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

Monday, August 21, 2017

The politics of Hajj quotas: 'What would Allah say to this?'

Critics argue that the Saudi authorities need to make their Hajj quota system more transparent to ensure it is fairer

The Clock Tower and Grand Mosque in Mecca in September 2016 (AFP)-How do Saudi authorities decide who can attend Hajj each year? (AFP)
How do Saudi authorities decide who can attend Hajj each year? (AFP)
A Bangladeshi family at dawn at the plain of Arafat, outside Mecca, in 2000 (AFP)-The stampede at Mina in 2015 left more than 2,000 pilgrims dead (AFP)

Areeb Ullah's pictureAreeb Ullah-Sunday 20 August 2017

Ismail Mahmud left his home in Minya, Egypt and headed for a neighbourhood cafe to write his will. He was diagnosed with a life-threatening illness two years ago and knew his time in this world was short. He had one final wish: to complete the Hajj in Saudi Arabia, but obtaining a visa to do so has come at a high price.
I put myself down for a visa to work at the Hajj as a cleaner just so I can get into the country. It was the only way
- Ismail Mahmud, pilgrim
"My sons were not happy when I sold these fields, but we had no choice," said Mahmud, a 59-year-old primary school teacher. "The economic conditions in Egypt have become very difficult and they refused to give me a visa, even with a note from my doctor. It was the only way to pay for my dream to do the Hajj."

Mahmud refused to wait and see whether his name would be picked out of a government-run lottery, entitling him to attend. Instead, he went one step further.

"Everyone said getting picked by the government was impossible unless you paid high officials, but I just couldn't afford it," he said. "So I put myself down for a visa to work at the Hajj as a cleaner just so I can get into the country. It was the only way."

The problem with Hajj quotas

Like thousands of Egyptians, Mahmud has waited years to go to the Hajj. His situation is not uncommon, with millions of Muslims worldwide turning to private travel agents or other means via the black market.

The Hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam and one which all Muslims are obligated to complete at least once, meaning that visas are hotly contested.

Those who undertake the five-day pilgrimage are absolved of all their past sins, meaning many look to attend during their old age.

Saudi Arabia sets the quotas, based on the population of Muslims in each country, which in turn - through governments or private travel companies - allocate places for their citizens.

The long wait times, which can be up to 10 years or longer in some countries, lengthened after Riyadh cut the overall quota of visas by 20 percent in 2009 to accommodate expansion work in the grand mosques in Mecca and Medina. It has now reversed the decision, so an additional million pilgrims can now attend the pilgrimage, which this year begins on 30 August.

The rise in numbers comes after the Gulf kingdom suffered a decline in oil prices as well as the lowest number of pilgrims in a decade in 2016. It will boost the economies in Mecca and Medina.
The lottery of obtaining a visa

The governments in most Muslim-majority countries allocate the largest chunk of their places via a random lottery and give the rest to private travel agents. In the UK and elsewhere, tickets are sold via private travel agents on a first-come, first served basis, depending on eligibility.

The biggest problems come in countries such as Indonesia, which is usually awarded the largest number of visas - it  has a Muslim population of 260 million.

Indonesia is given the highest quota of Hajj visas by the Saudis (AFP)

Like many countries with inflated waiting times, it celebrated the addition of an extra 10,000 places on top of the 220,000 already allocated by praising the Saudi authorities.

Indonesia uses a lottery system to allocate the majority of its places: each applicant pays $2,000 to be considered - the average monthly wage is around $1,200 - and is then put on a waiting list. Even so, locals still face a wait of up to 39 years, meaning some pilgrims die before they win a place.

Other countries take tough measures to be fair and reduce waiting times. Jordan only has 7,000 places to fill this year. Its rules include automatically accepting prospective pilgrims who were born in 1945 or before and demanding that potential pilgrims swear on the Quran that they have never previously attended the Hajj.

The year-of-birth rule is adjusted annually to give elderly applicants a better chance of winning a place, meaning that next year those born on or before 1946 will be eligible to attend. Exceptions are granted to male guardians, such as a son or husband, who are accompanying a female pilgrim.

Bouthaina Naser, 40, a housewife from the north of Jordan, has tried numerous times to obtain a visa, without success. She began thinking about the Hajj after being diagnosed with cancer five years ago and every year since has applied for a visa.

Frustrated at the Jordanian restrictions, she was forced to turn to the black market to achieve her "dream of doing the Hajj".

"I tried three times to buy Hajj visas from the black market and through people who knew someone selling them from the Saudi embassy," she told MEE. "The Jordanians should allow people to attend if they have the financial ability to go and assess it on a case-by-case basis."

Claims of corruption

Critics accuse the Saudi authorities of politicising the Hajj and helping create a global black economy in visas, with the allocation process in some countries being described as rife with corruption and unfair to poorer pilgrims.

Pakistan, which receives the third-highest quota, was recently rocked by a corruption scandal after prospective pilgrims accused officials of giving a portion to private companies in exchange for bribes.

In Bangladesh, the high court has demanded an investigation into how the government managed this year's allocation after some travel agents delayed submitting visa applications in the hope of receiving cheaper rates on accommodation in Mecca and Medina. It has left some Bangladeshis who won on the lottery still uncertain as to whether they will be attending.

Madawi al-Rasheed, a Saudi academic based at the London School of Economics, told Middle East Eye that the al-Saud clan had created a "black economy around the world which is centred on the Hajj".

"The lack of transparency in Saudi Arabia, especially with the quota system, has helped create a black market and trade in visas," she said.

"There is a black market in visas where Saudi embassy employees from around the world sell visas illegally and give them to their friends. They have a certain interest in getting certain people in and excluding others or putting them on a waiting list for the rest of their lives."

Hajj: An arena for political fighting

Riyadh justifies the quota it sets as a means to ensure the safety of all pilgrims. The Hajj has been hit by numerous incidents over the years, which have resulted in the deaths of pilgrims, usually through overcrowding.

The most recent incident, a stampede in 2015, left at least 2,000 people dead, although the final death toll has been disputed.

Some observers have characterised the quota system as a means for Riyadh to influence Muslims around the world. Rasheed said that the Saudis have historically used the Hajj "as a political tool" after it took control of the two holy sites in the early 1920s.

"Access to the Hajj and performing the ritual is dependent on the will of the Saudi regime," she said. "The main reason is so it is able to control Muslim countries because the Hajj is one of the pillars of Islam, and every Muslim is under the obligation to do it if they can.

"If a Muslim is anti-Saudi or voices criticism of Saudi then they are banned from coming. We saw this happen with Rachid Ghannouchi, the leader of Ennahda [a political party] in Tunisia, when he tried to do the Umrah [attend Mecca outside Hajj] from London, the Iranians last year, and the Qataris this year."

Iranian pilgrims were told by their government not to attend the Hajj in 2016, the first time it has done so, after pre-existing tensions worsened between Tehran and Riyadh. Diplomatic relations hit an all-time low after more than 450 Iranian pilgrims were killed during the 2015 disaster.

Mehdi Beyad, a PhD candidate at SOAS in London who focuses on the geopolitics of Iran, told MEE that Tehran had politicised this incident and had historically used the Hajj as a "marker for broader political conflicts".
Just as you cannot divorce Saudi politics from its approach towards Hajj, the same goes for Iran
- Mehdi Beyad, academic
"Just as you cannot divorce Saudi politics from its approach towards Hajj, the same goes for Iran, for instance with the 1987 incident where Shia pilgrims were killed in clashes with Saudi security forces," said Beyad.

At least 400 people were killed by Saudi riot police after Iranian pilgrims chanted "Death to America! Death to the Soviet Union! Death to Israel!" next to the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

Beyad said: "This incident is seen as a rallying cry for Iranians and Shias more widely, and the competing narratives over it illustrate the broader way in which Hajj has become an arena where states battle for legitimacy and try to connect their identities to it.

"Beyond stated security concerns, by appearing to take a stand over Hajj different states can project themselves as protectors of their professed communities, call into question the capabilities and legitimacy of others, and use Hajj as a marker for broader political conflicts."

For Mahmud, the politics behind the award of a visa has left him frustrated and resentful.

"Each year the Hajj keeps getting more expensive, and I don't know how long I will have," he said.

"These restrictions are making hard-working people like me and others lie to complete my God-given right to visit the Masjid al-Haram and the Prophet's mosque.

"What would Allah say to this?"

Escape from Aleppo

Wheels had to be cut off the cages to fit them into a commercial aircraft. Finding the right tool to do this in the middle of the night in Istanbul was another challenge.

by Eric S. Margolis writes from Amman, Jordan-
( August 20, 2017, Amman, Sri Lanka Guardian ) I haven’t seen many miracles in my decades of travel around the globe, particularly not in the strife-torn Mideast.
But last week I participated in a real miracle in Jordan as the splendid Four Paws International group staged a daring rescue of 13 wild animals trapped in the wartime hellhole of Aleppo, Syria. It appeared to be a mission impossible.
Syria has been torn apart for the past six years by a bloody civil war that has killed over 400,000 people and reduced many parts of this beautiful country to ruins. Half the population has become refugees. The ancient northern city of Aleppo, Syria’s largest, was laid waste.
Just outside Aleppo lies a wrecked 40-acre amusement park cum zoo that once held hundreds of imprisoned wild animals to entertain children. The animals were abandoned in their cages in the midst of constant gunfire and shelling. Many were killed; the rest were left to starve to death or die of thirst. Some starving Syrians shared their meager rations with the animals.
No one else cared about these abandoned creatures that included five lions, two tigers, two Asian black bears, two hyenas and two Husky dogs.
But the Vienna-based Four Paws Charity did, and so did I. Four Paws had rescued a majestic lion named Simba and a charming honey-colored bear named Lula from Iraq’s abandoned Mosul zoo. Both had been starving. I agreed to sponsor much of the rescue operation in Aleppo.
I spent a morning in the New Hope Refuge outside Amman, Jordan, presided over by Jordan’s Princess Alia, the king’s sister. Over lunch, she showed remarkable compassion and understanding for wild animals.
Previously, Four Paws, led by its veterinarian, Dr. Amir Khalil, had rescued numerous starving or sick animals from the ghastly zoo in Gaza, Palestine.
Last week, a security team engaged by Four Paws International finally entered war-ravaged Aleppo which is besieged by feuding jihadist bands supported by competing outside powers that include al-Qaida and even Israel. Throw in Kurds, Turks, the Syrian government, Iranians, Hezbollah and the US for a total madhouse – and a very dangerous one.
Risking their lives, the security team managed to get around the jihadists and then into the Aleppo zoo. Over two trips, the thirteen remaining animals were coaxed into cages, then lifted onto flatbed trucks. Then the convoy headed for the Turkish border. This was the second attempt. A previous one had been held at the border, then forced to turn back.
The daring rescue team had to negotiate with the bands of trigger-happy jihadists surrounding them. A team of well-armed ‘security consultants’ came in to guard the convoy escaping from Aleppo. There was talk that the Israeli army might come to aid the animals, or a Turkish-backed militia. In any event, the little mercy convoy finally got to the Turkish border under the cover of darkness.
But the gate leading into Turkey was locked. Four Paws, with the help of Turkish volunteers, managed to talk the guards into opening it – yet another small miracle.
The animals were then driven for over 24 hours to an animal sanctuary near Bursa, south of Istanbul. There, one of the tigers, an imposing male that I named Sultan, went into cardiac arrest. Another wonderful veterinarian, Dr. Frank Goeritz, got into his cage and managed to bring him back to life, warning his aides ‘leave the gate open in case he wakes up.’ Sultan was saved.
Wheels had to be cut off the cages to fit them into a commercial aircraft. Finding the right tool to do this in the middle of the night in Istanbul was another challenge.
After long delays, the mercy flight finally got to Amman where we met them at 5:30 am. Four Paws director Heli Dungler was waiting with us. Thanks to the patronage of Princess Alia we got the animals through border controls and then onto flat-bed trucks for a two hour journey north to the al-Ma’wa animal refuge near the ancient Roman city of Jerash. Drivers on the road could not believe their eyes as our convoy of big predators rolled by.
After a labor of Hercules, the heavy cages were unloaded from the trucks and the 13 new residents were gently introduced into their new enclosures. The animals were of course confused, exhausted and testy, but we were thrilled that our wards were finally safe in their new homes.
We humans were also exhausted, but elated. I had slept no more than a few hours for days and was groggy from jet lag and fatigue. But Four Paws had achieved the impossible and shone a beacon of humanity into the boiling darkness of Syria’s civil war.
As a final sign of good karma, lioness Dana gave birth to a feisty little girl who begins her life in a far better place.
Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2017

Stephen Hawking: I'm worried about the future of the NHS


Tyler News
BBCBy Nick Triggle-19 August 2017

Stephen Hawking has said he is worried about the future of the NHS, in a speech critical of government policy and Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
The Cambridge University scientist, who publicly backed Labour in the election, accused Mr Hunt of "cherry-picking" evidence to support his policies.
The 75-year-old also said he was concerned about the involvement of the private sector in the NHS in England.
But Mr Hunt said some of Mr Hawking's comments were "pernicious".
A statement released by the Department of Health after the text of the speech was given to the BBC in advance said extra money was being invested in the NHS and it had recently been ranked as a top-performing health system.
Prof Hawking, who has had motor neurone disease for most of his adult life that has impaired his movement and ability to speak, delivered the speech at a conference at the Royal Society of Medicine in London, organised to air concerns about the future of the NHS.
The author of A Brief History of Time, who is a Labour supporter, said he had been motivated to speak because of the role the health service has played in his life, saying if it was not for the NHS he "wouldn't be here today".

How the NHS has helped Prof Hawking

In the speech, Prof Hawking listed a number of occasions on which the NHS was there for him.
This included an episode in 1985 when he caught pneumonia in Switzerland.
Doctors there suggested his ventilator be turned off to end his life, but his wife refused and he was flown back to Addenbrooke's hospital in Cambridge where he received treatment and recovered.
Fourteen years after that, he had pioneering throat reconstruction surgery in London after his condition worsened and he was struggling to eat and breathe.
"I have had a lot of experience of the NHS and the care I received has enabled me to live my life as I want and to contribute to major advances in our understanding of the universe," he said, referring to his theories on black holes and the origin of the Universe.

Why Prof Hawking is worried about the NHS

His speech then listed some of the developments in the NHS that concerned him, including the move toward what he called a "US-style insurance system".
He said he believed there had been an increase in private provision of care, including the use of agency staff, that was leading to profit being extracted from the health service.
"The more profit is extracted from the system, the more private monopolies grow and the more expensive healthcare becomes. The NHS must be preserved from commercial interests and protected from those who want to privatise it," he said.
He said that a publicly provided, publicly run system was the "most efficient" and so those who say we cannot afford the NHS are wrong.
"We cannot afford not to have the NHS," he added.
Jeremy HuntHealth Secretary Jeremy Hunt was embroiled in a row over the use of data on seven-day services last year-REUTERSImage caption

Image copyright

His speech also mentioned Mr Hunt by name.
In a section about the move towards a seven-day NHS, Prof Hawking said that while he would like there to be more services available at weekends, the government has failed to carry out "proper due diligence", particularly with regard to whether there would be enough staff.
He quoted from a letter he put his name to last year explaining how Mr Hunt "cherry-picked" research to put his case.

What has Jeremy Hunt said?

The health secretary initially said on Twitter that Mr Hawking was a "brilliant physicist but wrong on the lack of a weekend effect" in the NHS.
He also said the the study into mortality rates associated with weekend NHS services was "the most comprehensive ever".
But hours later he posted two further tweets, in which he said Mr Hawking's concerns, about the development in the UK of the type of insurance system seen in the United States, were a "pernicious falsehood".
He also said the Conservatives had provided the NHS with more money and medical staff than ever before.

The government's defence

The Department of Health responded to Mr Hawking's comments by pointing out that the numbers of staff working in the NHS were increasing and it "makes no apology" for tackling the weekend effect.
The statement pointed out that only about 8% of NHS funding goes to the private sector.
It also said that "despite being busy", the NHS had been ranked as the "best, safest and most affordable healthcare system out of 11 wealthy nations" in a recent study by the Commonwealth Fund.
"The government is fully committed to a world-class NHS, free at the point of use now and in the future - that's why we're backing it with an extra £8bn of investment over the next five years," the statement said.

Sunday, August 20, 2017

காணாமல் போனோரது உறவுகளுக்கு அச்சுà®±ுத்தல்

Sri Lanka, Anuradhapura. The Buddhist flag in front of Ruwanwelisaya Stupa, sacred to Buddhists around the world. Stock Photo
Published by RasmilaD on 2017-08-19
காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட உறவுகளின் சங்கத்தின் உறுப்பினர்களுக்கு இராணுவ புலனாய்வு பிà®°ிவினரின் அச்சுà®±ுத்தல் இருந்து வருகின்றது.எமது பாதுகாப்புக்கு  à®…ரசாà®™்கம் உத்தரவாதம் அளிக்கவேண்டுà®®் என காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட உறவுகளின் சங்கத்தின் கிளிநொச்சி à®®ாவட்ட இணைப்பாளர் யோகராசா கனக ரஞ்சனி தெà®°ிவித்தாà®°்.
காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட உறவுகளின் சங்கம் நேà®±்à®±ு à®®ுன்தினம் கொà®´ுà®®்பில் நடத்திய செய்தியாளர் சந்திப்பில் கலந்துகொண்டு கருத்து தெà®°ிவிக்கையிலேயே அவர் இவ்வாà®±ு தெà®°ிவித்தாà®°்.
அவர் à®…à®™்கு தொடர்ந்து கூà®±ுகையில்,
காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட உறவுகளின் சங்கத்தின் உறுப்பினர்களுக்கு இராணுவ புலனாய்வு பிà®°ிவினரின் அச்சுà®±ுத்தல் இருந்து வருகின்றது. கடந்த இரண்டு தினங்களுக்கு à®®ுன்னர் à®®ுல்லைத்தீவு à®®ாவட்டத்தைச் சேà®°்ந்த காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட உறவுகளின் சங்கத்தின் இணைப்பாளரான மரிய ஈஸ்வரி என்à®± இரண்டு பிள்ளைகளின் தாயாà®°் இனந்தெà®°ியாத நபர்களால் கடுà®®ையாக தாக்கப்பட்டு வைத்தியசாலையில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளாà®°். 
இந்த தாய் காணாமல் ஆக்கப்பட்ட தனது கணவரை தேடுà®®் போà®°ாட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்டு à®®ாலை நேரத்தில் தனது வீட்டுக்கு செல்லுà®®் வழியில், இனந்தெà®°ியாத 3 நபர்கள் à®®ோட்டாà®°் சைக்கிளில் வந்து இடைமறித்து தாக்கியதுடன் இந்த போà®°ாட்டத்தில் இதற்கு பின்னர் கலந்துகொண்டால் கணவருக்கு இடம்பெà®±்à®± நிலையே பிள்ளைகளுக்குà®®் இடம்பெà®±ுà®®் என அச்சுà®±ுத்தியுள்ளனர். இந்த தாக்குதல் சம்பவம் தொடர்பாக பொலிஸில் à®®ுà®±ைப்பாடு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது.
அத்துடன் நாà®™்கள் இன்à®±ு (நேà®±்à®±ு à®®ுன்தினம்) கொà®´ுà®®்புக்கு வந்து எமது கோà®°ிக்கைகளை ஊடகங்கள் ஊடாக தென்னிலங்கை எமது உறவுகளுக்கு தெà®°ியப்படுத்த à®®ுன் வந்துள்ளோà®®். ஆனால் நாà®™்கள் à®®ீண்டுà®®் எமது வீடுகளுக்கு செல்ல à®®ுடியுà®®ா என்à®±ு தெà®°ியவில்லை. அந்தளவுக்கு எமது போà®°ாட்டத்துக்கு இராணுவ புலனாய்வாளர்களின் அச்சுà®±ுத்தல் இருந்து வருகின்றது. அத்துடன் எமது உற­à®µு­à®•ளை தேடுà®®்­à®ªோ­à®°ாட்­à®Ÿà®¤்தில் à®…à®°­à®šாà®™்­à®•த்தின் எந்த பாது­à®•ாப்புà®®் எமக்­à®•ில்லை. à®…à®°­à®šாà®™்கம் à®…à®®ைத்­à®¤ி­à®°ுக்குà®®் காணாமல் ஆக்­à®•ப்­à®ªà®Ÿ்­à®Ÿ­à®µà®°்கள் தொடர்­à®ªாக கண்­à®Ÿ­à®±ியுà®®் அலு­à®µ­à®²­à®•த்­à®¤ுக்கு சாட்­à®šி­à®¯­à®®­à®³ிக்க வரு­à®ª­à®µà®°்­à®•ளின் பாது­à®•ாப்பு தொடர்­à®ªாக à®…à®°­à®šாà®™்கம் எந்த உத்­à®¤­à®°­à®µா­à®¤à®¤்­à®¤ையுà®®் இது­à®µà®°ை அளித்­à®¤­à®¤ில்லை.
அத்­à®¤ுடன் à®…à®°­à®šாà®™்­à®•த்­à®¤ிடம் ஒப்­à®ª­à®Ÿைக்­à®•ப்­à®ªà®Ÿ்ட எமது உற­à®µி­à®©à®°்­à®•ளை à®®ீள எம்à®®ிடம் ஒப்­à®ª­à®Ÿைக்­à®•ு­à®®ாà®±ே நாà®™்கள் போà®°ா­à®Ÿு­à®•ின்à®±ோà®®். இந்­à®¨ி­à®²ையில் எமக்குà®®் எமது உற­à®µி­à®©à®°்­à®•­à®³ுக்குà®®் இனந்­à®¤ெ­à®°ி­à®¯ா­à®¤­à®µà®°்­à®•ளால் விடுக்­à®•ப்­à®ªà®Ÿுà®®் அச்­à®šு­à®±ுத்­à®¤à®²்­à®•­à®³ுக்கு  à®…ரசாà®™்கம் அளிக்குà®®் உத்தரவாதம் என்ன என்à®±ு கேட்கின்à®±ோà®®் என்à®±ாà®°்.

Police Intimidates Member Of EC After He Criticised Police For Working In Sinhalese In North And East

A member of the Election Commission, Prof.S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole has been intimidated by the police, a highly placed source closed to the Speaker and the Chairman of the Constitutional Council told Colombo Telegraph.

Police officer Wanninayake speaks to Prof Jeevan Hoole’s elder brother Dr. Rajan Hoole with Black Maria like vehicle (WP LF 0711) and armed police

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According to a complaint made by Prof. Ratnajeewan Hoole, mid-morning on 16th August, an armed police party called at the home of Prof. Hoole in Jaffna and wanted to take him away to the Jaffna police station under an old warrant issued in 2011 at the instigation of Douglas Devananda that everyone knew was vindictive. “There is no doubt that the attempted arrest was triggered by Prof. Hoole’s role as an outspoken member of the Commission and DIG Jaffna knew about it,” the source told Colombo Telegraph.
In the complaint Prof Hoole said: “The police came to my home today with a warrant for my arrest. They know who I am. There is even a (long-forgotten) sign up book at my gate for police patrols from when I joined the Commission. My house is in front of the Department of Education, a church, and a government school besides being next to a church school. The incident attracted much public attention – I feel that the Election Commission is being demeaned by publicly making out that I am a criminal. After all, how can a criminal be responsible for elections? As I detail below, the incident has evoked much fear in me on whether the Election Commission can be independent and in my wife and children on whether we can be safe in Sri Lanka.”
As Prof. Hoole says in his letter, the incident is troubling when this happens just after he challenged the police working in Sinhalese in the North and East and the Commission invoking Article 33(1)(d) of the Constitution on the duty of the President to heed the advice of the Election Commission and giving advice to the President on the postponement of election
“Democracy has been under attack before, but there was always spirited resistance. In the 1980s for example, Jayewardene never had a moment of peace. There was always a spirited opposition, in parliament and outside. Even in the worst times there were great parliamentarians, whom people of all communities could look up to and trust – H. Sri Nissanka, T.B. Subasinghe, Senator Nadesan and Sarath Muttetuwegama immediately come to mind. Cross over has become so much a disease that the majority of MPs have no set position between government and opposition, and are awaiting the right price. Never have the pledges of politicians and their words been so empty, and they don’t care,” the source said.
“The expectations from the revolution of 2015 were great and changes in the structure of commissions held out promise. One of them was the new Election Commission with three members taking joint responsibility for decisions. It was harder to control by visible and invisible pressures, than a commission of one. The present Commission has resisted political pressures and fought against postponement of elections. This incident describes an insidious attempt to muzzle it. If the nation is to sustain itself, democracy can never become meaningless. Every tier that holds it in place must be fought for before it is too late,” the source further said.
We publish below the official complaint by Prof Ratnajeevan Hoole:
88 Chemmany Road

Nallur,

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