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, December 18, 2017

Courts to hear 20 corruption cases a day to punish wrongdoers:PM 

2017-12-18

Arrangements have been made to hear 20 court cases dealing with corruption on a daily basis with a view of expediting the process of penalising wrongdoers, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said yesterday.The Prime Minister revealed this while speaking at the UNP Bala Mandala meeting in Maharagama yesterday evening. “Some are questioning us about the pledge the government gave during the last election to eradicate Corruption and to penalize those who have robbed public funds. I have already discussed this issue with the attorney general and a decision has been made to expedite the hearing of 20 court cases," the Prime Minister said.

However, Mr. Wickremesinghe pointed out that the court cases would be conducted within the existing judicial system. This he said is because one cannot go out of the existing legal framework to punish those who are facing corruption charges.

‘One of the changes we have brought about is with regard to conducting probes on allegations that are brought against members of the government itself. We have got ministers who are facing such allegations to resign from their posts. This is one change this government has made. Another change is media freedom. The media is now free to criticize the actions of the government. Media personnel either disappeared or were killed during the last regime if they criticized the government. We have also introduced an insurance scheme for school children and increased the allocation of funds for the education sector," he added.

He also re-iterated that the government has been able to be validated and get the assistance of world leaders to develop the country. “The Malaysian Prime Minister is here on an official visit and the Singaporean Prime Minister will also be visiting the country next month.

“Some have question us on the slowness they see when it comes to development work in the country. We are moving slowly in order to safeguard the changes we have brought about. We can move faster but then we run the risk of losing what we have achieved so far," he explained. The Prime Minister also pledged to arrest the debt crisis that presently exists in the country.

Minister of Megapolis Patali Champika Ranawaka who also addressed those present said the joint opposition including former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and MP Dinesh Gunawardene actually wants the UNP to win the local government election. He said this government is not engaged in forceful development which is done by grabbing public lands.

Minister Harin Fernando, who was also present, said the UNP would have swept the local government election if it was held on schedule in 2015. However, he said the policy of this government was to ensure that a new electoral system was put in place and to see that women receive adequate representation in local bodies. “My prediction is that the UNP will become even more powerful and would even have the chance to form a government on its own after it emerges victorious at the upcoming local government polls," he said.(Yohan Perera)

Maithri -Maharaja mahajara (filth) deal and decision wreak havoc ! Factual story behind Russia’s ban on SL Tea


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 18.Dec.2017, 11.25PM)   The decision taken by Mathripala Sirisena and Kili Maharaja alias mahajara (filth ) wheeler dealer group who have no  knowledge of  State diplomacy,  and because their gaze are  solely and wholly fixed on rackets, has  plunged the entire country into doom and gloom on an unprecedented scale . The saddest part is , It is the helpless and hapless  people who have to bear the brunt of all the problems generated  by their illicit deals.  
Even before the saliva that oozed out of the mouth could dry of  president Maithripala when he was saying ,  Russian president Putin is his bosom pal , while  Maithri was on a tour of South Korea , it is the same so called bosom pal Putin who decided that the import of Tea from Sri Lanka shall  be halted with immediate effect despite the fact SL has been exporting tea to Russia for decades.   
Even as  president Sirisena was bragging that the leaders of foreign states whispered to  him ‘ give me just a call for any assistance’ , Russia without any intimation took  this disastrous decision against SL.
The reason cited officially by Russia for this action is , the Tea in the container imported from SL contained the insect ‘trogoderma  granarium’ alias ‘Kapra’ 
These  insects do not live among tea leaves, and are found in seeds.  This controversial  SL  tea export had been dispatched via Turkey Port and in Turkey’s  containers.  The insects have been detected not in the SL tea but among the cardboards meant for packing the tea . These cardboard materials  had been transported sans the necessary written certificate  along with the tea consignment . Though the insects were allegedly found in the container of tea , the ban was imposed not on tea alone , rather on all plantation products of SL.
Russia is a main import hub for SL tea , and about 50 million kilograms are exported to Russia annually. That constitutes about  17 % of the total tea export of SL. The SL tea export makes up as large as  23 % of the Russian tea market. (It was 33 % before the present government) .  During the first ten months of this year alone , 141,300 tons of tea valued at US dollars 436 million  had been exported to Russia. 
In the circumstances the action taken by Russia has metaphorically speaking , given  a slap in the face of SL. Moreover , because of the publicity given to this incident through the European media , already SL’s  tea market has been most adversely affected in the long run.  
It is the consensus  that all these are the evil fallout of the decision taken unilaterally by the Maithri- Maharaja group to ban Asbestos ceiling sheets within SL on the grounds that those cause lung cancer , without any medical data or technological report to substantiate that claim.
 Notorious Maharaja  the mahajara wheeler dealer orchestrated this camouflage  because he had plans to manufacture S- Lon variety asbestos ceiling sheets. When asbestos sheets are unavailable maharaja the mahajara would have no competitor. 
It is noteworthy when  president took this decision, UNP the main constituent party of the government was not  consulted. In any event , by 2020 , asbestos ceiling sheets will be completely eliminated from the SL market .
It is significant to note asbestos sheets are mainly  imported to SL from Russia. The ex Russian ambassador to SL , Alexander Kerchavo expressed his bitter resentment in Colombo to the SL government against this decision taken without any research report . It is a pity President Sirisena who gleefully and proudly said ‘ I am the one who was invited to Russia after 44 years and  Putin is my friend ’ did not have any sense of diplomacy despite being a president of the country. Sirisena who knows only to brag does  not know how to resolve diplomatically or give   diplomatic answers.

In any  case , let us say a few words about president Sirisena ‘s much vaunted invitation to Russia after 44 years . This was not an invitation extended to president Sirisena by Russia , rather an invitation extracted via inducements.    When President Sirisena was earlier invited to the G 8 conference he had occasion to meet  the Russian president most briefly.  Our president’s translator told Putin   ’ our president likes to see your country as he has not seen Russia’. Putin ‘s reply was ‘ then pay a visit .‘  After casually saying that Putin left the venue. That was a very brief meeting lasting just a few seconds . President Sirisena who returned to SL , began writing letters after letters to the Russian foreign ministry  .Your president at the G8 conference extended an invitation to president  Sirisena, the letters  stated .The latter sent letters begging  to make official arrangements towards that . It is only thereafter , unable to endure the pestilence that the invitation from Russia was sent .So that is how the invitation after 44 years was solicited .
Sadly, this close  friendship flaunted by Sirisena however was  reciprocated in a most weird way  by president Sirisena’s so called bosom pal Putin  - he imposed  a ban on SL ‘s tea and plantation product exports.  Though this  reaction did not match the obnoxious  action taken by  SL in exactitude  , by July 2017 itself there were signals that Russia is going to retaliate.  It is the present minister of foreign affairs now in Russia , who speaks Sinhala fluently and  considers SL as his second homeland who  revealed  what was in store.   Even Sirisena’s maturity had been ignored. 
 In November, four Inspection centers were established at   Russia’s four Customs departments of the State to obtain quarantine certificates pertaining to imports of agricultural products .  However Sirisena’s present  ambassador in Russia,  Saman had been unconcerned and had been blind  to this  development.
 While there was no need for a quarantine certificate when SL tea was  imported into Russia after 2012 , Saman who is there after getting an extension  had not inquired why  these changes are  being effected.  This unconcern of his was   natural because Saman is there to facilitate the warship deal  engineered by Maithri-Maharaja group , and the gaze is only  on colossal illicit commissions which are part and parcel of the deal. 
The  decision taken by Russia against SL will apply to four other countries -Kazakhastan , BeloRussia , Kirgisthan and Tajikistan .Syria which is a  close friend of Russia is also likely to abide by this decision. Since SL exports tea to all these countries , the situation is most grave and portentous.
Earlier on following a political issue that erupted between Russia and India , a similar ban was imposed in regard to import of rice , and it took over 6 months for India to get that withdrawn. 
It is very unfortunate due to the ‘mature’ decisions taken by Maithri-Maharaja  , Naveen Dissanayake has been made the scapegoat.  Though Naveen with a delegation left for Russia , it is unlikely he can meet any minister or official these days because of the Christmas holidays.
Having got the opportunity therefore to drink Vodka and enjoy the flesh of body peddlers   at State expense  to kill time , they are sure to thank the ’Kapra’ insect which paved the way for their mirth and merriment  at public expense. 

By Special correspondent
-

---------------------------
by     (2017-12-18 17:57:08)

WOMEN’S QUOTA IN LG ELECTIONS HISTORIC OPPORTUNITY ELECT QUALIFIED, CAPABLE WOMEN



BY Mirudhula Thambiah.-18/12/2017

Women’s organizations and democracy activists are aghast at the attempts by corrupt politicians to suppress attempts by women to enter the Local Government (LG) election process, which for the first time in our history, has a mandatory requirement for female representation.

Executive Director of Women and Media Collective Dr. Sepali Kottegoda is sober with her comment. “There are hundreds of women and they should be given an opportunity to make use of this historic development,” she told Ceylon Today.

The upcoming LG elections for more than 350 local bodies will be conducted on a mixed representation system with more than half of the councillors being chosen on a Ward basis and the rest through the party list. According to the Local Authorities Elections (Amendment) Act there has to be 10 per cent representation of women from the Ward Based List and 50 per cent from the Proportional Representation List. This will ensure the election of 25 per cent women candidates to Local Councils.

Rotten political culture

Traditionally, ever since proportional representation was introduced in the late 1970s, political parties have installed thugs, drug dealers, rapists and murderers supporting their rotten political culture in these local bodies through the party list. The recent amendments for which civil society activists have fought for over the past 20 years or so are aimed at bringing locally recognized people and more women into the mix. No wonder there is extreme resistance on the part of established parties against this move and they are complaining that there are no women to be included on the nomination list. However women activists claim that there are enough interested women candidates but that political parties have failed to properly identify them.

One of those activists, Coordinator for Women’s Resource Centre (WRC) Sumika Perera, pointed out that there are more than enough women who are interested in politics, who take part in it. There is a chance that smaller political parties and independent groups might not have enough representation but it is most certainly not the case in others. She debunks the claim that there are not enough women for parties as an utter lie.

Kottegoda said that this is the opportunity for political parties to recognize women and to throw away the biases and preconceived notions about what women can do and cannot do. Women have proven themselves now and there has to be very careful scrutiny at every level that such women are given nomination or put on the list.

Historic development

“We cannot be waiting to hear the same old stories that there are no women. This is what they told us in 2002, when the parliamentary select committee on political representation met. If they can’t see women, political parties must put on their spectacles and look. There are hundreds of women and they should be given an opportunity to make use of this historic development,” she said.
Even if the 25 per cent representation of women was introduced to the Local Authorities Elections (Amendment) Act, women activists who have experienced grass root situations claim that female political representatives are being thoroughly discriminated against when slots are allocated during nominations.

Perera charges that women candidates have a 10 per cent opportunity to contest for their electorate, yet political parties nominate various others to particular areas with high female candidate numbers and allocate female candidates a completely different area. When that happens, these candidate’s influence in that particular area where she was either born or was living in, is seriously hampered. Female candidates are forced into alien grounds through this procedure. It’ll be the same electorate but a completely different division or village. This she says is a form of discrimination.

She further pointed out that many candidates are given promises that they will be on the list; while they have allowed those who have no political background to contest. There are so many women who are willing to and who do take part in politics. But through the list, not everyone gets the opportunity. “Only a handful gets selected and that leads to disappointment and candidates lose enthusiasm. The 25 per cent quota is applied to all political parties as a whole; not independently to different parties. That reduces the opportunities these women have,” she said.

Unfair

While Executive Director of People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL) Rohana Hettiarachchi said some capable women who are influential campaigned for the party which in turn, promises to give a chance on the nomination list. But they do not keep the promise. They end up promoting some other candidate.

“If a women representative is living in ward ‘A’ and has more influence in her community or locality, she will be asked to work for the party. The party leader will also promise nominations. However, later this women representative will not get nominations for ward ‘A’ on the Ward Based candidate List, but included in the Proportional Representative List. At this instance the representative cannot say no, because it is necessary to obtain a slot on the Proportional Representative List. Even if the representative is not happy to work for the other candidate nominated for ward ‘A’ by the party.
At the end of the day there is no assurance for this women candidate that she will get elected at the upcoming elections through the Proportional Representation List. Even if there are vacancies in this list, there is no assurance that the party organizer will select her. Thus it will be unfair,” he said.

Relatives of thugs

Multiple sources told Ceylon Today that political parties have fielded wives and relatives of thugs on the nomination list to fill up the women’s representation according to the new quota, claiming the availability of women candidates are less. Hettiarachchi commenting on the above issue said “It will be a disaster if these types of people are included on the list. The rest of the candidates will not be able to carry out their campaigns independently. Everybody will fear for their lives. This situation may pave the way for the automatic election of such people. However it will depend on the voters of the area. If the voters realize that a particular man or a woman has a bad record, without considering their party, voters can reject those people.

“The worst part is that if they bring this sort of people on the Proportional Representation List, nobody can object. There will be no way for people to reject; it is completely decided by the party organizers in those areas. If they are prepared to bring family members of any underworld person, people will not be able to reject them,” he added.

“Political parties should have more problems in selecting well informed and trained women who have worked with their respective constituencies,” said Dr. Kottegoda

“Over the last one and half decades, many women have expressed their wish to take part in main stream politics and have participated in various training and awareness raising programmes. Several organizations including mine, as well as the National Committee on Women and the Ministry of Women’s Affairs and many other Non-Government Organizations, who are interested in the issue of having equal representation of women and men in governance have carried out this programme and have had many discussions with women who want to contest politics at different levels,” she stressed.
Sri Lankan Institute of Local Governance (SLILG) Director, Sujeeve Samaraweera told Ceylon Today, “We have gone around the country and we can give you over 4, 500 signatures. Any political party that does not have candidates can contact us, we educated representatives. It was our mandate and we published a book. We have also given recommendation,”

Women are capable

Hettirachchi said that this is a big opportunity for women of this country. If capable women are elected, corruption can be controlled. The quality at local level can be improved, especially the education sector. “Women are capable of controlling finance, improving the health sector, education, environment etc. All these can be equally achieved at local level too. Many changes can take place but it all depends on how a party will select suitable women. If they select capable, creative and committed women onto their lists, the whole LG system can be changed. But if the party organizers bring their family members or their colleagues, it will not fulfil the requirements of the quota request for women.

“At the end of four years if you are not able to deliver something, people will say ko, ganu gihilla mokadha kale (so the women took office but what did they achieve) but that does not mean women cannot do anything, women can do a lot. But it depends on who will be selected by the party as well as the people of the country,” he said.
Courtesy Ceylon Today

The Duties Of The Election Commission: A Proactive Or Bureaucratic Stand?


By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole –December 18 2017 


We have a new Election Commission. Appointed in Nov. 2015, it will go on until Nov. 2020. It is the Commission’s immense responsibility to establish strong norms of governance as precedents for future Commissions.

It is legitimate in matters of national importance in a democracy to seek input from the public to engender a national debate. I raise two issues: 1) How we deal with big shots who violate election laws, and 2) Accepting unlawful nominations;

Dealing with Big Shots and Friends: Charging them?
 
There are many dos and don’ts at election time. In July 2011 I reported after a visit to Kayts that police jeeps were running around without number plates, President Rajapakse’s cutouts were inside polling booths and that EPDP cadres were preventing rivals from entering Kayts for canvassing purposes and villagers were having their poll cards forcibly purchased. For that, a criminal charge was filed against me for inciting a riot. I fled the country on legal advice and was forced to live abroad for 4 years. Even after my return and surrender to court in Aug. 2015, I was out on bail while our cowardly and corrupt police kept coming to court saying they need time to investigate. Finally, early this year, the judge discharged me saying he has seen no evidence of an investigation and doubts there ever was one. 

As I breathed a sigh of relief thanking God that the country has come out of its sordid past, I find it depressing that we are returning to the past. To date, however, we have been spared of white vanning. Ironically, these high minded principles underpinning free and fair elections are being flouted by our new rulers.

In Election Law, these practices are described as corrupt practices.

For example, Colombo Telegraph reports that under the National Sasundoya Program launched on 5 Dec., 1000 Temples are to be built using state funds all over the island (presumably in Tamil areas too as part of the continuing state-funded colonization of Tamil areas).

President Maithripala Sirisena laid the foundation stone for a Kidney Hospital in Polannaruwa on Dec.6 in the middle of the nomination period.
 
Education Minister Viraj Kariyawasam will distribute Rs. 700 mn worth of schoolbooks to children.
Madam Vijayakala Maheswaran is building free roads in Thinnavely close to the Farm School.
Douglas Devananda, Rishard Bathiudeen, and Sivasakthi Anandan have for several years been using government guesthouses in Vavuniya without paying any rent, and are now launching their election campaigns from these, reports Uthayan.

The parties of ministers are using Ministry offices in the Vavuniya Kacheri for elections. So, officials of the ministry sit on one side and do their work while the rest of the offices are used for political campaigns. Our officials have confirmed that the UNP, the president’s SLFP and Rishard Bathiudeen are engaged in this corruption.

In Mullaitivu District’s Maritime Paththu, Rs. 98 lakhs is to be distributed by the Ministry of Industry and Commerce only to party supporters. Divisional Secretary S. Gunapalan says he did not prepare lists for distribution and he has refused to sign anything, and he has been asked by his bosses to sign and be done with it to avoid the hassle. The Government Agent for Mullaitivy Rubavathy Ketheeswaran reportedly says that she does not know anything about it but that such functions can be conducted without politicians.

The response of the Commission has been to write letters to the politicians who are flouting the law, asking them to stop.

I gave on Saturday 16 Dec. at the Nallur District Secretariat in Jaffna to inform the public on the new system. A participant suggested that merely writing when laws are so freely violated is a petty excuse by the Commission to keep up good relations with the Prime minister, President and even GA Vavuniya whose good offices we need to set our salaries and conduct elections. When we write, they stop but do it again elsewhere, reducing the Commission and our letters to a joke. Why not charge them, he asked. I replied that I fully agreed with him.

Accepting unlawful nominations

In background to the problem, the Constitution in §3 defines the franchise as part of our fundamental rights. Further §104B says “It shall be the duty of the [Election] Commission to secure the enforcement of all laws relating to the holding of [elections]”.

The Local Authorities Elections Ordinance says in §8 that to be qualified as a member of a local authority, a nominee must be on the first day of June in the year of the commencement of the preparation or revision of that register, ordinarily resident in that electoral area.

I received a complaint that one Makathevan Sutharsine of NIC No. 875463675 V was nominated by the Tamil Congress for the Chavakacheri Urban Council, and that this person is not registered as a voter under that Council area. I checked up and found the person not registered anywhere in the Island. So, I passed the complaint on with a recommendation to reject the nomination.

However, the nomination was accepted along with, I understand, many others to other Local Authorities of people not registered in those authorities. It was explained to me that the long practised position of the legal division of the Commission is that §31 of the Local Authorities Ordinance gives reasons for rejecting nominations, and that the reason of not being a resident of the local authority is not among the reasons. The Legal Division adds that it is not really a serious problem because if the person is elected, the jurisdiction of the courts may be invoked to get the person removed the way Ms. Gita Kumarasinghe was removed as an MP for Matara.

Here is how §31 (1) on the Rejection of nomination papers reads: “The assistant returning officer shall, immediately after the expiry of the nomination period, examine the nomination papers received by him and reject any nomination paper that … [ listing the reasons, etc.]”.

My position is that this list of §31 (1) is not exhaustive because it does not say “reject only any nomination paper that … etc.]. As it is, thanks to the Commission, people will vote for this unqualified person and waste their franchise violating their fundamental rights of §3 of the Constitution cited above. Further, if elected, it will take another two to three years for our lazy courts to finish hearings – it took that long to remove Ms. Kumarasinghe after paying her as an MP with perks like car permits which most MPs sell for Rs. 2.5 million. In the meantime, people will be deprived of an elected representative while an imposter will parade as their representative. Is this not the worst form of violation of franchise?

Read More


Crisis of school education in Sri Lanka



By Dr. S. Sivasegaram- 

[Primary and secondary education in Sri Lanka, once a leader among Asian countries in literacy and school education, are now in crisis owing to decades of callous neglect.]

Continued from yesterday

Private tuition

Private tuition has reached a stage where private tutories engage in education on a scale comparable with that in schools. Tutories are purely examination oriented and coach students for examinations, thus hurting incentive for self study and search for knowledge.

The profit motive of tutories induces corruption in examinations; and large tutories rely on the underworld to sustain their business and keep down competition.

School teachers also engage in private tuition, although not in tutories, to the detriment of school teaching.

Most tutories lack sanitary facilities and function outside normal teaching hours. The lack of monitoring puts the students at risk of exposure to criminal acts including child abuse and use of drugs.

Private tutors including school teachers also publish textbooks and books of model answers to ‘supplement’ the textbooks and teacher’s guides supplied free of charge by the state. The quality of the material supplied is questionable, but students are under pressure even from their teachers to purchase them.

Private tuition has undermined not just proper school education but also the aim of the government to provide free school education for all.

Brand names and oversize schools

Reputed schools exist in very nearly every district. The state built over 50 Central Colleges in the five years preceding independence to ensure wide access to quality education. There are now 323 national schools with enrolment above 2000, and leading schools among them have enrolment well exceeding 3000 to be as high as 8000.This is the result of the illusion among many parents that their children receive the best education in the country in these schools.

Enrolment exceeding 2000 is not conducive to healthy interaction among students. However, according to media reports, popular schools meet demand for admission by increasing class size, nominally at 35 (already a large number by international standards) to exceed 45, with size well exceeding 50 in the lowest form.

Excessive enrolment has also meant inadequate facilities for sports and recreation and a decline in the use of library facilities.

Demand for admission to leading schools has led to scandalous levels of bribery of school administrators, which undermines their authority.

Mushrooming of International Schools

Private missionary schools co-existed with state-assisted schools until the state took over the latter in 1960.Some assisted schools opted to go private and the country now has 33 private autonomous schools and 33 state-assisted non-fee levying private schools.

The open economic policy of 1978enabled private education in the name of "International Schools" teaching in the English Medium with curricula not linked to national education goals. These costly profit-oriented ventures do not always assure academic quality.

Lack of school discipline

Breakdown in student discipline is serious; and notorious in leading schools. Difficulty in controlling large classes is aggravated by political meddling and pressure from influential parents, while private tuition encourages truancy and disregard for school learning.

Alcoholism prevails among senior students and drug abuse exists in schools. But the school is unable to do much because the teachers as a group seem unable maintain discipline. Practice of private tuition by teachers is a further factor weakening their authority.

The public tends to blame the education system for the deterioration in moral standards in society. While the school system cannot be blamed for all social evils, it has notably failed to cultivate in students a spirit of tolerance and acceptance towards others.

Overemphasis of examination performance

A highly worrying aspect of education in the country is overemphasis of performance at written examinations. School children face three public examinations of which the value of two is questionable.

The Grade 5 Scholarship examination was initially meant for students from backward schools seeking places in reputed schools. In recent years that purpose has been distorted: children from all schools sit the examination, and rather as a talent contest among leading schools. The success rate, based on qualification for admission to National Schools, is low, making a vast majority of children ‘failures’ with adverse emotional implications.

The GCE O-L certificate offered employment prospects some years ago. But now the GCE O-L results are used mainly to stream the nearly 50% who qualify to follow the GCE A-L classes.

GCE A-L results decide admission to institutions for higher education. Despite a success rate of over 60%, less than 17% find places in state universities but, for a vast majority, not for the desired programmes.

Implications of competition

Children of tender age are made to compete for admission to reputed schools and then at Grade 5. Anxious parents arrange private tutoring for the children at the expense of valuable leisure time, thus distorting their social life and robbing them of play, playmates and social skills.

Children spend time comparable with school hours in private tuition to prepare for GCE (O-L) and GCE (O-L). Emphasis on learning has given way to committing text to memory to reproduce at examinations and training to solve problems of set pattern.

Competition has hurt friendly relations between students who see each other as a rival, and led to malpractices such as impersonation and cheating at examinations.

The issues listed above comprise commonly observed issues and are symptoms of an underlying malaise. The NEC Report on General Education draws attention to a fundamental weakness in the education system, namely that, despite students’ only learning facts for reproduction at public examinations to obtain high grades, the results are not encouraging. It also draws attention to complaints by employers that the output from the education system lacks basic competencies required by the workplace, and points to the thriving private tuition industry parallel to the formal school system which, besides high cost to parents, is a barrier to children enjoying their childhood, as their leisure time is spent in uncomfortable tutories, often with anti-social influences. It also notes that children hardly engage in physical exercises or games essential for physical and personality development.

Several other serious consequences of the perversion of school education are not commented on in that context. The rise in obesity among school children has as much to do with lack of physical activity owing to lack of time and space to play as with bad eating habits. Indiscipline and anti-social behaviour too have their roots in the perception of the worth of the school in the education process.

Addressing the crisis

There is much awareness of inadequate allocation offends for education, and political parties pledge spending 6% of the GNP on education. (In the past decade, education expenditure fell from 3.3% to 1.8% compared with 2.4 for defence). But there is inadequate public pressure on government to increase education allocation. This is partly owing to the middle class having accepted private tuition, which undermines the very principle of free education as a central aspect of the education system.

Priority is for competition for places in reputed schools and for admission to prestigious university degree programmes. Those with means tend to send their children abroad or admit them to one of several local ‘branches’ of foreign universities with little idea of the kind of education that the children receive. The controversial arrival of private universities is seen as a less expensive option by many parents.

The root of the crisis lies in the understanding of the purpose of education by parents and children alike and a general lack of imagination about profitable careers other than in well established disciplines in some form of hierarchical order.

The school education system is flawed as its emphasis is on the 5% or so who can enter university. The 30% or so of school leavers― eligible for university admission but denied access ―are left on their own to seek avenues besides all manner of private higher education. The school and the society see 95% of the students as ‘failures’. This matter needs to be addressed from the early years of schooling. In other words, the school should identify for children careers that suit their interests and potential, are beneficial to them, and useful to society.

While investment in school infrastructure and personnel are important, resources can be put to maximum benefit only through instilling in the minds of teachers, students and parents the purpose of education as a social tool for producing responsible citizens with a sense of belonging and commitment to community.

Many educationists have pointed to the lack of knowledge of English among school leavers. They see it as a fundamental flaw because of their perception of English as the sole window to advanced knowledge. But they ignore other countries big and small which are economically and industrially advanced that provide school education in the mother tongue. Freeing ourselves of such colonial mindset is important―but that does not mean rejection of English as a useful language. We need to elevate the use of the native languages to meet the growing demands of modernity. Switching to English medium education has, predictably, failed to produce results since the emphasis on English disregards difficulties faced in learning in an alien language.

This brings us to another badly misunderstood purpose of education, namely producing people who can find employment in the global employment market. This is an unhealthy outcome of the open economic policy followed since 1978, when the notion of a national economy was rejected in the interest of the open economic policy with unrestricted inflow of foreign capital and goods.

While investment in school infrastructure, educational reforms and decentralization of the education system are important, integration of education with national needs should be a priority whose achievement demands a healthier approach to education at public level and greater involvement of the public in education policy and process.

Note

[The National Education Commission published its Proposals for a National Policy on General Education in Sri Lanka early in 2017. Implementation of the Proposals depends entirely on how seriously the government takes the matter of school education. Recent developments, however, offer little reason for optimism.]

No sex please, we’re Sri Lankan

logoTuesday, 19 December 2017

There is no gainsaying my assertion that Sri Lankans are prudes when it comes to sex, especially sex outside of marriage. Whether on Galle Face Green or in Peradeniya Gardens, the local constabulary make it their business to go around harassing youngsters making out beneath the minimum of privacy an umbrella offers.

Private refuges for those wanting to get some action are few: the back row of a cinema, a room by the hour in a decrepit ‘hotel’, a deserted classroom after school. While one might have got up to a little premarital mischief oneself, one naively assumes no one else has.

Sex, like so much else swept under the carpet during Victorian times, is yet to emerge as a topic suitable for even adult discussion in Sri Lanka. But even as puritanical adults persist in pretending that it is the stork that brings home the babies, young Sri Lankans have entered on a trajectory of promiscuity all on their own, some of it happy, some of it sad.

Here I summarise a number of recent studies by doctors dealing with sexual health and argue it is time Sri Lankan adults—especially parents—enter into a more mature conversation with their preteen children on the subject of sex. Sources of the information presented here, cited within brackets [ ], are listed at the end of the article.

Sex in the highlands

A recent study led by Dr. Niroshan Jayasekara (University of Sydney) on the sexual habits and histories of 400 plantation workers aged 18-24 in the Nuwara Eliya District showed up some data that might surprise you [1].

The average age at which boys had their sexual debut was 13½ years, and girls 18½ years (5% had had their first sexual encounter before age 10). In all, 86% of boys and 4% of girls reported at least one homosexual experience (initially with an older partner). Among males, 35% had had two to five sexual partners, while 28% had had more than five.

The researchers tested all participants for common Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs). Happily, none were positive for HIV or hepatitis B, and only one for syphilis. Although more than 90% of the group were literate, 59% had learned about sex not from books or the media, but from friends, telling researchers that “schoolteachers were the least reliable to discuss sexuality-related topics”.

Sex in the city

These results corroborate those of an earlier survey of 3,134 students aged 18-20 in six districts, by Drs. Bilesha Perera (University of Ruhuna) and Michael Reece (Indiana University) [3], which found 28% of girls and 55% of boys to be sexually active, with 20% of boys and 3% of girls reporting that they had had penetrative intercourse (anal and/or vaginal).

More than 13% of boys and 9% of girls had had oral sex with an opposite-sex partner, 13.3% and 2.8% respectively having had penile-vaginal intercourse (yes, do the math). About 20% of boys said they had had homosexual inter-femoral (between the thighs) sex, about the same percentage saying they had had homosexual anal sex; 13% had had oral sex with another boy.

Although 80% of boys reported that they had learned about reproductive and sexual health issues in school, 58% admitted that peers were their first choice for sexuality-related consultation, only 12% admitting they would take their sexual problems to their mothers (60% of girls, however, would ask ammi).

It’s not all roses

OK, I get it: Sri Lanka is beginning to sound a bit like Margaret Meade’s Samoa [4], an idyllic island in which everyone seems to be having far too much of a good thing. But there is a dark side. In 2009 Drs. Perera and Østbye (Duke University) surveyed 2,389 high-school students (almost all aged 18) in southern Sri Lanka [2]. They found 14% had suffered sexual abuse as children. Unsurprisingly, of children not residing with their parents, 20.6% were victims.

Worryingly, an earlier study by Perera & Reece’s [3] too, had 19.1% of boys and 11.6% of girls reporting that they had been forced to participate in sex. This resonates with Dr. Jayasekara’s study [1], which showed that 17% of the participants or their sexual partner had at least one illegal abortion following an unwanted pregnancy.

Now pause and ponder a while on the tragedy these figures imply. The statistics show that almost one in every five boys and one in every 10 girls in Sri Lanka has been raped (i.e., forced to have sex with someone against their will). In at least some parts of the country (e.g. Nuwara Eliya), one in every six girls has had an illegal abortion (there is almost no provision for legal abortion in Sri Lanka: something I will discuss in a separate article); and one in every seven children of either sex self-identify as having been a victim of sexual abuse. Any one of them could well be—and probably is—your son, your niece or your best-friend’s daughter.

And if you think this happens only to the poor, think again: Perera and Østbye’s study [3] showed that children in the highest socio-economic group were much more likely to be abused than those in the lowest (18.4% vs. 12.3%), and that maths/science-stream students were at almost twice the risk (19.8%) as those studying the arts (11%).

In a more recent transnational study by Rachel Jewkes et al. [5], 6.2% of 1,440 Sri Lankan men interviewed actually admitted to having perpetrated rape, 25% of these on multiple occasions; astonishingly, 38% of the rapists said their victims had included males, though only 2% had exclusively raped males.

Almost 90% of rapists were in the age group 15-29 when they first committed rape; 78% of those who raped a non-partner woman said they felt it was their sexual entitlement, only 33% admitting to feeling any guilt after the act. Just 3.2% of rapists had been arrested, a negligible 2.1% were sent to prison for their crime.

The gay scene

Homosexuality is no longer considered an illness (homosexuals are born that way: get used to it) and many countries have recognised gay marriage. Just as equal consideration of women is a novelty that is barely a century old, and that of disabled and coloured people (yes, us!) only a few decades, the extension of equal rights to homosexuals remains among the last bastions of prejudice still recognised by law. In our region Nepal became the first country following a Supreme Court ruling in 2007 to decriminalise homosexuality, though Nepalese society is yet to give the nod to same-sex marriage.

As for us, Section 365A of Sri Lanka’s Penal Code states: “Any person who in public or in private, commits, or is a party to the commission of, or procures or attempts to procure the commission by any person of, any act of gross indecency with another person, shall be guilty of an offense, and shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years…”

The meaning of “gross indecency” may appear vague, but precedents for the interpretation of this Victorian expression include man-on-man sex, and oral and anal sex whether homo- or heterosexual. Given how commonplace these practices are according to the above-mentioned studies, the law in effect criminalises about 20% of the Sri Lankan population (86% in Nuwara Eliya!). And those are the ones who admitted to what they did: no doubt a substantial fraction of those surveyed made false denials of homosexual activity.

Several recent studies highlight aspects of and attitudes towards homosexual behaviour that would surprise many: e.g., the allegedly high incidence of sexual molestation of male terror suspects in custody [6]; or the alleged rape of male prostitutes by police [7].

Men and boys catering to sex tourists too, present a paradox that is hard to resolve. The spectre of foreign paedophiles roaming our beaches is repulsive even to the most hard-hearted among us. References to the “child-sex tourism industry” are commonplace in the media.

But another recent study [8] suggests that sexual moralists may need to think again. Here 26 male and eight female sex workers in beach resorts between Mount Lavinia and Tangalle were interviewed to understand whether they were “beach boys” or “sexually exploited children”. The former, after all, are perceived as a menace while the latter are sympathised with as victims.

But Dr. Miller shows there is little to separate [adult] ‘beach-boys’ from ‘exploited children’ (as which many of the former began their careers): 85% of them had commercial sex with foreigners, only 18% exclusively heterosexual.

The first sexual encounter, between age 14 and 23, was always consensual and supported by assurances from peers and the attraction of monetary reward; they saw nothing morally wrong with their occupation. Almost none of the men perceived themselves as ‘gay’.

Underlying this is an online survey by Dr. Niroshan Jayasekara [9], this time of 400 gay/bisexual Sri Lankan men (mean age 26) using internet chat rooms and personal profiles on Yahoo.com, Gaydar.com, Gay.com and Facebook.com. The study showed that 91% made their sexual debut at 11-17 years of age, 87% of them with a male partner. Only 2.2% used a condom at first intercourse, 61% reporting unprotected anal intercourse (and hence high risk of HIV transmission).

Rx one carpet (large, stat.)

While each of us might each be entitled to his own prejudices, none of us is entitled to his own facts. The facts highlighted by these recent studies, all of them done by respected medical or scientific professionals and published in learned, peer-reviewed journals, show Sri Lanka chronically unable to come to terms with sex.

I suspect most people reading this would respond to these data with an exclamation like “Wow, I had no idea!” That is feeble: we each of us do have an idea. Statistics dictate that each of us has a sexually-abused child, a gay person, or a rape victim within our inner circle of family and friends. Yet, so steeped are we in Victorian morality that we cannot bring ourselves to accept it.

It is time children received a proper education on sex. The age in which parents and teachers are among the last people to whom an abused child would turn must end. Our attitudes to sex are perhaps a last vestige of the British colonial values to which we cling to so dearly, even as Britain itself has moved on. It was only in 2013, after all, that the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill of the UK, legalised gay marriage.

So bigoted is Sri Lanka still that I suspect our response to all this will be (as we do whenever a national quandary is faced) to get ourselves a nice big carpet and sweep everything under it.

Sources

[1] Jayasekara, A. A. I. N. et al., 2012. A cross sectional study on sexual practices[sic] and knowledge related to sexual health of youth in the tea plantation sector; NuwaraEliya district, Sri Lanka. The Sri Lanka Journal of Venereology, 3(1): 41-46.

[2] Perera, B. & Østbye, T. 2009. Prevalence and correlates of sexual abuse reported by late adolescent school children in Sri Lanka. International Journal of Adolescent Medicine and Health, 20(2): 203-11.

[3] Perera, B. & Reece, M. 2006. Sexual behavior of young adults in Sri Lanka: Implications for HIV prevention. AIDS Care, 18(5): 497–500.

[4] Mead, M. Coming of age in Samoa. William Morrow, New York.

[5] Jewkes, R. et al. 2013. Prevalence of and factors associated with non-partner rape perpetration: findings from the UN Multi-country Crosssectional Study on Men and Violence in Asia and the Pacific. The Lancet Global Health, doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(13)70069-X

[6] Peel, M. et al. 2000. The sexual abuse of men in detention in Sri Lanka. The Lancet, 355: 2069-2070.

[7] Nichols, A. 2010. Dance Ponnaya, Dance! Police abuses against transgender sex workers in Sri Lanka. Feminist Criminology, 5(2): 195-222.

[8] Miller, J. 2011. Beach boys or sexually exploited children? Competing narratives of sex tourism and their impact on young men in Sri Lanka’s informal tourist economy. Crime, Law and Social Change, 56(5): 485-508.

[9] Jayasekara, A. A. I. N. et al., 2012. HIV, social networks and sex seeking behaviours of men who have sex with men. The Sri Lanka Journal of Venereology, 3(1): 29-32.

Molestation of students by teachers shoots up ! Culprits get away with just a transfer !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 18.Dec.2017, 11.15PM)  Sexual molestations of students by  teachers  have shot up  in the North steeply , yet the politicos of the area instead of taking action to punish the culprits are providing protection to them , TNA Mullaitivu member of the Northern provincial council (NPC) A. Puvaneswaran accused. 
The NPC member made this comment during the session to express views of the members following the tabling of the budget for 2018.  
Sexual molestation  of students in schools by teachers have risen steeply in Mullaitivu district , but the politicians without allowing those to be brought before the  law enforcing authorities (Police) are resolving those crimes at family levels, he pointed out. 
People  who are now residing in Mullaitivu are those  who had no fixed abode  for the last 30 years  and moving from place to place  , therefore identifying each other has become an issue . Consequently , identification of the suspects is difficult , the NPC member went on to explain. 
As the criminals  are aware minimum  punishment is meted out to the culprits , and because the politicos are aiding and abetting them , these sex crimes are on the increase . Besides , the teachers who were found guilty had been served with lenient punishment – transfer only from one  school to another , he lamented. 
Taking advantage of the financial woes ,lack of  transport facilities and other issues in Mullaitivu, not only the teachers , even others while promising to help those in need out of those problems are engaging in these sex crimes , the NPC member highlighted. 
Dinasena Rathugamage
Translated by Jeff
---------------------------
by     (2017-12-18 17:47:01)

Israel lobby group trying to sue Steven Salaita


Graffiti on the Israeli-built wall dividing the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem promotes the BDS — boycott, divestment and sanctions — movement.Ryan Rodrick BeilerActiveStills

Ali Abunimah-15 December 2017

An Israel lobby group is trying to expand its efforts to sue academics who support Palestinian rights, as part of a lawsuit against the American Studies Association.

It has asked the judge to add Steven Salaita and three other individuals to the list of defendants as part of an expanded complaint.

But lawyers call it a continuation of efforts to intimidate and punish academic associations and scholars who dare to disagree with the plaintiffs’ strident pro-Israel views.

“This is a harassment campaign at the highest levels,” Radhika Sainath, a staff attorney at Palestine Legal said, adding that professors targeted by the lawsuit “have been subjected to death threats, rape threats and other misogynistic and racist hate mail.”

Defense lawyers say the real target of the lawsuit is the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, and the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement more generally.
They are asking the judge not to accept the expanded complaint.

Frivolous and flawed lawsuits

In April 2016, several current and former members of the American Studies Association (ASA) filed a lawsuit in federal court against the group over its 2013 resolution to boycott Israeli academic institutions.

The force behind the lawsuit is the Louis D. Brandeis Center, an Israel advocacy organization that has for years worked to smear Palestine solidarity activism as anti-Semitism and attempts to suppress it with frivolous lawsuits and bogus civil rights complaints.

Its president, Kenneth Marcus, is an attorney for the plaintiffs. In October, the Trump administration tappedMarcus for a key civil rights post in the Department of Education that will allow him to advance his campaign to repress supporters of Palestinian human rights from within the federal government.

But in March this year, the lawsuit suffered a major setback when a federal judge in Washington, DC, threw out the plaintiffs’ key claim that the ASA had acted beyond its charter by passing the boycott resolution – a claim that it was acting ultra vires, in legal language.

“The boycott resolution was aimed both at encouraging academic freedom for Palestinians and strengthening relations between American institutions and Palestinians,” US District Judge Rudolph Contreras wrote. “Thus, it was not contrary to the ASA’s express purposes.”

But the judge allowed other parts of the lawsuit to proceed, including accusations of “breach of contract” and “corporate waste.”

In addition to the ASA, the original lawsuit named several individuals as defendants: Lisa DugganCurtis Marez, Avery Gordon, Neferti Tadiar, Sunaina Maira and Chandan Reddy.

The lawsuit claims that these academics at institutions across the United States spearheaded the boycott initiative. Duggan and Marez are both past presidents of the ASA.

In November, the Brandeis Center filed an expanded complaint adding four more academics as defendants: Salaita, Jasbir Puar, J Kehaulani Kauanui and John Stephens, the ASA’s executive director.

Salaita gained broad international attention in the summer of 2014, when he was fired from his new position at the University of Illinois after posting tweets critical of Israel’s assault on Gaza.

“Lurid fantasies”

The amended 83-page complaint alleges that a “cabal of USACBI leaders” surreptitiously took over the ASA and used their positions on its executive committee and national council to foist the boycott resolution on the association’s unsuspecting membership.

It alleges that in the run up to the 2013 ASA annual meeting that approved the boycott, “certain individual defendants continued to collaborate with USACBI leadership and continued to keep secret their collaboration with USACBI.”

Jesse M. Fried and Eugene Kontorovich, advisers to the plaintiffs, summarized the conspiracy theory in a Wall Street Journal article earlier this month.

Citing snippets of emails written by Puar, Maira and others, taken from among thousands of emails obtained during discovery, Fried and Kontorovich claim that “the American Studies Association’s decision to boycott Israel was orchestrated by a small cadre of academics who infiltrated the ASA’s leadership to demonize the Jewish state.”

The amended complaint’s sharpened focus on Maira comes just as she has a forthcoming book on the academic boycott of Israel and the struggle for justice in Palestine.

In a letter to the editor, David Lloyd, an ASA member and English professor at the University of California Riverside, responded to what he calls Fried’s and Kontorovich’s “lurid fantasies.”
Lloyd writes that “Several years of very public and open grassroots organizing preceded the resolution’s passing, including numerous advertised panels on the topic.”

Lloyd accuses the lawsuit’s authors of a “ludicrous” attempt to label “democratic deliberation and advocacy suspect and sanctionable activities.”

Similarly, Palestine Legal describes the expanded complaint as “a desperate attempt to bury the single most important fact: the ASA membership voted by an overwhelming democratic majority – 66 percent – after months of open debate, to support a boycott in support of Palestinian equality.”

Punishing opinions

Lawyers for the ASA, from the Washington firm Whiteford, Taylor & Preston, are asking the judge not to allow the expanded complaint.

They argue in a motion filed in November that the plaintiffs’ amended complaint is “a continuation of their public relations campaign through litigation, whose focus is not truly the well-being of the ASA, but punishment of persons and entities who dare take contrary positions regarding boycotts of Israeli academic institutions.”

They say it repeats allegations the court already threw out and tries to resurrect the dismissed ultra vires claims, but “just dressed up differently.”

According to the motion, the new complaint is a “thinly veiled attack on another organization which is not even a party to this case,” namely USACBI – the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel.

The ASA’s lawyers note that the plaintiffs spend “several paragraphs discussing a gentleman by the name of Omar Barghouti, a nonparty and a founder of the BDS movement.” The complaint also brings in all kinds of other extraneous opinions from USACBI or people associated with the BDS movement, “but fail[s] to set forth the language of the ASA resolution itself.”

This “telling omission” the defense lawyers argue is because the plaintiffs know that the ASA resolution differs from USACBI’s stances, and it underscores the lawsuit’s real motivation of silencing dissent on Israel.

The timing of the new complaint, according to the ASA’s lawyers, is meant to “ratchet up” the pressure to deter other scholarly associations that “might consider a boycott against Israeli academic institutions.”

Notably, the Brandeis Center’s Kenneth Marcus attempted to publicly spin the court’s March dismissal of the ultra vires claims not just as a “victory” but as one that “is much bigger than merely the ASA.”

Marcus specifically cited the supposed deterrent effect of the lawsuit, claiming that “Academic activists are beginning to think twice before adopting anti-Semitic and unlawful policies.”

Threats, harassment and smears

According to the ASA’s lawyers, individuals targeted by the lawsuit began to receive hate mail specifically referencing Marcus’ press release.

The harassment was severe enough that the judge granted a defense request for a protective order. This unusual move stops parties in the lawsuit from publishing personal information about the defendants that could be used to harass them.

The ASA’s lawyers also allege that the attempt to amend the complaint and add defendants was timed immediately before this year’s annual Middle East Studies Association conference, a forum which they say the plaintiffs hoped to use as an opportunity to “mine for data with which to harass anyone whose views differ from plaintiffs and their supporters.”

Of those the plaintiffs are trying to add as new defendants, Steven Salaita is perhaps the best known for being targeted by Israel lobby smears that ultimately destroyed his academic career.
But he is not the only one.

Jasbir Puar, a professor of women’s and gender studies at Rutgers University in New Jersey, has been the subject of vicious attacks by anti-Palestinian advocates for her work on Palestine, including pinkwashing – Israel’s propaganda painting itself as LBGTQ-friendly to deflect attention from its human rights abuses.

She has been accused of “anti-Semitism” and the anti-Palestinian blog Legal Insurrection alleged she spread “blood libels” for reportedly stating in a February 2016 lecture at Vassar College that Palestinians fear Israel has taken organs from Palestinian bodies without permission for use in scientific research.

Ignoring the facts

This campaign escalated in the weeks prior to the filing of the amended complaint: the far-right pro-Israel publication The Algemeiner ran an article in October attacking Puar over her new book The Right to Maim.

The article claims Puar “supports terrorism” and that she falsely accuses Israel of shooting Palestinians to deliberately maim and disable them.

A follow-up Algemeiner article reports on efforts to pressure Rutgers to suspend the “anti-Semitic” Puar and tries to link her with an alleged incident in which “a swastika was put on someone’s car.”
As such smear campaigns invariably do, the one against Puar flagrantly ignores the facts.

In an article for Jadaliyya responding to the smear campaign, Puar explains that she made no factual claims in her lecture about Israel harvesting organs, but rather “relayed a simple ethnographic observation” that some Palestinians “speculate that their bodies were mined for organs for scientific research.”

“This example was intended to highlight the daily terror that imbues Palestinians’ lives and the ways that fear for their bodily integrity animates every interaction with the Israeli state,” Puar adds.
According to Puar, “During the question and answer session, no one asked for further elaboration or clarification about why Palestinians might fear organ mining of their relatives’ corpses.”

But had they done so, she could have readily explained the facts underlying such fears.

Israel has admitted that for years pathologists at its Abu Kabir forensic institute did indeed harvest organs from dead Palestinians and others without the consent of their families.

This included the removal of livers, brains, breasts, wombs, testicles and prostates for research purposes, without permission.

The institute then compounded the violation by burying tissue samples in a mass grave without permission from the families, claiming it did not even know who the body parts came from.
And Israel’s practice of deliberately shooting or threatening to shoot Palestinians to disable them has been documented recently in Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem.

In her book, Puar cites extensive evidence from human rights groups and Israeli media of such practices dating back to the first intifada three decades ago, when Yitzhak Rabin, then Israel’s defense minister, ordered soldiers to use “force, might and beatings” to crush Palestinian protests. Under Rabin’s leadership, soldiers deliberately broke the bones of Palestinian demonstrators.

Yet the amended complaint serves as a vehicle to further spread the smears against Puar, claiming that she is “infamous for anti-Semitic lectures condemning Israel, which she charges with maiming Palestinians, ‘pinkwashing,’ murdering innocent Palestinian children, and using the bodies of the dead and maimed Palestinians for scientific research, in the vein of Dr. Mengele and blood libels directed against Jews since at least the Middle Ages.”

It is undoubtedly no coincidence that Rutgers University, where Puar teaches, was previously the subject of a civil rights complaint backed by Marcus’ Brandeis Center claiming that administrators tolerated a hostile atmosphere for Jewish students, because of campus advocacy for Palestinian rights.
In 2014, the US Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights – the office the Trump administration has now nominated Marcus to head – dismissed the complaint as baseless.

Writing in Jadaliyya, Puar highlights the purpose and effect of the harassment and smears: “The exercise of free speech and academic freedom becomes extremely constrained in such environments, where any information or research about the Israeli occupation of Palestine is a priori characterized as anti-Semitic.

New York case dismissed

So far the Israel lobby lawsuits against the American Studies Association haven’t fared much better. In addition to the setback in federal court in March, a New York State court last month dismissed altogether another lawsuit targeting the ASA.

The complaint filed in 2016 by an Israeli organization called Athenaeum Blue and White claimed that the ASA’s 2013 boycott resolution violated New York’s anti-discrimination laws.

But New York State Supreme Court Justice Carolyn Wade ruled that the case was baseless and the plaintiff had no standing to sue.

The court’s 6 November decision states that the plaintiff “acknowledges that it was accepted as a member of ASA.”

“There are no allegations that any of plaintiffs’ members were denied access to any of the programs hosted by ASA,” the ruling adds. “The pleadings are also devoid of claims that Israeli academic institutions were denied membership. Thus, plaintiff has not established an injury in fact.”

The plaintiff in the New York lawsuit was represented by David Abrams, director of the Zionist Advocacy Center.

In 2015, Abrams worked with the head of the Mossad-linked Israeli lawfare group Shurat HaDin to file a complaint against a US trade union that voted to back BDS.

The US National Labor Relations Board dismissed the complaint.

But as the Brandeis Center’s Kenneth Marcus and other Israel lobby lawfare operatives have made abundantly clear, the point of these legal proceedings is to punish and deter support for Palestinian rights.

Whether the plaintiffs win or not, they impose a cost by dragging their targets through the enormous emotional, financial and career costs of litigation.

Lawyers expect that the judge in the federal case will rule within the next few months on whether to allow the expanded complaint and the addition of new defendants.

This article has been updated since initial publication.