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

Monday, August 18, 2014

Central Bank usurps Cabinet powers in bid to change US policy


The UPFA Government’s saga of hiring more PR agencies in the United States to lobby and win over President Barrack Obama’s administration continues. Paradoxically, this is whilst being engaged domestically in a bitter war of words with the US.
Just this week, the External Affairs Ministry (EAM) issued a strange news release with the heading “Examine root cause for US perception of anti-Western sentiment”. It alluded to the security message given to US citizens by the US Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security following a demonstration opposite the US embassy in Colombo protesting Israeli military operations in Gaza.

COPE’s control over public enterprises: A serious lapse in economic policy governance?



August 18, 2014
N.M. Perera: Avoiding Parliamentary control over public institutions is undemocratic
An eternal debate between veteran politician and LSSP leader Dr. N.M. Perera and Minister of State and Deputy Prime Minister J.R. Jayewardene in Parliament during 1965-70 had been on Parliamentary control over State-owned limited liability companies.










India requests Malaysia for evidence on Lankan terror suspect

india flagIndia has requested Malaysian authorities to hand over evidence against an arrested accused who was part of a conspiracy to plan and carry out terror strikes allegedly at the behest of ISI on the US and Israeli consulates in the southern part of India.
Official sources in the National Investigation Agency (NIA) said the request under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), signed by the two countries in 2012, urged Kuala Lumpur to share the evidence against Mohamed Hussain Mohamed Sulaiman, a Sri Lankan national.
India has already secured an Interpol Red Corner Notice against Sulaiman and moved Kuala Lumpur with an application for a provisional arrest till all requirements for extradition are completed, the sources said.
47-year-old Sulaiman is wanted in India for alleged hatching of “criminal conspiracy, acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention, possession of forged or counterfeit currency-notes or bank-notes, terrorist act and raising funds for terrorist act”.
Sulaiman has reportedly told the investigators in Malaysia that he had been tasked to ferry two terrorists from Maldives to a South Indian coast to carry out terror strike at US Consulate in Chennai and Israeli Consulate in Bangalore.
Under the MLAT, either country can approach the other for collecting evidence against an accused.
A senior NIA official had also recently visited Malaysia and held talks with the anti-terror body there.
The terror plot was foiled by an effective coordination of Intelligence Bureau (IB) with foreign countries as Malaysia tipped the central agency about an alleged conspiracy being hatched from Sri Lanka about carrying the attack on US and Israeli consulates in Chennai and Bangalore, the sources said.
Malaysia had stumbled upon the case when its Special Unit was probing money laundering and human trafficking cases. Hussain was alleged to be talking to ISI officers and planning to carry out terror strikes on the two consulates.
The probe was handed over to NIA by the Tamil Nadu Police so that the conspiracy hatched overseas including in Sri Lanka and Malaysia could be unravelled, the sources said.
Besides these two countries, a probe would also be carried out in Maldives from where the suicide attackers were supposed to take a boat ride to reach a coast in Kerala, the sources said.
The case was cracked with the arrest of Sri Lankan national Sakir Hussain on 29 April.
Hussain named Colombo-based Pakistan High Commission’s Visa Consular Amir Zubair Siddiqui as his handler, a charge denied by Pakistan. However, facing heat from India, Siddiqui has been shifted out of Colombo.
According to the plan, Hussain told interrogators that the ISI planned to carry out terror strikes on the two consulates, the sources claimed.
The reason for ISI to pick him up, according to Hussain, was that he had expertise in human trafficking, making of forged passports and smuggling of fake Indian currency.
Pictures of US and Israeli consulates showing various gates and roads leading to the two premises were recovered from his laptop, the sources said, and claimed that these pictures had been mailed to his alleged handlers in Pakistan and its High Commission in Colombo. - Agencies
lankaturthA tense situation erupted at Bastian Mawatha near Pettah bus stand yesterday (16th) evening when owners of shops there opposed an attempt by officials of Urban Development Authority to demolish their shops.
The shop owners had been informed to remove their shops before 12.00 noon yesterday. The Urban Development Authority that promised the Human Rights Commission to provide the shop owners whose shops would be demolished with alternative places before the shops were demolished is acting contrary to the decision says the JVP Member of the Western Provincial Council Attorney at Law Sunil Watagala.
It is reported that a scheme is underway, on a decision by Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, to remove small scale businessmen from Colombo on the pretext of developing Colombo city.



Students who tackled gunman to receive bravery awards

 7News Melbourne



Students who tackled armed robber to receive bravery awards
Students who tackled armed robber to receive bravery awards

NewsTwo students who overpowered a gunman during a McDonalds robbery are among dozens of courageous Victorians to be recognised with bravery awards.
He disarmed and disabled a gunman trying to rob a McDonalds store, but what scared Kasun Fernando more, was telling his parents back home in Sri Lanka that he had risked his life in doing so.
"At first mum was a bit scared, but she's really proud now," he told 7News reporter Brendan Roberts.
His fellow suburban crime fighter, Ishan Chathuranga, avoided telling his parents, fearful of the worry it would cause them.






The brave students tackled an armed robber attempting to raid a McDonalds store in Mulgrave. Photo: 7News Library

In 2012, the pair was waiting at a McDonalds outlet in Mulgrave when a masked man, carrying a sawn-off shot gun stormed the fast food restaurant and tried to rob it.
"When I saw the gun was away from him and he was busy collecting the money, I thought I can take him on, so I jumped on him and put him down," Kasun said.
The pair then held the gunman until police arrived ten minutes later.






Students Kasun Fernando and Ishan Chathuranga wrestled and disarmed a shotgun-wielding robber during an attempted raid on a McDonalds restaurant. Photo: 7News Library

Nearly 300 Victorians were honoured in this year's national bravery awards, announced by the Governor General.
They will be presented with their awards at a ceremony next year.
Students who tackled armed robber to receive bravery awards - Yahoo!7

The late airship pilot Michael Nerandzic received the highest accolade, the Star of Courage, for sacrificing his own life to save three passengers when his blimp burst into flames over Germany three years ago.
The paramedics who spent two weeks talking to miners, Brant Webb and Todd Russell, while they were trapped underground at Beaconsfield have also been honoured.
"We were there 24 hours a day. When they wanted to sleep, they slept, when they wanted to talk, we were there for them."
Fifteen members of the Marysville CFA have also been commended for their bravery on Black Saturday.

As Gaza war subsides, a battle over how it is investigated

Palestinians ride a donkey cart past the ruins of houses which witnesses said was destroyed during the Israeli offensive in Johr El-Deek village near the central Gaza Strip August 17, 2014. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu MustafaBY LUKE BAKER-JERUSALEM Mon Aug 18, 2014 
Reuters(Reuters) - Even before starting work as chairman of a U.N. human rights commission investigating the Gaza war, Canadian law professor William Schabas has been vilified as an apologist for Iran incapable of setting aside his perceived anti-Israel bias.
Full page adverts have been taken out against him in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post, while the Facebook page of Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, a leader of the anti-Schabas campaign, has attracted more than 30,000 "likes".
The make-up of Schabas's commission is still being finalised - George Clooney's fiancee Amal Alamuddin turned down the invitation so another one or possibly two members must be found - but already he is worried about whether the team will be allowed to get into the region to conduct its inquiry.
"There is going to be an issue for the commission getting access, getting into Gaza and going to Israel," he told Reuters in an interview, speaking from his home in England, where he is a professor of international law at Middlesex University.
"Other fact-finding bodies of this nature have had difficulty in the past," he said. "I can't rule it out."
In the meantime, Schabas finds himself defending comments he has made criticising Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and explaining how can set aside his personal feelings about the Middle East to carry out a balanced investigation.
"We all have views about Israel, Palestine and things that have gone on in the past and we all have to put those things to one side," he said. "I'm determined to do that. The question is whether the person is capable of doing it. I think I'm capable of doing it and no one has any proof to the contrary."
HEAVY TOLL
The month-long war against Hamas, with Israel carrying out air strikes, artillery bombardments and ground operations in response to constant militant rocket fire and attacks via tunnels, left more than 2,000 Palestinians dead, most of them civilians, as well as 64 Israeli soldiers and three civilians.
It was the deadliest war in Gaza since Israel unilaterally withdrew from the territory in 2005 and included several incidents in which Israel was accused by rights groups of excessive use of force, war crimes or crimes against humanity.
For its part, Hamas fired rockets indiscriminately at Israeli towns and cities, was accused of using civilians as human shields and of carrying out attacks from next to hospitals, from ambulances and inside densely populated areas.
In two cases, U.N.-run schools being used as shelters were hit by Israeli artillery, killing 25 people, and in another incident four boys playing on a beach were killed by shell fire.
Israel said the area around the schools had been used to fire rockets - rockets were found at three empty U.N. schools - while describing the death of the boys as a "tragic outcome" in which Hamas fighters were the intended target.
Schabas would not be drawn on which events in the war would be most closely scrutinised, saying the commission had to be fully constituted first. But he made clear that the mandate was for a broad investigation, covering both sides.
Israel had already given "brief but nevertheless significant" explanations for some of its actions, he said. The aim would be to get more detail and clarity, from all parties.
"When we see young boys being killed on a beach, it may not be enough to say that we were acting in self-defence and we try to minimise civilian casualties," he said. "We need more detail to understand."
IRANIAN "TOADIE"
From Rabbi Boteach's point of view, there is nothing Schabas can say that will make his investigation credible.
Having once described Netanyahu as "the greatest threat to Israel" and declared him his "favourite" to appear before the International Criminal Court, Schabas is, in the minds of most Israelis, unfit to serve as an independent investigator.
His part-sponsorship in 2011 of a human rights conference in Iran alongside an organisation Boteach described as "fundamentalist and anti-Semitic" has enraged detractors.
"Someone like William Schabas, who has a proven record of bias, who has served as a fig-leaf and toadie for the Iranian regime, has no credibility to adjudicate any kind of human rights commission," the U.S.-based rabbi said in an interview.
"If he had any decency he would recuse himself. He doesn't like Israel and he hates its prime minister."
Netanyahu has not kept out of the fray either, saying that Schabas's inquiry has already been written.
"They have nothing to look for here. They should visit Damascus, Baghdad and Tripoli," he said last week.
Part of the frustration for Israel is what it feels is an excessive focus on its every action, with past U.N. inquiries, most infamously the Goldstone Report into the 2008-9 Gaza war, focusing far more on Israel than any Hamas violations.
More than a year after his report was published, Judge Richard Goldstone separated himself from some of its findings, saying subsequent information provided by Israel had convinced him that some of the original conclusions were wrong.
Schabas said he hoped Israel, which refused to cooperate with Goldstone's inquiry, would not do the same this time.
"Goldstone essentially said 'if I had known then what I know now about certain issues, then the conclusion of my report would have been different,'" said Schabas.
"That is a very compelling argument to encourage Israel to cooperate with this commission. If they think its fruitless or futile to cooperate, it's a good argument to bear in mind."

(Additional reporting by Dan Williams; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

What is the UK government's strategy in Iraq?

MONDAY 18 AUGUST 2014
Channel 4 NewsDavid Cameron insists the government has a "fully worked through" strategy to tackle Islamic State (IS) extremists in Iraq and Europe.
David Cameron insists the government has a "fully worked through" strategy to tackle Islamic State (IS) extremists in Iraq and Europe.
Supplies being checked before being air-dropped over northern Iraq. Credit: Cpl Neil Bryden RAF/MoD/Crown
Above: supplies being checked before being air-dropped over northern Iraq. Credit: Cpl Neil Bryden RAF/MoD/Crown
The prime minister on Monday stressed troops would not get involved in another war in the troubled country - but argued that limited action was needed to prevent violence spreading to British streets.
With the US carrying out air strikes against IS forces, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon revealed at the weekend that the RAF had now deployed the Rivet Joint surveillance aircraft alongside Tornado bombers to provide vital intelligence on extremist movements across Iraq.
Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Mr Cameron said: "What we are trying to do is to help with the situation that we face. First of all, that is the humanitarian situation that we face... but alongside the humanitarian crisis there is also a political and extremism crisis in Iraq that has a direct effect on us back here in the UK."

1. Humanitarian aid

Mr Cameron reiterated on Monday that the British focus remained the humanitarian situation. The UK has so far committed £13m in new assistance in response to the crisis in Iraq.
The UK has delivered aid to displaced Iraqis currently living in refugee camps across northern Iraq and to the 12,000 Yazidis who have escaped from Mount Sinjar to a refugee camp over the Syrian border.
On Saturday, two Airbus flights landed in Erbil carrying UK aid supplies that will now be distributed by UN agencies to people cut off from their homes in camps across the Dahuk region of northern Iraq.
In addition, the RAF at the weekend made seven successful air drops of UK aid over Mount Sinjar including water containers, solar lamps and shelter kits.

2. Arming Kurdish forces

The Foreign Office on Friday said the UK was promoting an "inclusive, sovereign and democratic Iraq that can push back on Isis advances and restore stability and security across the country".
News
Mr Cameron said: "We do want to have, and we do have, a fully worked through strategy for helping allies to deal with this monstrous organisation, IS.
"So we are helping the Kurds, we are working with the Iraqi government to make sure it is more representative of the whole country and, of course, we are working with neighbours and allies to put the maximum amount of pressure on IS and make sure it is properly dealt with.
"We have said that if the Kurds, the peshmerga, want to have arms from us, that is something we would consider favourably.
"Up to now they have not been making that request. Really the sort of weapons they have been using have been more eastern bloc variety, and so they have been supplied by others."
Mr Cameron said he viewed the Kurds as the "first line of defence against these murderous extremists in IS that are causing so much damage in Iraq".

3. Tackle threat to Britain

Finally the Foreign Office said it was working with the international community to tackle the broader threat that Isis poses to the region and other countries around the world.
Mr Cameron added: "We have already had the first IS motivated attacks in Europe; for instance, the dreadful terrorism that took place in Brussels just a few weeks ago."
However, he stressed: "I want to be absolutely clear to you and to families watching at home, Britain is not going to get involved in another war in Iraq. We are not going to be putting boots on the ground. We are not going to be sending in the British Army.
"Yes, we should use all the assets that we have, our diplomacy, our political relationships, our aid, the military prowess, the expertise that we have to help others - we should use these things as part of a strategy to put pressure on Islamic State and make sure this terrorist organisation is properly addressed and it cannot cause mayhem on our own streets."
The PM said "keeping people safe here at home" was his "number one, two and three priorities".

China promotes mixed marriages in Tibet as way to achieve ‘unity’

PhotoErja, center, and Baima, left, celebrate with guests during their traditional Tibetan wedding near Danba, Sichuan Province Jan. 26, 2012. China has turned to promoting interracial marriage in an apparent attempt to assimilate Tibetans and stamp out rebellious impulses. (Carlos Barria / Reuters/REUTERS)



During their controversial six-decade-rule of Tibet, China’s Communist Party leaders have been accused by human rights groups of trying to tame the restive region by imprisoning Tibetan political prisoners, keeping in exile their leader the Dalai Lama and repressing Tibetan religion and culture.

Japan PM stays away from controversial Yasukuni Shrine

Has Shinzo Abe taken the first steps towards Sino-Japanese reconciliation?
By  Aug 18, 2014
Asian CorrespondentA ceremony to mark the 69th anniversary of Japan’s WWII surrender at the controversial Yasukuni Shrine on Friday drew over 80 Japanese politicians, but Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was not among them. The prime minister’s decision to avoid Yasukuni is seen as political move to kick-start a duration of calm in Sino-Japanese relations that could lead to the first diplomatic talks between himself and China’s President Xi Jinping this November.
Since Shinzo Abe and Xi Jinping both came to power in 2012, diplomatic relations have deteriorated to the point that both countries view one another as their leading national security threats and have enhanced their military capabilities accordingly.
In April of this year, Japan lifted its post-war ban on its constitution’s pacifist military policy to allow the exporting of weapons abroad (most notably to Vietnam and the Philippines) and permit its forces to fight overseas. Meanwhile, China continues their power politics approach in the region, reporting last week their intention to build five lighthouses on disputed islands in the South China Sea, and the presence of new Chinese Coast Guard vessels in the waters around the Senkaku Islands, all of which are acts of defiance to America’s calls for a period of peace in the region.
The key factors leading to the downward spiral in their diplomatic relations are both countries territorial claims over the Senkaku Islands (known as the Diaoyu Islands in China), and their differences over wartime history, which in China’s opinion the Yasukuni Shrine epitomises.
The Yasukuni Shrine memorialises 2.47 million Japanese soldiers who have died in the past two centuries, including 14 convicted WW II Class-A war criminals. Seen in Japan as a shrine to commemorate those who gave their lives for their country, it is both a symbol of national pride and a reminder of the importance of peace. However, in countries who suffered under Japanese aggression, such as China and South Korea where the war criminals were at large, it symbolises Japan’s attempt to glorify their military history.
In December 2013, Abe’s one and only visit to the Yusukami Shrine as prime minster triggered a wave of international criticism and resulted in Chinese foreign ministers boycotting all talks with their Japanese counterparts for the first half of 2014. Abe’s conservative stance on Japan’s wartime history, stating in his 2006 book Toward A Beautiful Nation that Japan’s convicted warcrimes were not crimes under domestic law, and that the Nanking Massacre or the use of civilian “comfort woman” for Japanese soldiers never occurred, has isolated Japan and created further tensions with South Korea.
South Korea and Japan are both America’s main allies in Asia and therefore vital to America’s strength in the Pacific. Yet, relations between both countries relations are at an all-time low, allowing China, once a strong supporter of North Korea, to establish a free-trade agreementwith South Korea which will be complete by the end of 2014. This will bring South Korea into China’s sphere of influence and isolate Japan even further. This might explain recent reports of Shinzo Abe possibly visiting Kim Jong Un in North Korea at some point this year, in an attempt to play Xi Jinping at his own game.
As Tokyo and the rest of Asia come to grips with the reordering of power in the region and China’s refusal to moderate its behaviour, it is no surprise that Abe is calling for the first formal set of talks between himself and Xi at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in China this November. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who met briefly with his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida’s earlier this week for the first time in two years, was reported saying that holding a summit between both leaders under the current circumstances would be very difficult.
With Xi very much in the position of power, he won’t be in any rush to sit down and compromise with Japan until the political setting suits him favourably. How a meeting with Abe will be viewed from among China’s hardliners is still unclear. In April 2013, Xi had a brief sideline meeting with former Japanese Prime Minister Hu Fuduka at Boao Forum held in South China. Their meeting, however, was never reported on in the state-owned China Daily newspaper, which is seen the mouthpiece for the Chinese government. This suggests Beijing is uncertain on how to approach such talks.
Although Abe’s act of restraint around such a flashpoint was still condoned by Chinese mediaas he made a donation to Yasukuni, it could set in motion a series of compromises that could lead to an environment where diplomatic relations could come to bloom this November.