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 23, 2014

Understanding Gnanasara Through A Psychological Perspective


Colombo Telegraph
By Dhammika Herath -August 23, 2014
Dr. Dhammika Herath
Dr. Dhammika Herath
Psychopathy and Sociopathy are often misunderstood and misquoted in contemporary psychiatry, as well as among the general public. However, the study of this fascinating aspect of human personality is important in order to understand certain individuals that we deal with. There is hardly ever an opportunity to analyse someone who so publicly demonstrates a range of behaviours, impulses and cognitions as well as interpersonal relations which are the cornerstone of one’s personality.
In recent months, I have had the opportunity to observe this man who has exposed himself so much in the media. An analysis of his psychological make up is warranted and timely.
Psychopathy is not a very well researched clinical entity, as most psychopaths are either incarcerated or in high public and business offices. It is not a mental condition that can be successfully treated. The problem of personality disorder is where the sufferer is neither aware of the condition, nor distressed by the symptom profile. For him the entire world is wrong but not himself.
His thought processes are egosyntonic and do not cause any distress in him. His behaviour, however much deviant, immoral and unethical, are normal to him, and he will justify them, even going to extreme lengths to justify them.
gnanasara GAHis interpersonal skills and relations are tattered, but he blames the others for his faults. He lies, deceives, manipulates, even becomes violent to reach his ends and goals. Those actions and behaviours leave no guilt or remorse, and he rather enjoys the suffering of others, and will not hesitate to inflict pain in others in order to derive pleasure or monetary or other material or sexual gains. Moreover, he will act predatorily, using others’ money and property for his own pleasure.
Psychopaths usually live a parasitic life, they do not work, simply live at the expense of others and tend to be proud of it. With air of grandiosity, they tend to be charming, sweet talking and when necessary violently aggressive and will justify their most vicious actions.
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Climate change is the ultimate risk multiplier – Prof. Munasinghe 

By Rishar Saleem- August 23, 2014

Ceylon Finance Today: "Sustainomics, seeks to make development more sustainable. It helps to practically address two major global challenges — sustainable development and climate change. Development problems like poverty are already formidable. Climate change is the ultimate risk multiplier, worsening the other crises. Its worst impacts fall on the poor who are least responsible for the problem," these were the opening remarks made by Professor Mohan Munasinghe presenting his keynote address at a seminar organized by the University of Sri Jayewardenepura (USJ) recently.

Professor Mohan Munasinghe said this delivering his keynote address titled 'Sustainable economics: A trans-disciplinary framework providing integrated solutions for global problems', at the international conference on Multidisciplinary approaches harnessing knowledge and harmonizing diversities, organized by the Faculty of graduate studies of the USJ.

Stressing further he said, "The world currently faces multiple economic, social, and environmental threats. The economic collapse is the most urgent. The social crisis arises from global poverty, and inequity and inappropriate governance. Finally, mankind has caused severe environmental damage, including climate change. Present trends could destabilize global society. The way forward requires better use of economic stimulus packages to support green investments, social safety nets, and better price policies". Elaborating further he said, "A long-term vision goes beyond our current focus on surface level indicators. Instead, deeper issues need to be addressed systematically focusing on both the immediate drivers and underlying pressures. The most effective approach is to integrate climate change policies into national sustainable development strategy, using the sustainomics framework". Explaining further Prof. Munasinghe said, "First, is the practical, step-by step approach of "making development more sustainable" (MDMS). Second, we need a balanced and integrated analysis from three main perspectives: social, economic and environmental. Third, the analysis must transcend conventional boundaries imposed by discipline, space, time, stakeholder's viewpoints, and operationality. "Finally, sustainomics provides many practical tools," he said.

Speaking on the risks involved and their mitigation he noted further, "This approach is applied globally to reconcile climate change risk management and development aspirations. Some practical national level applications are also described involving integration of adaptation and mitigation polices into sustainable development strategy. Specific cases include macroeconomic agriculture and water, and renewable energy projects. Although the issues are complex and serious, both climate change and sustainable development problems could be solved together, provided we begin immediately".

The conference was chaired by senior professor Dean Faculty of Graduate studies USJ, Swarna Piyasiri, while the chief guest was University Grants Commission Chairperson Professor Kshanika Hirimburegama. Vice Chancellor of USJ Dr. N.L.A. Karunaratna also participated at the inauguration of the seminar.

Accessing the seas of Mannar

By Thulasi Muttulingam-August 23, 2014 
Time and tide, they say, wait for no man. Now though, through the intervention of an infrastructure project funded by the European Union to help fishermen, tides have been taken out of the equation.

Dengue on the rise 500 cases a week 

By Umesh Moramudali-August 23, 2014
 
Nearly 500 dengue patients in and around the country have been identified each week, Head of the Epidemiology Unit Dr. Paba Palihawadana said.
 
According to statistics from the Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry, 58 people had died due to dengue so far this year.
Dr. Palihawadana said, programmes were being carried out to control the spread of dengue by eradicating mosquito breeding places.
 
"With the onset of the rains, special programmes will be carried out countrywide, with the support of the Presidential Task Force, to eradicate dengue breeding places, on 29 and 30 August," she added.
 
Most dengue patients, 60%, have been reported from the Western Province, and the Colombo District reported 40%.
She added, the number of dengue patients reported per week had reduced when compared to the figures of May, during which 2,000 cases had been reported per week.

Namal at Sanath’s dinner for journalists!

sanath wife

Saturday, 23 August 2014
Journalists became worried when they saw president’s son, Hambantota district MP Namal Rajapaksa, present at a dinner hosted by deputy posts minister and chief cricket selector Sanath Jayasuriya for them in order to reconcile with recent media criticism of him.
Since the dinner was strictly for journalists, some had gone there even without informing their respective workplaces.
Due to Namal’s presence, they had become severely inconvenienced, and had tried to hide themselves from him.
Below is a picture taken of Namal with some journalist supporters of his, at Sanath’s Q-Bar where the dinner took place.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa suddenly leaves for US!

mrPresident Mahinda Rajapaksa has suddenly left for the United States, say Temple Trees sources.
According to our sources, the trip had been a previously unannounced one.
When contacted, a very close friend of the president told us that the president’s brothe Dudley, who lives in the US, had been in Sri Lanka recently, and that the two had left early today (23) for a minor medical test of the president.
The silent approach by the Rajapaksa family over this trip has given rise to speculations. However, the president’s office has officially announced that the president was preparing to to leave for New York to address the annual meeting of the United Nations.

India reviews state hospitals to end widespread corruption

Women wait for a routine examination with doctors in Anand town, about 70 km south of Ahmedabad August 24, 2013.
Women wait for a routine examination with doctors in Anand town, about 70 km south of Ahmedabad August 24, 2013.  REUTERS/Mansi Thapliyal/FilesNEW DELHI Sat Aug 23, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - The government on Saturday ordered a review of activities at all state-owned hospitals to end what the health minister called systemic corruption, as part of the new administration's crackdown on malpractice in the healthcare sector.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has vowed to eradicate graft in India's $74 billion healthcare industry, where doctors receiving extra payments for referring patients to a particular clinic or receiving gifts from companies for prescribing their drugs are common.
"There are many aspects to corruption in hospitals which as a medico I know exist," Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said in a statement.
"If money is made in the allocation of beds or as kickbacks from suppliers, it is sleaze. What is equally corrupt is the silent practice of reserving beds and facilities for employees or VIPs."
Private companies dominate India's healthcare system, while government hospitals are overcrowded and lack the resources to cater to growing demand.
Though the industry is growing at 15 percent per year according to consulting firm PwC, public spending on healthcare has stagnated at about 1 percent of gross domestic product for years.
That compares to 3 percent in China and 8.3 percent in the United States, according to a World Bank database for 2012.
The review ordered on Saturday would also apply to New Delhi's premier All India Institute of Medical Sciences, where thousands of patients queue up daily for subsidized treatment.
The government crackdown started last month after a media report exposed alleged kickback arrangements between diagnostic laboratories and doctors in India's capital.

In recent months, leading doctors and advocacy groups have teamed up to try to root out corruption from the system, forming anti-graft panels at hospitals and writing open letters to the government.

Russian trucks leave but Ukraine says they’re taking military parts with them






 A convoy of Russian aid trucks that had entered Ukraine without permission returned to Russia on Saturday, but Ukrainian officials continued to express alarm, saying that Russians had loaded sophisticated military equipment onto the vehicles before they left.
Russian Trucks Leave but Ukraine Says They’Re Taking Military Parts With Them by Thavam

The rise of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions

Israel has failed to respond effectively to the rise of the BDS movement internationally.

Last updated: 19 Aug 2014 15:47
Israel has attempted to undermine the development of a broad-based decentralised movement for justice in clumsy, heavy-handed ways, writes Moor [AP]
The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement was founded by a broad coalition of Palestinian civil society groups in 2005. The intervening years have seen BDS develop and gain force in tandem with the emergence of two phenomena that will define the Palestinian fight for freedom for the foreseeable future.
First, the resolution of the conflict will be mediated through grassroots activism rather than through the diplomatic or governmental efforts of political elites. Second, the Palestinian struggle has been internationalised. In other words, the quest for a resolution to the problem of Zionism is no longer the exclusive preserve of the Americans and their client regimes in the Arab world.
Taken together, these structural developments, which both contribute to and are derived from BDS, represent the best chance for delivering freedom in Palestine.
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions 
Nearly ten years ago more than 170 organisations - representing political parties, trade unions, NGOs and youth and women's groups - issued a near-unanimous call for boycotts and sanctions in response to deepening Israeli apartheid and occupation in Palestine. Their mobilisation occurred as a direct response to the apparent inability of Palestinian political elites to produce any positive national achievements on their behalf.
Read more of our coverage on Palestine 
Specifically, the Palestinian architects of the BDS movement encouraged solidarity groups around the world to impose boycotts, divest from occupation profiteers and otherwise sanction Israel until the country fulfills and adheres to its responsibilities under international law. The call will remain in effect until Israel ends the occupation, recognises Palestinian-Israeli rights, and finally, enacts and protects the Palestinian right of return as enshrined in UN Resolution 194.
Today, the BDS movement is larger and more vibrant than it's ever been. That's particularly true in Western countries like England and Norway, where international law is regarded more highly than in other places. The failure of the "peace process" - whose ostensible objective was to liberate the Palestinians - has driven some of that growth. But so has the intensified savagery of the occupation regime, showcased most recently in Gaza. 
Finally, the invigoration and reemergence of Palestinian civil society - which created BDS - has emerged as one of the movement's main characteristics. The two derive strength and legitimacy from one another to sustain a kind of virtuous circle.
The Palestinian grassroots movement
Before the Oslo Process began in 1993, Palestinian labour unions, cultural organisations, women's groups and student-led parties all interacted directly with different elements of society to produce a vibrant, genuinely grassroots response to Israeli occupation.
That began to change in 1994 when the Palestinian Authority (PA) was created. Civil society was gutted and hollowed as the "interim" PA focused on building "state institutions" in preparation for statehood in 1999. Foreign NGOs flooded the Palestinian Territories and supplanted the local organisations that simply could not compete with the resources afforded by enormous European and US aid budgets.
Over time however, donor aid - both to NGOs and the Palestinian Authority - revealed its pernicious effects to the Palestinians in Palestine and the diaspora. The reliance on Western governments meant that beneficiary institutions could not express genuine opposition to Israeli apartheid. Their political horizons were circumscribed by their donors, who simultaneously funded the maintenance of the Israeli regime. 
Aid money was variously the cudgel or inducement used to cultivate obeisance among members of the occupied population. As security and humanitarian apparatuses, the PA institutions - which never really developed as independent organs of society - and foreign NGOs were reduced to staggering and lurching from one set of crises to the next. They lacked the tools and the political prerogative required for generating and enacting real theories of liberation and change.
In that context, Palestinian civil society worked to reclaim its role as the true expression of the collective Palestinian political voice. It began to succeed after the total collapse of the "peace process" in the early 2000s, and the BDS movement is one outcome of that effort. 
Internationalisation of the fight for justice
The empowered members of the US political class have opposed Palestinian aspirations and the fulfillment of their rights for at least 70 years. Many in Palestine and the diaspora acknowledged that fact, and during the Cold War they sought unsuccessfully to balance US partiality to Zionism through appeals to the Soviet Union. 
The period after 1991 was notable for the Americans' emergence as the sole arbiter of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. However, Washington never claimed any real measure of credibility among the Palestinians, a dynamic that was reinforced by the Americans' extreme indulgence of Israeli apartheid. Yet the Palestinian counterparts to the Oslo process only learned of their entrapment when it was too late. They had arrived in Ramallah on the force of US guarantees; their deference had already been paid for.
The case was different among the Palestinian grassroots. By never having indulged at the trough of Western aid, Palestinian civil society insulated itself from the lack of recourse that afflicted the PA. The freedom to choose how to conduct the anti-apartheid struggle resulted in direct appeals to people of conscience and civil society in other countries, particularly those whose governments provide aid to Israel.
The direct appeal to citizens of other countries has come at a time when self-inflicted injuries and unforeseeable developments have undermined US influence in the Middle East. Iraq, Libya, Syria, Egypt and Iran each have demonstrated the waning power of US force and diplomacy to shape the region. Tel Aviv too has asserted its independence from the White House, if not from Capitol Hill. Yet it would be wrong to claim that US' diminished regional stature triggered the internationalisation of the conflict - it has only contributed to the strategy's success.
Israel's response
Israel has attempted to undermine the development of a broad-based decentralised movement for justice in clumsy, heavy-handed ways. Officials began by claiming that the BDS movement was essentially anti-Semitic, a charge that failed to convince more than a few sympathetic Zionists. 
Over time, networks of closely monitored and well-funded hasbara groups were also developed. Young people are now employed by the Israeli state to act as social media "activists". Similar programmes providefellowships to spokespeople for Israel on college campuses across the US. Other attempts, like tacky andsleazy marketing videos, have misfired entirely. 
The Israeli government effort is a well-coordinated one, but it will not succeed. It is driven by top-down processes and an excessive reliance on monetary compensation as a means of motivating Zionist partisans. It is also a campaign that relies on a fundamental belief in the power of marketing and deception - two things that are difficult to produce in an instant-media environment.
The activities of a broad coalition of self-funded and self-directed activists from diverse societies are what drive BDS. The movement draws strength precisely through its diffuse organisational structure and its simultaneous adherence to universal values, which resonate from Barcelona to Oakland and Cape Town.
Countries whose diplomats have only contributed peripherally to the "peace process" have seen their grassroots activists take a leading role in the fight against apartheid. The conflict has been internationalised; US politicians are less and less capable of protecting Israel from the consequences of its actions. And the rest of the world is capable of extracting more.
Ahmed Moor is a Palestinian-American who was born in the Gaza Strip. He is a Soros Fellow, co-editor of After Zionism (Saqi Books 2012) and co-founder and CEO of liwwa.com.
Follow him on Twitter: @ahmedmoor 
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

UN calls for immediate action to avert massacre in besieged Iraqi town

Special representative for Iraq says situation in Amerli demands immediate action to prevent possible massacre of its citizens
A Iraqi Turkmen Shia fighter holds a position in Amerli. The city has been completely surrounded by Islamic State militants for more than six weeks. Photograph: Ali Al-Bayati/AFP/Getty Images
A Iraqi Turkmen Shia fighter holds a position in Amerli
 and agencies
Saturday 23 August 2014
The United Nations special representative for Iraq has called on the international community to take immediate action to avoid a massacre of civilians in town besieged by Islamic State (Isis) forces.
Nickolay Mladenov said he was "seriously alarmed" by reports that the people living in the northern Iraqi town of Amerli had no food or water as the two-month siege continues.
He said: "The situation of the people in Amerli is desperate and demands immediate action to prevent the possible massacre of its citizens. The town is besieged by [Isis] and reports confirm that people are surviving in desperate conditions."
Mladenov, a former Bulgarian foreign minister, also called on the Iraqi government to evacuate the town or provide "lifesaving humanitarian assistance" to those trapped there.
He added: "Iraq's allies and the international community should work with the authorities to prevent a human rights tragedy. The United Nations in Iraq will do all it can to support the government and people of Iraq in alleviating the unspeakable suffering of Amerli's inhabitants."
His comments came as western powers face mounting pressure to do more to confront Isis in its stronghold in Syria, as the heavily armed militants edged closer to taking an important airbase that would cement their domination over a swath of the country's north.
As US aircraft continued to pound the Islamist militants in northern Iraq, the Obama administration was studying a range of options for pressuring Isis in Syria, primarily through training "moderate" Syrian rebels as a proxy force, with air strikes as a possible backup.
Leaders in Washington and London are adamant they will not collaborate with the regime of Bashar al-Assad in tackling their common enemy, and on Friday the Pentagon insisted that it had yet to decide on whether to expand the US air war into Syria.
The White House has issued its strongest condemnation yet of the killing of American journalist James Foley, describing his beheading as an act of terrorism and warning that the US military response would not be restricted by international borders.
US deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said Foley's murder "represents a terrorist attack against our country" – a position backed by the UN security council, which called the killing "heinous and cowardly" in a unanimous statement.
"When we see somebody killed in such a horrific way, that represents a terrorist attack against our country and against an American citizen," said Rhodes, adding that the US would do whatever necessary to protect its citizens in future.
"We are actively considering what is necessary to deal with that threat and we are not going to be restricted by borders," said Rhodes, briefing reporters at Martha's Vineyard, where Barack Obama is on holiday.
Earlier on Saturday Iraq's parliamentary speaker said an investigation was underway into an attack on a mosque that killed around 70 people and threatened moves to form a new government in the country struggling to contain the advance of the extremist Isis.
Salim al-Jabouri said on Saturday that a committee of security officials and MPs would announce its findings in two days after an investigation into the attack on Friday at a Sunni mosque in Diyala province, in eastern Iraq.
Doctors and police officers said 20 people were also wounded when worshippers were attacked with machine guns at the Musab bin Omair mosque, which Jabouri, a Sunni, described as "carnage".
Initial reports suggested Shia militiamen carried out the attack in revenge for the deaths of their fellow fighters, raising the threat of a further escalation of sectarian tensions. Ibrahim Aziz Ali, whose 25-year-old nephew was among those killed, told Agence France-Presse that he and other residents heard gunfire and rushed to the mosque, where they were fired on by snipers.
Five vehicles with images of Imam Hussein, one of the most revered figures in Shia Islam, were parked at the mosque, Ali said.
When they could finally enter, "we found a massacre," he said.
Police officers said that angry residents exchanged fire with security forces and militiamen in the area on Friday, but reported no casualties.Iraqi premier-designate Haider al-Abadi issued a statement calling for unity and condemning the killings.
Two major Sunni blocs, including Jabouri's, have suspended talks on forming a new Shia-led government until the investigation is concluded. But other reports have said Isis, a Sunni militant group, was responsible.
Jabouri did not comment on the political fallout of the incident but it comes as the US vice-president, Joe Biden, made it clear that the White House would back a federalist government in Iraq, a further acknowledgement that there are growing doubts as to whether the unity of the country can be maintained.
Writing in the Washington Post, Biden – who is a longtime advocate of a plan under which Iraq would be divided into three autonomous regions for Shias, Sunnis and Kurds – also said the US was prepared to "further enhance" its support for Iraq's fight against Isis.
The hunt for the ‘British’ jihadi who killed James Foley
Channel 4 NewsThursday 21 Aug 2014
A manhunt is under way for the jihadi, believed to be British, who appeared in video footage showing the murder of US journalist James Foley.
We have been searching for clues amid suggestions that the Islamic State extremist – who has been reportedly identified by a former hostage as “John” – may be from London.


How many western hostages are still out there?

Channel 4 NewsThursday 21 Aug 2014
How many western hostages are still out there – and how powerful is the Islamic State? It is well funded and well organised and is fighting a major war on several fronts.
On Feb. 12, 1993, journalist Christopher Burns filed a story from Somalia containing a term that had never before appeared in English language press: "The U.S.-led military mission to halt clan warfare and get aid to the needy has unofficially widened its role to include such tasks as rebuilding houses, digging wells and creating police forces. Officials call it 'mission creep.'"

Inequality and lies on the frontline in Ferguson

Channel 4 News
FRIDAY 22 AUGUST 2014
Photojournalist Jon Lowenstein has been in Ferguson, Missouri, since last week, as protests seethe and simmer over the shooting of unarmed teenager Michael Brown.


It is nearly two weeks since Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old, was shot dead by police officers in the city of Ferguson, Missouri, in America’s Midwest, writes photojournalist Jon Lowenstein. In that time the anger of the local community and the ripple effect around the world has resulted in one of the biggest news events of 2014.
Social media has allowed for a conversation to go global, a conversation that America does not like having, despite having a black president: one about race and power control. People from the community where Michael Brown grew up have lived with what, in their eyes, is an oppressive police force. They feel the police have little or no accountability and can act with almost total impunity in their daily activities. They want these protests to change that.
I arrived in Missouri five days after the shooting. Here I found a community that had had enough. People were extremely upset about what had transpired in the small suburb of St. Louis. This is not the inner city.
In fact, there were no murders in Ferguson this year. The vast majority were active in their abhorrence of an American police system that kills more than 400 people a year, which is itself a conservative estimate (states like Florida and Alabama do not submit their data). Some were radical, wanting to fight back; some would not allow their protest to be hijacked by violence. Not violence from them anyway.

The 'bigger lie'

It is the police and their levels of violence that are at the heart of this story, from the shooting of an unarmed man to accusations of heavy-handed treatment of protesters and journalists, to their outright threatening behaviour. I had a police officer level his rifle at me. This same officer had just threatened to kill another journalist. The incident was verging on the absurd. People could not believe what the officer was doing.
And it is the treatment of that officer that illuminates the bigger lie of these past two weeks. The officer who pointed his gun was swiftly suspended. The treatment of the officer who shot Michael Brown was slow and indecisive, fuelling community anger.
I live on the south side of Chicago and consistently witness both the ongoing "foot on the neck" treatment of black males by the police, the intense levels of poverty, and the real neglect of one of the most powerful and important African-American communities in the country.
The south and west sides of Chicago saw five police shootings over 4 July weekend, with three killed. Of course, there were 77 other shootings in Chicago that weekend, and violence perpetrated by the police and and by local residents continues to be a huge issue.

Protecting and serving

They are, of course, not equal. The state must do better as the police are charged with "protecting and serving" the residents. It appears that in Ferguson this was not the case. When I went to the shooting scene of Kajieme Powell, in St Louis, the scene reminded me of what I see on a daily basis, yet the chants suddenly changed from "hands up, don't shoot" to "hands up, we shoot back".
These issues will not be solved with violent means. We must communicate and find real solutions to the lack of accountability by police forces throughout the country. Mike Brown, Trayvon Martin, Erik Garner and the thousands of other men who have been unlawfully killed by police should not die in vain. It is vital that we enforce the laws against all citizens in this country - including the police.
This crisis reminds me of Hurricane Katrina, a time when all of America suddenly saw afresh a forgotten and disaffected community. That time the storm took everything from them, this time, they are creating the storm for themselves.
Follow @jonlowenstein on Instagram