or “Jasmine Revolution,” in 2011, the Chinese government placed a large number of political dissidents under “residential surveillance at a designated place,” including rights lawyers Liu Shihui (刘士辉) and Tang Jingling (唐荆陵). Liu recalled: “The agents beat me. I had to get stitches. My ribs were in severe pain. I was deprived of sleep for five days and five nights. To be taken to a detention center actually became my highest hope at that time.” Tang Jingling was deprived of sleep for 10 days. It was not until “his entire body started to shiver, his hands became numb, his heart beat erratically, and his life was in danger” that the police allowed him one to two hours sleep per day.
At around the same time, dissident writer Ye Du (野渡) was placed under residential surveillance in a police training center in Guangzhou for 96 days. He told China Change: “I didn’t see sunlight for a whole month. I was interrogated for 22 hours a day. One hour for food, one hour for sleep. I was interrogated like this for seven consecutive days until I suffered terrible gastrointestinal bleeding. Then they stopped.”
Writing about his 85-days of “residential surveillance” in 2002, He Depu (何德普), a pro-democracy activist who also served eight years in prison for organizing the Chinese Democratic Party, gave this assessment: “I feel that China’s residential surveillance system is one of the cruelest systems of torture there is.”
“Residential surveillance” is also applied to other categories of prisoners. Hua Chunhui (华春辉), a dissident who was once criminally detained, recently tweeted: “A co-inmate of mine who was allegedly involved with a criminal gang was first incarcerated in a re-education-through-labor center, then he was placed under residential surveillance at a designated place. Several months later he was taken back to the detention center. He told me that it wasn’t a place for humans.” At that point Hua understood “the horrors of ‘residential surveillance at a designated place.’”

Yaqiu Wang (王亚秋) researches and writes about civil society and human rights in China.

Indians push for alcohol prohibition in street protests

Activists in Tamil Nadu state say police are threatening and beating them up, as hundreds of officers protect government-owned liquor shops
A shop selling alcohol in India, where activists in some states are pressing for a ban. Photograph: Rupak de Chowdhuri/Reuters/Cor
Sandhya Ravishankar in Chennai and  in Delhi-Tuesday 4 August 2015
Demonstrators took to the streets in southern India on Tuesday to call for a ban on the sale of alcohol.
Hundreds of police were deployed to protect liquor shops after violent clashes earlier in the week between activists, students and the police in the southern city of Chennai and elsewhere in the state of Tamil Nadu.
“The police are threatening us and beating up protesters,” said Mathivanan Vinodh, a student activist in Salem, 200 miles from Chennai. “Our demand is for immediate and total prohibition … Too many lives are being ruined due to alcohol and women are suffering the most,” Vinodh, 22, said.
An increasing number of grassroots movements in India are pressuring local state governments – which earn vast sums from the sale of alcohol – to impose restrictions or bans.
According to a recent World Health Organisation report, around 30% of the total population of India consumed alcohol in the year 2010 – mainly spirits. The per-capita consumption of alcohol in the country rose from 1.6 litres (2.8 pints) a decade ago to 2.2 litres in 2012 – one of the fastest increases in the world. However the highest average intake per capita was still lower than that of the average citizen of the US and binge drinking less common than in many other countries.
Medical officials experts say alcoholism is a serious problem in Tamil Nadu, with a growing public health impact. “Alcohol, domestic violence and suicide – this is the classic triad,” said Dr Lakshmi Vijayakumar, psychiatrist and founder of an NGO called Sneha which runs a suicide helpline.
Vijayakumar said: “In India the average drinking age has come down from 19 to 13-14 years of age. In my experience about 10 years ago, alcoholics who came to me for treatment used to be in their 40s. Now most of my patients are 25-30 years of age. Of the people who consume liquor, only perhaps 20% drink in moderation. The rest fall into the hazardous drinkers category.”
The state of Kerala, a popular destination for western holidaymakers, implemented partial prohibition in August last year, allowing liquor sales only in five-star hotels and bars. Local liquor shops were initially shut down and later converted to beer and wine parlours. In Maharashtra, a western state, officials said a ban was being considered. There have been calls for similar action in the north-western state of Punjab.
In the state of Goa, drinking has been banned on beaches but a broader ban would be against the state’s culture, politicians have said.
Many movements to ban the sale of alcohol in India are led by women. “All the men in our village are alcoholics,” said Arunmozhi Velusamy, a farm labourer in Theni district, Tamil Nadu. “We get beaten up daily by drunk husbands and fathers and there is never any money in the house as the men spend it all on liquor.”
In Tamil Nadu, the state government took over retail sales of liquor in 2003. Liquor stores are now government-owned. Government revenues from the direct sale of alcohol have gone up by 20% every year since 2003 and stood at 260bn rupees (£2.6bn) last year – one-third of the state’s entire revenues.
The protests have intensified following the death of a veteran anti-alcohol campaigner during a protest last week. Sasi Perumal, 59, climbed a 40-metre mobile phone tower in Kanyakumari district with a can of kerosene and threatened to self-immolate unless a local liquor outlet in the area was shut down. He appeared to have suffered a fatal cardiac arrest.
Perumal’s family and fellow activists began a hunger strike soon after his death. “Our demands are total prohibition,” said Navaneethan Sasi Perumal, the 35-year-old son of the dead campaigner. “We demand immediate closure of all liquor outlets.”
The state government, ruled by the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, has refused to change its policy despite opposition parties’ support for the campaigners. “Government policy cannot be changed by violent protests,” said the state minister for prohibition and excise, Natham Viswanathan, in a statement on Monday.

The justice deficit

We need to make sure that our justice system — once the pride of India, now overburdened and slow — gets its mojo back. Because a weak justice delivery mechanism can kill democracy.
Aug 02, 2015
India has carried out the execution of Yakub Memon,” says the BBC, “the man convicted of financing the deadly 1993 Mumbai bombings.” It goes on to say that 257 people were killed in the Mumbai blasts. In my quiet hotel room overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, this news is supposed to induce further calm. Oh good, this horrible mass murderer has finally been punished for his crimes. How carefully we simplify news, how neatly we cut off jagged ends and make a nice, presentable, bite-sized package to be consumed easily.
No talk of how Yakub Memon, an accidental participant in the horrible acts of terror, had defied his brother Tiger Memon, one of the masterminds of the blasts, stepped out of the protection of the Inter-Services Intelligence of Pakistan and willingly come back to India to cooperate with the Indian government. No talk of how the blasts that killed 257 were a response to the horrifying Bombay riots of 1992-93 that killed over 900. Or of the planned demolition of the Babri Masjid before the riots. Nothing justifies the killing of innocents through bomb blasts, of course, but looking at it out of context gives a wrong picture to the uninitiated.
There are several worrying facts here. We need to address them as responsible citizens of a beautifully crafted democracy that is in danger of crumbling. We need to make sure that our justice system — once the pride of India, now overburdened, slow and far less majestic than before — gets its mojo back. Because a weak justice delivery mechanism can kill democracy.
First, we are told that it was necessary to hang Yakub Memon because he was a terrorist. So were the others sentenced with him, some of whom had far bigger roles in the blasts, but whose death sentences were commuted to life imprisonment. Yakub, sadly, was the absconding Tiger Memon’s brother. In our country, your family is more important than your own deeds. He had to hang.
Second, it was necessary, we are told, for justice, for closure for the families of those 257 dead. What about justice for the 900 dead in the same city just before that? Do their families not deserve closure? There have been only three convictions for the riots that killed so many and wounded thousands. Three Shiv Sena men were sentenced to one year in prison. Of them, one was a member of Parliament so he got instant bail, and died a free man. On the other hand, 100 people were convicted for the blasts, of which several are in jail and Yakub hanged.
Third, why are acts of terror that kill 257 worse than acts of terror that kill 900? Why is being blown to bits by a bomb worse than being butchered and raped and killed by sadistic murderers protected by the powers that be? To investigate the riots, the Congress government set up a commission of inquiry, headed by Justice B.N. Srikrishna. When the Shiv Sena-BJP coalition came to power in Maharashtra, it quickly disbanded it. It was brought back following a huge public outcry, and asked to probe the blasts as well. The Srikrishna Commission declared that the riots were instigated by the Shiv Sena and Hindu mobs, and that the blasts were a direct result of the riots and the demolition of the Babri Masjid. The report was brushed aside by the Hindutva political brotherhood, and Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray lived like a king and was given a state funeral when he died in 2012.
To investigate the blasts, however, we did not have a commission. We had a special, horrific law, the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (Tada). Yakub and other convicts were tried under this inhuman, now defunct law. Yakub was hanged under this law that lapsed in 1995. How fair is that?
Fourth, our honourable political parties fight for brownie points over the lives of citizens stamped “terrorist”. If the Congress-led government could collect patriotism brownie points by the disgusting, secret hanging of Afzal Guru, how could the BJP-led government not grab patriotic brownie points by hanging Yakub Memon? Killing convicts is a show of strength. And the President must remain a rubber stamp — robotically discarding all mercy pleas.
Fifth, there is a feeling that our justice system sometimes panders to political expediency and mob sentiment. Which gives a majoritarian tilt to justice. We saw it in the Allahabad high court’s verdict on the Babri Masjid. It attempted to rectify the imagined wrong of a Hindu temple being demolished at the site 500 years ago, but made no attempt to rectify the recent wrong of demolishing the Babri Masjid witnessed by the nation on live television. Instead, it allowed those who demolished the mosque to profit from their crime, thus legitimising the act. By trying to provide a political solution to a politicised problem of faith, the court let the muscle-flexing majority influence legal justice, disregarding the constitutional guarantee of equality before the law.
That acts of violence against Muslims are not punished the same way acts of violence by Muslims are, is worrying. Maya Kodnani, accused of killing a hundred-odd people during the Gujarat riots, is out on bail, and the courts are reportedly going slow on those accused of “Hindu terror” while moving swiftly on Muslims — all this gives reason to fear for the health of Indian democracy.
Sixth, is it shocking that though Yakub was helping state agencies in the blasts probe and gave them evidence of Pakistan’s involvement, he was still hanged? Not really. When the state wants to look good it often yanks up someone at hand to throw him to the lions. When they need to, investigative officers unflinchingly frame police informers, or surrendered militants working with the agencies, as terrorists. They are usually Muslims. Yakub was not the only one betrayed by our law enforcement officers and justice system.
Seventh, in our country, justice often eludes the powerless. Minorities disproportionately fill our prisons, mostly as undertrials. Muslims, dalits and tribals make up 53 per cent of India’s prison population.
Let’s face it, our justice system is biased towards the powerful. If we wish to save the secular, democratic credentials of India, this justice deficit needs to be urgently rectified.
The writer is editor of The Little Magazine. She can be contacted at:sen@littlemag.com

Newborn girl rescued from lavatory pipe in China

Members of the public were alerted by the baby's cries, the Beijing Times reported, and a police officer reached down the pipe to extract the girl

A Chinese policeman holding an abandoned newborn baby in a public toilet in Beijing, August 2, 2015
A Chinese policeman holding an abandoned newborn baby in a public toilet in Beijing Photo: Beijing Tianqiao Police/AFP/Getty Images

Telegraph.co.ukBy Shanghai-04 Aug 2015
A newborn baby girl who was rescued from inside a public lavatory inBeijing is recovering in hospital, according to local newspaper reports.
Beijing’s Tiangqiao police station received a call after local residents heard the cries of a baby coming from the lavatory. The baby was taken to hospital but is not thought to have any injuries.
Police said they were trying to identify the baby’s parents.
Photographs carried by the Beijing Times newspaper show policeman Qian Feng holding the tiny infant just moments after he rescued her from the squat lavatory. It is thought the baby’s mother gave birth in the lavatory and abandoned the baby.

The policeman managed to pull the baby from the pipe (AFP/Getty)
“The baby was upside down with her whole body in the pipe,” Mr Qian told the Beijing Times newspaper. “We could barely see her feet from the side.”
According to a report by China state television in 2013, an estimated 10,000 children are abandoned every year in China, the majority of whom are ill or disabled.
A similar case in May 2013 drew a lot of attention and sparked heated debate online in China when a baby boy was cut from a sewage pipe by firefighters. According to media reports, the baby’s mother was unmarried and had hidden her pregnancy before giving birth unexpectedly in the lavatory.
In another case last month, a newborn baby boy was reported to have survived for eight days after he was abandoned and partially buried in a cemetery.
In an attempt to deal with the large numbers of abandoned children, the government opened baby hatches in a number of cities where babies could safely be left instead of being left on the street.

This Is How To Treat Your Dry And Cracked Heels With Baking Soda!


2015 July 31
Having cracked and dry heels can not only be a cosmetic issue, but can also turn into a painful condition as the skin becomes dry with thick callus appearing yellow or brown especially along the inside border of the heel, as well as redness, itching, inflammation and peeling skin.
Cracked heels can be a result of lack of moisture, dry air, unhealthy diet, improper foot care, hard floors, prolonged standing, and wearing the wrong types of shoes. Moreover, there are other conditions which can contribute to this problem and those are eczema, calluses and corns, thyroid disease, and diabetes. If the proper precautions are being taken right away cracks can be prevented from getting deeper and causing pain and bleeding. There is some home remedy which is very beneficial for this condition.
cracked heels
Take 10 aspirin tablets (acetylsalicylic acid), or andol tablets (acetaminophen) and crush them in fine powder. Cover it with 250 ml of 70% rubbing alcohol and let it stay for 1-2 days. Each night soak a cotton ball/pad or gauze in it, but shake it before use, and apply it on your heel. Wrap the foot in a plastic foil and put on a sock, leaving it stay overnight. When you wake up, rinse it with water and dry it with towel after which you’ll apply some greasy foot cream, or glycerin. After 10 treatments you’ll see improvements. If you want some better results, you can go ahead and exfoliate your heels with a foot scrubber before you apply the foot cream. If in case you suffer from painful varicose veins, this treatment will help. The pain will lessen immediately after applying it.

Monday, August 3, 2015

COAL TENDER EXPOSED!

Monday, August 3, 2015
-Gross irregularities in awarding multi-million dollar coal tender for past five years
-Ministry Secretary expresses shock, disappointment in letter to Presidential Secretariat
Lakvijaya Power Plant
Daily News Online : Sri Lanka's National NewsIn a startling turn of events to the multimillion-dollar coal tender, Power and Energy Ministry Secretary Dr. B.M.S. Batagoda has written to the Senior Assistant Secretary to the President, stating that there were gross irregularities in the awarding of tenders for the supply of coal to the thermal power plant in Norochcholai during the past five years. The letter has been sent to T.T. Upulmalee, Senior Assistant Secretary to the President, on July 24, over procurement of coal for Lakvijaya Power Plant in Puttalam.
z_p01-COAL01.jpg
Dr. B.M.S.  Batagoda
He says that one supplier has been favoured ‘not through the Standard Tender Procedure but by Cabinet Decisions.’ Dr. Batagoda says “every single time, the tender has been awarded against the decision of the Standing Cabinet Appointed Procurement Committee (SCAPC).
“In my 30 years of public service, I have never seen such a situation,” he said.
“This looks to me as if the bidders have more power in making decisions on this tender than the SCAPC or the appeal board.”
Dr. Batagoda says in the letter, that on his taking up office, the minister had specifically instructed him to ensure that all mismanagement or irregularities, which occurred in the last five years should not be repeated and the tender procedure has to be clearly managed.
The Secretary alleges manipulation by Nobel Resources Pte. Limited as it is amply proved that they were in possession of confidential information, which should only be known to the SCAPC and the Technical Evaluation Committee (TEC). “In effect this company has accepted that it has illegally gained access to confidential information which it is not supposed to know,” the letter states.
“This is the situation of this tender. I honestly believe that if this trend continues like this, the country cannot move.
The way the appeals have been written, the language they are using, the corruption charges they are making clearly indicates that this country is in real trouble. My opinion is that this five year drama of this tender should now end and the government should now learn to respect SCAPC decisions which are made by respectable very senior public officials, unless there are serious lapses on their part,” the Secretary states concluding his letter.
The Daily News is in possession of a trove of documents, which clearly maps out the suspicious pattern followed throughout the tender procedure. Our initial perusal of these documents show that there has been a well oiled mechanism set up to tamper with tender procedures for government contracts, carried on with impunity. At the centre of this controversy is the Procurement Appeal Board (PAB) appointed by the Executive. The PAB is shown to have overridden many of the decisions made by the SCAPC and TEC to the advantage of one particular supplier.
The PAB has always consisted of three retired public officials. Justice K. Viknarajah chaired the previous committee while Justice Hector Yapa is the current chairman. Although members in the PAB have been changed over the years, one particular member, retired auditor general P.A. Pematilaka has remained since 2009. 
- See more at: http://www.dailynews.lk/?q=local/coal-tender-exposed#sthash.jB0Hm7es.dpuf

Home of Bribery Commission IP who served summons on MR; investigated Shiranthee’s Sirilya fraud, open fired ! (Video)

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 02.Aug.2015, 11.30 PM) Two individuals who arrived in a motor cycle had opened fire on the house of  police inspector Chinthaka of the commission inquiring into allegations of bribery and corruption who served notice a few months ago on Mahinda Rajapakse to appear at the commission . The attackers after shooting at the house of the inspector situated at Walgama , Matara have fled . This attack took place yesterday(01) night.
Though no harm was caused to lives , the house had been damaged.
Earlier on, after  Chinthaka handed over the summons  to Mahinda, a gang  of goons entered the house of Chinthaka , and damaged the goods and valuable articles in the house. Thereafter they fled the scene. Though a complaint was lodged with the Matara police , a proper investigation was not launched.
IP Chinthaka is the officer who not only served summons on  Mahinda , but also conducted the investigation into the 'Sirilya' account fraud of Shiranthee and the corruption activities of Mahndananda Aluthgamage.
Following the attack damaging the goods in the house , and the death threats he was consistently receiving , Chinthaka installed a CCTV camera in his house.The culprits who arrived  and attacked yesterday night have been clearly recorded by the camera (the video tape herein displays).

This noon after the attack an individual has been arrested who was allegedly spying for the attackers. However the suspect has not so far revealed anything, it is learnt.
It is worthy of note that after the new government came to power , investigations were launched into the monumental corruption and criminal activities of the deposed Rajapakse regime. A provincial council member of the government D.V.Upul who was enraged over this openly threatened that the police officers who are engaged in these investigations shall be murdered by stoning. Upul represents Matara and he made this threat brazenly on the stage on which Namal Rajapakse too was and on the latter’s coaching, it is reported.
The video tape can be viewed by clicking here 
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by     (2015-08-02 23:25:35)