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

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Asia: Poverty As The Absence Of Protection


| by Basil Fernando - Right Livelihood Award laureate 2014
AHRC-ANM-039-2014-01.jpg(An article issued on the occasion of receiving the Right Livelihood Award - 2014)
( September 25, 2014, Hong Kong SAR, Sri Lanka Guardian) There are many ways of looking at poverty and its causes.

The most common way is to see poverty as the absence of the most meagre of resources for living. In other words, it is the lack of a minimum income. On the basis of this perception of poverty, the solution commonly suggested is to supplement this lack of income with contributions by the state. And, the approach proffered by states, and even by the United Nations in terms of the Millennium Development Goals, in discussions on poverty alleviation, is to find ways to improve basic income needed for living.
Often missing from such poverty alleviation discourse, purely concerned with a minimum improvement of basic income, is the cost that the poor have to pay, as a result of the absence of protection. What is meant by absence of protection? This absence is the non-existence of a public justice system capable of protecting the poor from the onslaught of predators in society.

Any study that focuses on such predators of the poor is bound to produce a shocking picture of man’s inhumanity to man. There are a large number of forces that scavenge from a poor man’s income and resources for their enrichment. The role of moneylenders who extract high rates of interests from the poor is well known. What is often not discussed is the way a “bad system” of administration of justice can create an ever greater burden on the poor.

The police, in many developing countries, rely on the poor for supplementing police officers income. This is a known fact. The power of arrest is often utilized as a means to force the poor to pay bribes to law enforcement agencies. Years of work at the Asian Human Rights Commission, in 12 Asian countries, has resulted in the collation of a body of information on the ways the poor are harassed by law enforcement agencies. When poor persons are arrested, often for no good reason, their close circle of family members and friends are forced to bribe the police and security agents, in cash or kind to obtain their release and to ensure that they will not be tortured in custody. Often, the way in which the poor pay such bribes is by borrowing money on high rates of interest or by selling whatever few possessions they may own.

When these poor persons are brought before the courts by unscrupulous police, they again encounter a large number of predators. Lawyers head this list. Other predators include the touts in the courts, court clerks, and even some judges. If a poor man is remanded for some time or sent to jail, then his or her family would also have to bribe the jailors, with the hope that he/she may be granted some relief while in detention.
Add to this brief description of predators the various pseudo-religious servants (or witch doctors) to whomt the poor resort in times of desperation.

AHRC-ART-075-2014-02.jpgA public system of justice is meant to protect all individuals, including the poor, from being harassed and harmed. Such a justice system protects all individuals under a framework of law. It is the criminal justice system that provides this protection. Such a system is meant to protect individuals from those who may try to harm their life or limb; defraud them one way or another; or engage in any other form of illegal exploitation of people. Within such a system, predators are the ones who stand to suffer.

Where such a system exists, the poor, like everyone else, have opportunities to improve their income. And, most crucially, they do not have to share the little income they have on predators.
One of the major causes of poverty, unaddressed during the state and international discourse on poverty, is the failure of states to create and maintain a public justice system, that is capable and willing to protect all individuals in the jurisdiction from attack and predation by others.

Anyone concerned with improving the incomes for the poor must be concerned with the type of public justice system available to them. Where the public justice system is weak or does not exist – which is the case in almost all developing countries – it should be the primary objective of all agencies concerned with poverty alleviation to institute or radically improve the system.

A critical contemporary challenge is to find ways to influence all concerned international agencies contributing to the improvement of the lives of poor, so that they may understand the importance of creating and maintaining public justice institutions that help protect the poor.

What this calls for is a change at policy levels in strategies of poverty alleviation. The minds of all policy makers need to be opened to enable them to consider the problem of poverty, not only from the point of view of economic criteria but also from the point of view of political and social criteria, within which the problem of the missing public justice systems should be given prime place.

This is a challenge to all humanitarian organizations in the world. It calls for richer understanding of humanitarian tasks, in terms of poverty alleviation and poverty eradication. This challenge for an understanding well beyond the mere doling-out of money or simply introducing programmes, such as credit facilities to the poor. Lobbying and advocacy for establishing and improving public justice systems must find place on the humanitarian agenda.

Naturally, human rights organizations too should be able to look beyond mere calls for investigations and prosecutions of human rights violations. They should play more active and dynamic roles in promoting ways to create and maintain credible and functioning public justice systems.

An outstanding contribution to this discourse is a book written by Gary Haugen and Victor Boutros, The Locust Effect – Why the end of poverty requires the end of violence, published in 2014, and already a best seller. This book is devoted to demonstrating the link between poverty and the need to protect the poor from violence through the establishment of effective public justice systems.
MODI's FIRM STAND 




By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan

 September 25, 2014 
Global Convener of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Vijay Jolly has told President Mahinda Rajapaksa that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi insists upon Colombo working on devolution of power.

Senior politician Jolly who is also a member of the National Executive Committee of the BJP told Ceylon Today that he was "not satisfied" with the answer President Rajapaksa gave,when asked how Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran will function when he had no power over his Chief Secretary. He claimed that the President had replied, "She has held that position for years and they can share the work."


He quipped, "It's a peculiar bureaucracy when the Chief Minister has no power over his Chief Secretary."
Jolly further pointed out, "I know that the Chief Secretary has to work under the Governor of the Northern Province who is at loggerheads and the whole scenario seems to be peculiar."


BJP politician Jolly and BJP National General Secretary Muralidhar Rao have had a nearly 45 minute long meeting with the President prior to their departure on 20 September and discussed a wide range of issues relating to the Tamil diaspora, the proposed 13th Amendment and devolution of powers within the framework of the Sri Lankan Constitution.
He said that there is an urgent need to settle all pending Tamil issues and to restart a dialogue with the Tamil National Alliance Leader to seek lasting peace.

TNAயின் ஒருங்கிணைப்புக்குழு கூட்டத்தில் ஏகமனதாக முக்கிய முடிவுகள் எடுக்கப்பட்டன:-

TNAயின் ஒருங்கிணைப்புக்குழு கூட்டத்தில் ஏகமனதாக முக்கிய முடிவுகள் எடுக்கப்பட்டன:-
23 செப்டம்பர் 2014
தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் ஒருங்கிணைப்புக்குழு கூட்டம் தலைவர் இரா.சம்பந்தன் தலைமையில் பாரளுமன்ற கட்டிடத் தொகுதியில் இன்றுமாலை இடம்பெற்றது. இதில் தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் அங்கத்துவக் கட்சிகளின் பிரதிநதிகள் கலந்து கொண்டனர். இங்கு, இன்றிருக்கக்கூடிய அரசியல் நிலைமைகள், தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் எதிர்கால நடவடிக்கைகள் போன்ற பல விடயங்கள் ஆய்வுக்கு உட்படுத்தப்பட்டது. இதில் முக்கிய சில முடிவுகள் ஏகமனதாக எடுக்கப்பட்டது
 
1. தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பை ஒழுங்கமைக்கப்பட்ட ஒரு ஸ்தாபனமாகவும், சில கட்டுப்பாடுகள் சட்டதிட்டங்களுக்கு உட்பட்டு கூட்டமைப்பை கொண்டு நடத்த வேண்டியிருப்பதனால் இவற்றை உள்ளடக்கிய யாப்பொன்று தயாரிக்கப்பட வேண்டுமென முடிவு செய்யப்பட்டது.
 
2. ஈ.பி.ஆர்.எல்.எவ், தமிழரசுக் கட்சி ஆகியவற்றின் தேசிய மாநாட்டின் தீர்மானங்களுக்கேற்ப தமிழ் மக்களைப் பிரதிநிதித்துவப்படுத்தக்கூடிய பல்வேறுபட்ட மக்கள் அமைப்புக்களை உள்ளடக்கி தமிழ் தேசிய சபையொன்றை நிறுவுவதெனவும் முடிவுசெய்யப்பட்டது
 
3. வடக்கு மாகாணசபை தொடர்பான விடயங்கள் தொடர்பாக கலந்துரையாடுவதற்கும், அதற்கான ஆலோசனைகளை பரிமாறிக்கொள்வதற்குமாக மாதாந்த கூட்டமொன்றை முதலமைச்சருடன் இணைந்து மேற்கொள்வதெனவும் முடிவுசெய்யப்பட்டது.
 
4. தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் உள்ளுராட்சி சபைகள், மாகாண சபைகள், பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் தொடர்பாக முறையான ஒழுங்காற்று நடவடிக்கைகளை உருவாக்கும் பொருட்டும் தமிழ் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் சட்டதிட்ட வரைமுறைகளுக்கும் கொள்கைகளுக்கும் எதிராகவோ முரணாகவோ செயற்படுவோர்மீது ஒழுங்காற்று நடவடிக்கைகளை எடுக்கக்கூடிய வகையில் குழுவொன்றை அமைப்பது தொடர்பாகவும் தீர்மானிக்கப்பட்டது.

Enemies Of The President’s Promise


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajiva Wijesinha -September 25, 2014 
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
In May 2009, Sri Lanka seemed on top of the world. Under PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa, the Sri Lankan government and forces had defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which had dominated Tamil politics in Sri Lanka. It had survived conflict with not just successive Sri Lankan governments, but even the might of India.
Though the Tigers had been banned by several countries, there was some sympathy for them in many Western nations who could not distinguish between them and the Tamils of Sri Lanka, who they felt had been badly treated by successive Sri Lankan governments. Fuelled by a powerful diaspora that sympathized with and even supported the Tigers, several Western nations had tried to stop the war being fought to a conclusion. When this attempt failed, they initiated a special session at the Human Rights Council in Geneva, but the condemnation they anticipated of the Sri Lankan government did not occur.
Instead, Sri Lanka initiated a resolution of its own, which passed with an overwhelming majority. It received the support of most countries outside the Western bloc, including India and Pakistan and China and Russia and South Africa and Brazil and Egypt.
War Crime 1Less than three years later, the situation had changed. A resolution critical of Sri Lanka was carried at the Council in Geneva in March 2012, with India voting in its favour. It had been initiated by the United States, and won support from several African and Latin American countries, including Brazil, that had been supportive previously. Next year an even more critical resolution was passed, with a larger majority, followed in 2014 by a Resolution which mandated an investigation by the Office of the High Commissioner. India voted against this Resolution, but it still passed with a large majority.Read More

Sri Lankan President avoided main entrance of the UN due to rally


rally-1Due to this rally, Sri Lankan President avoided using the main entrance of the UN
As Sri Lankan President was speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York, thousands of Tamils rallied outside the building protesting his troops killing of tens of thousands of Tamils and sexually assaulting and raping Tamil women.

Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE) organized this rally, which attracted people across United States and Canada.
Demonstrators also raised the issue of Sri Lanka’s denial of UN war crimes investigators visa to that country and threats to potential witness to the UN probe.
The Prime Minister of Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, Mr. Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran, and several other Tamil leaders, NGOs and other dignitaries spoke.
Some of the slogans the demonstrator’s shouted are:
“Arrest the War Criminal”, “Why are you hiding from UN investigation?”, “Where are the thousands of disappeared?” and “Your next stop is International Criminal Court”.
Due to this rally, Sri Lankan President avoided using the main entrance.
LATEST UPDATE: A Huge rally was held in the Indian State of Tamil Nadu against Sri Lankan President’s UN visit.
rally-2

[ வியாழக்கிழமை, 25 செப்ரெம்பர் 2014, 02:07.10 PM GMT ]

ஐ.நா மனித உரிமை ஆணையாளர் சார்பில் ஜெனிவா மனித உரிமைகள் பேரவையில் இன்று இலங்கை தொடர்பான விசாரணையின் வாய்மொழி அறிக்கை வெளியிடப்பட்டுள்ளது.
இதன்போது, இலங்கையில் நீடித்த சமாதானம், நல்லிணக்கம் மற்றும் மனித உரிமைகளுக்காக ஐ.நாவின் சர்வதேச விசாரணைக்குழுவிற்கு ஒத்துழைப்பு வழங்குமாறு ஐ.நாவின் பிரதி மனித உரிமை ஆணையாளர் ஃலேவியா பின்சேய்ரி கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளார்.



Sri Lanka president uses U.N. speech to assail war crimes probe

Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, addresses the 69th United Nations General Assembly at the U.N. headquarters in New York September 24, 2014.
Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, addresses the 69th United Nations General Assembly at the U.N. headquarters in New York September 24, 2014.    REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
UNITED NATIONS Wed Sep 24, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa assailed the United Nations Human Rights Council on Wednesday in his address to the U.N. General Assembly, calling its probe into Sri Lanka's 26-year civil war disproportionate and politically motivated.
Sri Lanka has refused to cooperate with the Human Rights Council's investigation into the deaths of some 100,000 people since it was announced in March, despite mounting international pressure to issue visas to U.N. investigators.
"Post-conflict Sri Lanka has also become an unfortunate victim of ill-conceived agendas of some in the Human Rights Council," Rajapaksa said in his address to the 193-member U.N. General Assembly, adding that the body was overlooking Sri Lanka's "substantial progress" since the war ended in 2009.
"There is an obvious lack of balance and proportion in the manner in which my country is being targeted today," he said, adding that there were more pressing emergencies elsewhere in the world.
"External intervention without adequate consideration of the structures in a society and cultural traditions of the countries where such intervention takes place, inevitably results in detribalization," he said.
The United Nations estimated in a 2011 report that about 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed in the final weeks of the war, mostly by the army. Sri Lanka has rejected the allegation and said it was conducting its own investigation.
The Human Rights Council, in voting to investigate the deaths of some 100,000 in March, said Sri Lanka had failed to investigate properly.

Rajapaksa Henchman Among Top 50 Gaming Tycoons In Asia

Colombo Telegraph
September 25, 2014 |
The Rajapaksa regime might be spewing lies to the locals on their stand on casinos, but their underhand deals to establish casinos Sri Lanka cannot be kept under the wraps forever as a powerful henchman of the regime – Dhammika Perera has been listed among the top 50 gaming tycoons in Asia.
DhammikaPerera has been ranked 26th in Asia’s top 50 gaming tycoons list, described as Sri Lanka’s richest man. He owns three of the four casinos in the country that are officially sanctioned. But the real push of Perera into the top 50 list is owing to his new casino project – the Queensbury, worth 350 million USD for which the government has given the green light.
As the regime keeps pushing for tourism to become the country’s major foreign income generator, casinos are one of the areas where attention was focused on in order to generate some easy money.
Among the other two casino projects that have been given the approval are the Crown Colombo led by James Packer worth 350 million USD and 850 million USD project by John Keells Holdings. While the future of Crown Colombo seems uncertain presently, Perera has become the biggest casino operator in Sri Lanka.
The newest casino project Queensbury is supposed to be 40 stories with a room capacity of 500. His hold on the local economy includes 23 listen companies that account for 8% of all the companies traded on the Colombo Stock Exchange.

RajaniThiranagama commemoration focuses on Democratisation

rajini thiranaFollowing the assassination of Dr. RajaniThiranagamaon 21 September 1989 by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a well-attended commemoration and a peaceful march were heldin Jaffna, in which large numbers of students, clergy, activists, both local and international, and ordinary people participated. Twenty-five years ago these events took place despite the very hostile and intimidating environment.After that, Rajani's fellow activists, friends and family were not able to commemorate her memory in Jaffna,where she was born, raised, worked and eventually died, until this last weekend. This year, the RajaniThiranagama Commemoration Committeebelieved the time was fitting to commemorateRajani and others who stood for justice and democracy in Jaffna. Five years after the end of the war, we felt herlegacy, and her prophetic words about the future of the Tamil communityare particularly relevantand meaningful to a society that is still reflecting on the war, and grappling with its future.

Successful events and discussions
The main commemoration event was held on the morning of September 20th at Trimmer Hall, and a cultural event followed that afternoon at Veerasingam Hall in Jaffna. The events wound up with a seminar titled "A more just and democratic society" the following day at Trimmer Hall. The speeches, messages, and performances at the commemoration eventranged from those made by academics who had taught and been taught by Rajani in medical college to women who had received support from Rajani during times of crisis, family members, and left and human rights activists who had worked with her from her early years as a medical student.During the cultural event, several young performers and speakers born long after Rajani's death, acted, sang and spoke about issues of democracy and social justice. The seminar made way for meaningful and engaging discussions on contemporary social issues.The public in Jaffna turned up in good numbers and spirit for all three events. More than a third of the participants were from other parts of the country, and there was a large presence of the academic community from various parts of the island.
Denial of university and public space
Although the events were organised as transparent and open democratic engagements, the Committee was compelled to make last minute changes to the programme and venue. The Committee had duly made all applications for permission to hold the planned events in good time, both at the University and the Jaffna Police station, and diligently pursued its applications and were assured that the events could be held by the officers responsible. Unfortunately, permission to hold these events in public spaces such as the Jaffna University and the Jaffna Public Library was arbitrarily rescinded at the last minute. Approval for a peaceful march, which was included in the initial programme of events, was cancelled all together. The events that eventually did take place were marked by a noticeable presence of the CID who diligently photographed the speakers as well as the participants. Even though surveillance cast a somewhat unpleasant shadow, the audience participated with enthusiasm and vigour.
The RajaniThiranagama Commemoration Committee thanks the public for their display of solidarity. We are encouraged by those who made great efforts to be with all of us in Jaffna, and believe that efforts like these are important for democratisation in Jaffna.
- RajaniThiranagama Commemoration Committee -m 

Why Do They Shoot?


25th Death Anniversary of Rajini Rajasingham Thiranagama
| by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“Politics is not religion, or, if it is, then it is nothing but the Inquisition.”
Camus (The Rebel)
( September 25, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The first shot was not fatal. She was heard asking her assassin, “Why are you shooting me?”
25 years after the murder of Rajini Rajasingham Thiranagama her final question remains unanswered at the most fundamental level. As Sri Lanka lurches towards another conflict, it is a question which needs to be pondered, at least by those who remember the past and fear its return, in an even more malevolent form.

Uva Provincial Council Elections 2014: Communiqué on Post-Election Violence 

Monaragala Incidnet_1

Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV)Centre for Monitoring Election Violence in Sri Lanka 

Download this PR as a PDF here.
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25 September 2014: The Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) has been informed of 9 incidents of violence after the conclusion of the Uva Provincial Council elections held on 20th September 2014. The incidents reported to CMEV include incidents where UPFA supporters were involved in making threats to and/or damaging property of opposition candidates (particularly JVP and UNP). CMEV is concerned with the ongoing violence and the lack of accountability for it, which denotes the prevailing culture of impunity.
Uva Provincial Council Elections 2014 Communiqué on Post-Election Violence by Thavam

‘Man of the match’

September 25, 2014 
Never before has a winning party licked its wounds so defensively. Never before has a losing side been so jubilant in defeat. The Uva provincial election will be epoch-making in more ways than one. But for bringing his party back with a fighting chance, it is young Harin Fernando who should take the biggest bow.

UNP MP Chandrani B’s Son Gets Diplomatic Posting

Colombo Telegraph
September 25, 2014 
Colombo Telegraph can now reveal that the son of UNP Parliamentarian Chandrani Bandara has been given a diplomatic posting by the Rajapaksa Government even though he has not passed the Sri Lanka Foreign Service Exam or gone through the appropriate channels.
Chandrani TissaThe posting for the UNP MP’s son is believed to be a reward to Tissa Attanayake from the Government for the role played by the UNP general secretary to the Ranil-Sajith negotiations to bring Sajith in as deputy leader of the party once again.
Chandrani Bandara is believed to be on intimate terms with Attanayake over a prolonged period, even though the latter is also married.
Rukshan Jayasinghe the son of UNP MP Chandrani Bandara has already departed for the Sri Lankan Consulate of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.
The political appointment for the offspring of a opposition MP comes amid angry allegations by the UNP and the JVP about the number of political appointments based on nepotism and other connections to the regime being posted to Lankan missions overseas.
When the news began to circulate in UNP circles about the appointment of Rukshan Jayasinghe several party seniors wanted to take the issue up with MP Chandrani Bandara and call for explanation.
However Attanayake intervened claiming the appointment was a ‘personal matter’.
UNP MP Rosy Senanayake who also strongly supports Premadasa also had offspring working for the Government through political connections. Her daughter was inducted to work for CHOGM as previously revealed in Colombo Telegraph and was to be sent as a diplomat. However after revelations about the appointment Senanayake is believed to have withdrawn her daughter from the group.
A Song-class submarine. (Internet photo)
A Song-class submarine. (Internet photo)
  • Want China TimesStaff Reporter
  •  2014-09-25
    The Changzheng 2, a Type 091 Han-class nuclear-powered submarine, has become the first Chinese submarine to visit Colombo in Sri Lanka, according to the website of the state-run Sri Lanka News on Sept. 15.
    The submarine arrived at the Port of Colombo one day before China's president, Xi Jinping, arrived in the country on Sept. 16. In addition to the Changzheng 2, there were two other PLA Navy warships in port.
    The Changzheng 2 is under the command of the PLA Navy's North Sea Fleet. Equipped with C-801 anti-ship missiles, it is capable of attacking targets 80 kilometers away.
    Duowei News, a media outlet operated by overseas Chinese, cited photos published by the Sri Lankan state news organization, suggesting however that the Changzheng 2 is no longer in the service of the PLA Navy. Duowei News stated that the submarine that visited Colombo on Sept. 15 was in fact a Type 039 Song-class conventional submarine. The North Sea Fleet's Changxingdao submarine salvage vessel was also there to accompany the submarine.
    Duowei said that this is the first time that a Chinese submarine has openly visited a nation in the Indian Ocean. Furthermore, Xi Jinping is the first Chinese leader to visit Sri Lanka in 28 years, though he was only there for one day. Taken together with the joint naval exercises with Iran launched Wednesday, this seems to suggest China's ambitions to project its military power into the Indian Ocean, according to Duowei.
    References:
    NBRO issues landslide warnings for Kegalle and Nuwaraeliya districts 
     September 25, 2014 
    With the prevailing rain continuing, NBRO has issued landslide watch for the Deraniyagala Division in Kegalle District and the Ambagamuwa Korale Division in the Nuwaraeliya District.
     
    If the prevailing rain continues, NBRO requests the residents and the roads users to be watchful on the possibility of occurring landslides, rockfalls and cut slope failures in the said two Divisions.

    Insight: Did ISI divide Colombo to target India?

    sisArun Selvarajan and Sakir Hassan, the two suspected ISI spies reveal a chilling tale of how the ISI benefitted from various conflicts in Sri Lanka, which made their job of setting up a Colombo module extremely easy.
    The ISI's repeated attempts over the past ten years to target India from a Sri Lanka module failed, but the plan began to make a headway only in the year 2012.
    First meeting: Mission India
    Selvarajan and Hassan narrate a meeting of October 18, 2012, headed by Amir Zubair Siddiqui at Colombo where he discussed how the module in Colombo was extremely important for a sure shot way of targeting India. "All must work hard towards it and money shall not be the criteria. A good job done will be rewarded handsomely, "Siddiqui is quoted to have said during the October 2012 meet.
    The rise of the BBS and a cruel strategy:
    The ISI was helped indirectly by the rise of the Bodu Bala Sena, a fierce group which has been fighting for Buddhist dominance and the eradication of Muslims and Christians in Sri Lanka.
    Here comes the shocking part of the investigation, conducted by the National Investigation Agency, which has found that the BBS was in fact funded heavily by the ISI under Siddiqui to create this rift between the various religions in Sri Lanka so that they could capitalise on the rift and rope in the minorities. An NIA officer, part of this probe informed that the ISI took complete advantage of the rift that the BBS caused which drew the
    Muslim minotity towards them. Beyond age barrier:
    The ISI which was tottering at 15 operatives managed to rope in over 50 people, following the October 2012 meet. Today the ISI proposes to take more operatives into their fold and ensure that they fight with the BBS which would only increase tensions in Sri Lanka. The ISI is well aware that the BBS is a much stronger force and can override the minorities and this again would help them since the minorities will look to the ISI for protection.
    Sakir and Arun Selvarajan say that a large number of operatives have been told to stay on in Sri Lanka while a few are being sent to India to scan targets in a bid to carry out major strikes. The NIA has already un-earthed several such details of major strikes being planned in India particularly in South.
    Some of the targets that the ISI was looking at were the Israeli missions, the NSG hubs and also army units. They had planned on carrying out a major strike in Chennai to kick start their operations in South India.

    Need for a fresh global Development Dialogue arises amid ‘terror’


    article_imageSeptember 24, 2014,
    LIBERIA, Monrovia : A resident sick from the ebola virus waits on September 23, 2014 outside "Island Clinic", a new Ebola treatment centre that opened in Monrovia. The first members of a team of 165 Cuban doctors and health workers have arrived in Sierra Leone to help the fight against Ebola, a health official said Tuesday. AFP