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

Thursday, December 28, 2017

The Political  Responsibility in the Collapse of Our Planet


Human Wrongs Watch

By Roberto Savio*

Rome, Dec (Other News) – On 20 December, Europe’s 28 Ministers of Environment met in Brussels, to discuss the plan for reducing emissions prepared by the Commission, to comply with the Paris Agreement on climate change. Well, it is now clear that we have lost the battle in keeping the planet as we have known it. Now, of course, this can be considered a personal opinion of mine, devoid of objectivity.
Savio-small1
Roberto Savio
Therefore, I will bring a lot of data, history and facts, to make it concrete. Data and facts have good value: they focus any debate, while ideas do not.
So those who do not like facts, please stop reading here. You will escape a boring article, as probably all of mine are, because I am not looking to entertain, but to create awareness. If you stop reading, you will also lose a chance to know our sad destiny.
As common in politics now, interests have won over values and vision. The ministers decided (with some resistance from Denmark and Portugal), to reduce Europe’s commitment.
This is going in the Trump direction, who left the Paris Agreement, to privilege American interests, without any attention to the planet. So, Europe is just following.
Of course, those alive now will not pay any price: the next generations will be the victims of a world more and more inhospitable. Few of the people who made to Paris in 2015, solemn engagements in the name of all humankind to save the planet, will be alive 30 years from now, when the change will become irreversible. And it will be also clear that humans are the only animals who do not defend nor protect their habitat.
First of all, the Paris’ Agreement was adopted by the 195 participating countries, of which 171 have already subscribed to the treaty, in just two years. Which is fine, except that the treaty is just a collection of good wishes, without any concrete engagement.
To start with, it does not set up specific and verifiable engagements. Every country will set its own targets, and will be responsible for its implementation.  It is like to ask all citizens of a country to decide how much taxes they want to pay, and leave to them to comply, without any possible sanction.
Europe engaged in Paris in 2015, to reach 27% of renewable energies (by scaling down the use of fossils), fixing a target of 20% for 2020. Well, from 27%, it went down to 24.3%. In addition, the ministers decided to keep subsidies for the fossils industry, until 2030 instead of 2020, as planned.
And while the proposal of the Commission was that fossils plants would lose subsidies if they did not cut their emissions to 500 grams of CO2 per ton by 2020, the ministers extended subsidies until 2025.
Finally, the Commission proposed to cut biofuels (fuels made with products for human consumption, like palm oil) to 3.8%. Well, the ministers, in spite of all their declarations about the fight against hunger in the world, decided to double that, at 7%.
Now let us go back to the real flaw of the Paris Agreement. Scientists took two decades to conclude with certitude that climate change is caused by human activities, despite a strong and well financed fight by the coal and fuel industry, to say otherwise.
The International Panel on Climate Change, is an organization under the auspices of the UN, whose members are 194 countries, but its strength comes from the more than 2.000 scientists from 154 countries who work together on climate.
It took them from 1988, (when the IPCC was established), to 2013, to reach a definitive conclusion: the only way to stop the planet deteriorating more rapidly, emissions should not exceed 1.5 centigrade over what was the Earth’ temperature in 1850.
In other words, our planet is deteriorating already, and we cannot revert that. We have emitted too much gas and pollution, that are at work already. But by halting this process, we can stabilize it, but never cancel what we did cause, at least for thousands of years.
The Industrial revolution is considered to start in 1746, when industrial mills replaced individual weavers. But it started in great scale in the second half of the 19th century, with the second industrial revolution.
This   involved the use of science in the production, by inventing engines, railways, creating factories, and other means of industrial production. We started to register temperatures in 1850, when this was done with thermometers. So, we can see how coal, fossils and other fuels started to interact with the atmosphere.
What the scientists concluded was that if we went over 1,5 centigrade of the 1.850’s temperature, we would irreversibly cross a red line: we will not be able to change the trend, and climate will be out of control, with very dramatic consequences for the planet.
Paris conference is a final act of a process who started in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, with the Conference on Environment and Development, where two leaders have now pass away, Boutros Boutros Ghali and Maurice Strong, ran the first summit of heads of state on the issue of environment.
Incidentally, it is worth remembering that Strong, a man who spent all his life to make environment a central issue, did open up the conference for the first time to representatives of civil society, beyond governmental delegations. Over 20.000 organizations, academicians, activist come to Rio, starting the creation of a global civil society recognized by the international community.
In 1997, as a result of Rio Conference, the Kyoto Treaty was adopted, with the aim to reduce emissions. The results show that during the nearly two decades bringing to Paris, the results are very modest.
Coal went from 45,05% in 1950, to 28.64 in 2016, also because of new technologies, but petrol increased from19.46, to 33.91 and renewables were a negligible reality.  So, Paris was left with a very urgent task, after having lost already two decades.
And according to the World Bank, in 2014 there are 1,017 billion people without electricity, with Africa where only 20% of people has access to electricity. For all these people, we should provide renewable energy, to avoid a dramatic increase of emissions.
Paris was supposed to be really a global agreement, unlike Tokyo.  So, to bring as many countries as possible on board, it is a little known dirty secret that the UN decided to put as a goal not the very tight 1,5 centigrade as a target, but a more palatable 2 centigrade. But unfortunately, the consensus is that we have already passed the 1.5 centigrade.
And the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), has estimated that the engagements taken by the countries in Paris, if not changed, will bring us to 6 centigrade, an increase that according to the scientific community would make a large part of the earth inhabitable.
In fact, in the last four years we had the hottest summers since 1850. And in 2017 we have the highest record of emissions in history, because they have reached 41.5 gigatons. Of those, 90% comes from activities related to human actions, while renewables (cost for which has now become competitive with fossils), still cover only 18% of the energy consumed in the world. And now let us move to another important dirty secret.
While we talk on how to reduce the use of fossils, we are doing the opposite.  At this very moment, we spend 10 million dollars per minute, to subsidize the fossils industry.
Just counting direct subsidies, they are between 775 billion dollars to 1 trillion, according to the UN. The official figure just in the G20 is 444 billion.
But then, the International Monetary Fund accepted the economists’ view that subsidies are not only cash: it is the use of the earth and society, like destruction of soil, use of water, political tariffs (the so-called externalities, the cost which exists but are external to the budget of the companies). If we do that, we reach the staggering amount of 5.3 trillion: they were 4.9 trillion in 2013. That is 6.5% of the global Gross National Product and that is what it costs to governments, society and earth, to use fossils.
That was nowhere in in the news media. Few know the strength of the fossils industry. Trump wants to reopen the mines, not only because that brings him votes by those who lost an obsolete job, but because the fossils industry is a strong backer of the Republican party. The billionaire Koch brothers, the largest owners of coal mines in the US, have declared that they have spent 800 million dollars in the last electoral campaign.
Someone might say: these things happen in the US but according to the respected Transparency International, there are over 40.000 lobbyists in Europe, working to exercise political influence.
The Corporate Europe Observatory, which studies the financial sector, found out that it spends just in Brussels 120 million a year, and employs 1.700 lobbyists. It found that they lobbied against regulations, with more than 700 organizations, which outnumbered trade unions and civil society organizations, by a factor of seven.
The power of the fossils industry explains why in 2009 governments helped the sector with 557 billion dollars, and only 43 to 46 billion dollars to all renewable industry (International Energy Agency estimates).
It is clear that citizens have no idea that a part of their money is going to keep alive, with good profits, a sector which is well aware that they are key in the destruction of our planet. A sector that knows well that they are now emitting 400 particles of CO2 per million, when the red line was considered 350 particles PM. But people do not know, and this is a spectacular feast of hypocrisy that goes on.
The UN, in 2015, conducted an extensive poll, with the participation of 9.7 million people. They were asked to choose as their priorities six themes out of 16.
The first of the themes presented was climate change. Well, the first one chosen, with 6.5 million of preferences, was “a good education”. The second and third, with over 5 million of preferences, were “a better health system”, and “better opportunities for work”.
The last of the 16 themes, with less than 2 million, was the “climate change. “And this was also in the preferences of the least developed countries, who are going to be the major victims of climate change.
The 4.3 millions poorest participants, from the least developed countries, put again education first (3 million preferences); climate change was last, with 561.000 votes…Not even in Polynesia, Micronesia and Melanesia, islands which could disappear, climate change was at the first place. This is an ample proof that people do not realize where we are: at a threshold of the survival of our planet, as we have known it for several thousand years.
So, if citizens are not aware, and therefore not concerned, why should the politicians be? The answer is because they are elected by citizens to represent their interests, and they can make more informed decisions. How does this ring in your ears? With lobbyist all over fighting for interests, what can be well sold as jobs and stability?
And now, let us bring a last dirty secret, to show how far we are from really addressing the control of our climate. In addition to what we said, there is a very important issue, that has even been discussed in Paris: the agreements are entirely about the reduction of emissions by the fossils’ industry. Other emissions have been left entirely out.
Now, a new documentary, the Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret, produced by Leonardo di Caprio, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyTFZefMvZ8 has ordered several data presented by vegans, on the impact of animals in the climate change.  They are considered somehow exaggerated. But their dimensions are so big, that they add anyhow another nail to our coffin.
Animals emit not CO2, but methane which is at least 25 % more damaging than C02. There is recognition by the UN, that while all means of transportation, from cars to planes, contribute to 13% of emissions, cows do with 18%…
And the real problem is the use of water, a key theme that we have no way to address in this article. Water is considered even by military strategist to be soon the cause of conflicts, as petrol has been for a long time.
One pound of beef uses 2.500 gallons of water. That means that a hamburger is the equivalent of two months of showers…! And to have 1 gallon of milk, you need 100 gallons of water.
And people worldwide, use one tenth of what cows need. Cattle uses 33% of all water, 45% of the earth, and are the cause of 91% of the Amazon deforestation.
They also produce waste 130 times more than human beings. Pig raising in the Netherlands is creating serious problems because theirs waste acidity is reducing usable land. And consumption of meat is increasing in Asia and Africa, very fast, it is considered a mark of reaching the choices of rich societies.
Beside this serious impact on the planet, there is also a strong paradox of sustainability for our human population. We are now 7.5 billion people, and we will reach soon 9 billion. The total food production worldwide could feed 13 to 14 billion people. Of this a considerable part goes wasted, and does not reach people (theme for an article by itself). But the food for animals could feed 6 billion people. And we have one billion people starving. This is proof how far we are from using resources rationally for the people living on earth. We have enough resources for everybody, but we cannot administer them rationally. The number of obese has reached the number of those starving.
The logical solution in this situation would be to reach an agreement on a global governance, in the interest of the planet of humankind. Well, we are going in the opposite direction.
The international system is besieged by nationalism, who make increasingly impossible to reach meaningful solutions. Let us conclude with a last example: overfishing.  It is now two decades that the World Trade Organization (which is not part of the UN, and was built in contrast to the UN) tries to reach an agreement on over- fishing with mega nets, who scoop up an enormous quantity of fish: 2.7 trillion, of which they keep only one fifth, and they throw back four fifth.
Well, at the last WTO conference on the 13 December in Buenos Aires, governments were again not able to reach an agreement on how to limit illicit fishing. Big fishes are now down at 10% of 1970.And we are exploiting one third of all stocks. It is estimated that illegal fishing puts between 10 billion and 23 billion on the black market, according to a study by 17 specialized agencies, with a full list of names. And again, governments spend 20 billion per year to finance the increase of their fishing industry…another example of how interest win on the common good.
I think now we have enough data, to realize the inability of governments to take seriously their responsibilities, because they have the necessary information to know that we are going toward a disaster. In a normal world, Trump’s declaration that Climate control is a Chinese hoax, and it is invented against the interest of United States, should have caused more global emotion.
Also, because while Trump’s internal policies are an American question, climate is affecting all the 7.5 billion in the planet, and Trump was elected by less than a quarter of eligible voters: nearly 63 million. Too little to take decisions which affect all humankind.
And now European ministers are following, as a proverb says, money speaks and ideas murmur… And there are many who are preparing to speculate on climate change. Now that we have lost 70% of the ice of the North Pole, the maritime industry is gearing to use the Northern Route, which will cut cost and time by a 17%. And the British wine industry, since the warming of the planet, is increasing production by 5% each year.
The vineyards planted in Kent or Sussex, with a calcar soil, are now bought from producers of Champagne, who plan to move there. The UK is already producing 5 million bottles of wine and sparkling wines, which are all sold. This Christmas, local sparkling wine will exceed champagnes, caves, prosecco and other traditional Christmas drinks.
We have all seen, at no avail, the increase of hurricanes and storms, also in Europe, and a record spread of wildfires. The UN estimates that at least 800 million people will be displaced by climate change making uninhabitable several parts of the world. Where they will go? Not to the United States or Europe, where they are seen as invaders.
We forget that the Syrian crisis came after four years of drought (1996-2000) which displaced over a million peasants to the towns. The ensuing discontent fuelled the war, with now 400.000 dead and six million refugees. When citizens will awake to the damages, it will be too late. Scientists think that it will become clearly evident after thirty years.
So why do we worry now? That is a problem for the next generation, and companies will continue to make money until the last minute, with complicity of governments and their support, so, let us ride the climate change tide.
Let us buy a good bottle of British champagne, let us drink it on a luxury cruise line over the Pole, and let the orchestra play, as they did in the Titanic until the last minute!

Is health life or not?





29 December 2017

logoThe phrase ‘arogyaparamalabha’, which is from a verse recited by the Lord Buddha (Dhammapada Verse 204), has a common usage in society, especially in relation to health services. Translated in English the phrase means ‘health is the greatest gift’. Regardless of belief, anyone who has suffered from any ailment would accept this as a universal truth.

However, thanks in no small measure to the advances in medical sciences, many ailments that plagued people before are now curable provided, however, there is access to quality health services. At present, for abundance of reasons, the public/free health service in Sri Lanka is incapable of meeting the healthcare needs of the people. This has forced many to resort to private health service providers; either local or overseas. However, the cost of private health care is not something that everyone can afford and hence health insurance is imperative.

Health insurance

A health insurance policy covers against the risk of loss to the person(s) insured due to any sickness or infirmity. The benefits provided under a health insurance policy are in the nature of indemnity or fixed pecuniary benefits (or a combination of both). In layman’s terms the former is where the insured is reimbursed the actual loss attributable to the illness and typically medical expense policies fall into this category. The latter is where a fixed amount (the sum insured) is paid out for an illness or condition stated in the policy and typically critical illness covers fall under this category.

Health insurance is also classified as short-term and long-term health insurance depending on the period the policy is in force. However, the determining period varies from one country to another.

The tug-of-war over health insurance 

According to an amendment brought to the Regulation of Insurance Industry (RII) Act, the insurance industry was required to segregate the life and general insurance business into separate corporate entities by the beginning of 2015. This, however, gave rise to a tug-of-war situation between the segregated life and general companies over health insurance.


The health insurance segment has seen significant growth in recent years and industry analysts predict even higher growth potential. It is the second largest sub-class within the general insurance business (the largest being motor insurance). Therefore, it is natural that the segregated life and general insurance companies would compete for a larger slice of the pie, if not, the whole pie. The situation is more intense among previous composite insurers that have divested either their life or general insurance business outside the group. Thus, the insurance industry is faced with a very pertinent question of whether health insurance belongs to the life (long-term) or general insurance class of business.

The legal framework

The principal legislative enactment governing the insurance industry is the RII Act and the interpretation section (S. 114) of the Act provides the definitions of both long-term insurance and general insurance business. Interestingly, the only reference to health insurance in the above definitions is found under the long-term class of insurance. Accordingly, contracts for the granting of accident and sickness benefits, and permanent health are listed as two separate sub-classes under long-term insurance.

Permanent health contracts provide specified benefits on incapacity from accident or sickness; however, the contract must be in effect for a period more than five years and cannot be cancelled by the insurer during that period (‘sickness’ is the statutory term used to denote health insurance in most commonwealth jurisdictions). Thus, the legal framework supports the contention that health insurance belongs to the long-term class of insurance.

The regulator’s approach

At the onset of this controversy, several industry players, ‘big and small’, made representations to the Insurance Regulatory Commission of Sri Lanka (formerly the Insurance Board of Sri Lanka), stating their respective case as to why health insurance should belong to one class of insurance over the other. This prompted the regulator to enter into a series of discussions with the industry and subsequently the regulator issued a letter to the industry, clarifying its approach with regard to health insurance.

Accordingly, the regulator prescribed two situations, in which life companies could write health insurance, and thus giving a clear indication that, except in those situations, health insurance belonged to the general class of insurance. The first is a stand-alone health policy, where it must be in effect for more than five years. It is reasonable to infer that this refers to the above mentioned permanent health sub-class. The second is any health policy, which is offered as a rider or additional benefit to a life policy, however, the main cover must be the life cover.

This letter, although not in the form of any statutory instrument the regulator is empowered to issue under the Act, has worked in way of moral suasion and the industry seems appeased; despite the contradicting legal provisions stated above.

The global position

In answering this question, it is worth to consider how other countries treat health insurance.

The UK and Europe: The UK and other European counties, which implement the Solvency II regulatory framework, have segregated or are in the process of segregating the insurance industry into the two broad classes of long-term and general insurance. These countries have categorised contracts providing sickness benefits as a sub-class of general insurance and permanent health as a sub-class of long-term insurance. However, the regulatory framework recognises sickness as an ancillary risk to the life business and permit life insurance companies to write contracts providing sickness benefits as a supplemental policy or rider benefit. This is similar to the approach adopted by the regulator in the second situation referred above.

However, according to the guidance on Solvency II, the technical provisions or policy liabilities of health insurance pursued on a similar technical basis as general insurance should be valued as general insurance policy liabilities. Where health insurance is pursued on a similar technical basis as life insurance, the technical provisions should be valued as life insurance policy liabilities.

Singapore: In Singapore too insurance is divided into the two broad classes of long-term and general insurance. However, the industry is not segregated and there are composite insurers providing both classes of insurance. Health insurance is divided into short-term and long-term health insurance, and given statutory definitions. Accordingly, a long-term health policy is one that is in force for more than five years and cannot be unilaterally terminated by the insurer (however, it may be terminated earlier by the policy owner). A short-term health policy is defined as any health policy that is not a long-term health policy. The definition of a long-term health policy is consistent with the definition of permanent health and the first situation of the approach adopted by the regulator referred to above.

However, an insurer licensed to carry on only long-term insurance is permitted to write short-term health policies on a stand-alone basis and such business is to be treated as part of the life business (including the technical provisions). The composite insurers have the option of treating short-term health policies as either part of their life or general insurance business.

India: In India health insurance is a class of insurance in itself and the insurance industry is segregated as life, general and health insurance. All companies can engage in health insurance, however, the scope of each is clearly defined so as to avoid any overlaps. Accordingly, life companies can offer individual health policies for a term of five years or more. But the premium should remain unchanged for at least three years. Life companies cannot offer indemnity based products either as individual or group policies. General and health companies can offer individual health policies with a minimum tenor of one year and a maximum of three years and group health policies must have a term of one year.

However, the regulations provide for ‘combi products’, which is a combination of a life insurance cover offered by a life company and a health insurance cover offered by a general or health insurance company. These products may be offered on individual or group basis. The life cover of the product is treated as part of the life company’s business and the health cover as part of the general/health company’s business. Therefore, pricing, underwriting, reserving and claim pay-outs are all managed by the respective companies and the collaboration is limited to non-core insurance functions such as marketing and policy servicing. It is mandatory for companies offering these products to have in place a memorandum of understanding that covers the modus operandi of the tie up.

Finding a satisfactory solution

The long-term/life insurance business is very important to an economy, as the life fund represents a large pool of funds available for long-term investment in the economy, and this distinguishes life insurance companies from other financial institutions that mobilise short-term savings. However, the life insurance penetration in Sri Lanka is amongst the lowest in the region at 0.5% in 2016 (measured as a percentage of total premium to GDP) and the contribution of the life insurance industry to the financial sector is only 2.2% (measured as a percentage of the total assets of the financial system)

One of the main reasons for this situation is the long-term nature associated with life insurance contracts. Ordinarily the policyholder is expected to pay a premium throughout the tenor of the policy and the benefit is received at the end of the policy period or the sum assured is paid out in the unfortunate event of the policyholder’s demise during the policy period. Due to this long-term commitment required by the policyholder, life insurance is a hard sell, especially in a country like Sri Lanka where people’s focus is on short-term benefit.

In this context, coupling life insurance with a health insurance policy works as a sweetener that is used world over and hence, an allowance is made for health insurance even in countries where the industry is segregated as referred above.

However, the health insurance business is extremely volatile and has a high claims ratio (the claims incurred as a percentage of the earned premium). Thus, where health insurance represents a significant portion of a life company’s business, it exposes the life business to the spill over risk from the health business. This would be counterintuitive to the objectives of the segregation of the life and general insurance business. Therefore, any solution must strike a balance between the overarching objective of the segregation of the insurance industry and the need to increase life insurance penetration.

The treatment for permanent health policies is more straightforward. In all of the jurisdictions referred above, including our legal framework, permanent health is classified under long-term insurance. These policies are written on a similar technical basis as life insurance and therefore the technical provisions should be valued according to the same techniques. This is in harmony with the approach adopted by the regulator referred to above.

However, a conundrum exists with regard to short-term/indemnity based health insurance policies. The Solvency II framework advocates that health insurance policies written on a similar technical basis to non-life insurance (general insurance) should be valued according to the techniques of general insurance. Thus, if a life company is to pursue short-term/indemnity based health policies, such company should maintain a separate fund valued according to general insurance techniques.

This would take the industry back to square one, especially where the health insurance business counts for a significant portion of the life company’s business. The objective of the segregation of the industry will be negated and the life business will be exposed to spill over risk from the health business. The Singapore approach of treating short-term health insurance as a part of the life business is worse off; however, the insurance industry in Singapore is not segregated and therefore, is not a relevant template for Sri Lanka.

It must be admitted, though reluctantly given the current cricket woes faced at the hands of the Indian team, the approach adopted in India serves as a better model to follow. The offering of a ‘combi product’ with a life and a health cover written by a life and general insurance company respectively, ensures the dual objectives of increasing life insurance penetration and the segregation of the life and general insurance business. The sweetener effect of the health cover draws customers to the product, yet the business risk is retained with the respective companies.

According to the understanding between with life and the general insurance company, the product can marketed and serviced by either the life or general company, or by both companies to provide more convenience to the customer. However, as practiced in India, it is wise for the regulator to spell out the dos and don’ts for each insurer in this arrangement and encourage the companies to have a written memorandum of understanding to govern the relationship.

(The writer is a Regulatory Compliance Specialist and can be contacted via e mail srivante@gmail.com.)

Islamic State claims responsibility for deadly Kabul attack at Shiite cultural center

Dozens are dead in an attack on a news agency in Kabul. The Islamic State said in an online statement that it was responsible for the attack.

A series of explosions at a gathering inside a Shiite cultural center killed more than 40 people and injured dozens more in the Afghan capital Thursday in the latest sign of rising violence in the city.

Hospital officials and residents said the toll from the blasts — in the compound of the Afghan Voice news agency in a Shiite-dominated part of Kabul — could increase.

The Islamic State claimed it carried out the attack, according to a statement on the group’s Amaq News Agency. It said a suicide bomber detonated one blast, which was followed by three other explosions.

An Islamic State link could not be independently verified, and the group has often asserted responsibility for attacks without providing clear evidence. But the Islamic State has waged a series of attacks in Kabul and has targeted Shiite Muslims, which the militants consider a heretic branch of Islam.

Earlier, the Taliban denied any role in the carnage — which served as another reminder of security shortfalls in Kabul and elsewhere even as Afghan and U.S. claim progress against militant factions.


Authorities say an attack on a Shiite gathering in the Afghan capital Kabul on Dec. 28 has left dozens dead and others wounded.
Scores of people were present at the compound, where the pro-Iranian cultural center is located. The gathering marked the December 1979 anniversary of the invasion of Afghanistan by the former Soviet Union.

Waheed Majroh, spokesman for the public health ministry, said the blasts killed at least 41 people and left 84 injured. One government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, put the number of those killed at more than 50, adding 100 were hurt.

Residents said two explosions, possibly hand grenades, were heard. As people gathered from those initial bursts, a bigger blast shook the compound.

When victims were being transported to a hospital, one attacker hurled a hand grenade at them, some witnesses said.

Most of the victims were either educated young people or children who took religious classes at the cultural center, family members of the victims said.

Among them was Said Andleb, who had graduated from university a day earlier. Several journalists were among the wounded, officials said.
“My son, 12 years old, was killed in the attack. My nephew was also there, and he has gone missing,” Ghulam Hussein, a weeping father, told reporters at a hospital.

Saad Mohseni, an Afghan media mogul, said: “these are individuals with hopes and aspirations with family and loved ones . . . how much pain can a nation take?”

In the face of rising attacks by the Islamic State against Shiites, President Ashraf Ghani’s embattled government has recently stepped up security measures for Shiite mosques by providing guns and funds for the community’s protection. The initiatives were arranged by the followers of the sect itself.

Last month, Mohammad Mohaqiq, a leader for one of the Shiite groups in Afghanistan, traveled to Iran and publicly praised Afghan and regional Shiite warriors who had taken part in the war in Iraq and Syria against Islamic State fighters.

The presidential palace said in a statement that Thursday’s attack was a “crime against humanity” and an “unforgivable act.”

The attack comes weeks after Ghani said the Islamic State, which emerged in Afghanistan in late 2014, “was on the run” in the country following a recent series of joint offensives with U.S.-led troops.

One of Ghani’s aides, Haroon Chakhansuri, said “the defeated enemies of Afghanistan cannot stop us from having a prosperous country.”

“Such barbaric attacks on civilians will increase public anger toward the enemies and will further strengthen our unity and resolute for having prosperous Afghanistan,” he added.

Last week, Vice President Pence visited Afghanistan for talks with Afghan leaders and to give a speech to U.S. troops more than 16 years after the American-led invasion in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

In Kabul, Pence discussed the Trump administration policies that could include expanded troop presence in the country.

Brian Murphy in Washington contributed to this report.

Saudi-led airstrikes kill 68 civilians in one day of Yemen's 'absurd' war

United Nations condemns mounting casualties after intensive air campaigns and says conflict has no military solution

 Yemeni people carry coffins of people killed in airstrikes in Sana’a. Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images

Diplomatic editor, and agencies-Thu 28 Dec ‘17 

Sixty-eight Yemeni civilians were killed in two air raids by the Saudi-led coalition in one day, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Yemen has said, as he condemned what he described as “an absurd and futile war”.

Jamie McGoldrick’s unusually direct criticism came in an update citing initial reports from the UN human rights office of the two strikes earlier this week. The first hit a crowded market in Taez province, killing 54 civilians, including eight children, and wounding 32 others, McGoldrick said. The second was in the Red Sea province of Hodeidah and killed 14 people from the same family.

“I remain deeply disturbed by mounting civilian casualties caused by escalated and indiscriminate attacks throughout Yemen,” McGoldrick said. In addition to the casualties from Tuesday’s two air raids, another 41 civilians were killed and 43 wounded over the previous 10 days of fighting, he said.

The Arab coalition intensified its air campaign targeting the Iran-backed Houthi rebels after 19 December, when Saudi air defences intercepted a ballistic missile the insurgents had fired at the Saudi capital, Riyadh. The Saudis claim to be on the outskirts of the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, which is held by the Houthi rebels.

“These incidents prove the complete disregard for human life that all parties, including the Saudi-led coalition, continue to show in this absurd war that has only resulted in the destruction of the country and the incommensurate suffering of its people,” McGoldrick said on Thursday. Civilians “are being punished as part of a futile military campaign by both sides”, he said.

“I remind all parties to the conflict, including the Saudi-led coalition, of their obligations under international humanitarian law to spare civilians and civilian infrastructure and to always distinguish between civilian and military objects,” he said.
 The UN official said the conflict in Yemen had no military solution and could be resolved only through negotiations. The same position has been adopted by the British foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, who has said the resolution of the Yemen conflict is his No 1 priority.

Saudi Arabia, which sees the conflict as part of a wider battle to restrain Iranian aggression across the Middle East, claims the missile fired at Riyadh was provided by Iran. Earlier this month, Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, staged a special press conference to back up the Saudi claim and assert that provision of the missile was in breach of UN security council resolutions.

The Saudis appear to be trying to capitalise on the political instability that has come about as a result of the death of Yemen’s former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was killed by the Houthis earlier this month as punishment for switching sides and seeking peace with Saudi Arabia.

Last week the Saudis said they had opened the port of Hodeidah to commercial and humanitarian ships, after an international outcry that a blockade imposed on 6 November amounted to starvation as a tactic of war. The UN said the first supplies of fuel had entered the port on 24 December. Yemen imports 90% of its food and all of its fuel and medicine.

At a press conference on Wednesday the Saudis claimed five vessels had entered Hodeidah carrying fuel this week and that coalition forces had given 10 permits to transfer aid to Yemen through land crossings.

The Arab coalition – essentially the Saudis and the United Arab Emirates, backed by the US, the UK and others – intervened in support of Yemen’s internationally recognised government in March 2015 after the Houthis took over Sana’a. But despite the coalition’s vastly superior firepower, the rebels still control the capital and much of the north.

The UN has no up-to-date estimate of the death toll in Yemen, but said in August 2016 that according to medical centres at least 10,000 people had been killed.

It says Yemen is the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, with about 8 million people on the brink of famine, a cholera epidemic that has infected 1 million people, and economic collapse in what was already one of the Arab world’s poorest countries.
Israeli forces shot 14-year-old Mohammad al-Farani in the face with a tear gas canister, causing skull fracture and loss of his right eye. (DCIP/Mohammad Abu Rukbeh)
Maureen Clare Murphy- 28 December 2017
With Israel’s crackdown on protests over Jerusalem has come a spike in violations of Palestinian children’s rights.
Since 6 December, when President Donald Trump announced that the US recognized the city as Israel’s capital and pledged to move the country’s embassy there, Palestinian children have been among the hundreds injured and arrested by Israeli forces.
Several children have suffered potentially irreversible head injuries, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Two have lost eyes.
Two boys were hit in the face with tear gas canisters fired by Israeli soldiers from a watchtower near Erez checkpoint during an 11 December protest at the Gaza-Israel boundary.
Mohammad al-Farani was sitting on a concrete block when he was hit.
“It was so painful, I don’t know how to describe it. There was a lot of blood running down my face,” the 14-year-old told Defense for Children International-Palestine.
The group stated that the child “was treated for a fractured cheekbone, head gash, internal bleeding in the brain and later underwent eye surgery to remove his right eye.”
Nidal al-Majzoub, also 14, was standing nearby and was hit soon after Mohammad, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine. He required 10 stitches to his forehead.

Shot in head with live ammunition

In the occupied West Bank, a 15-year-old boy was shot in the face with live ammunition near the town of Salfit on 12 December. He was detained and reportedly remains hospitalized in critical condition.
Israel initially claimed that the boy, identified by media as Hamed al-Masri, was attempting to stab soldiers when he was shot. Later they said that the child was “suspected of an attempt to attack on the border.”
Defense for Children International-Palestine also documented “two live fire injuries including a 16-year-old who was shot above his right eye, causing skull fractures and vision loss. The teen told DCIP he participated in a march on 8 December near Tulkarem in the northern West Bank.”
Other children were seriously injured by “less lethal” ammunition fired by soldiers.
A 15-year-old boy identified by the group as Qassam K. was critically injured when he was shot in the skull with a rubber-coated metal bullet during a late-night raid in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus on 20 December.
Muhammad Tamimi, 15, was seriously injured when he was shot in the face with a rubber-coated metal bullet fired at close range in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh on 15 December.
He required complex surgery and was placed in an induced coma and doctors fear he may be left with permanent disabilities.
His cousin, 16-year-old Ahed Tamimi, was arrested days later during a night raid on her home after she was seen in a widely circulated video slapping and shoving an Israeli soldier on her family’s property shortly after Muhammad was shot.
Ahed’s mother and another cousin were also arrested.
An Israeli military court extended all three of their detention orders by another four days on 25 December.
The military court judge “accepted police claims that Ahed Tamimi presents a danger, and that she could impede soldiers in their work,” the Israeli daily Haaretz reported.

“I remember my face bleeding”

A 16-year-old boy seen blindfolded and frogmarched by a group of Israeli soldiers in a now iconic photograph taken in the West Bank city of Hebron is among the 77 children who have been newly detained at Ofer military prison in the first three weeks of December, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
UPDATE: Today, the 16-year-old  boy detained in this photo appeared in Ofer military court and was charged with throwing stones. His hearing was adjourned until Dec. 18 and he remains in detention at Ofer military prison. He is represented by a @DCIPalestine lawyer. pic.twitter.com/ioIvmryJGR
UPDATE: On Dec. 18, the 16-yr-old  boy in this photo appeared in Ofer military court. The military court judge allowed the military prosecutor until Dec. 20 to submit more evidence. He remains detained until next hearing on Dec. 24.  pic.twitter.com/iUqiLuG3CJ

View image on Twitter
The boy, who has been identified by media as Fawzi al-Juneidi, told the rights group that he had been beaten and verbally abused for two hours before he was taken in for interrogation.
“When I arrived at the checkpoint, I remember my face bleeding, mostly my lips because of the beating. They took me to a room, knocked me down to the floor and began kicking me all over my body,” the boy testified to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Palestinian media reported that the child was released Wednesday night. A video shows the boy upon his release:

اللحظات الأولى بعد إفراج الاحتلال عن الفتى الأسير محمد الجنيدي (16) عاماً من مدينة الخليل، قبل قليل.
In the video, Fawzi appears with his arm in a sling and states that his injury was from the beating by Israeli soldiers.
Some 500 to 700 Palestinian children go through Israel’s military courts each year.
“In 590 cases documented by DCIP between 2012 and 2016, 72 percent of Palestinian child detainees reported physical violence and 66 percent faced verbal abuse and humiliation,” the group stated.
“Under Israeli military law, Palestinian children have no right to a lawyer during interrogation. Confessions that are often coerced through ill-treatment are routinely used in military courts to sentence children to prison terms.”
Palestinian children who go through civilian courts in Jerusalem are also subjected to “extensive denial of their rights,” according to a recent study.
Children are left traumatized after being detained by Israeli forces.
Ashraf, a 5-year-old boy from Jalazone refugee camp detained by soldiers for five hours earlier this month, has trouble sleeping at night, refuses to go to school and speaks very little, his father told Haaretz reporter Amira Hass.
The small boy’s detention was defended by Yoav Mordechai, head of COGAT, the bureaucratic arm of Israel’s military occupation, who stated on Facebook that the child had engaged in “dangerous and violent behavior” by throwing stones at soldiers.
Israel violates Palestinian children’s rights with nearly total impunity.
Thirty-five Palestinian children were killed by Israeli soldiers, police and armed civilians last year. It was the deadliest year for Palestinian children in the West Bank in the past decade.
Families of children who are badly injured by soldiers struggle to cover the costs of medical care and related expenses.
Israeli law all but bars Palestinians from getting compensation for injuries caused by its forces.