Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

"When the well is dry we know the real worth of water"
Benjamin Franklin, 1840


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By Ranjit Mulleriyawa- 

Drought is not an unusual event for inhabitants of Sri Lanka’s ‘dry zone’. It is a reality which they have had to contend with since time immemorial. It is the necessity of tiding over the rain-less (dry) period extending from April to September, which resulted in the construction of an ingenious system of village ‘tanks’ ( reservoirs) by our ancestors, to collect and preserve the precious rainfall of four months (October-January) during the North-East monsoon season. What is unique this year is the degree of severity of the drought occurring as early as July.

Nirupama gets 3 bowsers of water while Colombo is parched


The crisis in the supply of water to Colombo which had been disrupted for more than 72 hours has not been fully normalized despite it was restored say reports.
The pipeline supplying water to Colombo was raised when the bridge at the Battaramulla – Parliament Road junction was raised to allow pleasure boats to sail under it. This was done without consulting engineers of the Water Supply and Drainage Board on an arbitrary order from the Urban Development Authority. Due to inexperience of those who handled the undertaking a coupling burst and people in many parts of Colombo had to undergo immense suffering without water. After 72 hours the pipeline was restored but not in a scientific manner. As a result the coupling is unable to stand the pressure and to prevent a breakdown only two pumps can be used instead of the required three pumps.
As only two pumps are used the pressure would be very low and it would take 8 more hours to supply all the areas in Colombo. The low pressure in the supply would continue say reports.

Nirupama gets 3 bowsers of water while Colombo is parched

lankaturth
WEDNESDAY, 06 AUGUST 2014
 Parliamentarian Nirupama Rajapaksa has pressurized the Water Supply and Drainage Board to supply her with three bowsers of water. It is revealed that the water is needed to fill the swimming pool in her private residence.
Prime Minister’s daughter Dilini Jayaratna too had phoned the Maligakanda Operational Center of the Water Supply and Drainage Board yesterday (5th) night and had requested to send a bowser of water immediately. The Chairman of the Board had ordered to supply the bowser of water immediately.
Accordingly, a bowser with 500 liters of water had been sent to the residence at 172/14E at Polhengoda and the bowser and the crew had spent three hours to supply the water needed.
Later, a swimming pool on the second floor of the residence too had been filled with water.
Meanwhile, the water crisis that originated due to the move to raise the bridge over Diyawanna at the Battaramulla and Parliament Road junction on a direction by Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has continued for the fifth day today (6th). A large number of people have been severely inconvenienced due to the breakdown of water supply to areas such as Madapatha, Piliyandala, Hokandara, certain areas in Maharagama. People in Kirulapana area too complain that they receive only trickle of water due to low pressure.
Only two pumps are used to pump water due to the inability of the coupling to withstand the pressure at the place where the pipeline was raised to allow pleasure boats to pass under the bridge over Diyawanna. It is stated that there is the danger of the pipeline bursting if a third pump is used.
COPE Interim Report reveals Rs 9.7 B loss 

By Zahrah Imtiaz-August 6, 2014

The three biggest losers, the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC), Mihin Air and Ceylon Fisheries Corporation (CFC) accumulated losses amounting to Rs 9.7 billion during 2013, according to the Fourth Interim Report released by the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE).
 
The CPC had suffered loses up to Rs 6.3 billion, Mihin Air Rs 3.2 billion and CFC Rs 75 million. The COPE report was submitted to Parliament by its Chairman D.E.W. Gunasekara yesterday.
COPE audited these organizations from 8 October 2013 to 8 April 2014. The report investigated 47 public enterprises. Out of the 47, 18 were business ventures and 29 nonprofit institutions. The CPC, Mihin Air and CFC were the only business ventures which suffered such losses.
 
In the meantime, the Urban Development Authority, Ceylon Fishery Harbours Corporation, Cooperative Wholesale Establishment and Sri Lanka State Plantations Corporation had not submitted financial statements.
Of the nonprofit institutions investigated, nine had experienced deficits. They were the National Youth Services Council (Rs 253 million), National Transport Commission (Rs 190 million), Rubber Research Board of Sri Lanka (Rs 84 million), Vocational Training Authority of Sri Lanka (Rs 49 million), Central Environmental Authority (Rs 28 million), Rajarata University of Sri Lanka (Rs 18 million), Disaster Management Centre (Rs 9 million), Tertiary and Vocational Education Commission (Rs 4 million) and Post Graduate Institute of Pali and Buddhist Studies (Rs 3 million). These deficits were not termed losses as they provide welfare to the people.
 
The COPE report also observed that the CPC had incurred an estimated loss of Rs 8.3 billion on the procurement of petroleum products during the period from 1 June 2011 to 30 June 2012 due to "inefficiencies such as delays in laboratory tests, lack of coherent communication and preparedness to meet the challenges of a volatile market, overpayments, delays in planning orders for procurement of petroleum products, uneconomical blending of high and low octane petrol".

The CPC had overpaid US$ 2,060,842 to a foreign company (UAE Company) due to the inclusion of the premium of US$ 54 twice in the agreement entered into with the said Company to procure petrol.
The Central Environmental Authority (CEA) on the other hand had overpaid a contractor Rs 19 million in its Solid Waste Management Project in Dompe, "as the tender had been offered to the sixth highest bidder neglecting the justifications of the lower bidders".
 
The CEA had also faced further losses amounting to Rs 30 million when it paid Rs 295 per cubic metre instead of charging the contractor Rs 45, for the removal of 88,648 cubic metres of earth.
The COPE report has revealed that no proper investigation was carried out by the CEA when "issuing the environmental certificate to the Gloves Manufacturing Factory in Rathupaswala and the certificate had been issued by testing only the water samples provided by the factory owner".
 
UNP MP, Eran Wickremeratne, who addressed a media briefing on the report said, the Auditor General had identified four types of audit opinions. They were that of 'unqualified, qualified, disclaimer and adverse'. The unqualified opinion indicated that the Auditor General could not find significant financial violations in a public enterprise, while qualified opinion was expressed when the Auditor General found issues in the financial information of a public enterprise. "Of the 47 institutions we have investigated only seven received unqualified opinions, while 40 other received qualified opinions," observed MP Wickremaratne.

Rajapaksa Mihin Lanka Among Largest Loss-Making Public Companies


Colombo Telegraph
BAugust 6, 2014
Rajapaksa state-owned airline Mihin Lanka has been listed in the 4th interim report released by the Committee on Public Enterprise (COPE) as one of the largest three loss making state owned companies of 2013.
Mahinda Rajapaksa
Mahinda Rajapaksa
The report submitted to the Parliament by COPE Chairman D. E. W. Gunasekara yesterday revealed that Mihin Lanka – the first public venture that was named after President Rajapaksa, has incurred a loss of Rs. 3.2 billion along with Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) and Ceylon Fisheries Corporation with the total losses mounting up to Rs. 9.7 billion in 2013.
Interestingly, although the COPE audits had been carried out on 47 public enterprises, the Urban Development Authority (UDA) that is presently under the strict management of Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had not submitted its financial statements.
The COPE audits had been carried out between October 8.2013 and April 2014.

Israel, Genocide, And The ‘Logic’ Of Zionism

In our Bizarro World, “Judeo-Nazism” is for real
| by Justin Raimondo
( August 5, 2014, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) History is full of ironies: World War I, marketed to Americans as a “war to end all wars,” paved the way for an even more massive slaughter. The invasion and conquest of Iraq – which was supposed to augur what George W. Bush hailed as a “global democratic revolution” – instead ushered in a new era of chaos, bloodshed, and tyranny in the region. And in the year 2014, the state of Israel, founded in large part as a reaction to the Holocaust, has embarked on a policy of genocide in Gaza.

Exclusive: 'Why I quit over Gaza' - Baroness Warsi

Channel 4 NewsTUESDAY 05 AUGUST 2014
In her first interview, the minister who quit over Gaza, says she had to stand down because of the UK's "indefensible" position. Sayeeda Warsi says the government should not have "dragged its heels".




Baroness Warsi Quits Over Gaza: First Interview With Former Foreign Office Minister

Posted: 

The Huffington Post UKForeign Office minister Baroness Warsi has dramatically quit the government, citing the UK's "morally indefensible" position on the conflict in Gaza.
gaza rubbleIn her resignation letter to the prime minister, David Cameron, Warsi wrote that Britain's support for Israeli military action against Hamas, which has resulted in the deaths of more than 1,800 Palestinians over the past month, "is morally indefensible, is not in Britain's national interest and will have a long term detrimental impact on our reputation".

How will Gaza's children carry their scars into adulthood?

The children who survive Operation Protective Edge will emerge to find their previous lives almost unrecognizable, as the families, schools, hospitals and mosques that framed their world are systematically destroyed.
By Olivia Watson-Published August 5, 2014
Israel’s ground invasion of the Gaza Strip has seen the child death toll climb so rapidly – at the rate of one child killed every hour – that the exact circumstances of each killing are now barely mentioned in reports. But lists of fatalities, 329 and rising, obscure the reality that awaits Palestinian children in Gaza. Those who survive will emerge to find their previous lives almost unrecognizable, as the families, schools, hospitals and mosques that framed their world are systematically destroyed.
Three-year-old Firas Farhat lives with his brother, father and mother in a makeshift tent on a sidewalk outside Shifa Hospital. Their home in Gaza's Shejaiya neighborhood was destroyed by Israeli shelling. (photo: Samer Badawi)
Three-year-old Firas Farhat lives with his brother, father and mother in a makeshift tent on a sidewalk outside Shifa Hospital. Their home in Gaza’s Shejaiya neighborhood was destroyed by Israeli shelling. (photo: Samer Badawi)
Ahmad Tawfiq Ahmad Abu Jami’, an 8-year-old boy from Khan Younis, lived through five previous Israeli military offensives in the Gaza Strip. In 2006, two Israeli military operations claimed the lives of 143 children; in 2008 and 2009, two more assaults killed 385; in 2012, yet another led to 33 more deaths. A total of 561 children killed in six years, according to evidence collected by Defence for Children International Palestine. After surviving five attacks, Ahmad did not survive the most recent one: He died in an airstrike that killed 25 members of his family, 18 of whom were children.
Had he survived, he would have become one of thousands more suffering from the effects of the bombardment. More than 326,000 children, according to the latest UN figures, need immediate, specialized psycho-social support after experiencing the deaths of family members, injury or homelessness. This figure includes children fleeing indiscriminate attacks on residential buildings, driven to UN refugee shelters where intense overcrowding exposes them to potential abuse, exploitation and violence. More than 260,000 people – or 15 percent of the total population of Gaza – are taking shelter in UNRWA schools.
There is no safe space now for children in Gaza. Those who escape death the first time around find in their refuges more death and destruction. Hospitals and schools, theoretically protected from military attack under international law, are targeted indiscriminately by the Israeli military, in attacks described by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights as tantamount to war crimes.
A Palestinian man watches on as a child breathes through a medical ventilator. (photo: Activestills.org)
A Palestinian man watches on as a child breathes through a medical ventilator. (photo: Activestills.org)
In Beit Hanoun, an UNRWA school was directly targeted by the Israeli military, killing 15 people, most of whom were women and children. Reports included a mother and her one-year-old among the dead. When the school was hit, the children and their families who had fled there were preparing to evacuate again, with UN staff trying to coordinate a window with the Israeli army for the removal of civilians. The request was never granted.
Children recovering from initial attacks are then subjected to multiple ordeals, such as two-year-old Ibrahim al-Sheikh Omar, who died when shrapnel from an airstrike hit him as he lay recovering from a previous injury in the intensive care unit at Muhammad al-Durra Hospital.
Those who do survive these attacks will continue to pay the price for many years. Amputees like Mohammad Baroud, 12, who lost both his feet in an explosion that killed 11 of his neighbors, will require lifelong medical care and support. The damage wrought on Gaza’s infrastructure is so profound that children needing treatment will be forced to wait while hospitals are repaired and re-equipped with medical supplies.
For the children who manage to escape physical injury, the psychological effects of this latest operation will be hidden, but severe and resounding. Many have lost one or both parents, or other family members. Some have lost their entire extended families. All have experienced violence, fear and instability at close quarters.
A Palestinian girl cries after an Israeli attack on Beit Hanoun elementary schools mourn in Kamal Edwan Hospital, Jabalyia, Gaza Strip, July 24. The school was being used as a shelter by 800 people. The attack killed at least 17 and injured more than 200 of the displaced civilians. Israeli attacks have killed 788 Palestinians and injured around 5,000 in the current offensive, most of them civilians. (photo: Anne Paq/Activestills)
A Palestinian girl cries in Kamal Edwan Hospital, after an Israeli attack on Beit Hanoun elementary school, Jabalyia, Gaza Strip, July 24. The school was being used as a shelter by 800 people. The attack killed at least 17 and injured more than 200 of the displaced civilians. (photo: Anne Paq/Activestills)
As children reel from the onslaught on Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accused Hamas of “using telegenically dead Palestinians for their cause,” putting the responsibility for every child death squarely on Palestinian shoulders. Meanwhile, the Israeli authorities block public discussion of the deaths of Gaza’s children.
For a generation of young Palestinians, rhetoric of this kind will create a mindset that can only serve to move the region further away from a lasting peace. Those in Gaza who are children now will take their scars into adulthood, potentially shaping the trajectory of the conflict in years to come.
For now, international efforts are rightly focused on an immediate end to the violence. Those who understand the impact of Operation Protective Edge on the lives of Palestinian children, however, will strive for more: for an end to Israel’songoing blockade of the Gaza Strip; for a reappraisal of the impunity offered to the Israeli government that allows these massacres to take place. Only then will Gaza’s children be able to pick up the pieces, for the sixth time.
Olivia Watson is an advocacy officer with Defence for Children International-Palestine, an independent child-rights organization dedicated to defending and promoting the rights of children living in the occupied Palestinian Territory. DCI-Palestine provides free legal assistance to children, collects evidence and conducts advocacy targeting various duty bearers. Follow DCI-Palestine on Twitter and Facebook.

Pressure grows on Cameron after Warsi quits on Gaza

More Tory MPs are calling for the government to take a stronger stance on Gaza, as the Commons International Development Committee say they are "shocked" at conditions of the Gaza blockade.
News
Channel 4 NewsWEDNESDAY 06 AUGUST 2014
David Cameron was coming under renewed pressure from a handful of MPs who are coming out in support of Baroness Sayeeda Warsi.
In an exclusive interview with Channel 4 News, she said she was quitting government because the cabinet's position on Gaza was "morally indefensible".
"I think there is a sincerely held view in government that the best way to resolve this matter is to try and be as accommodating as possible to the Israeli government, to try and through that seek influence with them, and through that to try and move them to a more positive decision," she said. "I'm not sure that policy is working."
Following her stand, Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, and Vince Cable, the business secretary, made a public call for all arms licences to Israel to be suspended. Mr Clegg said he agreed with Baroness Warsi that there were "serious questions" about the licences.
Her resignation also prompted the cross-party Commons International Development Committee to say that even aside from the recent violence, some of the controls on the people in Gaza were not "proportionate" and in some cases ran counter to international law.
Gazans are rarely allowed to leave the territory and have many supplies restricted by Israel, and Hamas has said that Israel removing the blockade needs to be part of any longer-term peace plan.

Tory MPs line up to back Warsi

Within his own party, the prime minister is feeling the heat from some MPs over the government's stance on the four-week long conflict which has seen the deaths of 1,834 Palestinians, mostly civilians. Sixty-four Israelis have also been killed, mainly soldiers.
Sir Nicholas Soames, MP for Mid Sussex, also said that the government should "note and learn" from her resignation.
The government needs to note and learn from the resignation of Sayeeda Warsi she was right to leave over a matter of such great importance
Sarah Wollaston, MP in South Devon, also told Channel 4 News that she had written to David Cameron about her objections to the way the government is handling the situation, and that sanctions against Israel should be considered (see video below).
"I think it is time for the government to take a far stronger line on that. And if that involves applying sanctions, I think I'm afraid we've got to that stage," she said.
Ms Wollaston, a former doctor and chair of the commons health committee, said she was motivated on humanitarian grounds: "What we need to do is ask ourselves: would we view that as a war crime, if it was any other aggressor, and any other civilian population. And if we would, we should treat it accordingly."
Other leading Conservatives who have voiced their support for Baroness Warsi include Alistair Burt, the former Foreign Office minister responsible for the Middle East; Lord Deben, the former Environment Secretary; and former Immigration Minister Damien Green. Margot James, MP for Stourbridge, has also written a letter to the foreign secretary over Gaza.
On Monday, Crispin Blunt MP also told Channel 4 News that the Israeli shelling of a UN school was a "criminal act" (see video below).
Gaza Calling: All out on Saturday 9 August 

Day of Rage


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Aftermath of Israeli airstrike on Palestinian home in Gaza.
Gaza Calling: All out on Saturday 9 August Day of Rage
 by Call from Palestine
Global BDS MovementJoin the Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions Movement today. Demand Sanctions on Israel Now.
As we face the full might of Israel’s military arsenal, funded and supplied by the United States and European Union, we call on civil society and people of conscience throughout the world to pressure governments to sanction Israel and implement a comprehensive arms embargo immediately.
Gaza Calling All Out on Saturday 9 August Day of Rage by Thavam
Spain embargos arms sales to Israel


Israeli soldier






















Tuesday, 05 August 2014
Middle East MonitorSpain has frozen all arms and technological sales to Israel in protest against its ongoing brutal war against the Gaza Strip and the killing of thousands of Palestinian civilians, El Pais newspaper revealed.


The newspaper described this decision as purely "political" and was made last week by a committee consisting of the president, treasury, economy ministry, foreign ministry and defence ministry.

Spain is reported to have sold nearly €5 million in arms sales to Israel last year.

The Spanish decision comes hours after Britain announced it was reviewing licenses to export weapons and military technology to Israel.

A spokeswoman for the British government said yesterday that the UK is reviewing all arms export licenses to Israel because of the escalating conflict between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. "We are currently reviewing all export licenses to Israel to make sure they are appropriate," she said.

However, ministers said they would not stop licensing military equipment to Israel outright because they believed the country had a "legitimate right to self-defence".