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, October 11, 2018

Milk distributed at Namal’s ‘Rogues’rasthiyaduwa not contaminated ! Analyst department report ..


LEN logo(Lanka e News – 10.Oct.2018, 8.00PM) The recent melodrama enacted by the synthetic lawyer cum racketeer Namal Rajapakse to boost his power craze by getting down hired crowds to Colombo under the banner, ‘the People’s force’ which was in fact a ‘rogues’ rasthiyaduwa’ (roaming rogues), and the subsequent loud allegations made by the ‘rogues’ rasthiyaduwa’ that they began to defecate everywhere because of the polluted milk packets distributed to them by the government had been proved a damp squib.
The government analyst department which did an investigation into the ‘contaminated’ milk packets which were forwarded by the police had concluded and confirmed that there had been no contamination or infection of any kind in the milk , based on its report .
Police media spokesman made the above revelation to the media Monday (08).
Bud party Wennappuwa pradeshiya sabha member Alex Nishantha (lawyer) along with a milk packet lodged a complaint with the Fort Police, in which complaint he stated that a group from Pettah area distributed the milk packets , and 25 persons along with him became sick after drinking the milk.
The police media spokesman Ruwan Gunasekera revealed, following the complaint ,based on the police B report B/99339/3/18 a case was filed in Hultsdorf magistrate court , and on the orders of the court the milk packet was forwarded to the analyst department on 2018.09.13.
The Analyst department report following its investigation was received on 2018.09.28 , and that report had mentioned the milk contained no cyanide, metallic poisoning or pesticide adulteration, Gunasekera pointed out. The milk packet that was forwarded by the complainant had not even been opened , according to the analyst report ,he added.
It is therefore clearly proved now ,the uncontrollable diarrhea of the ‘rogues rasthiyaduwa’ participants leaving an uncontrollable stench which lasted several days at the venue of their demonstrations, was due to the stale food and contaminated milk provided by the organizers of Namal’s ‘rogues’ rasthiyaduwa’ and none else to the hired protestors. While these hired participants were excreting uncontrollably and creating a stench outside due to the stale food and contaminated beverages , the organizers including Machiavellian Rajapakses who were responsible for their sad plight were on the other hand enjoying luxurious meals and drinks provided by super luxury hotels . These sordid details were exposed by Lanka e news earlier on.
It is worthy of note , super luxury Shangri La Hotel , Colombo reserved 80 rooms free for the Alliance MPs and their ‘supermen’ .That was in addition to the other super luxury hotels like Hilton and Taj Samudra which too were reserved by them.

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by     (2018-10-10 14:33:27)

When dining with the devil, use a long spoon said William Shakespeare



An inquiry into whether social media is boon or bane

logoThursday, 11 October 2018

I start with two confessions – firstly, I am no hero, in fact I am still but a victim who has hope of overcoming the said syndrome; on the other hand I have reaped the benefits of social media and the rapid ripple effect it can offer. Secondly, everything I present to you has been said before – if it is your desire to learn more about it, it is at your fingertips, waiting.

In my independent research to prepare for a workshop on social media addiction, I decided the topic needs to be taken to a larger audience and be read by intelligent parents, leaders of tomorrows generation, and, if they are receptive, the targets themselves. If you interact in the realm of social media, the concept of dopamine is something you would have encountered. Sadly it is also included in the jargon of cocaine addicts. Imagine that! Now that I’ve got your attention let’s dive into it.


Concept of dopamine rushes and instant gratification

Dopamine goes hand-in-glove with instant gratification. Dopamine is a neurochemical created in various parts of the brain and is critical in all sorts of brain functions, including thinking, moving, sleeping, mood, attention, motivation, seeking and reward. Dopamine causes one to want, desire, seek out, and search. It increases your general level of arousal and your goal-directed behaviour. Therefore, because dopamine gives us the desire to seek and be rewarded, this is where the issue of instant gratification comes in.

Thanks to FB, Twitter, and Instagram, the desire to seek instant gratification is available at the click of a button. Thus it gives users a false sense of fulfilment. An example of this is the highly talked about issue with young professionals today in the workplace who crave the gratification of a pay raise or promotion without patience. When they don’t see the results, the rewards, they become frustrated and at times quit their jobs, thus getting them nowhere on the success ladder.

These days only a few people are actually striving to achieve their goals and becoming successful. We live in an era that individuals have become slaves to technology. Instead, we aim to create an environment that enables the target audience to thrive using the same tools that are posing a tremendous threat to their mental wellbeing.



What the architects of social media have to say

A former Facebook executive is making waves after he spoke out about his “tremendous guilt” over growing the social network, which he feels has eroded “the core foundations of how people behave by and between each other.”

Chamath Palihapitiya began working for Facebook in 2007 and left in 2011 as its vice president for user growth. When he started, he said, there was not much thought given to the long-term negative consequences of developing such a platform. “I think in the back, deep, deep recesses of our minds, we kind of knew something bad could happen,” says Palihapitiya. “But I think the way we defined it was not like this.”

That changed as Facebook’s popularity exploded, he said. To date, the social network has more than two billion monthly users around the world and continues to grow. But the ability to connect and share information so quickly — as well as the instant gratification people give and receive over their posts — has resulted in some negative consequences, according to Palihapitiya.

“It literally is a point now where I think we have created tools that are ripping apart the social fabric of how society works. That is truly where we are,” he said. “The short-term, dopamine-driven feedback loops that we have created are destroying how society works: no civil discourse, no cooperation, misinformation, mistruth. And it’s not an American problem. This is not about Russian ads. This is a global problem.”

Facebook has pushed back on the former executive’s comments, saying in a statement that Palihapitiya has not worked there for more than six years and that it was “a very different company back then”.

(Source: The Washington Post)

Silicon Valley keen to exploit brain chemical credited with keeping us tapping on apps and social media

The capacity for ‘persuasive technology’ to influence behaviour is only just becoming understood. In an unprecedented attack of candour, Sean Parker, the 38-year-old Founding President of Facebook, recently admitted that the social network was founded not to unite us, but to distract us. “The thought process was: ‘How do we consume as much of your time and conscious attention as possible?’” he said.

To achieve this goal, Facebook’s architects exploited a “vulnerability in human psychology” explained Parker, who resigned from the company in 2005. Whenever someone likes or comments on a post or photograph, he said, “we… give you a little dopamine hit”. Facebook is an empire of empires, then, built upon a molecule.


What is dopamine?

Dopamine, discovered in 1957, is one of 20 or so major neurotransmitters, a fleet of chemicals that, like bicycle couriers weaving through traffic, carry urgent messages between neurons, nerves and other cells in the body. These neurotransmitters ensure our hearts keep beating, our lungs keep breathing and, in dopamine’s case, that we know to get a glass of water when we feel thirsty, or attempt to procreate so that our genes may survive our death.

In the 1950s, dopamine was thought to be largely associated with physical movement after a study showed that Parkinsonism (a group of neurological disorders whose symptoms include tremors, slow movement and stiffness) was caused by dopamine deficiency. In the 1980s, that assumption changed following a series of experiments on rats by Wolfram Schultz, now a professor of neuroscience at Cambridge University, which showed that, inside the midbrain, dopamine relates to the reward we receive for an action. Dopamine, it seemed, was to do with desire, ambition, addiction and sex drive.

Schultz and his fellow researchers placed pieces of apple behind a screen and immediately saw a major dopamine response when the rat bit into the food. This dopamine process, which is common in all insects and mammals, is, Schultz says, at the basis of learning: it anticipates a reward to an action and, if the reward is met, enables the behaviour to become a habit, or, if there’s a discrepancy, to be adapted. (That dishwasher tablet might look like a delicious sweet, but the first fizzing bite will also be the last.) Whether dopamine produces a pleasurable sensation is unclear, says Schultz. But this has not dented its reputation as the miracle bestower of happiness. We are abusing a useful and necessary system. We shouldn’t do it, even though we can.

Dopamine inspires us to take actions to meet our needs and desires – anything from turning up the heating to satisfying a craving to spin a roulette wheel – by anticipating how we will feel after they’re met. Pinterest, the online scrapbook where users upload inspirational pictures, contains endless galleries of dopamine tattoos (the chemical symbol contains two outstretched arms of hydroxide, and a three-segmented tail), while Amazon’s virtual shelves sag under the weight of diet books intended to increase dopamine levels and improve mental health.

“We found a signal in the brain that explains our most profound behaviours, in which every one of us is engaged constantly,” says Shultz. “I can see why the public has become interested.”

In this way, unlike its obscure co-workers norepinephrine and asparagine, dopamine has become a celebrity molecule. The British clinical psychologist Vaughan Bell once described dopamine as “the Kim Kardashian of molecules”. In the tabloid press, dopamine has become the transmitter for hyperbole. “Are cupcakes as addictive as cocaine?” ran one headline in the Sun, citing a study that showed dopamine was released in the orbital frontal cortex – “the same section activated when cocaine addicts are shown a bag of the class A drug” – when participants were shown pictures of their favourite foods. Still, nowhere is dopamine more routinely name-dropped than in Silicon Valley, where it is hailed as the secret sauce that makes an app, game or social platform “sticky” – the investor term for “potentially profitable”.

“Even a year or two before the scene about persuasive tech grew up, dopamine was a molecule that had a certain edge and sexiness to it in the cultural zeitgeist,” explains Ramsay Brown, the 28-year-old cofounder of Dopamine Labs, a controversial California startup that promises to significantly increase the rate at which people use any running, diet or game app. “It is the sex, drugs and rock’n’roll molecule. While there are many important and fascinating questions that sit at the base of this molecule, when you say ‘dopamine’, people’s ears prick up in a way they don’t when you say ‘encephalin’ or ‘glutamate’. It’s the known fun transmitter.”

Fun, perhaps, but as with Kardashian, dopamine’s press is not entirely favourable. In a 2017 article titled ‘How evil is tech?’ the New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote: “Tech companies understand what causes dopamine surges in the brain and they lace their products with ‘hijacking techniques’ that lure us in and create ‘compulsion loops’.”

Most social media sites create irregularly timed rewards, Brooks wrote, a technique long employed by the makers of slot machines, based on the work of the American psychologist BF Skinner, who found that the strongest way to reinforce a learned behaviour in rats is to reward it on a random schedule.

“When a gambler feels favoured by luck, dopamine is released,” says Natasha Schüll, a professor at New York University and author of ‘Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas’. This is the secret to Facebook’s era-defining success: we compulsively check the site because we never know when the delicious ting of social affirmation may sound.

Randomness is at the heart of Dopamine Labs’ service, a system that can be implemented into any app designed to build habitual behaviour. In a running app, for example, this means only issuing encouragement – a high-five badge, or a shower of digital confetti – at random intervals, rather than every time the user completes a run. “When you finish a run, the app communicates with our system and asks whether it would be surprising to him if we congratulated him a little more enthusiastically,” explains Brown. Dopamine Labs’ proprietary AI uses machine learning to tailor the schedule of rewards to an individual. “It might say: actually, right now he’d see it coming, so don’t give it to him now. Or it might say: GO!”

While the sell seems preposterously flimsy (with a slot machine, for example, at least the random reward is money, a much more compelling prize than any digital badge), Brown says that the running app company has seen significant positive results. “If you do this properly, we see an average 30% improvement in the frequency of how often a person goes for a run.”

Dopamine Labs, which currently has 10 clients, has seen similar positive results with many other kinds of app. In one dieting service, which encourages people to track the food they eat, the company saw an 11% increase in food-tracking after integrating Dopamine Labs’ system. A microloan service saw a 14% improvement in how frequently people would pay back their loans on time or early. “An anti-cyberbullying app saw a 167% improvement in how often young people sent encouraging messages to one another by controlling when and how often and when we sent them an animated gif reward,” claims Brown.

The capacity for so-called “persuasive technology” to influence behaviour in this way is only just becoming understood, but the power of the dopamine system to alter habits is already familiar to drug addicts and smokers. Every habit-forming drug, from amphetamines to cocaine, from nicotine to alcohol, affects the dopamine system by dispersing many times more dopamine than usual. The use of these drugs overruns the neural pathways connecting the reward circuit to the prefrontal cortex, which helps people to tame impulses. The more an addict uses a drug, the harder it becomes to stop.



“These unnaturally large rewards are not filtered in the brain – they go directly into the brain and overstimulate, which can generate addiction,” explains Shultz. “When that happens, we lose our willpower. Evolution has not prepared our brains for these drugs, so they become overwhelmed and screwed up. We are abusing a useful and necessary system. We shouldn’t do it, even though we can.” Dopamine’s power to negatively affect a life can be seen vividly in the effects of some Parkinson’s drugs, which, in flooding the brain with dopamine, have been shown to turn close to 10% of patients into gambling addicts.

Brown and his colleagues are aware that they’re playing with fire and claim to have developed a robust ethical framework for the kinds of companies and app-makers with which they will work. “We spend time with them, understand what they’re building and why,” he says. “The ethics test looks something like: should this work in this app? Should this change human behaviours? Does this app encourage human flourishing? If not, does it at least not make the human condition shittier?” To date, Brown claims that Dopamine Labs has turned down both betting companies and free-to-play video game developers, who wanted to use the company’s services to form habits in their players.

Well-intentioned strategies often produce unintended consequences. “I don’t know whether [these apps] can generate addiction,” says Schultz, who, along with two other researchers, was awarded Denmark’s €1m Brain prize in 2017 for discovering dopamine’s effects. “But the idea behind behavioural economics, that we can change the behaviour of others not via drugs or hitting them on the head, but by putting them into particular situations, is controversial. We are telling other people what is good for them, which carries risks. Training people via systems to release dopamine for certain actions could even cause situations where people can’t then get away from the system. I’m not saying technology companies are doing bad things. They may be helping. But I would be careful.”

For Brown, however, co-opting these systems to produce positive effects is the safest and most logical way in which to evolve the human mind, and use a natural molecule to form intentional, positive habits. “We can close the gap between aspiration and behaviour and build systems that enrich the human condition and encourage human flourishing,” he says. “Our product is a slot machine that plays you.”

(Source: Guardian)


Is the tool any good?

Before I condemn all social media – I must warn everyone of one glaring obligation which is a legal one: the same rules applicable to defamation applies to your posts. This is something we are happy to disregard but one’s virtual life has equal ramification as do their real lives so be aware.

Having said that I cannot deny that social media is a tool I have used to champion causes and raise awareness for charity projects to great success. It a tool that can help one connect, reconnect, stay in touch and in some cases make money as well. Social media celebrities are plenty.

However, my intention here is to obtain some air play for the negatives of social media which doesn’t receive as much publicity and my earnest hope is that you take the lessons applicable to you. Wishing you a more interesting real life than a virtual one.



8 tips to fight information overload 

Stop the signs – feel alone even as you communicate with people all day? That is a signal that technology is dominating your life.

Take baby steps – try being inaccessible for short spurts to see what happens. The world probably won’t implode.

Repeat these four words – I have a choice. People who say “My boss wants me to be reachable after 8 p.m.” are likely exaggerating the controls others have over them.

Set limits – Rein in office emails and instant message traffic.

Give clear instructions – Try an email signature “I answer email at 10 a.m., 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. If you need a quicker response, please call”.

Make a tasks list – if you are interrupted you will get back to work faster if you have a list of what needs to be done.

Stick to a schedule – handle recreational web surfing and emails at set times.

Do a reality check – after five minutes of unplanned surfing, ask yourself, “Should I really be doing this now?”

(Source: Readers Digest)

(The author is an Attorney-at-Law and can be reached on tanya.goonewardene@gmail.com.)

MMDA Reforms: Dead & Buried Or Frozen?

Dr. Ameer Ali
logoIn societies where secular officialdom considers it blasphemous to rebel against the power of sacerdotalism, and therefore sacrosanct to remain subservient to their dictates, even tinkering with the most blatantly oppressive elements of what is claimed to be sacred by the hierocracy becomes a virtual impossibility. This seems to be the fate of the long awaited recommendations made by Justice Saleem Marsoof Committee (JMC), appointed at tax payers’ expense, to investigate into the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act (MMDA). By secular officialdom I simply mean the Muslim political hierarchy and the so called Muslim intellectuals who are advising it.  How and why the All Ceylon Jamiyathul Ulama (ACJU), an undemocratic and extra-territorially connected institution of religious functionaries and hierocrats, rather than theologians, has come to wield so much power so that it is able to veto all rational arguments against historical injustices endured by thousands of Muslim women innocently trapped under a male favoured matrimonial system is mind boggling. With some notable exceptions, even journalists and legal commentators on the issue have become unashamedly subtle apologists to ACJU for fear of avoiding its opprobrium. As a result, MMDA reforms remain either dead and buried for ever or frozen until perhaps another generation of agitators and daring intellectuals emerge to take up the cudgels and continue the struggle for Muslim women’s liberation. What follows is not a plea for promoting Muslim feminism an appeal to power holders in the Muslim community to listen to the voice of the aggrieved.  
In an earlier piece that I contributed to this journal (January 6 2018) I employed the term ‘pussyfooted reformers’ to describe the behaviour of recoiling by reform-seekers whenever the ulama1hurl in front of them the term shariah, and maqasid al-shariah2 to counter any argument.  Conceding for the sake of argument that sharia means Divine Law, who will know that law best except the Divine? That Divine has not sent down a compendium of those laws in any textual or aural form. All that the humans can find in the Quran are some signs of the intentions of the Divine from which humans are expected to derive their own laws to the best of their intellectual ability and needs. Even though the Sunnah of the Prophet has added some specificities to those signs even they have to be contextualised in terms of time and circumstances. That was what the eminent Muslim jurists accomplished in previous centuries through a process of discursiveness and ijtihad (the exertion of mental energy in search of an opinion). These laws are known as fiqh (practical details and rules) and they are man-made, both literally and conceptually. Therefore they can be repealed, modernised and reformed through the same processes. 
From the legislative endeavours of early scholar jurists arose a number of schools of legal thought, counting more than a hundred at one stage. However, in the course of time majority of these schools became extinct, largely due to their irrelevance to changing times and context. Today, there are four schools of fiqh that are predominant in the Sunni world of Islam. One of them, the Shafiite School, is the ruling one in Sri Lanka.  Yet, none of the originators of these schools, to their credit, ever claimed that their interpretations and derivations from the basic sources were the most accurate and that the others were wrong. Contrary to our modern day integrists and religious purists, those savants were strong believers in freedom of thought and expression. Nevertheless, they were not utopian but practical minded people. Since not everyone in the community is erudite and has the intellectual capacity to engage in ijtihad, they recommended ordinary people to follow one particular School of Law to avoid confusion and conflict. They did not however, prohibit the erudite and knowledgeable who would come after them to undertake ijtihad, to critic and improve existing rules and derive new ones in order to enhance society’s progress and public welfare. As Irfan Ahmad put it pithily, “to reform was to critic and to critic was to reform”3. 

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LET THERE BE NO MORE VICTIMS LIKE ME

 


2018-10-11 


I am a victim of Female Genital Cutting –some might want to call it circumcision, I call it Mutilation. Not in the way that the proponents want to depict it as what happens in Africa with horrific scars, but in the way it happened to me in Sri Lanka where there are still scars, tiny, almost unnoticeable, but in all the ways that matter, it has damaged me no less than those horrific scars one talks about in Africa. 
To those who want to medicalize the procedure, let me say that I was cut by a qualified doctor, in a sterile environment when I was seven years old. I remember that day clearly and it is I who has had to live with the consequence of what was done to me in the name of religion. Not my religious leaders, not my elders and not that doctor – ME – the women, that child without a voice, grew up to be.
 
Let me now take the arguments I’ve heard in support of the procedure and give you my perspective as someone who has first hand experience of the negative impacts of FGC. I will use the term female genital cutting (FGC) since irrespective of what one wants to call it, that is what is done to a lesser or greater degree, depending on who hold the pin, blade or knife. 

  • I still haven’t come across any argument to support as to why the procedure needs to be performed on infants or seven-year-old girls 
  • I personally find the very idea of parents allowing strangers access to their daughter’s private parts for non-medical reasons an extremely discomforting thought
  • I’m a Muslim, but I don’t believe that God who created me required any MAN or WOMAN to tamper with my body

A. Sex lives as Adults.

1. To the women who say that you have better sex lives due to FGC performed on you as a child, I ask you – what is your point of reference? Have you had sex with the same partner before and after your FGC to arrive at this conclusion? 

Have you ever considered the possibility that you have been very lucky, and that whoever performed the FGC on you spared you any real damage? 

It is also very presumptuous for you to assume that NONE of the billions of uncircumcised women around the world enjoy great sex same as you.

2. To the women who don’t have a horrific memory related to their own FGC and who don’t understand what all the fuss is about. Let me tell you that neither do I. I don’t have any horrific memories of that day when I was seven years old. My Mom who accompanied me held me gently, the doctor looked very professional and it was over before I knew what was being done. I felt a pinch, no bleeding that I can remember – just some cotton wool that smelled of antiseptic placed there after I was cut. And I walked out, in discomfort, confused but definitely not traumatized. 

It was as an adult that I realized the impact of what was done to me. I feel pain during intercourse. Most of you who have been through FGC may not. But does that mean you are not damaged? Have you ever considered the fact that intercourse is supposed to be more than just “pleasant”? or something you put up with when your husband feels so inclined? 

In my case, I have been examined by a doctor who has seen the tiny scars and helped me understand the impact of those scars on my ability to enjoy sex.

Initially I wondered whether I was a mere unfortunate mistake by this doctor – I have since then come across stories of others who were cut by the same and other doctors who share similar tales. So no, I was not an unfortunate accident – the doctor and others like him/her knew exactly what they were doing and did it nonetheless. 

B. The need to perform the procedure on a child.

All the literature shared by the supporters of this practice alludes to adult women enjoying their sex lives. I still haven’t come across any argument to support as to why the procedure needs to be performed on infants or seven-year-old girls who have a long way to go before they are sexually active. 
So, what is effectively being promoted is in fact sexualizing children. News flash - These organs don’t stay dormant and get activated only when one gets married. 

I personally find the very idea of parents allowing strangers access to their daughter’s private parts for non-medical reasons and letting them alter her genitals, an extremely discomforting thought.

I’m more inclined to believe that in their heart of hearts they know that they are in fact desexualizing her. Wanting to keep her pure and innocent until she could be given away. No thought giving to the fact that she then has to live with a damaged body and fulfil marital obligations that she may not enjoy as much in their effort to keep her pure and innocent until she was given away. 

C. The Religious Argument

There are two aspects to this debate– 
1. Who decides on one’s religious belief? – the individual or the individual’s parent? 

Yes, the parents would bring up the child within the religious norms they follow and yes in most cases the child would continue with that belief till the end, but this is not a certainty. 

Hence how do you justify altering a child’s body, without any medical need, to be in alignment with the parents religious belief when that child is yet to determine what path she would take or which God she will follow once she has learned enough to make that decision? 

As for me, I’m a Muslim, but I don’t believe that the God who created me required any MAN or WOMAN to tamper with my body, with a presumption that they can make it better. I believe the Quran, when it says that all of God’s creations are perfect. I won’t let any MAN or WOMAN tell me otherwise.

But my body has been altered irrevocably – its no longer the way God created it to be. My body is now in conflict with MY religious beliefs – it has ended up representing the beliefs of others and not mine. 

2. This is not a belief shared by all Muslims across the world – 

Much debate exists within the Muslim world as to whether FGC is even required under Islam. There is no evidence of it being required by the Prophet of his household or being carried out on his daughter/s. 

The very fact that it is much debated within the Muslim world with many concluding it as not obligatory and in some cases even dissuading the practice, should lend itself to introspection among those who support it in Sri Lanka - as to whether this is a fight that really needs to be fought or whether one should focus on the greater good – protection of the rights of the girl child – a true gift from God. 

D. Responsibility of the State

The questions the State need to keep at the forefront when deciding on the way forward on the issue are: 

1. Isn’t it the responsibility of the State to protect the girl child from any move to sexualize or desexualize her, specially by religious leaders and male proponents who should never be allowed to speak on this matter which is a women’s issue – even if religious.? 

2. Isn’t it the responsibility of the State to dissuade elders from altering the body of a child for non-medical reasons? 

3. Isn’t it the responsibility of the State to prevent anyone from stamping their religious conviction on a child’s body, when she is yet to decide on her own religious convictions? In other words protecting the right of the INDIVIDUAL to their religious freedom foremost. 

The response cannot be anything other than affirmative on all three questions posed above. Yes, it is the responsibility of the State, at least until she is an adult and can take all these decisions for herself depending on HER body, HER preference and HER religious convictions. 
The writer remains anonymous 

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Right-wing Israeli settlers break into al-Aqsa compound under police escort


Facilitated by police, incursions by right-wing Israelis happening on daily basis with aim of increasing Jewish presence at the holy site

Israeli policemen stand guard at Al-Aqsa compound during a raid by far-right Israelis of the holy site in July 2016 (AFP)

Wednesday 10 October 2018
Dozens of right-wing Israeli settlers broke into the Haram al-Sharif compound in the Old City of Jerusalem on Wednesday, escorted and protected by Israeli military police, local news agency Al-Quds reported.
Messianic Jews are hoping to establish an increased presence on the site of the Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock, among the most important Muslim shrines in the world and potent symbols of Palestinian nationalism.
In September, a total of 5,487 far-right Jewish settlers broke into the Haram al-Sharif compound, Al-Quds said. 
"There is a perceptible increase both in the number of settlers raiding Al-Aqsa, as well as in the religious rituals that they conduct on the site,” Khalid Zabarqa, a lawyer and expert on Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa, told Middle East Eye. “They grow increasingly audacious.”
Palestinian worshippers who did not give the settlers a wide berth were detained for hours, Zabarqa said.
According to local media, Israeli police also barred three employees of the Islamic Waqf - two guards and a cleaner - from entering Al-Aqsa mosque on Wednesday while the group of Israelis were inside the compound. The employees were also handed letters to show up at an Israeli police station, local media reported.
The Islamic Waqf, a religious authority, manages the mosque and the other sites in the Haram al-Sharif area.
View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
الاحتلال يمنع حارسي المسجد الأقصى خليل الترهوني وأحمد أبو عليا وموظف النظافة خميس عطية من دخول المسجد وتسلمهم أستدعاءات للتحقيق اليوم.
Translation: The occupation bars two of Al-Aqsa mosque's guards Khalil Tarhoony and Ahmed Abu 'Alia and the cleaner Khamis 'Attiah from entering the compound and hand them investigation notices.
In September, as Jewish-Israeli citizens across the country celebrated the holiday of Sukkot, Israeli security forces facilitated the entry of far-right Jewish groups - including some who hope for a new messianic Jewish age - to the Muslim holy sites.
Police also restricted the movement of local Palestinians, retaining their identity documents at the compound entrance.
Israeli forces erected barricades around the compound and throughout the Old City at the time, giving it the feel of “a military barracks”, local media reported.

Far-right Israelis aim to boost presence at holy site

Videos uploaded to social media showed activists belonging to the far-right Templar movement prostrating themselves in prayer on the Al-Aqsa compound and singing the Israeli national anthem, provocations that are in violation of the site rules.
The Templar movement aims to replace the Muslim structures in the Old City with a Jewish temple, in the fashion of the Roman tabernacle that stood on the spot of the Dome of the Rock about 2,000 years ago.
In recent weeks, posters have been plastered throughout ultra-Orthodox Jewish neighbourhoods of Jerusalem, extolling religious residents to ascend to the Haram al-Sharif, or Temple Mount, over the Jewish holidays.
Traditionally, ultra-Orthodox Jews have steered clear of the site, holding that Jews may not approach the holy ground until a messiah emerges from amongst them.
Read more ►
The United Nations' partition plan of 1947 to divide Palestine into Jewish and Arab states determined that Jerusalem would remain an ex-territorial international city, but it was eventually split between Israel and Jordan in the bitter war that followed, with the Israelis controlling the west and the Jordanians the east.
Twenty years later, Israeli forces conquered the Haram al-Sharif, the rest of Jerusalem, and all the other territories which were resolved to be part of a Palestinian state.
Although under Israeli occupation in East Jerusalem, the Haram al-Sharif site is managed by the Islamic Waqf.
But far-right Israelis are attempting to cultivate support for an increased Jewish presence on the site.
Their far-right beliefs were once considered a small fringe movement, but in recent years, they have found favour in the administration of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, receiving the endorsement of many lawmakers.

Did Israeli spy firm help Trump win presidency?


US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump are welcomed at Ben Gurion airport by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Sara Netanyahu, May 2017. (Israeli foreign ministry)

Ali Abunimah- 9 October 2018

report in The New York Times this week reveals details of a multimillion dollar scheme by a now defunct Israeli spy firm to use social media manipulation and fake online identities in a sophisticated effort to sway the 2016 election in favor of Donald Trump.

Trump eventually secured his party’s nomination and went on to win the US presidency but it is unclear if Psy-Group, a firm staffed by former Israeli intelligence agents, gave him a boost.

The company’s former CEO Royi Burstien previously commanded an Israeli psychological warfare unit.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Burstien lives in a settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and held several senior intelligence posts with the Israeli government between 2003 and 2013. He now markets himself as an “intelligence-based influence expert.”

Psy-Group has also reportedly been involved in the Israeli government’s covert campaign against the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights.

Back in May, the Times reported that three months before the 2016 election, Psy-Group owner Joel Zamel and an emissary for two powerful Gulf princes had met with one of Trump’s sons to talk about ways to help the Trump campaign.

“The emissary, George Nader, told Donald Trump Jr. that the princes who led Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were eager to help his father win election as president,” the Times reported.

“The social media specialist, Joel Zamel, extolled his company’s ability to give an edge to a political campaign; by that time, the firm had already drawn up a multimillion-dollar proposal for a social media manipulation effort to help elect Mr. Trump.”

“There is no evidence that the Trump campaign acted on the proposals,” the Times states in its latest report.

Suspicious payment

But the paper notes that Nader and Zamel “have given differing accounts over whether Mr. Zamel ultimately carried out the social media effort to help the Trump campaign and why Mr. Nader paid him $2 million after the election, according to people who have discussed the matter with the two men.”

The special counsel investigation run by Robert Mueller into alleged foreign interference in the 2016 US election has shown “keen interest” in the payment, according to the Times.

“It is unclear how and when the special counsel’s office began its investigation into Psy-Group’s work, but FBI agents have spent hours interviewing the firm’s employees,” the newspaper states.

“This year, federal investigators presented a court order to the Israel Police and the Israeli Ministry of Justice to confiscate computers in Psy-Group’s former offices in Petah Tikva, east of Tel Aviv.”

In May, Bloomberg reported that Mueller’s team was inquiring about “flows of money into the Cyprus bank account” of Psy-Group.

A likely line of inquiry is that third parties, not directly associated with the Trump campaign, paid for Psy-Group to go ahead with its covert influence effort.

Psy-Group owner Zamel, an Australian who settled in Israel, also cofounded a firm called Wikistrat which has been hired by the government of the United Arab Emirates. That firm has also reportedly been examined by Mueller’s investigators.

The Psy-Group scheme revealed by The New York Times – codenamed Project Rome – involved an elaborate effort “to create fake online identities, to use social media manipulation and to gather intelligence to help defeat Republican primary race opponents and Hillary Clinton,” according to interviews and copies of the proposals obtained by the newspaper.

According to the Times, Trump campaign official Rick Gates requested a proposal from Psy-Group to “target and sway” 5,000 delegates to the Republican Party convention so they would support Trump instead of his main primary rival Senator Ted Cruz.

This would involve dozens of Psy-Group employees creating “authentic looking” fake online personas to bombard delegates with pro-Trump messages.

Other proposals spoke of using “unique intel” and “covert sources” that would be part of an effort that would “look authentic and not part of the paid campaign.”

According to the Times, the Psy-Group effort would also gather information on Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and her associates using public information and “complementary intelligence activities.”

“It is unclear whether the Project Rome proposals describe work that would violate laws regulating foreign participation in American elections,” the Times states.

Israeli influence

In June, The Times of Israel revealed that Psy-Group was involved in creating a now-deleted website called outlawbds.com containing the names, email addresses and photos of individuals believed to support BDS.

The Israeli publication said it was “told by multiple sources that Psy-Group worked to counter BDS activists – and is one of several such firms, set up by or employing former Israeli intelligence operatives, that do so.”

The company shut down in February after FBI agents interviewed some of its US employees.
The latest revelations about Psy-Group underscore that despite the intense focus on supposed Russian interference and Trump campaign collusion, there has been scant evidence to date backing up those claims.

Yet time and again, when there has been compelling evidence of foreign meddling in American – and indeed British – politics, it has been Israel, not Russia, holding the smoking gun.

It is unlikely however that Ted Cruz or Hillary Clinton, the main targets of Project Rome, will complain too loudly: as divided as American politics may appear, elites are still united in treating Israel and its covert operatives as untouchable, no matter what they do.

It remains to be seen whether Mueller will break with that consensus by charging anyone involved in an influence campaign run from Israel.

Crown prince sought to lure Khashoggi back to Saudi Arabia and detain him, U.S. intercepts show

Jamal Khashoggi with his fiancee, Hatice Cengiz. (Courtesy of Hatice Cengiz)


The crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman, ordered an operation to lure Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi back to Saudi Arabia from his home in Virginia and then detain him, according to U.S. intelligence intercepts of Saudi officials discussing the plan.

The intelligence, described by U.S. officials familiar with it, is another piece of evidence implicating the Saudi regime in Khashoggi’s disappearance last week after he entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. Turkish officials say that a Saudi security team lay in wait for the journalist and killed him.
Khashoggi was a prominent critic of the Saudi government and Mohammed in particular. Several of Khashoggi’s friends said that over the past four months, senior Saudi officials close to the crown prince had called Khashoggi to offer him protection, and even a high-level job working for the government, if he returned to his home country.

Khashoggi, however, was skeptical of the offers. He told one friend that the Saudi government would never make good on its promises not to harm him.

“He said: ‘Are you kidding? I don’t trust them one bit,’ ” said Khaled Saffuri, an Arab American political activist, recounting a conversation he had with Khashoggi in May, moments after Khashoggi had received a call from Saud al-Qahtani, an adviser to the royal court.

A video obtained by The Washington Post purports to show events in Istanbul on the day journalist Jamal Khashoggi disappeared.
The intelligence pointing to a plan to detain Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia has fueled speculation by officials and analysts in multiple countries that what transpired at the consulate was a backup plan to capture Khashoggi that may have gone wrong.

A former U.S. intelligence official — who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter — noted that the details of the operation, which involved sending two teams totaling 15 men, in two private aircraft arriving and departing Turkey at different times, bore the hallmarks of a “rendition,” in which someone is extra­legally removed from one country and deposited for interrogation in another.

But Turkish officials have concluded that whatever the intent of the operation, Khashoggi was killed inside the consulate. Investigators have not found his body, but Turkish officials have released video surveillance footage of Khashoggi entering the consulate on the afternoon of Oct. 2. There is no footage that shows him leaving, they said.

The intelligence about Saudi Arabia’s earlier plans to detain Khashoggi have raised questions about whether the Trump administration should have warned the journalist that he might be in danger.

Intelligence agencies have a “duty to warn” people who might be kidnapped, seriously injured or killed, according to a directive signed in 2015. The obligation applies regardless of whether the person is a U.S. citizen. Khashoggi was a U.S. resident.

Jamal Khashoggi supporters urge Trump administration to investigate disappearance
Supporters of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who disappeared Oct. 2 at a Saudi consulate, urged the federal government to investigate on Oct. 10.
“Duty to warn applies if harm is intended toward an individual,” said a former senior intelligence official. But that duty also depends on whether the intelligence clearly indicated Khashoggi was in danger, the former official said.

“Capturing him, which could have been interpreted as arresting him, would not have triggered a duty-to-warn obligation,” the former official said. “If something in the reported intercept indicated that violence was planned, then, yes, he should have been warned.”

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which oversees the warning process, declined to comment on whether Khashoggi had been contacted.

Administration officials have not commented on the intelligence reports that showed a Saudi plan to lure Khashoggi.

“Though I cannot comment on intelligence matters, I can say definitively the United States had no advance knowledge of [Khashoggi’s] disappearance,” deputy State Department spokesman Robert Palladino told reporters Wednesday. Asked whether the U.S. government would have had a duty to warn Khashoggi if it possessed information that he was in jeopardy, Palladino declined to answer what he called a “hypothetical question.”

It was not clear to officials with knowledge of the intelligence whether the Saudis discussed harming Khashoggi as part of the plan to detain him in Saudi Arabia.

But the intelligence had been disseminated throughout the U.S. government and was contained in reports that are routinely available to people working on U.S. policy toward Saudi Arabia or related issues, one U.S. official said.

The intelligence poses a political problem for the Trump administration because it implicates Mohammed, who is particularly close to Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser.

On Wednesday, Kushner and national security adviser John Bolton spoke by phone with the crown prince, but White House officials said the Saudis provided little information.

Trump has grown frustrated, two officials said, after initially reacting slowly to Khashoggi’s disappearance. Earlier this week, he said he had no information about what had happened to the journalist.

White House officials have begun discussing how to force Saudi Arabia to provide answers and what punishment could be meted out if the government there is found responsible.

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill have reacted harshly to the disappearance. On Wednesday, a bipartisan group of senators asked Trump to impose sanctions on anyone found responsible for Khashoggi’s disappearance, including Saudi leaders.

Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), perhaps the president’s closest ally in the Senate, predicted a “bipartisan tsunami” of action if the Saudis were involved and said that Khashoggi’s death could alter the nature of relations between the two countries.

Kushner’s relationship with Mohammed, known within national security agencies by the initials MBS, has long been the subject of suspicion by some American intelligence officials.

Kushner and Mohammed have had private, one-on-one phone calls that were not always set up through normal channels so the conversations could be memorialized and Kushner could be properly briefed.

For all his criticism of the Saudi regime, Khashoggi was not always opposed to Mohammed’s policies. Khashoggi credited the young leader for what he saw as positive changes, including loosening Saudi cultural restrictions.

Khashoggi often expressed affection for his homeland, even while saying he did not believe it was safe for him. One person in contact with the crown prince, speaking on the condition of anonymity to preserve the relationship, said Khashoggi last year asked him to give a message to Mohammed saying he needed someone like Khashoggi as an adviser.

When he transmitted the message, this person said, the crown prince said that Khashoggi was tied to the Muslim Brotherhood and to Qatar, both Saudi adversaries, and that the arrangement would never happen.

Two other friends of Khashoggi said that at least twice he received cordial phone calls from Qahtani, the adviser to the prince, conveying friendly messages on his behalf.

In one of the calls, in September 2017, Qahtani said that Mohammed had been “very happy” to see Khashoggi post a message praising the kingdom after the government announced it was lifting a driving ban on women, according to one of the friends, who was with Khashoggi at the time. The tone of the call was pleasant, but Khashoggi also told Qahtani he would praise the government when there were “positive developments. When there are bad things, I will speak up.”

He spent the rest of the call advocating on behalf of several recently imprisoned critics of the regime.
A friend also said that Khashoggi told him he had been approached several times by a businessman close to the Saudi ruling family. The businessman, whom Khashoggi did not name, seemed “keen” to see him every time he visited Washington and told Khashoggi that he would work with the Saudi authorities to arrange his return, the friend said.

Kareem Fahim and Loveday Morris in Istanbul and Josh Dawsey, Karoun Demirjian, Karen DeYoung and Carol Morello in Washington contributed to this report.