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, September 6, 2014

Muslim Council Urges Authorities To Ensure Vigilance On Possible Infiltration Of SL By Terror Groups

Colombo Telegraph
September 5, 2014
The Muslim Council of Sri Lanka (MCSL) has called upon the authorities to observe extreme vigilance in order to ensure that Sri Lanka is not infiltrated by any terror group.
gota-and-mahindaReleasing a statement expressing concern over the recent announcement by Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri on the formation of the Indian branch of his global armed group to spread Islamic rue and ‘raise the flag of jihad’ across the subcontinent, MCSL Vice President Hilmy Ahamed has urged the authorities to ensure that every step is taken to thwart any form of infiltration into Sri Lanka by any extremist, religious or ideological groups that spread terror.
In that regard, he has assured that the Muslim community too would ensure vigilance against any possible infiltration into Sri Lanka by Muslim terrorists outside the country.
“The presence of such violent groups shouldn’t be allowed at any cost in Sri Lanka or any of the neighbouring countries,” Ahamed has asserted in the statement pointing out that no space for any form of extremism or terrorism should be allowed in Sri Lanka particularly since we are just covering from the set back and  lost opprotunities following the 30 year long war.
Furthermore, he called upon the President, the Defense Secretary and the government to address Buddhist extremist and hate campaigns that have manifested in the recent past that has turned into a cause of great concern for the minorities in the country.

Rice and beer



Economists may tell us that the phenomenon of sticky prices is not endemic to this country. That may be so, but, here, the price of rice is apparently stickier than those of other essential commodities. This situation is due to the involvement of some government politicians and their family members in the rice trade. There are a handful of mill owners who manipulate the rice prices through large-scale hoarding. It is only small-time traders who fear raids on their warehouses and prosecution. The so-called Millers’ Mafia has no such fears; it buys most of the rice harvest for a song through a well-established network and starves the market systematically thereafter so that the prices will not plummet even in the case of bumper harvests.

As if the problems caused by the Millers’ Mafia were not enough, breweries are now purchasing large stocks of rice for producing beer, we are told. Needless to say that it is not filling beer bellies that should be given priority but dulling hunger pangs.

The government, as a ministerial pundit audaciously declared in public recently, cannot control droughts, but hoarding and the bulk purchase of paddy for brewing beer are issues it is capable of tackling if it wills itself to do so. It is hoped that the people won’t be asked to drink beer if there is no rice. Once we had a minister of King Kekille’s calibre in the SLFP-led People’s Alliance government (1994-2001) who, having failed to import enough rice stocks in spite of warnings of an impending scarcity due to a crop loss, claimed rice was in short supply because Sri Lankans consumed too much of it!

The government’s paddy purchasing scheme is no match for the modus operandi of the Millers’ Mafia. There have been some complaints that the government buys paddy rejected by millers. If enough funds are allocated and the paddy purchasing system is placed in competent hands, the government may be able to protect the poor farmer as well as the hapless consumer. But, the question is whether it will ever want to do so at the expense of its ministers and their kith and kin.

Price controls alone won’t help bring relief to the public. There have been reports that some wholesalers have stopped buying rice because they cannot make any profits by selling it at the stipulated prices. The Consumer Affairs Authority (CAA) is being made to bite off more than it can chew where raids are concerned and it is apparently preoccupied with inspecting beauty parlours and canteens these days. However, it is not possible for the CAA to rule the rice traders with a rod of iron and force them to incur losses. Action, no doubt, has to be taken against hoarders and profiteers, but there is no alternative to boosting the supplies and taking on the Millers’ Mafia responsible for creating shortages.

Coconut prices, too, have gone through the roof because millers buy nuts direct from estates to produce oil, allowing only a fraction of the harvest to enter the market. Coconut growers also prefer to dispose their nuts in this manner though they sell them at lower prices than in the open market because of their longstanding agreements with millers who pay cash and buy nuts without rejecting smaller ones.

There has been a decrease in the paddy harvest in the drought-hit rice producing areas, and a drop in the supply inevitably leads to price hikes, but the massive price increases like the ones experienced at present could have been prevented if the existing stocks had been managed properly with action taken against hoarders, especially the big-time millers who have become a law unto themselves and enough rice stocks imported to meet the shortfall.

Xi’s Visit to India & Sri Lanka Promises 

Infrastructure, Shipping & Tourism 


Posted on  by 
India is in the spotlight following the decision to cancel the Pakistan leg of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s South Asia tour to India and Sri Lanka. In an unusual move, China postponed Xi’s visit to Pakistan, one of China’s closes allies, due to political uncertainty in Islamabad. This puts on hold the development of proposed trade corridors between Xinjiang and Pakistan—part of a long-term Chinese strategic plan to combat restlessness in the region by creating wealth through trade—and refocuses the trip largely on Chinese ties with India.
Xi will now visit Sri Lanka first, the small island nation that has already had much of its infrastructure improved by Chinese investment. As Indian worker demographics are ensuring that a large percentage of future global manufacturing will move to India, China needs to secure huge amounts of high-capacity Indian production to keep its own population supplied with affordable and inexpensive daily products. India is the only country with the workforce and proximity to China to be able to provide this; however, security and other concerns between the two nations have not always made cooperation easy.
Added to this, until recently the Indian government has been hog-tied in its own democratic process and unable to get major reforms in place, opening a significant infrastructure gap on India’s east coast. China has been quick to bypass this, turning to a friendly Sri Lanka for assistance. The result has been the redevelopment of Sri Lanka’s main port in Colombo, which China not only financed, but also owns the majority stake in.
The port facilities are mainly concentrated on the transshipment, processing and repacking of Indian products destined for the China market. It is a little observed fact that as China’s population ages, they will continue to need low cost, reasonable quality consumer products, and in the face of increasing production costs in China, sourcing from India has become vital to the sustained prosperity of the Middle Kingdom. The Colombo Port’s primary role is to facilitate this future bilateral trade demographic.
In return for Sri Lanka’s strategic assistance, China has been involved in a mass infrastructure development project throughout the country. This is something that the Indian Government would be wise to consider as they mull China’s offer to pay for India’s own infrastructure development. Sri Lanka now has a national highway system, much of which is completed, and a second international airport at Hambantota in the country’s southeast, together with another massive port facility.
That airport, when fully operational (the government is negotiating with budget airlines at this moment), will permanently alter the nature of tourism in South Asia. The Hambantota airport cuts 30 minutes off flight times into Sri Lanka from elsewhere in Asia, and coupled with the new expressways, reduces the travelling time to reach Sri Lanka’s gorgeous southern beaches to under an hour; accessing them from Colombo, even with the highways, is a four-five hour journey. It is no wonder that high-end hotel chains and resorts have been buying up vast swathes of land along Sri Lanka’s southeast coast. Within the next five years, Sri Lanka will become one of Asia’s premium tourist destinations. Many of them will of course be Chinese.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s failure to attract Xi Jinping will be met with smiles in India. For the first time in 30 years, India is ruled by a government possessing an absolute majority, and a foreign-investment friendly incumbent to boot. As mentioned, India has become an important strategic status play for China; the Chinese need India to get to work and provide it with the consumer goods it so desperately needs. As the Chinese population greys, its workforce is becoming more expensive. It is five times cheaper to hire a worker in Mumbai than it is in Guangzhou, and only India has the mass labor pool needed to properly service Chinese demand.
But to get there, the country needs to upgrade its infrastructure – hence the reason behind the Chinese offer, just as in Sri Lanka, to do so. That offer is still being assessed by the Modi government, and no doubt there will be security concerns somewhere in the mix. Yet rapprochement over long-disputed territories is also in the cards, and it is possible that China and India may settle these, if not during Xi’s visit then certainly in the near future.
Areas to watch will be in India’s aviation industry – the Indian market is the fastest growing in the world, and as bilateral trade increases, so too will the number of flights between China and India. Road, rail and airport development will also be discussed, especially on India’s southeast coast, where development is occurring at a pace much slower than China’s domestic market growth.
In short, India needs to recalibrate its supply chain to cater to China demand— how to do this, and the funding required to do so will be a large part of the discussions to come. For India, it may also be time to turn its perennial focus away from its western border with Pakistan, and look east, towards China. Pakistan is a security concern and offers little in the way of trade development, at a time when China offers huge trade opportunities and far fewer risks.
This dynamic is pushing Pakistan towards becoming a bit part player, and making it clear to both China and India that, if managed correctly, their bilateral relationship will thrust India into three decades of double-digit growth and secure the immediate future of China’s Communist Party, underpinning the new strategic alliance between China and India and boding well for their mutual prosperity.
Chris Devonshire-Ellis is the Founding Partner of Dezan Shira & Associates – a specialist foreign direct investment practice providing corporate establishment, business advisory, tax advisory and compliance, accounting, payroll, due diligence and financial review services to multinationals investing in emerging Asia. Since its establishment in 1992, the firm has grown into one of Asia’s most versatile full-service consultancies with operational offices across China, Hong Kong, India, Singapore and Vietnam, in addition to alliances in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand, as well as liaison offices in Italy, Germany and the United States. For further information, please email china@dezshira.com or visit www.dezshira.com.
- See more at: http://www.china-briefing.com/news/2014/09/05/xis-visit-india-sri-lanka-promises-infrastructure-shipping-tourism.html#sthash.5NauNlsR.dpuf

Russia promises 'a reaction' to EU sanctions over Ukraine

Channel 4 NewsSATURDAY 06 SEPTEMBER 2014
Russia vows "there will be a reaction" if new EU sanctions are imposed over its actions in Ukraine, where a truce appears to be largely holding after five months of fighting.
The EU announced the additional measures late on Friday but said they could be suspended if Moscow withdraws its troops from Ukraine and observes a newly agreed ceasefire in eastern Ukraine.
The new sanctions include adding a further 24 people to a list of people barred from entry to the 28-nation bloc and whose assets are frozen.
They are due to be implemented on Monday. "If they (new sanctions) are implemented of course there will be a reaction from our side," the ministry said in a statement.
Underlining the fragility of the truce, approved on Friday by envoys from Ukraine, the separatist leadership, Russia and the OSCE security watchdog, some residents in rebel-held Donetsk reported sporadic shelling overnight on the city outskirts.
"It is looking good for now but we know they (the Ukrainian side) are only using it to bring in more forces here and ammunition and then to hit us with renewed strength," said one rebel commander known by his nickname Montana.

'That is even worse'

"Come what may, I would not trust (Ukraine's President Petro) Poroshenko. And it's not him making the call anyway but the Americans and that is even worse."
Poroshenko agreed to the ceasefire after Ukraine accused Russia of sending troops and arms onto its territory in support of the separatists, who had suffered big losses over the summer.
Moscow denies sending troops or arming the rebels.
The truce has raised hopes of an end to fighting that has caused the worst standoff between Moscow and the West since the Cold War ended.
But US President Barack Obama, who has also accused Russia of involvement, said on Friday he was sceptical the separatists would follow through.

 


'No ceasefire but a theatre'

A Donetsk resident, Ksenia, said she had heard some shooting overnight after the ceasefire had come into effect. "I don't know what ceasefire we are talking of if there was shooting again. This is no ceasefire but a theatre.
"This war will go on for five to nine years. Slavs are killing Slavs, there can be nothing worse than that," she said.
Dmytro Tymchuk, a defence analyst with links to government forces, accused the rebels of violating the ceasefire at various sites around the region, adding: "The Ukrainian forces are fully observing the conditions of the ceasefire and only open fire when their positions come under attack."
People in sceptical about ceasefire: 'we've seen ceasefires before and the bandits in always break them'.

Japan's Abe steals a march on China with South Asia tour


Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks next to a teleprompter during a news conference after reshuffling his cabinet, at his official residence in Tokyo September 3, 2014.
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks next to a teleprompter during a news conference after reshuffling his cabinet, at his official residence in Tokyo September 3, 2014.  REUTERS/Yuya Shino
BY SERAJUL QUADIR AND RANGA SIRILAL-Sat Sep 6, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe flew to Bangladesh on Saturday for a two-stop tour of South Asia as the globe-trotting leader asserts Tokyo's interest in a region where it has ceded influence to China.

She wanted to be a nun. Now she could be Brazil’s next president.

Marina Silva, presidential candidate of the Brazilian Socialist Party, spoke during a news conference in Sao Paulo, Brazil. (Andre Penner/AP)



A Story from Gaza War: Assassinated Twice

Sep-05-2014 

A parents' worst nightmare happened to hundreds of innocent families during the 51-day war against Gaza.
Ibrahim 10 years old
10-year old Ibrahim was playing in the park when a drone injured him. He didn't survive the second attack, ten days later. Photo by Yousef Ghaben
(GAZA, Palestine) - It's the old habits, traditions, of the children in the feast that led the 10-year-old child Ibrahim Dawawsa to go to the Amusement Park for playing and laughing with kids.
It was the first time for his father to try to prevent him go out because of the war, but in vain. Ibrahim and his friends were happily playing on the swing, but it seemed the Israeli drones did not like it.
A drone's rocket hit the swing causing a terrifying blast over there. Fortunately, kids were all seriously wounded. None was killed. The people there rushed to save the little boys. Ibrahim was seriously wounded in his left arm.

Ibrahim's family was shocked when they heard the news. They realized he was likely killed. Yet, their joy was unspeakable to know he was still alive.

Ten days later, Israel and the Palestinian factions announced 72-day truce. It was Friday when Ibrahim was able to dress in new clothes and he got out for Juma'a prayer.

His mother was contemplating him from the window and smiling as if she could hardly believe he has survived the bombing in the park.

"Be careful Ibrahim," she called to him.

Ibrahim looked at her and smiled. He waved his little hand to his mother and went on walking to the mosque.

In just a matter of minutes, his mother heard a huge bomb.

"Ibrahim!" she spontaneously screamed.

She and the whole family rushed to the place of bombing. There was a huge mess. Ambulances were there moving the causalities to the hospital.

They looked for Ibrahim everywhere but found nothing. They realized he must be one of the victims. The parents rushed to the hospital to find their child.

When they arrived, they were severely shocked at what they saw. Their little innocent child was lying on a white bed. He was already dead by shrapnel to the head.

The mother fainted, and the father fell on the ground. Nurses carried the mother away for treatment. She kept repeating her son's name, "Ibrahim...Ibrahim...Ibrahim..."

The father was weeping and crying with heavy tears over his son. He kept hugging the boy's body saying, "Ibrahim...Ibrahim...Ibrahim"

I visited the family the next day. There was a vast grief and sorrow there. The mother was sit aside, silent and sad and surrounded by some women dressed in black.

The father was the same. None was talking there. It's just silence.

"How are u doing, Abu Jamal?", I asked.

"Praise to God," he replied.

I told him I'm a reporter and I need some information to report what happened.
With weak cracked voice he told me the story. I was severely shocked. The young Ibrahim was targeted twice by Israeli drones. He survived the first bombing, but didn't make it through the second.

The father got silent for a moment. He dropped his head, weeping and saying "I cannot believe I will never see him again... He was like an angel. Why did they kill you Ibrahim? ...Why?"
At that moment, I started weeping too. I apologized and left.

For humanity and morality friends, accept my apologize for making u sad. For Ibrahim, please share his story.

Broken Buildings and Bruised Psyches Complicate Start of Gaza School Year


A displaced Palestinian family eats dinner at school operated by the United Nations.CreditWissam Nassar for The New York Times
The New York Times | Updated: September 06, 2014 
GAZA CITY, GAZA STRIP:  Here is the vexing math problem educators in the Gaza Strip are trying to solve in order to start school Sept. 14, three weeks later than originally scheduled: 
There are 500,000 students who were scheduled to be divided among 648 schools, with 421 of the buildings being shared in double shifts. But the fighting between Israel and Hamas over the summer left at least 34 buildings damaged beyond use and dozens more in need of major repair. An additional 31 schools are still sheltering 59,728 residents who lost their homes. 
Now, the students must be sorted into classrooms, taking into account that thousands no longer live where they did last year. 

Continue reading the main storyShare This PageBroken Buildings and Bruised Psyches Complicate Start of Gaza School Year by Thavam

We Could Have Stopped This

Public health officials knew Ebola was coming. They know how to defeat it. But they’re blowing it anyway.

BY LAURIE GARRETT-SEPTEMBER 5, 2014
World, you still just don't get it. The Ebola epidemic that is raging across West Africa, killing more than half its victims, will not be conquered with principles of global solidarity and earnest appeals. It will not be stopped with dribbling funds, dozens of volunteer health workers, and barriers across national borders. And the current laboratory-confirmed tolls (3,944 cases, with 2,097 deaths) will soon rise exponentially.
IAEA inspectors gained rare access to plant where centrifuges for enriching uranium are developed as part of transparency deal, reports say
HQ of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran in Tehran. Iran says it is refining uranium to fuel a planned network of nuclear power plants. Photograph: Vahid Salemi/AP
HQ of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran in Tehran
The Guardian home
Kevin Rawlinson and agencies
Saturday 6 September 2014 
UN inspectors have gained rare access to an Iranian nuclear facility, giving them a "better understanding" of Tehran's disputed programme, it has been reported.
They observed a plant where centrifuges for enriching uranium were developed as part of a transparency deal but acknowledged that Iranremains resistant to an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)investigation.
According to a confidential IAEA report obtained by Reuters, inspectors visited a research and development centre for centrifuges on 30 August. It gave neither details nor the location of the site. But such access could be crucial to helping the agency determine how far along Iran might be in developing more modern models of the machines.
Iran's efforts to replace the breakdown-prone, 1970s vintage IR-1 centrifuge it is now operating at its Natanz and Fordow enrichment plants are closely watched by the west since success could lead to more efficient equipment enabling the country to amass material that could be used for atomic bombs more quickly.
Iran says it is refining uranium to fuel a planned network of nuclear powerplants. If enriched to a high concentration of the fissile U-235 isotope, uranium can also be turned into the explosive core of an atomic bomb.
"It is of importance to see the R&D to understand the full scope and status of the programme," former IAEA chief inspector Olli Heinonen, now at Harvard University's Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs, told Reuters.
Apart from an R&D centrifuge plant at Natanz to which the IAEA already has regular access, Iran has a facility called Kalaye Electric in Tehran that the UN agency has seldom visited. Heinonen said R&D work was also done at other locations.
It is not clear when the IAEA was last able to examine an R&D site but such visits are believed to be rare. One was made in 2011 and another in 2008, though it is not known whether they were to Kalaye or some other location.
Iran denies allegations its enrichment programme is part of a covert bid to develop the capability to make nuclear weapons, but western states have imposed economic sanctions to make it scale back its atomic activities.
Friday's IAEA report, which has not yet been made public, said Iran missed a deadline on 25 August to address suspicions about activities in the past that could be relevant to any attempt to assemble nuclear bombs.
It said Iran had implemented just three of five nuclear transparency steps that it had agreed to carry out by last month's target date.
The two measures it had failed to implement concerned providing information about alleged research that is part of the IAEA's long-running investigation into what it calls the "possible military dimensions" of Iran's nuclear programme.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Healing through humanisation: A reflection on Just Reconciliation

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GroundviewsHistory concealed   - 
An acquaintance returned from a recent visit to Jaffna to announce it as one of the best holidays she had ever had. The hotels were good, the food delicious, there were numerous places to visit and of course the roads were excellent.
Jaffna villagers demand resettlement in their own land
05 September 2014
Villagers from Valikamam North Mayiliddi have handed a petition to the Jaffna District Secretariat demanding they be resettled in their own land, which is currently being occupied by the Sri Lankan military after being designated as a High Security Zone (HSZ).
The petition,
logonbanner-105 செப்ரெம்பர் 2014, வெள்ளி
தங்களை சொந்த இடங்களில் மீள்குடியேற்ற வேண்டும் என்று கோரி வலி.வடக்கு மக்கள் மகஜர் ஒன்றினை யாழ். மாவட்ட செயலக நிர்வாக உத்தியோகத்தர் கி. கருணாகரனிடம் கையளித்துள்ளனர்.

யாழ். மாவட்ட அரச அதிபர் மற்றும் மேலதிக அரசாங்க அதிபர் ஆகிய இருவரும் வெளியில் சென்றுள்ளமையினால் குறித்த மகஜரை நிர்வாக உத்தியோகத்தரிடம் கையளித்துள்ளனர்.

இந்த மகஜரை பூந்தளிர் பெண்கள் அமைப்பின் யாழ். மாவட்ட தலைவி வழங்கி வைத்தார். இவருடன் தேசிய மீனவ ஒத்துழைப்பு இயக்கத்தினரும் கலந்து கொண்டிருந்தமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

குறித்த மகஜரில், நாம் கடந்த 1990 ஆம் ஆண்டு யுத்தம் காரணமாக வலி.வடக்கு மயிலிட்டிக் கிராமத்தில் இருந்து இடம்பெயர்ந்து தற்காலிக முகாமில் 24 வருடங்களாக வாழ்ந்து வருகின்றோம்.

யுத்தம் முடிந்து 5 வருடங்களுக்கு மேலாகிவிட்டது. ஆனால் இன்னமும் எனது சொந்த நிலத்தில் குடியமர்த்தாமை மிகவும் கவலையளிக்கின்றது.

எமக்கு வழங்கப்பட்டு வந்த நிவாரணமும் தற்போது சொந்த நிலங்களில் குடியமர்த்தப்பட்டுள்ளது என்ற அடிப்படையில்   நிறுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இவ்வாறு வழங்கப்பட்டுள்ளமையினால் தொழில் வாய்ப்பினை இழந்த எமக்கு எவ்வித அடிப்படை வாழ்வாதாரமும் இல்லாது பாரிய உணவு நெருக்கடியை எதிர்கொள்ள வேண்டி ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.

மேலும் பொருளாதாரம், கல்வி, சுகாதாரம், கலாச்சார ரீதியிலும் நாம் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளோம் எனவே  எங்களது சொந்த நிலங்களில் மீளக்குடியமர அனுமதிக்குமாறு கேட்டுக் கொள்கின்றோம் என்றும் அந்த மகஜரில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

மகஜரைப் பெற்றுக் கொண்ட நிர்வாக உத்தியோகத்தர் தான் அரச அதிபரிடம் சமர்ப்பிப்பதாக தெரிவித்தார்.


 which was delivered by leaders from the by Poonthalir Women's Organisation and the National Fisheries Co-operation Movement, said,
“We have been living in the temporary camp for 24 years since being displaced from the Valikamam North Mayiliddi village during the war in 1990.”“More than 5 years have passed since the war ended and it is worrying that we have not been resettled back in our own lands.”
Valikamam North is currently designated as a High Security Zone (HSZ) by the Sri Lankan military. Satellite images released last month show the Sri Lankan military has been consolidating its presence in the HSZ, increasing the number of permanent structures that it has built on land seized from Tamil civilians since the end of the armed conflict.
See more in our earlier post:

The petition went on to add that the continued denial of access to their land “is causing us lost job opportunities and with no basic livelihood more difficulties for food”.
“Furthermore, we are affected in terms of economy, education, hygiene, and culturally.Therefore we request to resettle us back in our own lands," said the petition.
See more in our earlier posts: