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

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

The Cabinet Decision To Ban Women From Purchasing Liquor Is Unconstitutional: Verité Research


January 17, 2018

“The Cabinet Decision to ban women from purchasing liquor is unconstitutional,” says Colombo-based interdisciplinary think-tank Verité Research.

We publish below the note issued by Verité Research in full:


Women are permitted to purchase liquor: On 10 January 2018, the Minister of Finance and Mass Media issued Excise Notification No. 02/2018 under the Excise Ordinance, No. 8 of 1912 (as amended). The new Notification amends Excise Notification No. 666 of 31 December 1979, and removes the ban on the sale of liquor to women ‘within the premises of a tavern’.[1] A tavern is usually defined as ‘a place of entertainment…[or] a house for the retailing of liquors to be drunk on the spot’.[2] Women are therefore entitled to purchase liquor under Sri Lankan law as at 10 January 2018. Moreover, Excise Notification No.666 does not appear to prohibit women from purchasing alcohol in premises that do not constitute a tavern (e.g. supermarkets).

Equality before the law: Article 12(1) of the Constitution states that ‘all persons are equal before the law, and are entitled to the equal protection of the law’. Moreover, article 12(2) states that ‘no citizen shall be discriminated against on the grounds of…sex.’ Therefore, acts that discriminate against women on the grounds of their sex violate their fundamental rights, and are thereby unconstitutional.
 
Article 16(1) of the Constitution states that ‘all existing written law and unwritten law shall be valid and operative notwithstanding any inconsistency with the preceding provisions of this Chapter’ (emphasis added). Article 16(1) only applies to written and unwritten law enacted prior to 1978. Thus any law that is enacted today must be compliant with the fundamental rights chapter of the Constitution, and cannot discriminate on the grounds of sex.

Cabinet decision is unconstitutional: On 16 January 2018 the Cabinet of Ministers unanimously decided to withdraw the above Excise Notification No. 02/2018, which removed the prohibition on the sale of liquor to women within the premises of a tavern.[3] This decision serves to prohibit women from purchasing liquor in the premises of a tavern by reinstating the previous ban under Excise Notification No.666 of 1979. The Cabinet’s decision therefore discriminates against women on the grounds of their sex. The new decision dated 16 January 2018, is not protected under article 16(1) of the Constitution, as it does not fall within the category of ‘existing written law or unwritten law’ at the time of promulgating the Sri Lankan Constitution of 1978.

There is an imminent infringement of a fundamental right: Article 126(1) affords the Supreme Court the sole and exclusive jurisdiction to ‘hear and determine any question relating to the infringement or imminent infringement by executive or administrative action of any fundamental right’ (emphasis added). The Cabinet decision dated 16 January 2018 falls within the category of ‘executive’ action.[4] Moreover, the decision to withdraw Excise Notification No. 02/2018 amounts to an imminentinfringement of article 12(2) of the Constitution, as the decision will directly result in the Minister of Finance and Mass Media withdrawing the said Notification. Such withdrawal will constitute an infringement of women’s rights to equality and non-discrimination guaranteed by articles 12(1) and (2) of the Constitution. Therefore, interested parties anticipating an imminent infringement of their fundamental rights have valid grounds to petition the Supreme Court under article 17 (read with article 126) of the Constitution.

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Smuggling of heroin in chocolates to SL from Italy detected! Here is the clue to trap the mastermind !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 17.Jan.2018, 11.00PM)   A leading  heroin magnate who was using the  Air Cargo services between Italy and Sri Lanka to  smuggle heroin to SL over a period of time had been identified by the SL Customs and the Police Anti narcotics Bureau.
The quantity of heroin smuggled in this manner was over 4 kilos hidden among perfumes, soap and  shampoo,  as chocolates. 
Following interrogation of the suspects in Italy and SL by the relevant divisions , and the other suspects are in the process of being identified , K.L.Milton , one of the suspects  was arrested in SL. The main suspects however  had been able to evade the arms of the law though he and his accomplices  are now being trailed by  the law enforcers.

This heroin parcel had been sent  to SL from a representative office  located in the vicinity of Piazzele Loreto , Milano, Italy , which is a sub office of  a popular SL main cargo dispatch office in Rome  which sends  air cargo to SL. Within a short period three  such parcels have been dispatched to SL , it has been discovered.
The businessman involved in this  is an owner of a luxurious two storied house and other properties near Keerihandigoda bridge ,Hikkaduwa . His  name is Mapalagama  Acharige Manura alias Manura Mapalagama .His date of birth is 1963-06-22; foreign  passport No. is N 5212791 ;and his ID. No. is 631742025 V.
Mapalagama resides at Edmondo de Amicis avenue,  Segrate , Milano .His wife NelkaKumari is a partner in this business. While the police were after her , she had  given the slip , and fled to Italy. One of their sons is following higher studies  in Australia while the other son is studying in Italy. 
Owing to this SL –Italy heroin smuggling , dispatch of parcels by air is experiencing grave problems . Air cargo service is in a confusion , and dispatch of many goods have been halted . It is most unfortunate because of this heroin scourge , even getting down an urgent medicine for a critical patient in SL has been hampered.
It is hoped that the foreign minister ,law and order minister ,the  IGP, SL Ambassador in Italy and  SL Consul General  shall treat this matter with the urgency it merits.  
As Sri Lankan businessmen in Italy who earn foreign exchange for our motherland , we urge the Institutions enforcing the law to take prompt action to apprehend these criminals and bring them before the law with a view to safeguard the country’s image.
By - Sri Lankan Business community living in  Rome and Milan , Italy 
---------------------------
by     (2018-01-17 20:22:50)

Navy nabs 7Kgs of gold worth Rs.50mn at KKS 















2018-01-17
Two suspects were arrested by the Sri Lanka Navy last night with seven kilograms of gold biscuits worth about Rs.50 million while attempting to smuggle them to India, Navy Media Spokesman Commander Dinesh Bandara said.
He said the suspects were arrested in the seas off Kankesanthurai (KKS) while they were sailing to India by using a dinghy.
“The raid was conducted following information received by the Navy and during the raid the navy had found seventy pieces of gold biscuits 100 grams each packed in parcels inside the dinghy ,”Commander Bandara said.
The Navy said the two suspects were planning to take out the gold biscuits to India to sell.
The dingy had been taken to Navy custody and the two suspects and the gold biscuits were to be handed over to the Customs Office in Jaffna for further inquiry.
Video by Gobi Ranjan

'It's slavery in the modern world': Foreign workers say they were hungry, abused at Toronto temple

Hindu Temple calls allegations false, but Toronto lawyer says workers owed 'substantial' settlement

Suthakar Masilamani, second from the left, and Sekar Kurusamy, far right, complained to CBC Toronto about their treatment at the hands of the Sridurka Hindu Temple's chief priest. The faces of the other two workers are blurred because CBC Toronto has not been able to interview them. (Tamil Workers Network)





















Sridurka Hindu Temple's chief priest Rev. Kanaswami Thiagarajahkurukkal is alleged to have treated the four workers poorly. (Facebook)
cbc masthead logoJan 17, 2018 5:00 AM ET
Four migrant workers from India faced harsh living conditions and were drastically underpaid as sculptors on a Hindu temple in Toronto, according to two of the workers who spoke exclusively to CBC Toronto.
By day, they sculpted and painted one of the most holy parts of the temple, by night they would languish in the basement of the building, sleeping on cots by the boiler, according to Sekar Kurusamy, 51, and Suthakar Masilamani, 46.

Trump cut causes “worst financial crisis” in UNRWA history

US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, second from right, said “she had the chance to talk with girls and women about their lives, their hopes and their dreams,” when she visited an UNRWA school in June. She recently demanded a total cut in US funding for their health and education. (via Facebook)

Ali Abunimah-17 January 2018

“This is the worst financial crisis in UNRWA’s history,” Chris Gunness, the spokesperson for the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees, told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday.

Gunness’ dire warning came the day after the Trump administration announced a savage cut in US contributions to the organization that provides basic health, education and emergency humanitarian services to five million Palestinian refugees.

On Tuesday, the State Department announced that the US was withholding more than half of a $125 million payment that was due to UNRWA this month.

While $60 million would be paid immediately, State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said that the remainder was being “frozen” and “held for future consideration.”

The US has been the largest single donor to UNRWA, providing almost $370 million of the agency’s $1.2 billion budget in 2016.

The cut makes good on threats President Donald Trump and his UN ambassador Nikki Haley made in recent weeks to slash funding for Palestinians in retaliation for the Palestinian Authority’s objection to the US recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and its rejection of American sponsorship of currently nonexistent peace negotiations.

Haley had reportedly advocated for the US funding to be cut completely, despite her previous public support for the agency’s work, including a photo-op with child refugees last June.

In a post on Twitter at the time, Haley said her visit to an UNRWA school gave her “the chance to talk with girls and women about their lives, their hopes and their dreams.”

But according to The Washington Post, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson prevailed over Haley in the internal battle over the funding.

Tillerson reportedly raised the matter “personally with Trump and secured the president’s agreement to support the State Department’s position” that not all the funding should be cut.

Israel has also called for the dismantling of UNRWA, as part of its drive to eliminate support for the rights of Palestinian refugees who remain in exile due to Israel’s refusal to allow them to return home solely because they are not Jews.

Health and futures at stake

The impact is likely to be felt immediately by some of the world’s most vulnerable people.

“At stake is the access of 525,000 boys and girls in 700 UNRWA schools, and their future. At stake is the dignity and human security of millions of Palestine refugees, in need of emergency food assistance and other support in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the West Bank and Gaza Strip,” UNRWA commissioner-general Pierre Krähenbühl said following the US announcement. “At stake is the access of refugees to primary healthcare, including prenatal care and other life-saving services.”

Krähenbühl urged other donor states and individuals around the world “to rally in support” of UNRWA’s work with funding and donations to replace the American contribution.

He offered assurances to Palestinian refugees that “we are working with absolute determination to ensure that UNRWA services continue” and told students that schools would stay open “so you can receive your cherished education.”

But despite those assurances, the agency has already laid off dozens of teachers in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and about 100 workers in Jordan, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported Tuesday.

UNRWA employs about 30,000 people, the vast majority of them Palestinian refugees.

In face of the crisis, Krähenbühl called on the agency’s doctors, nurses, school principals, teachers, guards, sanitation laborers, social workers and support staff to “be at your duty stations to serve the community with the same dedication and commitment that you have always shown.”

Public support urged

Krähenbühl’s statement also apparently responds to US claims that the agency needs “reform.” State Department spokesperson Nauert said that the US would “take a look at UNRWA, trying to make sure that the money is best spent.”

“The US government has consistently commended our high impact, transparency and accountability,” Krähenbühl said. “This was reiterated, once again, during my latest visit to Washington in November 2017, when every senior US official expressed respect for UNRWA’s role and for the robustness of its management.”

The agency has long been the target of smear campaigns by Israel and its lobby groups who believe that its mere existence keeps alive the issue of Palestinian refugees – who they view as a “demographic threat” to Israel on the racist grounds that they are not Jewish.

In an effort to mitigate the humanitarian impact, UNRWA is turning to the public for support.
Its website features a prominent call for public donations in response to the “dramatic reduction of US funding” and urges social media users to support the agency with the hashtag #ForPalestineRefugees.

UNRWA USA, a charity that supports UNRWA’s work with Palestinians, sent out an email Tuesday calling for donations and launching a petition to urge the White House to reconsider its decision.

Haiti Accuses Trump of Laundering Money for Former Dictator 'Baby Doc' Duvalier


Records show his condos were purchased through shell companies linked to the brutal despot.

HomeBy Travis Gettys / Raw Story-January 12, 2018, 9:53 AM GMT

President Donald Trump insulted Haiti during an Oval Office meeting with lawmakers, but he once signed off on a shady real estate deal with the nation’s ousted dictator.

More than a fifth of Trump’s condominiums in the U.S. have been purchased since the 1980s in secretive cash transactions that fit a Treasury Department definition of suspicious transactions, reported Buzzfeed News.

Records show more than 1,300 Trump condos were purchased through shell companies, which allow buyers to shield their finances and identities, and without a mortgage, which protects buyers from lender inquiries.

Those two characteristics raise alarms about possible money laundering, according to statements issued in recent months by the Department of Treasury, which has investigated transactions just like those all over the country.

The agency may even require real estate professionals to adopt new programs to keep illegally obtained funds from being plowed into luxury housing to conceal the money’s origins.

Trump companies reportedly sold $35 million in real estate last year alone — mostly to secretive shell companies that open the president up to possible influence peddling.

According to the Buzzfeed News report, the Haitian government complained in the 1980s that former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier laundered money stolen from the Caribbean nation’s treasury by purchasing an apartment in Trump Tower.

Duvalier, nicknamed “Baby Doc,” was overthrown in 1986, but three years earlier used a Panamanian shell company called Lasa Trade and Finance to buy apartment 54-K in Trump’s Manhattan tower for $446,875 cash.

Trump, the future U.S. president, signed the deed of sale.

Federal prosecutors charged a Russian native in 1984 with laundering the proceeds from a gasoline bootlegging operation through five Trump Tower condos purchased for $4.9 million.

David Bogatin pleaded guilty in 1987 and served eight years in federal prison.

Trump Taj Mahal casino was charged under anti-money laundering regulations 106 times in 1990 and 1991 by failing to identify gamblers who bought or cashed out more than $10,000 in chips.

Those reports are required to help authorities identify gamblers who may be laundering money, and Trump’s casino paid a $477,000 fine to the Treasury Department in 1998 without admitting wrongdoing.

Former CIA agent arrested for keeping notebook full of sensitive information

  • Jerry Chun Shing Lee, 53, left CIA in 2007 and moved to Hong Kong
  • Lee charged with unlawful retention of national defence information


Matthew Weaver and Julian Borger Wed 17 Jan 2018 10.35 GMT

A former CIA officer has been arrested for keeping details of US agents, safe houses and other secrets years after retiring from the agency and moving to Hong Kong.

The former intelligence officer, Jerry Chun Shing Lee, was detained at JFK airport on Monday, more than five years after FBI agents discovered he had kept a small address book and pocket calendar containing secret operational notes from his time at the CIA, about “asset meetings, operational meeting locations, operational phone numbers, true names of assets and covert facilities” according to court documents.

Lee, a 53 year-old naturalised US citizen who left the CIA in 2007, made an initial appearance in a New York federal court on Tuesday. He was charged with the unlawful retention of national defence information. He is due to appear at another court in northern Virginia, where the CIA is located.

The New York Times and the Washington Post reported that Lee is suspected of leaking the names of US agents to the Chinese authorities, in one of the deadliest intelligence setbacks for the CIA since the cold war. Between 2010 and 2012, the Chinese killed or imprisoned more than a dozen US sources in China, the New York Times reported last year.

Lee was not charged with crimes related to the breach or spying for a foreign government. It is unclear why Lee was not arrested when his notebooks were first found by FBI agents during a search of his luggage during trips to Hawaii and Virginia in 2012, five years after leaving the CIA. Nor is it clear why he travelled back to the US in 2012 and on Monday, knowing he was under suspicion for leaks.

The Department of Justice said Lee grew up in the US and served in the US army before joining the CIA as a case officer in 1994.

He served in unnamed overseas locations and left the agency in 2007. He was most recently reported to be have been employed in Hong Kong at an auction house.

Officials did not say why it took so long to bring charges against Lee, or whether he had leaked any materials to foreign countries. Former intelligence officials told the New York Times that the FBI managed to persuade Lee to travel to the US under a false pretext, and interviewed several times in 2013.

A CIA spokesman declined to comment on the case on Tuesday, citing Lee’s ongoing prosecution.

Asked about the case at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Wednesday, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said: “I’m not aware of the information you’ve mentioned.”

Department on Chinese State Media Outlets Registering as Foreign Agents

If Russian outlets have to file, lawmakers ask, why not Chinese ones?

Sen. Patrick Leahy greets Sen. Marco Rubio on his first day back in Congress after suspending his presidential campaign, in Washington on March 17, 2016. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call) 

No automatic alt text available.
BY -
JANUARY 16, 2018, 3:16 PM
A bipartisan group of senators is pressing the Justice Department to examine why Chinese state media outlets operating in the United States have not registered as foreign agents.

In a letter sent to Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday, seven senators led by Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) are asking whether the Justice Department has examined if Chinese state-controlled media outlets fall under the reporting requirements of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, or FARA.

The letter comes on the heels of a December article in Foreign Policy on Beijing’s foreign media operations, revealing that the American division of CCTV — China’s state broadcaster — has not registered as a foreign agent, even as the Justice Department has asked the Russian news outlets RT and Sputnik to file under the act.

“If the Department assesses that the [People’s Republic of China] media organizations do not incur reporting requirements under FARA similar to those of U.S.-based affiliates of RT and Sputnik, please state why,” the letter says.

In November, RT, the Kremlin-funded news outlet, registered under FARA after it was identified by the U.S. intelligence community as a key distributor of Russian propaganda in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election. In a January 2017 report, U.S. intelligence agencies said RT was a key player as part of the Kremlin’s interference in the election campaign and spread news stories boosting then-presidential candidate Donald Trump.

The scrutiny of RT and other Kremlin-affiliated outlets has led to a renewed interest in Washington in getting state-controlled news outlets to register as foreign agents.

First enacted in 1938 to counter Nazi propaganda in the United States, FARA provides basic disclosure requirements for lobbyists and media outlets working on behalf of foreign governments. The legislation is designed to provide Americans with information about who is attempting to influence U.S. politics and provides no concrete restrictions on state media outlets’ operations.

FARA also provides a carve-out for editorially independent state-backed outlets, such as the BBC.

Rather than prosecute violators of the law, the Justice Department has historically sought to bring violators into compliance with the act by voluntarily registering as foreign agents. Tuesday’s letter asks for information about whether the Justice Department believes outlets including CCTV, the Xinhua news service, and China Daily fall under FARA’s requirement, which says media directed, controlled, or financed by a foreign government must register as foreign agents.

The other signatories of the letter include Sens. John Cornyn (R-Texas), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), and Ted Cruz (R-Texas).

The Justice Department did not answer questions on Tuesday about the letter but told FP in December that it is actively working to enforce the law.

“When we learn any person or organization — including a media organization and regardless of any particular nationality — is engaged in activities within the scope of the statute, the Department will take necessary and appropriate measures to ensure compliance with the law,” Justice Department spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said in December.

Myanmar police shoot dead seven protesters in troubled Rakhine

Rakhine State residents protest after a local gathering in Mrauk U celebrating an ancient Buddhist Arakan kingdom turned violent and many were killed and injured, in Sittwe, Myanmar January 17, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer

JANUARY 17, 2018 

YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar police shot dead seven demonstrators, while 12 were injured in troubled Rakhine State, after a local gathering celebrating an ancient Buddhist Arakan kingdom turned violent.

The demonstrators gathered late on Tuesday in Mrauk U township in the northern part of Rakhine to mark the end of the Arakan kingdom, the secretary of the Rakhine state government, Tin Maung Swe, told Reuters.

The violent demonstration underscores the challenges facing Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi in a country where dozens of ethnic groups have been clamouring for autonomy since independence from Britain in 1947.

Some 4,000 people surrounded a government building after the annual ceremony marking the demise of the Arakan kingdom over 200 years ago, Tin Maung Swe said. Organizers did not seek approval from local authorities for the gathering, he said.

“The police used rubber bullets initially but the crowd didn’t leave. Finally the security members had to shoot. The conflict happened when some people tried to seize guns from the police,” he said.

Tun Ther Sein, regional MP from Mrauk U, said some of the critically injured protesters were taken to the state capital of Sittwe, a three-hour drive south of the ancient town studded with Buddhist temples.

Rakhine State residents protest after a local gathering in Mrauk U celebrating an ancient Buddhist Arakan kingdom turned violent and many were killed and injured, in Sittwe, Myanmar January 17, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer

Rakhine State residents protest after a local gathering in Mrauk U celebrating an ancient Buddhist Arakan kingdom turned violent and many were killed and injured, in Sittwe, Myanmar January 17, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer

The United Nations in Myanmar called on authorities to “investigate any disproportionate use of force or other illegal actions that may have occurred in relation to this incident”.

“We urge respect for the rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression, and call for the security forces and demonstrators to act with restraint and to avoid further violence,” the agency wrote in a statement.

The U.S. embassy in a statement expressed “deep concern for all innocent people affected by the violence” and hoped “reason and restraint will prevail.”

Myanmar government spokesman Zaw Htay did not respond to requests for comment.

The Rakhine, also known as Arakanese, are one of the 135 officially recognized ethnic groups in Myanmar. Their identity is closely connected to the once powerful Arakanese kingdom along the Bay of Bengal, which was conquered by the Burmese kingdom in 1784. The kingdom was once an important stop on the old silk trade route.

Tensions in Rakhine have risen since a sweeping Myanmar army operation in August inflamed communal tension and triggered an exodus of over 650,000 Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh.

“Very sad to hear reports of civilian casualties in Mrauk U...Rakhine urgently needs non-violent rule of law,” Kristian Schmidt, the European Union’s Ambassador to Myanmar, said on Twitter.

A German hacker offers a rare look inside the secretive world of Julian Assange and WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks Julian Assange at the Embassy Of Ecuador in London last May. (Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

 The passengers stepping off the Lufthansa flight from Frankfurt, Germany, last month head straight for the passport-scanning machines that allow European residents to enter Britain quickly and without any human interaction.

A lone figure in a black hoodie and jeans breaks off from the pamck.

"Too many biometric details," says Andy Müller-Maguhn, eyeing the cameras on the timesaving devices.

He has come here, as he does most months, to meet with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, the world's most controversial purveyor of government secrets. For most of the past six years, Assange has been confined to the Ecuadoran Embassy in London, fearful that if he leaves he will be extradited to the United States for prosecution under the Espionage Act. Ecuador recently granted Assange citizenship, but British officials said he is still subject to arrest if he leaves the embassy.

Müller-Maguhn is one of Assange's few connections to the outside world. He typically brings Assange books, clothes or movies. Once in 2016, he delivered a thumb drive that he says contained personal messages for the WikiLeaks founder, who for security reasons has stopped using email.
These visits have caught the attention of U.S. and European spy chiefs, who have struggled to understand how Assange's organization operates and how exactly WikiLeaks came to possess a trove of hacked Democratic Party emails that the group released at key moments in the 2016 presidential campaign.

The three major U.S. intelligence agencies — the CIA, the FBI and the National Security Agency — assessed "with high confidence" that Russia relayed to WikiLeaks material it had hacked from the Democratic National Committee and senior Democratic officials. And last year, then-FBI Director James B. Comey said that the bureau believes the transfer was made using a "cut-out," or a human intermediary or a series of intermediaries.

Exactly how the Russians delivered the email trove to WikiLeaks is the subject of an ongoing examination by U.S. and European intelligence officials. As part of their effort to understand the group's operations, these officials have taken an intense interest in Müller-Maguhn, who visits Assange monthly, U.S. officials said.

Müller-Maguhn insists that he was never in possession of the material before it was put online and that he did not transport it.

"That would be insane," he says.

U.S. officials who once dismissed WikiLeaks as a little more than an irritating propaganda machine and Assange as an antiestablishment carnival barker now take a far darker view of the group.

"It's time to call out WikiLeaks for what it really is: a nonstate hostile intelligence service," CIA Director Mike Pompeo said in the spring after the group released documents describing CIA hacking tools. In December, he doubled down on that assessment, describing WikiLeaks as a national security threat and suggesting that Assange cannot protect those who pass him state secrets.

"He ought to be a bit less confident about that," Pompeo said.

In an interview at the Ecuadoran Embassy last month, Assange insisted that Müller-Maguhn never possessed the hacked DNC emails and blasted Pompeo's statements as "very strange and bombastic."
Müller-Maguhn is more cautious. "How many of you wouldn't be scared s---less by the head of the CIA declaring you the next target?" he asks.

The 46-year-old hacker moves through Heathrow Airport like a man who knows that powerful governments are tracking his every move. A Washington Post reporter travels with him as he goes through passport control.

He switches off his cellphone, fearful that British immigration officials have technology that can steal his data. Müller-Maguhn could enter the United Kingdom with his German identification card but prefers to use his passport. "The ID card has my address on it," he says.

A heavyset immigration officer looks over Müller-Maguhn's passport and stares for several seconds at a computer screen.

"Why are you in the U.K?" he asks.

"I'm visiting people," Müller-Maguhn replies.

The officer pecks at his computer. Necks crane to catch a glimpse of the man clad in all black who is holding up the normally brisk line of passengers headed to early morning business meetings.

After a few minutes, the officer waves through Müller-Maguhn, who is walking toward the exit when the officer remembers one last question.

"Sir, sir, where are you traveling from again?" he shouts.

"Frankfurt," Müller-Maguhn replies.

And with that he is gone. Behind him, the immigration officer is still typing. The travelers who briefly took notice of Müller-Maguhn are back staring at their phones or marching toward their destinations. Müller-Maguhn heads for the Heathrow Express into London.

Into the embassy

The roots of Müller-Maguhn's relationship with Assange trace back to his teenage years in the 1980s when his walk to school in Hamburg took him past of the offices of the Chaos Computer Club.

The group embodied postwar Germany's anti-fascist convictions and the hacker underground's libertarian ethos. Now the largest hacker club in Europe, it bills itself as "a galactic community of life forms independent of age, sex, race or society orientation that strives across borders for freedom of information."

Müller-Maguhn soon became a friend, confidant and adviser to the group's founder, Wau Holland.

 "They were like a strange couple," said Peter Glaser, a club member, journalist and friend of both men. "Andy was very young and behaved like an adult, and Wau was older and behaved like a child."
Müller-Maguhn later parlayed his interest in computers and surveillance into a business that he co-founded in 2003 making encrypted phones. He had hoped to sell the phones to journalists and dissidents but quickly discovered that military and intelligence agencies in Europe, Asia and the Middle East were the only clients who understood the technology and were willing to pay for it.
"This was during the time I was following the path of capitalism," he said with a smile, during one of several lengthy interviews in Berlin.

Müller-Maguhn spent 10 years selling the phones before leaving the company. "You can imagine, I know really strange people in really strange places," he adds. These days, Müller-Maguhn says he runs a data center that hosts websites and manages email for businesses and also works as a security consultant, helping companies and governments safeguard their secrets. One of his clients is in China, a state known for its suppression of the Internet and its surveillance of dissidents.

By Müller-Maguhn's calculus, the nominally communist government is less prone to violence overseas and less of a threat than the United States. "They don't have the wish to apply their standards to the rest of the planet or have others dance to their music," he says. "So there's a big difference."

In recent years, Müller-Maguhn's consulting and advocacy work have carried him all over the world, including Moscow, where in 2016 and 2017 he attended a security conference organized by the Russian Defense Ministry.

On his way into London for his meeting with Assange, Müller-Maguhn casually mentions that he is just back from a three-day trip to Brazil.

"It was business-related," he says, declining to elaborate.

Müller-Maguhn hops out of a cab in Knightsbridge, a posh section of London that's home to Harrods department store, the Ecuadoran Embassy and Assange. On this cold December day, the stores are decked out for the Christmas season. Müller-Maguhn raises a camera with a telephoto lens and aims it at a building down the street from the brick embassy where Assange has been holed up since 2012.

The shutter on his Nikon camera clicks as he snaps off a few shots, hoping to spot surveillance equipment pointed at Assange and the embassy. Women in fur coats rush by him as Bentleys and Rolls-Royces roll past on the busy road. Müller-Maguhn moves down the sidewalk to get a better angle, fires off some more pictures and then slings the Nikon over his shoulder.

Farther down the block and closer to the embassy, he points up toward an apartment building where he suspects that the Spaniards, angry over Assange's tweets in support of Catalan separatists, may have set up a surveillance team.

Then he bounds up the steps of the building that houses the Ecuadoran Embassy, takes one last glance over his shoulder and rings the bell of the embassy door, where a guard immediately recognizes him and welcomes him inside.

Müller-Maguhn met Assange through the Chaos Computer Club in 2007 when the WikiLeaks founder was seeking support for his then-fledgling organization.

In those early days, Assange described his creation as a group committed to the mission of publishing original source material so citizens of the world could see "evidence of the truth" about global corporations and their governments.

Just past the doors to the embassy, a guard asks Müller-Maguhn to turn over all electronic devices: cameras, mobile phones, and even his watch and car keys.

"The last time, they even looked into the fruit I was bringing," Müller-Maguhn says. "These guys have their job. They have their instructions. So I am not complaining."

Since WikiLeaks' early days, Assange's circle of contacts has dramatically contracted. Some allies, such as Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who first invited Assange to the Chaos Computer Club and signed on as WikiLeaks' spokesman, broke with WikiLeaks in 2010 after Assange released hundreds of thousands of pages of U.S. military documents without redacting the names of local Afghans who had helped the military and could be targeted by the Taliban. Other backers were put off by Assange's legal troubles and allegations of sexual assault in Sweden or his Manichaean view of the world.
Still others alleged that the group allowed itself to be used as a tool by the Russians in their campaign to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

"Look, he has messed up with so many people I have no idea how many people he has left as friends," Müller-Maguhn says.

Assange continues to fear that he will be prosecuted by the United States and as a result is afraid to leave the embassy, which he thinks would lead to his extradition. The Justice Department is considering a case against him, according to people familiar with the matter. Several months ago, Domscheit-Berg said, the FBI sought an interview with him in connection with a long-running grand jury, which is investigating WikiLeaks' publication of State Department cables. Domscheit-Berg said in an interview he rebuffed the request. "No matter the differences that Julian and I had, I'm not going to talk to anybody about what happened," he said.

As WikiLeaks has contracted and Assange has retreated from public view, it has become harder for Western intelligence agencies to get a sense of how the group operates. An internal CIA report from November said the U.S. intelligence community has "gained few good insights into WikiLeaks' inner workings." The agency predicted that Assange's negative views of Washington will lead the group to continue to "disproportionately" target the United States.

Former WikiLeaks supporters say the group is governed by Assange's whims. "The way to think of it is always just chaos," said one former WikiLeaks activist who spoke on the condition of anonymity to offer a frank opinion and avoid retribution from Assange. "There aren't any systems. There aren't any procedures — no formal roles, no working hours. It's all just Julian and whatever he feels like."

During the 2016 campaign, Assange put out word that he wanted material on Hillary Clinton. "He was kind of asking everybody, 'Can we get something for the election?' " Müller-Maguhn recalls.
Assange signs off on all WikiLeaks publications but does not review everything that comes to the group. "For security reasons, he does not want that," Müller-Maguhn says. Müller-Maguhn, though, is vague on WikiLeaks' internal workings.

A former WikiLeaks associate said that Müller-Maguhn and a colleague oversaw submissions through WikiLeaks' anonymous submission server in 2016 — though Müller-Maguhn denies such involvement.

Asked to explain the submission review process, he replies, "I don't want to."

The only reliable way to contact Assange, he says, is through Direct Message on Twitter. "He seems to live on Twitter," adds Müller-Maguhn, who doesn't hide his disdain for the platform. "On Twitter you follow people, and that's what German history forbids you to do," he says.

The size of WikiLeaks' staff and its finances are also murky. Neither Müller-Maguhn nor Assange will say how many people work for the group or where they are located. "It seems to be a rather small team," Müller-Maguhn says.

WikiLeaks has amassed a stash of bitcoin, the digital currency that enables anonymous, bank-free transactions. As of this week, the stockpile is worth about $18 million, though in late December, with the currency's spike in value, the group was sitting on $25 million, according to public online ledgers that record such transactions. Over the last several years, the Wau Holland Foundation, which was launched in 2003 after the founder of the Chaos Computer Club died, collected hundreds of thousands of dollars for Assange's group.

Müller-Maguhn sits on the board of the foundation, which seeks to promote "freedom of information and civil courage in various forms." He says the foundation has provided support for some of WikiLeaks' releases, such as last year's "Vault 7" disclosure of CIA hacking tools.

He describes the Vault 7 releases as a public service, adding that the CIA was "messing up other people's computers and making it look like someone else had done it."

To Assange, any suggestion that Müller-Maguhn may have served as an intermediary to deliver the DNC emails is "a lame attempt" by U.S. intelligence agencies to hurt the Wau Holland Foundation, which is a key conduit for tax-free donations in Europe.

The threat is all the more significant because the only other source of tax-exempt donations, the U.S.-based Freedom of the Press Foundation, has cut ties to WikiLeaks.

Müller-Maguhn says he cannot say with certainty what was on the USB drive that he delivered to Assange. "How can I prove what was on there?" he says. "I cannot." But he adds that it would be risky and impractical to deliver sensitive files by hand, rather than through encrypted channels.
"A classical walk-in? You saw too many movies from the 1970s," he says.

These days, Müller-Maguhn describes his visits to the embassy as motivated by an increasingly rare commodity in Assange's world: friendship. Assange's visitors include celebrities, such as actress Pamela Anderson, or politicians, such as Nigel Farage, a vocal advocate for Britain's exit from the European Union, and Dana Rohrabacher, a GOP congressman from California.

When he talks to visitors, Assange turns on a white noise generator in the embassy conference room to counter listening devices. Above the door, he points out a surveillance camera and indicates that sensitive messages should only be communicated via handwritten notes, shielding the text from the camera with a hand or notepad cover.

On July 3, 2016, Müller-Maguhn visited Assange at the embassy to celebrate Assange's 45th birthday. Inside the brick building, Ecuadoran children, dressed in traditional garb, serenaded Assange with little guitars and pipe flutes.

As the children sang, Müller-Maguhn's mind flashed forward.

"I had this s---ty impression of me standing there watching 50-year-olds making music for us, and Julian would still be there," he said.

After about two hours inside the embassy last month, Müller-Maguhn emerges from the building, carrying his black leather satchel, stuffed with documents, and his Nikon camera. He quickly makes his way through the Christmas crowds and back to Heathrow Airport for an evening flight home to Germany.

He tries to minimize his time in Britain. "I don't like to stay overnight in a country that is hostile towards me," he says.

Jaffe reported from Washington. Greg Miller, Rachel Weiner and Julie Tate in Washington, Karla Adam in London and Stefan Pauly in Berlin contributed to this report.

The countries where people work the longest hours

Workers continue working into the night in the City of London, Britain on October 16, 2017. Picture has been rotated 180 degrees. Picture taken October 16, 2017. REUTERS/Mary Turner
These are the countries where people work for the longest hours compared with the rest of the world.


Mexicans work far longer days than anyone else. Germans, on the other hand, clock up the least hours.

New data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development(OECD), whose 35 members include much of the developed world and some developing nations, found the average Mexican spends 2,255 hours at work per year – the equivalent of around 43 hours per week.
Greeks work the longest hours in Europe, at an average 2,035 hours per year.
At the other end of the spectrum, German workers put in a comparatively meagre 1,363 hours per year. That’s 892 fewer hours spent at work per year than Mexicans.

Workers in the US are in the middle with 1,783 hours.

Different work cultures

Differing cultural attitudes and socio-economic factors play a key role in the amount of hours employers expect from workers.

In Mexico, long-standing fears about unemployment, coupled with lax labour laws, mean that the maximum 48-hour workweek is rarely enforced.

In third-placed South Korea, longer working hours have been part of a drive to boost economic growth.

But following concerns about social problems, including a low birth rate and slowing productivity, President Moon Jae-in has led a push to reduce the country’s working hours and give workers the “right to rest”.

Despite having a term to describe death by overwork ("karoshi"), the average Japanese worker does 1,713 hours per year – below the OECD average.

This might come as a surprise in light of the country’s reputation for having a workaholic culture, which has led to calls for the government to impose a cap on overtime work.

Fewer hours, more productive

Despite enjoying the shortest working hours among OECD member countries, Germany manages to maintain high productivity levels. In fact, the average German worker is reported to be 27% more productive than his or her British counterpart.

The Dutch, French and Danes also work fewer than 1,500 hours per year on average. Just 2% of Danish employees – who enjoy the best work-life balance in the world – put in long hours compared to the OECD average of 13%.
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'Staggering' trade in fake degrees revealed


A BBC reporter was offered a degree from the fake Nixon University for $3,600

File on 4-16 January 2018
BBCThousands of UK nationals have bought fake degrees from a multi-million pound "diploma mill" in Pakistan, a BBC Radio 4's File on Four programme investigation has found.
Buyers include NHS consultants, nurses and a large defence contractor.
One British buyer spent almost £500,000 on bogus documents.
The Department for Education said it was taking "decisive action to crack down on degree fraud" that "cheats genuine learners".
Axact, which claims to be the "world's largest IT company", operates a network of hundreds of fake online universities run by agents from a Karachi call centre.
With names such as Brooklyn Park University and Nixon University, they feature stock images of smiling students and even fake news articles singing the institution's praises.
According to documents seen by BBC Radio 4's File on Four programme, more than 3,000 fake Axact qualifications were sold to UK-based buyers in 2013 and 2014, including master's degrees, doctorates and PhDs.
Many of Axact's online universities - like Baychester University - share the same format and use stock photographs
Many of Axact's online universities - such as Baychester University - share the same format and use stock photographs
A trawl through the list of Axact UK buyers, seen by the BBC, reveals various NHS clinical staff, including an ophthalmologist, nurses, a psychologist, and numerous consultants also bought fake degrees.
A consultant at a London teaching hospital bought a degree in internal medicine from the fake Belford University in 2007.
The doctor - who had previously been disciplined by the General Medical Council (GMC) for failing to report a criminal conviction - told the BBC he had not used the certificates because they "had not been authenticated".
An anaesthetist who bought a degree in "hospital management" said he had not used the qualification in the UK.
And a consultant in paediatric emergency medicine, who bought a "master of science in health care technology", claimed it was an "utter surprise" when the BBC told him it was fake.
There is no suggestion any of these clinicians do not hold appropriate original medical qualifications.

Large-scale problem

The General Medical Council (GMC) said it was up to employers to verify any qualifications additional to medical degrees.
But Higher Education Degree Datacheck (HEDD) chief executive Jayne Rowley said only 20% of UK employers ran proper checks on applicants' qualifications.
And while purchasing a fake diploma was not illegal in the UK, using one to apply for employment constituted fraud by misrepresentation and could result in a 10-year prison sentence.
"[The GMC] are correct in that [doctors] are licensed to practice medicine if they have a legitimate medical degree. But [by buying a fake degree], they have still committed fraud and could still be prosecuted," she said.
Danny Mortimer, chief executive of NHS Employers, said all NHS trusts operated rigorous primary checks.
Verification was "achieved through a variety of channels" and fraudulent activity would be reported to police, he said.
The fake degree certificate offered to a BBC reporter
The fake degree certificate offered to a BBC reporter
In 2015, Axact sold more than 215,000 fake qualifications globally, through approximately 350 fictitious high schools and universities, making $51m (£37.5m) that year alone.
Former FBI agent Allen Ezell, who has been investigating diploma mills since the 1980s, said: "We live in a credential conscious society around the world.
"So as long as paper has a value, there's going to be somebody that counterfeits it and prints it and sells it.
"Employers are not doing their due diligence in checking out the papers, so it makes it work. It's the damnedest thing we've ever seen."

'Very serious issue'

Defence contractor FB Heliservices bought fake Axact degrees for seven employees, including two helicopter pilots, between 2013 and 2015.
One of these employees, speaking anonymously to the BBC, said soon after he had been given a contract to work on the Caribbean island of Curacao, the local government decided all those working in the territory had to have a degree.
"We looked into distance learning, and contact was made with this online university. It was just something that needed to be done to keep working in the country.
"Everyone knew they were not bona fide. But no-one had a problem with it."
Parent-company Cobham held an internal investigation into the incident, but decided the purchase was a "historic issue" that "had no impact upon the safety of any of its operations or the training of any individuals in the UK or elsewhere".
"Procedural and disciplinary actions have been taken to address all the issues raised," it added.
But MP James Frith, a member of the Education Select Committee, said the decision was a "very serious issue".
"I am amazed that a business would put itself and its very existence at risk by having fraudulent qualifications to, by the sounds of it, get into a new market."
Former FBI officer Allen Ezell has written a book about fake diploma mills like Brooklyn Park University
Former FBI officer Allen Ezell has written a book about "fake diploma mills" such as Brooklyn Park University
Following a New York Times expose in 2015, Axact's chief executive was arrested and an investigation launched by the Pakistani authorities.
Senior manager Umair Hamid was sentenced to 21 months in a US prison in August 2017 for his part in Axact's fraud.
Yet the Pakistani investigation has ground to a halt amid claims of government corruption.
Allan Ezell said Axact continued to launch new online universities all the time - and had now branched out into extortion and blackmail.
"It's a whole new game," he said. "Normally a diploma mill is finished with you by the time you get your degree. That's just the beginning now.
"You get a telephone call that looks like it's coming from your embassy or local law enforcement, threatening to arrest or deport you unless you get some additional documents to help support the phony diploma you already have. We've never seen that before."
Cecil Horner, a British engineer based in Saudi Arabia, was still getting threatening calls from Axact agents after paying nearly £500,000 for fake documents.
Mr Horner's son Malcolm said he believed his father, who died in 2015, had bought the qualifications because of the fear of losing his job.
"It makes me so angry," he said.
"It's unfathomable these websites still exist and they can't be shut down."
Action Fraud, the UK's national cybercrime reporting centre, said it did not have the power to close fake Axact websites but instead had to provide evidence to domain registries and registrars, which could take months.
A degree certificate from Axact-run Neil Wilson University
A degree certificate from Axact-run Neil Wilson University
MP James Frith said he was "staggered" by the "aggressive tactics" used by Axact and would ask the Education Selection Committee to look into the issue.
The Department of Education said HEDD was taking a proactive approach.
"Degree fraud cheats both genuine learners and employers, so we've taken decisive action to crack down on those seeking to profit from it," a spokesman said.
Axact did not respond to a request for an interview from the BBC.
File on 4: Degrees of Deception is on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday 16 January at 20:00 GMT and on the iPlayer.