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

Saturday, August 2, 2014

If Nuclear War Doesn’t Exterminate Us The Ebola Virus Might


By Dr. Paul Craig Roberts
paulcrobertsAugust 02, 2014

If Nuclear War Doesn’t Exterminate Us The Ebola Virus Might | Global ResearchI just heard on National Public Radio two things that have totally destroyed what tiny bit of belief I still had in American leadership.  I have concluded that the term “intelligent American” is an oxymoron. 

by Thavam

Is United Nations Relevant Any More ?



| by N.S.Venkataraman
( August 2, 2014, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) The ongoing war between Israel and Palestine in the Gaza strip, where more than one thousand people have been killed shows the United Nations in very poor light. In several other areas of conflict such as in Egypt , Syria and Iraq as well as in Afghanistan and others, United Nations has practically played no role in promoting peace and avoiding war and killings. The organisation appears to be now left without ideas and action plans and seem to be operating in vacuum.
The Secretary General of United Nations appears to be satisfied simply by issuing statements and writing letters to the concerned nations in conflict . The ground reality is that the governments in different countries do not seem to be paying any attention to the appeals of UNO for peace and harmony. This makes many wonder as to whether U N has lost its relevance and importance and outlived its utility and purpose.

In all the areas of conflicts, United States of America is involved in one form or the other and directly or indirectly. In the case of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, USA has unilaterally imposed sanction against Russia without taking the UN O into confidence or discussing the matter with the member countries in the United Nations Assembly. Obviously, USA also seems to think that UNO has become a non-entity.

Now, we see, several nations forming economic and interactive groups such as BRICS, SAARC, G 8 etc. and such moves to form alliances between a few countries, perhaps, reflect on the lack of confidence of these countries on the role of UNO in representing the interests of the weak nations and the suspicion of several countries that United Nations is becoming irrelevant.

What is particularly surprising and even shocking in the present scenario is that the Secretary General of the United Nations, who is responsible for running and managing the organisation true to its purpose and role, is not protesting. What is the view of the Secretary General of U N with regard to the inability of UNO to interfere effectively to prevent conflicts and ensure peace is not very clear? The Secretary general is not speaking on the present helplessness of UNO and he is yet to be seen to be making any attempt to mobilise the world opinion about individual governments ignoring the appeals of UNO and rendering it as a toothless body. This makes many people think that the Secretary General lacks confidence and courage of conviction, that is expected of a person holding such crucial position in a world body.

The UNO essentially must function as conscience keeper of the world and call a spade as spade and condemn unequivocally those who are responsible for creating and promoting conflicts. For such functioning of UNO, it needs to show high level of commitment to the cause of world peace and harmony . It must have the stamp of a person in the leadership position with enormous moral authority and the world wide acceptance.

With United Nations now functioning as a mere cosmetic body and as a routine meeting place for academic discussion forum, the focus of the world towards the need for peace and the support for deprived nations is in jeopardy. Such situation should not be allowed to persist and continue by peace loving citizens of the world.

What causes particularly even more concern today is the fact that the sane voice of the peace loving citizens of the world are not being heard , protesting against the willful belittling of the United Nations by several governments. Those concerned about world peace should join together and start a world movement for restoring the rightful place for United Nations in the global arena.

Witness in killing of journalist slain in southern Philippines

By  Aug 02, 2014
Asian CorrespondentA witness to the murder of a broadcaster was shot dead by three armed attackers in Davao City in southern Philippines.
Ritchie Manapol was watching a pool game in his neighborhood when the gunmen shot him in the chest and chin on Thursday evening.
Manapol was a witness to the slaying of 50-year-old Nestor Bedolido, who was gunned down in June 2010.
Reports said the gunmen chased the Manapol into the kitchen of the billiards hall after missing their target on the first attempt.
Manapol died on the spot.
The gunmen immediately fled the scene on a  motorcycle.
Manapol had earlier left the government’s witness protection program (WPP) after testifying in the Bedolido murder trial.
Henry Mirafuentes, the alleged gunman in the slaying of Bedolido, who surrendered to the police in Manila in October 2010, had earlier identified then Davao del Sur Gov. Douglas Cagas and Davao del Sur Mayor Butch Hernandez as masterminds behind the killing of the media man.
Cagas denied the allegation.
The Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) said Bedolido’s killing was work-related as he was writing articles critical of some politicians in Digos City.
Some reports, however, said Bedolido worked as a propagandist for other politicians.
Rose Bedolido, widow of the slain journalist, said the killing of Manapol is related to the murder of her husband.
The National Union of Journalists in the Philippines said164 members of the Philippine media have been slain since it began recording media-related killings in 1986.
The latest victim was Samuel Oliverio, also from Digos City, who was killed in May this year.
The Philippines has been named as among the top 3 most dangerous countries in the world for journalists.
On November 2009, 58 people were killed in a gruesome politically motivated killing. Thirty-two of the victims were journalists and media workers who were covering a convoy of relatives of a gubernatorial candidate in Maguindanao province in Southern Philippines.

Gaza: violence amid Israeli hunt for soldier

Channel 4 News
SATURDAY 02 AUGUST 2014
Israel launches strikes on Gaza and militants fire rockets at Israel after the collapse of a ceasefire. The whereabouts of a missing Israeli soldier, which Israel says Hamas abducted, remain unclear.
News
Hamas said it had no clear information on the whereabouts of Lieutenant Hadar Goldin, an Israeli soldier who went missing after clashes on Friday.
A statement by its armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, said it had lost contact with the troops deployed in the ambush and believed they had probably been killed by "enemy bombardment" - suggesting that Goldin could also have been killed in the attack alongside its troops, if he had been taken prisoner by them. Two other IDF soldiers were killed in the ambush in southern Rafah.
The statement issued on Saturday morning added: "The Qassam Brigades has no information as of this time about the missing soldier, his whereabouts, or the circumstances of his disappearance."
Washington accused Hamas of a "barbaric" violation of the agreement, and the UN, although it said it had not verified the circumstances surrounding the incident, questioned Hamas's commitment to the truce and called for Goldin's release.
Either way, a ceasefire that was supposed to last 72 hours - giving the citizens of Gaza time to stock up on food and care for their dead and injured, as well as giving both sides in the conflict space for longer-lasting peace talks - lasted barely 72 minutes, and since then, violence has escalated again. Israel has also said it will no longer send envoys to peace talks in Egypt this weekend.
Palestinian officials said 55 people had died in Israeli strikes on Saturday, mostly in Rafah, where Goldin disappeared. The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) later messaged Palestinians in an area of northern Gaza, telling them they could return home.
We have told Beit Lahia residents that they may return to their homes. We advised them to avoid explosives placed by Hamas across the area.
In the past 24 hours, we struck over 200 terror targets in Gaza, including a weapons development center located in the Islamic University.
Militants also fired rockets into Israel on Saturday morning, many of which were intercepted by Israel's Iron Dome system.
The latest flare-up of violence was initially sparked by the deaths of three Israeli teenagers, whose bodies were found in Hebron, in the West Bank. A Palestinian teen was then found dead in Jerusalem. Israel launched an air and naval offensive on Gaza on 8 July amid rocket salvoes by Hamas and other groups.
Palestinian officials say 1,650 Gazans, most of them civilians, have been killed in the weeks of violence, including a muezzin who died in an Israeli strike on a northern mosque on Saturday.
Sixty-three Israeli soldiers have been killed, and Hamas rockets have killed three civilians in Israel.

Ukrainian forces advance in east as Russia, West squabble

Ukrainian servicemen, who are members of an artillery section, take cover after firing a cannon during a military operation against pro-Russian separatists near Pervomaisk, Luhansk region August 2, 2014.
Ukrainian servicemen, who are members of an artillery section, take cover after firing a cannon during a military operation against pro-Russian separatists near Pervomaisk, Luhansk region August 2, 2014. REUTERS/Maks LevinReuters
BY TIMOTHY HERITAGE AND MARIA TSVETKOVA-Sat Aug 2, 2014
(Reuters) - Government forces tightened the noose around the main stronghold of pro-Russian rebels in east Ukraine on Saturday and, with diplomacy stalled, Moscow and the West stepped up their war of words.
The seizure of Krasnogorovka and Staromikhailovka, towns just outside Donetsk, brought the army to the edge of one of the last cities still in rebel hands following its advances in the past month. The other is Luhansk, near the border with Russia.
The separatists shot down a drone in the latest violence but both sides observed a truce around the fields in rebel-held territory where a Malaysian airliner was downed last month, enabling international experts to resume the search for victims.
Diplomatic efforts to end the wider conflict, the worst standoff between Moscow and the West since the Cold War ended in 1991, show no sign of progress.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said NATO must rethink its ties with Moscow and called for it to overhaul itself to be able to better defend member states from a potential Russian military threat.
"Six months into the Russia-Ukraine crisis we must agree on long-term measures to strengthen our ability to respond quickly to any threat, to reassure those allies who fear for their own country’s security and to deter any Russian aggression," he wrote in a letter to fellow alliance leaders and NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.
U.S. President Barack Obama also vented his frustration with Russia after speaking to President Vladimir Putin by telephone on Friday.
Obama told reporters the United States had done "everything that we can do," short of going to war, to persuade Putin of the need to resolve the crisis diplomatically.
"But sometimes people don't always act rationally, and they don't always act based on their medium- or long-term interests," he said.
RUSSIA SEES EU 'DOUBLE STANDARDS"
The United States and the European Union imposed new sanctions on Moscow this week after accusing Putin of failing to use his influence with the separatists to end the fighting in the mainly Russian-speaking east.
Putin denies arming the rebels and accuses the West of pursuing a policy of containment against Moscow, using a Cold War-era phrase to suggest Washington wants to reduce Russia's global influence.
In a new attack on Western policy, Russia's Foreign Ministry accused the EU of "double standards", saying it was punishing Russian defence sector with the latest sanctions but "on the quiet" had ended restrictions on sales of military technology and equipment to Ukraine.
"We call again on our EU colleagues to follow sound logic and not conjecture and goading from Washington," the Foreign Ministry said, questioning the EU's "dubious political goals."
The rebellion in east Ukraine began in mid-April, two months after Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted following a shift in policy away from the EU towards Moscow, and one month after Russia annexed the Crimea peninsula from Ukraine.
The army has been making advances against the separatists since President Petro Poroshenko stepped up the military campaign against them after his election in May, and fighting intensified after the Malaysian airliner was downed on July 17.
The United States says the separatists probably shot down the plane by mistake with a Russian-made missile. The rebels and Moscow deny the accusation and blame it on Kiev.
After being unable to reach the plane's wreckage for several days because of the fighting, international experts worked at the site for a second successive day but the results of the day's work were not immediately announced.
Ukrainian officials said this week the bodies of 80 of the 298 victims had not yet been recovered, but the experts found some human remains on Friday and continued their search on Saturday. The dead included 196 Dutch, 27 Australians and 43 Malaysians.

(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk and Aleksandar Vasovic in Kiev, Alexander Winning in Moscow and Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels; Writing by Timothy Heritage; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Islamic State's war on religion - clickable graphic

Channel 4 NewsSATURDAY 02 AUGUST 2014
Militants from the Islamic State have embarked on a campaign of religious destruction in the "caliphate", erasing shrines and mosques connected to the Shia Muslim and Christian faiths.





A large amount of the destruction has taken place in the cities of Mosul, the first city captured by the Islamic State in its recent charge through northern Iraq, and nearby Tal 'Afar.
The Islamic State believes the veneration of tombs in religious places is against the teaching of Allah, and as such has used explosives and bulldozers to destroy centuries-old monuments.
In a video posted by the Islamic State three days ago, entitled Upon the Prophetic Methodology, the Islamic State showcases its destruction of Shia mosques and shrines.
The diversity of Iraq's cultural heritage bears witness to centuries of peaceful coexistence among all communities making up the society of the country.Irina Bokova, Unesco director-general
The video talks of the mujaheddin duty to "remove blatant appearances of evil", while the latest edition of the Islamic State's glossy magazine, Dabiq, features pictures of shrines being destroyed.
Last week the Islamic State militants also destroyed one of the most important mosques in Mosul, the mosque of Prophet Jonah - which is built on a site dating back to the eighth century BC. Jonah is a prophet in both Islam and Christianity, best known for being swallowed by a whale.

'War crime'

Unesco Director-General Irina Bokova said, following the destruction of the mosque of Prophet Jonah: "I am shocked by this violence against the millennial heritage of Iraq. Destroying places of religious and cultural significance is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated."
"The destruction of the shrine, a significant place of worship and pilgrimage with a centuries-old history, is one among several recent attempts to destroy religious and cultural heritage in Iraq."
She added that the intentional destruction of cultural heritage represents a war crime.
"The diversity of Iraq's cultural heritage bears witness to centuries of peaceful coexistence among all communities making up the society of the country," she added.
The destruction of shrines is not limited to Iraq. In another Islamic State video, mujaheddin who have been enforcing sharia law in the Syrian city of Raqqa are rewarded by blowing up a Shia mosque.
Unesco is so concerned about the destruction being carried out by the Islamic State that it has implemented an "Emergency Action Plan" for the area.
'Nothing Could Be Further From the Truth'

As Washington awaits the release of the highly classified probe into the CIA's torture program, John Brennan's integrity is being questioned just when the agency needs it most.

John Brennan's week has gone from bad to worse. The CIA director was already bracing for the imminent release of a 600-page Senate report that, as the world already knows, accuses the CIA of torturing suspected terrorists and misleading Congress about it. Then Brennan wasforced to apologize for CIA employees who spied on the very Senate staff investigating his agency -- an allegation he emphatically denied for months -- following a scathing report by the agency's own inspector general.

Rape charges 'have become a fashion' in India, says Shiv Sena party

Hardline Hindu nationalist party and government ally says rape accusations are 'good weapons to seek personal revenge'
Women in Delhi protest against the gang rape of two teenage girls in Uttar Pradesh state in May. Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP
Women in Delhi protest against the gang rape of two teenage girls in Uttar Pradesh state
 and agenciesA rightwing 
Saturday 2 August 2014 
Indian party has said rape charges have "become a fashion" in the country.
The hardline Hindu nationalist party Shiv Sena made the comments in an article supporting a police officer who has been accused of rape. It questioned victims' intentions for reporting crimes, saying rape allegations were "good weapons to seek personal revenge".
It follows accusations that Sunil Paraskar, a senior police officer, raped and molested a model over a three-month period.
"After he has served for so many years in the police force, one model now charges DIG [deputy inspector general] Sunil Paraskar with rape and in one night he becomes a villain," the party wrote. "Such accusations have become good weapons to seek personal revenge.
"Cases of charging men with molestation and rape in [high society] to create hype is on a rise now. It has almost become a fashion," wrote Shiv Sena, which is a key ally of prime minister Narendra Modi's government.
It added that the Indian judicial system needed to "open its eyes" and protect the innocent because "all the laws in the country favour women so anyone can slap any charge against anyone".
The alleged victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, criticised Shiv Sena's comments. "This matter is in court," she said. "No one should be commenting in sensitive matters like this without knowing all the facts."
It was reported last week that the woman had been placed under police protection after saying that she feared for her life.
India has toughened its sexual assault laws following the fatal gang rape of a student on a bus in New Delhi in December 2012 which sparked nationwide protests. But the move has done little to stem attacks against women.
Last month, the alleged rape of a six-year-old girl in a school triggered a series of street protests by angry parents and political activists over the lack of safety for women and children in the country.
A 16-year-old girl in Delhi was gang-raped at gunpoint in June, and a seven-year-old girl was found hanging from a tree in a village in West Bengal state. Locals suspect she too had been raped.
In May, two girls in Uttar Pradesh state found hanging from a tree had been gang-raped in a case that sparked public revulsion.
Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata party promised a zero tolerance approach to violence against women after it swept to power in May elections. However, two state BJP ministers appeared to trivialise rape in June when one said the attacks happened accidentally and another said they were "sometimes right, sometimes wrong".
Uttar Pradesh's Samajwadi party leader Mulayam Singh was the target of public anger in April when he told an election rally that he opposed a recently introduced death penalty for gang-rapists, saying: "Boys make mistakes."
Shiv Sena, which has a history of inciting violence, was criticised this month after some of its MPs tried to force-feed a chapati to a Muslim restaurant manager fasting for Ramadan because they were unhappy about food at a government canteen.

FACTORY BLAST in eastern CHINA KILLS at least 68 BREAKING NEWS 2014


Published on Aug 2, 2014
BBC World NEWSBBC World NEWS
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FACTORY BLAST in eastern CHINA KILLS at least 68 BREAKING NEWS 2014
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Factory blast in eastern China kills at least 68

China suffered its worst industrial accident in a year on Saturday when an explosion killed at least 68 people and injured more than 120 at a factory in China that makes wheels for U.S. carmakers, including General Motors.

The blast in the wealthy eastern province of Jiangsu occurred around 7:30 a.m. in Kunshan city, about an hour's drive from Shanghai, after an explosion ripped through a workshop that polishes wheel hubs.

An preliminary investigation suggested that the blast at Kunshan Zhongrong Metal Products Co Ltd. was triggered when a flame was lit in a dust-filled room, the local government said at a press conference, describing the incident as a serious safety breach.

Several officials from the firm have been since been detained, the government said. State news agency Xinhua said five company representatives were held by authorities.

Survivors with charred skin were seen being wheeled into ambulances, as residents recalled hearing the explosion from two kilometres away. At the site of the blast, television images showed wrecked walls and heavy machinery that was hurled through windows.

"We heard a really loud blast at about 7 a.m. this morning so we rushed out of our dormitories," said Zhou Xu, a 26-year-old working at a plant across the site.

"First the ambulance came, then as the news surfaced in the media, many families - especially the wives - rushed to the site to see if their husbands were okay."

A security guard from an adjacent factory, who declined to be named, said the impact from the explosion was so great that it shattered the windows of his guard house, located about 500 metres away from the site of the blast.

Friday, August 1, 2014

12 Little Known Laws of Karma (That Will Change Your Life)

12 Little Known

 9 October, 2013 at 08:06
What is Karma? Karma is the Sanskrit word for action. It is equivalent to Newton’s law of ‘every action must have a reaction’. When we think, speak or act we initiate a force that will react accordingly.
12 Little Known Laws of Karma (That Will Change Your Life) by Thavam
 by Thavam