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

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

How our democracy has changed


October 2, 2013 
The recent provincial election results show that the Government of President Rajapaksa cannot be shaken. Is it due to its popularity with the people and if so, what are the causes of the popularity? Are there other factors as well?
The Northern Provincial Council of course showed that the methods employed in the south to win popularity do not work to win the votes of the Tamil people. What are these methods?

Electoral system
Firstly the electoral system has been completely transformed. The rationale behind the Proportional Representation system is that it is based on lists submitted by the political parties. The names denoted a ranking as well, under the original system introduced by President J.R. Jayewardene.

Eastern Province Wants Full Implementation Of 13A


Colombo TelegraphOctober 2, 2013 

Minister Rambukwella unaware on law order - M.A.Sumandhiran
[ Tuesday, 01 October 2013, 08:16.51 AM GMT +05:30 ]
TNA parliamentarian M.A.Sumandhiran said government cabinet media spokesman and the minister Kehiliya Rambukwella unaware on law and order of this country.
Commenting Supreme Court judgment on land and police powers to the provincial councils Minister Rambukwella recently said court clearly brief there are no land and police powers to provincial council is SriLanka.
Responding to this comment MP Sumandhiran went on to say,
TNA will receive all legal powers to the Northern Province.
We never consider comments made by the minister and we will work according to law and order of this country.

Sri Lanka says no to provincial councils on land, police powers

Return to frontpageSeptember 29, 2013
Sri Lankan provincial councils, including the Tamil-dominated Northern, will not have discretion over land and police matters and they will have to operate within the existing limits of power, a government spokesman said on Sunday.

“Provincial councils would have to operate within the existing limits (of powers),” Minister of Information and government spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said.

The Northern Chief Minister-elect K.C. Wigneswaran was no stranger to these limitations of powers for provinces as he was a judge of the Supreme Court, Mr. Rambukwella said.

His comments came as the main Tamil party Tamil National Alliance (TNA) met in Colombo on Sunday to deliberate on the future functioning of the Northern Provincial Council.

He said this week’s Supreme Court determination that land powers are the preserve of the Central government would invalidate the TNA’s claim for land-controlling powers in the north.

The Supreme Court on Thursday annulled an earlier Appeal Court ruling that provinces have the right to exercise land powers.

“It is very clear now, the government can’t devolve land powers by contravening the constitution,” Mr. Rambukwella said.

The TNA won 30 out of 36 seats in last week’s first-ever Northern Provincial elections in 25 years in the former war-torn region.

Their campaign was based on a programme to force the Central government into fully implementing the 1987 India-backed 13th Amendment.

The councils were created under the 13th Amendment, a byproduct of the 1987 Indo-Lanka Accord.

However President Rajapaksa’s nationalist allies say unfettered powers to provinces would lead to Tamil-minority dream of separation of the island.

Understanding obstacles in structuring people’s struggle for self-determination

Mr Saba Navalan addressing the ‘Conference on Democracy, Self-Determination and Liberation of Peoples’ held at the European Parliament complex in Brussels on 23 September, 2013.
TamilNetSaba Navalan at IBON conference[TamilNet, Monday, 30 September 2013, 18:07 GMT]
How do we save national struggles from decimation and structure these struggles as people-centric? This is the uppermost question we have to address in right earnest, observed, Mr Saba Navalan, the editor of inioru.com in the UK, in reading a paper on Sri Lanka’s case study in the 21st century’s movements for self-determination, at an EU-level conference convened by IBON International that took place in the European Parliament last Monday. According to Mr Navalan’s observations, an obstacle in the realization of self-determination is that the upper layer of each ethnic group is held by pro-imperial forces and despite having fundamental contradiction, the upper middle class, in the absence of national capitalism, is comfortable about its association with the pro-imperial class. 


The rape volcano

Brave Heart triggers a pent-up avalanche-October 1, 2013 
In a recent survey of 10,000 men conducted in Bangladesh, China, Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Papua New Guinea, led by South Africa’s Medical Research Council, about one in 10 of the men surveyed admitted raping a woman who was not their partner. When the wife or girlfriend was included, the figure rose to about a quarter.
The research was funded by several UN Agencies and Australia, Britain, Norway and Sweden. A previous study by the WHO found that one third of women worldwide said they had been victims of domestic or sexual violence.

Disinformation, Devolution & The Presidency

By Dayan Jayatilleka -October 1, 2013
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Colombo TelegraphThere’s something amiss with the tale that Justice CV Wigneswaran should take his oaths as Chief Minister before the Governor and no other; certainly not the President.
Watching the well-made, well researched and gripping movie Madras Cafe, and conscious of its gaps and oversimplifications, I was reminded that I have lived through those times and events as peripheral participant-observer, ranging from the run-up to the Provincial Council election to the assassinations of Rajiv and Ranasinghe Premadasa. That’s how I know that the first Chief Minister of the Northeastern Provincial Council took his oaths at the President’s House in Colombo and before President JR Jayewardene, though the rest of us Ministers of the NEPC were indeed sworn in by the Governor, ex-army commander Gen Nalin Seneviratne in Trincomalee.
That day at the President’s House, President JRJ almost wrecked my well earned revolutionary credentials. I had just been amnestied having spent three years in la vida clandestina (to  borrow the title of the  youngest Minister of Fidel’s first Cabinet, Enrique Oltuski’s revolutionary memoir) having been indicted on fourteen counts under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.  From the corner of my eye I saw Chief Minister Vardarajaperumal gesturing frantically towards me and when I looked, it was President Jayewardene patting the space next to him on the sofa. When I walked over he declared “I was a friend of your father’s before you were born”.
I don’t know who advises the President these days but I have a shrewd suspicion as to who provides ‘intelligence’. Just how intelligent those briefings are, is best evidenced by President Rajapaksa’s answer to Al Jazeera interviewer James Bays, who quoted something I’d written on the Weliweriya shootings and mentioned me by my previous designation. The President replied that I was with “a powerful NGO”. Now that is entirely without foundation in empirical fact—which is to say it is utterly untrue. I neither am not a member of, nor am I ‘with’ any NGO, local or foreign, powerful or weak and I would dearly love to know the name of the one that the President believes I am affiliated with. The last NGO I belonged to was thirty years ago, and has long been defunct (an anti-racist organization called MIRJE).
Read More

President And BBS Echo Statements About Dayan


Colombo TelegraphOctober 2, 2013 
President Mahinda Rajapaksa who in a recent Al Jazeera interview charged that his former Ambassador to the UN in Geneva was now fulfilling the political agendas of a powerful NGO, was echoing the sentiments expressed not long ago by the Sinhala hardline Bodu Bala Sena organisation.
The President and the BBS
President Rajapaksa on being confronted with the text of a comment written by former Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, Dayan Jayatilleka, his personal political appointment during the Al Jazeera interview shot back that the ex-Ambassador was saying political things because he was now a member of a NGO, a charge Jayatilleka denies.
A few weeks ago in a full length serial feature in the Global Mail, the author Eric Ellis wrote that Bodu Bala Sena General Secretary Galagodaaththe Gnanasara who called Jayatilleka a “mad, bad person” who “gets funding from various people, Christian and other groups, to speak against Buddha, with NGOs.
“So Dayan Jayatilleka is mad? I ask Gnanasara. “A very bad man he is,” Gnanasara says. “They are funded. You look at their background. Are they Buddhist? There are some groups created by the church and they want to destroy Buddhist culture. His (Jayatilleka’s) background is not Buddhist, Milinda is not Buddhist,” Ellis wrote in his Sri Lanka feature.
The statements by the Bodu Bala Sena and the President on Jayatilleka’s involvement with a NGO raises questions about campaign of misinformation regarding Government critics.
SLMC says Govt. could not take the Tamils for a ride
by Our Political Correspondent -  Tuesday, 01 Oct 2013                                                        

General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), M.T. Hassan Ali, requested the government to respect the outcome of the Northern Province polls, and expedite the process to find a political solution to the Tamil question.

Addressing the media, MP Hassan Ali said, although the government had taken the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress and the Muslims in the country for a ride, they could not do so with the Tamils in the North. “The government must address the unresolved humanitarian problems in the North and implement the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC). Failure to do so would lead to the government having to face a big problem at the UNHRC sessions in Geneva next year.

The international community will be all out to act against the government. Therefore, taking the outcome of the elections for the Northern Provincial Council, the government must take prompt measures to address the unresolved issues of the Tamils and the minorities in the country,” Hassan Ali said.

Referring to the manifesto of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), he said the manifesto was an important one as the whole world was speaking about its contents.


“Therefore, the government, without adopting a confrontational approach when engaging with the TNA, must instead explore ways and means of settling issues amicably,” he said.
SLMC threatens to withdraw support to EPC administration
By S.G. Nathan-Tuesday, 01 Oct 2013
Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) has warned that it would withdraw its support to the current administration of the Eastern Provincial Council (EPC) if it drags on without finding satisfactory solution to the land problems faced by the Muslim community in Pulmoddai in the Trincomalee District. The leader of the SLMC in the EPC, A.M. Jameel, issued the warning at the monthly meeting of the EPC held on Monday.

Chairperson of the EPC, Aryawathie Galapathi, presided.
As the meeting was called to order, EPC councilor, M.R. Anwer, of the SLMC brought an urgent motion in regard to the land appropriation now taking place in Pulmoddai, a traditional Muslim village, that is impacting on the Muslim community.
Seconding the motion, Councillor, Jameel, who is the SLMC group leader said, lands belonging to Tamils and Muslims are being appropriated in the Eastern Province but the EPC is unable to stop such appropriation effectively. If the PC administration fails to take prompt action against such appropriation of lands, the SLMC would be forced to withdraw the support it extends to the current administration of the EPC. During the past one year rule of the current EPC administration, no meaningful steps had been taken is taken to safeguard the rights of the people
He wanted the EPC administration to take immediate, meaningful steps to solve the Pulmoddai land problems. “The Chief Minister should exercise his powers to settle land problems faced by the Muslim community.
SLMC Group Leader, A.M. Jameel, hailed the outstanding victory of the Tamil National Alliance in the Northern Provincial council election held last month, and congratulated the  Chief Minister, C.V. Wigneswaran on behalf of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress. (Ceylon Today Online)

For Sinhalese Like Us: ‘Unknown Knowns’ Of The Tamil Man’s Problem

By Vangeesa Sumanasekara -October 1, 2013 
Vangeesa Sumanasekara
Colombo TelegraphLet us lay the cards on the table. The Northern Provincial Council election result has decisively shaken the post-war political balance in the country and redefined the lines of demarcation. The immediate future of the country will depend, to a large extent, on the way the newly elected Northern Provincial Council strategically implement its political agenda and the way the government responds to that. The fundamental challenge at hand for us, in the South, is to prevent a Sinhala-Buddhist fundamentalist counter-mobilization that would ultimately pressurize the government to adopt the former’s position.
Heart of the problem is the following: why does the overwhelming majority of the Sinhalese do not recognize what only appears to be the blatantly obvious and justifiable reality of the aspirations of the Tamils to obtain a certain self-determination in the parts of the country where they are the dominant majority ? The Tamil man’s problem, as I will henceforth call it – and by ‘man’ I, of course, include both men and women – is, in a certain sense, a remarkable phenomenon. It is at once the most elusive and the most obvious problem, depending on one’s standpoint: one that argues that the Tamil man’s problem is a pseudo-problem and the one that believes that it is the most serious and pressing problem in the country right now.
The former position can be summarized thus: ‘Tamils do not have a problem at all. The colonial rulers had intentionally given privileges to Tamils, in order to create an ethnic divide in the country and, by extension to safeguard the smooth functioning of the former’s rule. At the end of the colonial rule, Tamil leaders perceived that they would no longer be getting the privileges they enjoyed during the colonial rule insofar as the numerical majority of the country would become its new rulers, as indeed it should be according to the natural destiny of the country, in tune with its pre-colonial history. With this realization the Tamil leaders started to demand an unjustifiable share in legislative power and started to mobilize the average Tamil people around a mythical homeland, when in fact, the latter did not have a problem being a Tamil. It was the leaders who corrupted the minds of the people in order to maintain the privileges the former enjoyed. Tamil ‘problem’ itself is an illusion’
Action on Resolutions and Decisions under Agenda Item on Human Rights Bodies and Mechanisms


27 September 2013
Action on Decision on the Establishment of a Special Fund for the Participation of Civil Society at Various Fora

In a decision (A/HRC/24/L.16) on the establishment of a Special Fund for the participation of civil society at various fora, adopted without a vote, the Council requests the Secretary-General to establish a Special Fund for the participation of civil society and other relevant stakeholders at the Social Forum, Forum on Minority Issues, and Forum on Business and Human Rights, to be administered by the Office of the High Commissioner. The Council decides that the Special Fund should aim at facilitating the broadest possible participation of civil society representatives and other relevant stakeholders and to give priority to the participation of local and national level non-governmental organizations active in the relevant fields. The Council calls upon States to support the participation of civil society and other relevant stakeholders and encourages intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations and other private or public entities to make voluntary contributions to the Special Fund. 

Austria, introducing the draft decision L.16 on the establishment of a special fund for the participation of civil society at the Social Forum, Forum on Minority Issues and Forum on Business and Human Rights, said that the decision aimed to set up a fund, within the Office of the High Commissioner and with little administrative effort, to support the participation of civil society representatives and other relevant stakeholders at the three United Nations forums on human rights issues. It was the very purpose of the three forums to provide a broad range of civil society organizations with an opportunity to actively participate in the human rights related discussions held at the United Nations. Austria thanked the main co-sponsors, Cuba and Norway, for their excellent cooperation and commended the Office of the High Commissioner for its valuable advice on the drafting of this decision. 

Cuba, introducing the draft decision, said that the fund would make it possible to ensure the participation of all stakeholders in the human rights related discussions at the United Nations. The Office of the High Commissioner would be in a position to support financially non-governmental organizations with limited resources. The participation of small non-governmental organizations from developing countries was very important to the work of the Council. Cuba associated itself with Austria in the appeal to all States to contribute to the fund.

Norway, also introducing the decision, was pleased to be a co-sponsor of the decision. The set-up of the fund aimed to be as simple as possible. It was hoped that the new fund would be perceived as an effective means for donors to strengthen participation by civil society and other stakeholders in the fora.

No withdrawal of army from north, says Rajapaksa

Mahinda Rajapaksa

Mahinda Rajapaksa
MEERA SRINIVASAN-COLOMBO, October 1, 2013
A recent statement by President Mahinda Rajapaksa that there will be no withdrawal of the army from the north has raised concerns about the Sri Lankan government’s intention as regards its demilitarisation.
Return to frontpageExplaining his position, the President, in his interview to Al-Jazeera, asked: “Then, if the other Provincial Councils also asked me to withdraw their army camps all over the country where can I have the army?”
Ever since the ethnic war ended in 2009, different sections in the country have repeatedly raised issues of heavy militarisation in the north and east and the interference of the army in civil matters.
The government’s argument against demilitarisation is often centred on the question “Where is the space for accommodating the troops?”, but what many in the north are asking for is, in fact, not a complete withdrawal of the army but its confinement to barracks.
R. Sampanthan, leader of the Tamil National Alliance — which saw a resounding victory in the first ever Northern Provincial Council polls held on September 21 — said the presence of the army in the north has not been conducive to civil activities and is unwelcome. “Therefore, the military presence must be minimised and confined to the barracks,” he told The Hindu.
Referring to the army’s “disturbing role” during the recent elections, Mr. Sampanthan said that in addition to army personnel engaging in “subtle intimidation”, it was strongly believed that the army was involved in the attack of a TNA candidate’s home two days prior to the elections — an incident that drew some strong comments from international election monitors as well.
“We urge the President to give his careful and earnest consideration to the matter and respect the wish of the people of the Northern Province,” he said. The TNA has also been urging the Centre to replace the current Northern Province Governor — who was formerly serving the army — with a civilian.
Speaking of the implications of militarisation, Dharmalingam Sitharthan, leader of TNA’s constituent People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE) said the army’s constant surveillance resulted in a sense of fear gripping people of the north.
Soon after the elections — considered a political milestone — the focus of political debates in Sri Lanka shifted to the extent of power and autonomy that the new Provincial Council will have. The Sri Lankan Supreme Court’s recent ruling — which came days after the elections — that powers over land will remain with the Centre, and the President’s statement on withdrawing the army have only sparked more concern about the government’s actual intent regarding political devolution.
The developments not only increase the challenge facing the new TNA administration — the TNA received the lion’s share of about 80 per cent of the total votes polled in the recent elections — but also point to the Sri Lankan State’s apparent reluctance to devolve powers meaningfully.
Down but not out
Emphasising the need to address the issue of militarisation, Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, development economist and principal researcher at the Point Pedro Institute of Development said the overt presence of uniformed army personnel may have come down in the north since 2009-10, but there are plain-clothed personnel, virtually everywhere.
“Even in the markets, selling vegetables,” he said.
Instead of a point blank refusal to withdraw the armed forces, the government should look at confining the army to its barracks so that such interference in day-to-day life is minimised, he added.
According to Jaffna Security Forces Commander Major General Mahinda Hathurasinghe the number of military personnel had come down from 26,400 in December 2009, when he took over as commander, to approximately 13,200 now.
Denying all charges against the army — including those by international monitors and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay who was in Sri Lanka a month ago —he said “one or two instances may have been there”.
Challenging the new TNA administration to deliver, he said: “leave the army alone, we have no political role in this country”.

TAMIL’S POLITICAL SPACE RESTRICTED BY SRI LANKA'S 6TH AMENDMENT: VISUVANATHAN RUDRAKUMARAN (TGTE)



"Due to this, the responsibility falls upon the shoulders of the Diaspora to articulate Tamil’s political aspirations fully."
logoNEW YORK, USA, September 26, 2013
1) Tamils back home have demonstrated in the recent elections, that their quest for freedom cannot be suppressed, despite political repression and massive human rights abuses.
2) Sri Lankan President Rajapakse will join the ranks of war criminals Pinochet, Charles Taylor and Fugimore.
3) Due to lack of political space inside the island, responsibility falls upon the shoulders of the Diaspora to articulate Tamil’s political aspirations fully.
16 Decisions taken at International Conference on Accountability for Tamil Genocide in SriLanka
[ Tuesday, 01 October 2013, 12:59.46 PM GMT +05:30 ]
International Conference on Accountability for Tamil Genocide in SriLanka held in Britain recently concluded with 16 decisions taken at this meeting.


Conference organised by the Transitional Government of Tamil Eelam.
This conference aimed at ensuring accountability for those responsible for the genocide of Tamil people and an effective deterrence be provided for such genocide not only in SriLanka but for the rest of the world.

TID operatives harass Thinakkural journalists in Jaffna

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 01 October 2013, 10:22 GMT]
The Chief Editor of Yarl Thinakkural, Mr Atputhananthan, has complained to the regional commissioner of the Sri Lankan Human Rights Commission in Jaffna on Monday that individuals claiming to be from the ‘Terrorist Investigation Division’ were intimidating two of the journalists in the paper, Mr Punitharuban Vinslow and Mr Tharmabalan Vinojith of the paper. “During the last two weeks the individuals claiming to be from the TID have been visiting this office and trying to collect personal data relating to above named two journalists. In the absence of of any official request and hence the inability to obtain any data, they are now engaged in collecting such information from the localities where they live,” the chief editor of Yarl Thinakkural has stated in his letter to the SL HRC. 

Yarl Thinakkural's letter to Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka
Yarl Thinakkural's letter to Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka
Reply to Thinakkural from the Human Rights Commission office in Jaffna
Reply to Thinakkural from the Human Rights Commission office in Jaffna
Yarl Thinakkural's letter to Human Rights Commission of Sri LankaThe TID, which earlier functioned from Colombo is now operating district-wise interrogation offices and is engaged in issuing threats to political activists, student leaders, human rights activists and journalists. 

Following the Northern Provincial Council elections, the TID operatives in Jaffna and Vanni have threatened activists who campaigned for the Tamil National Alliance (TNA). 

The TID has also been targeting human rights activists who met UN Human Rights High Commissioner Navanetham Pillay during her recent visit to North and East. 

The TID investigators have recently summoned the new student leaders from the Jaffna University Student Union by issuing unofficial invitations to their district office at Navalar Road and threatened them of abductions if they engaged in remembrance events or protests such as Pongku Thamizh. 

The General Secretary of the Tamil National Peoples Front (TNPF) and former parliamentarian Selvarajah Kajendren was also ‘invited’ for investigations by the TID in Jaffna. 

The TID, which operates under the direct command of SL presidential sibling and Defence Secreary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, is said to have launched a fresh ‘counter insurgency’ styled operation targeting political activists, rights defenders and journalists. 

There have also been reports of violent attacks launched on Tamil youth at Mallaakam where a hand grendae was lobbed at a place where the youth activists gather. The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian Suresh Premachandran has blamed that the SL military and its operatives have launched almost a war against the Tamil youth that rallied behind the TNA during the election campaign. 

Thoughts On Balloth Ekka Bae

By Jagath Asoka -October 1, 2013 |
Dr. Jagath Asoka
Colombo TelegraphWhen a dog bites a man, there is no story to tell, but when a man bites a dog that story is worth telling. That was my sentiment after seeing the Sri Lankan play—Balloth Ekka Bae—in Staten Island, New York.
I saw something that I have never seen before. All of us have either seen or heard the stories about sleazy, venal politicians; impudent, presumptuous secretaries;   and impotent government officials; how the creator of this play chose to tell the story of our present Sri Lankan society, using a politician, his secretary, a government official, a prostitute, two Buddhist monks, and a make-up artist impressed me. Like all the actors of this play, the actor who played the role of the make-up artist did a wonderful job, but I think a better role would have been a spineless journalist who indirectly supports the current regime for perks, while giving the impression that he is criticizing the government. After seeing the play, one gets the impression that being a prostitute in Sri Lanka is much more honorable than being a politician, a government official, or an impious monk.
For nearly two hours, the actors could keep my attention. Usually, I am the first to leave a show—sometimes within ten minutes—if the show is not entertaining. I have done it several times; most people think that I am crazy to leave a show within ten minutes. I think to squander your time and money when you are unaware of what you are getting into is ignorance, but to continue on that path when you are convinced that the show is going to be bad, is stupidity. During this show, for nearly two hours, I even forgot about Freud’s thoughts about artists: One who desires intensely “honor, power, riches, fame, and the love of women,” but lacks the means to attain them; frustrated the artist becomes introverted and turn with unsatisfied longing from reality to fantasizing; however, the artist is gifted with a mysterious ability to reproduce his daydreams in such a way as to afford satisfaction to other frustrated souls. So, the artist earns the gratitude and admiration of other frustrated souls. Even though I agree with Freud to some extent, I could not help but admire the artists because they gave a wonderful performance.                                                                            Read More

My Dad Was A Man Who Loved Britain

October 1, 2013 |
By Ed Miliband MP, Leader of the Labour Party, writes in Tuesday’s edition of the Daily Mail:
It was June 1944 and the Allies were landing in Normandy. A 20-year old man, who had arrived in Britain as a refugee just four years earlier, was part of that fight. He was my father. Fighting the Nazis and fighting for his adopted country.
On Saturday, the Daily Mail chose to publish an article about him under the banner headline “The Man Who Hated Britain.”
It’s part of our job description as politicians to be criticised and attacked by newspapers, including the Daily Mail. It comes with the territory. The British people have great wisdom to sort the fair from the unfair. And I have other ways of answering back.
Colombo TelegraphBut my Dad is a different matter. He died in 1994. I loved him and he loved Britain. And there is no credible argument in the article or evidence from his life which can remotely justify the lurid headline and its accompanying claim that it would “disturb everyone who loves this country”.
Saturday’s article referred to a single diary entry by my father, written as a 17 year old, describing the suspicion he found of the Continent and the French when he arrived here. To ignore his service and work in Britain and build an entire case about him hating our country on an adolescent diary entry is, of course, absurd.
In fact, his story will make you understand why he loved Britain. Britain saved him from the Nazis. He arrived here as a 16 year-old boy – a Jew – having walked 100 kilometres with his Dad from Brussels to Ostend to catch one of the last boats out before the German soldiers arrived. Read More