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, October 16, 2014

If Rajapaksa Goes for Illegal Third Term He Should be Defeated – JVP

1354815683-jvp-protest-against-sri-lankan-governments-2013-budget_1659709
Sri Lanka Brief[JVP has extensive mobilisation capacity]-16/10/2014 
“Mahinda cannot a third time – No illegal presidential elections!”
News have been published that incumbent president Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa, before his second term concludes and immediately after he completes four years of his term, is preparing to go for a presidential election. It is evident that this presidential election is against the constitution which is the fundamental law in our country and violates its clauses. As such, we believe all people in this country should know the important facts regarding for what purpose is the sudden presidential election is to be held, could it be held legally, what would be the outcome of an illegal presidential election and how could it be avoided.
If Rajapaksa Goes for Illegal Third Term He Should Be Defeated – JVP by Thavam

DG plays casinos with SLBC money


slbc 123The director general of the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation comes to the institution evey night in an inebriated state and gets hundreds of thousands of rupees of SLBC money from the finance division through one Ekanayake and goes to play casinos, say Corporation employees.

If he wins, the money is returned on the next morning.
But, if he loses, he will take several days to return the money, until such time a certain director of the SLBC covers up the fraud.
Over this, the chairman summoned Ekanayake to the meeting of heads of division, questioned him and severely warned him, but the DG continues to play casinos with SLBC money.
Meanwhile, plans are being made to hand over a SLBC circuit bungalow in Nuwara Eliya, re-acquired through legal action after being leased to a friend of minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage, to a friend of finance division’s Ekanayake.
The plan is to obtain Rs. 1.5 million as the lease money, but only Rs. 900,000 will go to the corporation, while the rest will be shared by the DG, the director, Ekanayake and office bearers of the SLBC’s SLFP union.
Their plan is to be implemented within the next few weeks by misleading the board of directors.
The chairman and the subject minister do not seem to know this abuse of state property, and employees question as to whether not even the president can see

Ravana Balaya accosts with FEB Chairman

Ravana Balaya accosts with FEB ChairmanOctober 16, 2014logo 
A group of monks representing the Ravana Balaya Organisation, this afternoon, met the Chairman of the Foreign Employment Bureau (FEB), and alleged that the FEB not doing enough to protect the Sri Lankan employees in the Middle East countries.

Convener of the Ravana Balaya, Ven. Ittakande Saddhatissa Thero, said that the employees in the Middle East are harassed daily and suffer a lot, however, the FEB has failed to take adequate steps in a bid to suppress it. Saddhatissa Thero said the employees in the Middle East who seeks shelter must be brought back the country without any delay. 

An argument also erupted with Saddhatissa Thero when the FEB Chairman Amal Senalankadhikara charged the Ravana Balaya for storming into his office without a prior appointment.

UN chief says 800m people do not have enough healthy, nutritious food

 Date: 15/10/2014

Tehran, Oct 15, IRNA – UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in his message on World Food Day, 16 October 2014, said more than 800 million people do not have enough healthy, nutritious food to lead active lives.

According to a press release issued by the UN Information Center, the full text of his message reads:

Today, and every day, we eat thanks to the labours of family farmers. They run the vast majority of farms in the world. They preserve natural resources and agro-biodiversity. They are the cornerstone of inclusive and sustainable agriculture and food systems. 

It is fitting that in this International Year of Family Farming, there are 100 million fewer hungry people than just 10 years ago. Sixty-three countries have halved the portion of their population which is undernourished. Our vision of zero hunger is within reach.

But there is much work to be done. More than 800 million people do not have enough healthy, nutritious food to lead active lives. One in three young children is malnourished.

Family farmers are key to unlocking global progress. But they are at a disadvantage when it comes to access to technology, services and markets. And they are acutely exposed to extreme weather, climate change and environmental degradation. 

Ensuring equal access – particularly for women – to productive resources is essential to empowering the world’s 500 million smallholder farmers to help eradicate poverty and safeguard the environment.

At the Climate Summit in New York last month, more than a hundred organizations and governments pledged to work more closely with farmers, fishers and livestock keepers to improve food security and nutrition while addressing climate change. The Zero Hunger Challenge and the Scaling Up Nutrition movement are catalyzing partnerships with governments, civil society and the private sector. The Committee on World Food Security, has made impressive progress on responsible investments in agriculture, addressing food losses and waste, and taking action to promote sustainable fisheries and aquaculture. 

In 2015 we have an opportunity to turn the tide, by achieving the Millennium Development Goals, shaping a new agenda for sustainable development, and fostering a meaningful universal climate agreement. A world free from poverty and hunger, where all people have realized their right to adequate food, is central to the future we want.

On this World Food Day, let us resolve to end hunger in our lifetimes.
மீராபாரதி-15.10.2014
கனடாவில் ரொன்ரொடோ நகரில் சமவுரிமை இயக்கத்தின் முக்கியஸ்தவர்களும் முன்னிலை சோசலிக் கட்சியின் தலைவர்களும் பங்குபற்றிய கூட்டம் நடைபெற்றது. கூட்டதிற்கு வழமையாக வருகின்றவர்களே வந்திருந்தார்கள். அதிலும் வழமையாக வருகின்ற முக்கியமான சிலரைக் காணமுடியவில்லை. “சமவுரிமைக்கான இயக்கம் எனக் கூறப்பட்டபோதும் ரொரன்டோவில் வாழ்கின்ற சிங்கள முஸ்லிம் நண்பர்களைக் காணமுடியவில்லை. மாறாக கருத்துரை வழங்குவோராக சிங்களவர்களும் தமிழர்களும் இருந்தனர். கேட்போராக தமிழர்கள் மட்டுமே இருந்தனர்” என ஒருவர் குறிப்பிட்டார். ஆகவே இக் கூட்டமே இவர்களது அடிப்படை நோக்கத்தையே கேள்விக்குள்ளாக்குகின்றது. 

War correspondent award event brings hope and comfort to the family of slain journalist James Foley







Credit: 
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
A sign outside a shop remembers James Foley in his hometown of Rochester, New Hampshire.   Foley, 40, was beheaded by members of ISIS in August 2014.

Public Radio InternationalOctober 13, 2014 
For more than two decades, the Bayeux-Calvados has honored the best work of war correspondents from newspapers, radio, television and photojournalism.

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This year's ceremony, though, took on a more somber mood as the parents of James Foley attended the event. Foley was the American journalist who was beheaded by ISIS in August.
The Foleys were invited to attend the event and "their presence really gave the whole event a richer and deeper meaning," said Vivienne Walt, the Paris correspondent for Time Magazine, and one of the judges of the awards. "[The Foleys] courageously wanted to know what James' world had been like and, of course, a number of us, including myself, had met [Foley] in various conflict zones in Libya and Syria and had many stories to tell."
Walt said many of the French hostages who had been detained with Foley for many months also attended the event and shared a lot of detailed information about what Foley's last few months had been like.
"There's something very poignant with the Foley family and the French hostages all at one little table and being aware of the fact that they were released and Foley was not. And there was only one thing that separated them," Walt said. That was the payment of ransoms.
"You would think it would be traumatic," said Walt, meeting survivors. But, in fact, Foley's father John stood up and said that being there had been like "seeing a rainbow after a rain storm. So as difficult as it was for the Foley family, it was also something very healing about meeting all of James' friends and realizing that there was a ... tribe of war reporters and photographers traveling around the world and forming very close bonds as a result."
Walt said the Bayeux-Calvados event was about more than just honoring the best journalistic works. There were discussions about creating a group that could help the families of hostages cope while they were in captivity, as well as creating an insurance fund that could help with the ransoms, said Walt. The fund would be targeted at hostages from the United States and the United Kingdom —governments that do not pay ransom.
As is done each year during the Bayeux-Calvados awards event, a memorial is unveiled to honor the journalists killed in conflicts. Still, none of the journalists were really ready to say that they won't go back to a war zone, and "it's very much a kind of badge of honour that they do still go back." However, there is a consensus, said Walt,  that because of the dangers facing journalists covering the news in Syria, it's unlikely there will be much information to come out of there.
"This has been a terrible year for war reporters," Walt added.

Russia’s Putin signs law extending Kremlin’s grip over media



 In a move that will significantly constrict Russia’s fast-shrinking space for independent reporting, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday signed into law a measure that will curtail foreign ownership of media outlets in his country.
Russia’s Putin signs law extending Kremlin’s grip over media.odt by Thavam

Ramped up air strikes stall Islamic State advance on Syrian town

Smoke rises from the Syrian town of Kobani, seen from the Mursitpinar border crossing on the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa province, October 16, 2014. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Smoke rises from the Syrian town of Kobani, seen from the Mursitpinar border crossing on the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa province, October 16, 2014.
BY HUMEYRA PAMUK-MURSITPINAR Turkey Thu Oct 16, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - Two days of heavy air strikes by U.S. warplanes have slowed an advance by Islamic State militants against Kurdish forces defending the Syrian border town of Kobani.
Last week Turkish and U.S. officials said Islamic State were on the verge of taking Kobani from its heavily outgunned Kurdish defenders, after seizing strategic points deep inside the town.
The tempo of coalition air strikes has increased dramatically, with U.S. fighter and bomber planes carrying out 14 raids against Islamic State targets near Kobani on Wednesday and Thursday, the U.S. military's Central Command said.
The strikes had seen the militants' advance slow, but "the security situation on the ground in Kobani remains tenuous," the U.S. statement added.
The four-week Islamic State assault has been seen as a test of U.S. President Barack Obama's air strike strategy, and Kurdish leaders say the town cannot survive without arms and ammunition reaching the defenders, something neighbouring Turkey has so far refused to allow.
Islamic State has been keen to take the town to consolidate its position in northern Syria after seizing large amounts of territory in that country and in Iraq. A defeat in Kobani would be a major setback for the Islamists and a boost for Obama.
Heavy and light weapons fire were audible from across the border in Turkey on Thursday afternoon, with one stray mortar hitting Turkish soil close to abandoned tents, a Reuters correspondent said.
Turkish security forces moved civilians and media away from hills overlooking Kobani as the fighting raged.
Six air strikes hit eastern Kobani and there was fierce fighting between Kurdish and Islamist fighters overnight on Wednesday, but neither side made significant gains, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Kurdish fighters later managed to seize a street in Kobani that had been held by militants, the Observatory said.
A journalist in Kobani said air strikes had allowed Kurdish forces to go on the offensive for the first time since Islamic State launched their assault four weeks ago.
"We walked past some (YPG) positions in the east yesterday that were held by IS only two days ago," Abdulrahman Gok told Reuters by telephone.
"Officials here say the air strikes are sufficient but ground action is needed to wipe out IS. YPG is perfectly capable of doing that but more weapons are needed."
Islamic State's Kobani offensive is one of several it has conducted after a series of lightning advances since June, which have sent shockwaves through the region and sparked alarm in western capitals.
U.S. officials have ruled out sending troops to tackle the group, but Kurdish forces have been identified as viable partners for the coalition, and Kurds in Iraq have received western arms shipments to bolster their cause. No weapons or ammunition have reached Kobani however, fighters there say.
Kurdish forces killed at least 20 Islamic State fighters on Wednesday west of Ras al-Ayn, another Syrian city on the border to the east of Kobani, the Observatory reported.
At least two YPG fighters were also killed during the clashes, in which Kurdish fighters seized Kalashnikovs, machine guns and other weaponry, The Observatory said.
SAFE ZONE 
Turkey has refused to bow to pressure to aid Kobani, either by ordering in Turkish tanks and troops that line the border, or permitting weapons and ammunition to reach the town.
Ankara is reluctant to be sucked into the morass of the Syrian conflict without clear guarantees from western allies that more will be done to help repatriate 1.6 million people who have fled across the border from Syria.
Officials are also wary of arming Kobani's Kurdish defenders, who have strong links with the militant Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has staged a decades long insurgency against the Turkish government in the country's predominantly Kurdish southeast.
Turkish officials are increasingly frustrated with criticism of their actions towards Kobani, saying they have carried the humanitarian burden from the fighting, which saw 200,000 people cross the border from the Kobani area.
They also say air strikes fail to offer a comprehensive strategy against Islamic State, which has flourished in the power vacuum created by Syria's war. Ankara blames Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for this, and wants him toppled from power, something western allies currently refuse to countenance.
Speaking on Wednesday, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Kurdish fighters who had fled into Turkey had been invited to return to Kobani to defend it, but had declined.
He also spelled out details for the "secure zones" that Turkey wants to be set up in Syria close to its border, so that refugees can begin to return.
Zones should be created near the city of Aleppo, which has seen some of the fiercest fighting of recent months. Others would be set up near the Turkish border in Idlib province, Hassaka, Jarablous and Kobani, Davutoglu said.
To boost legitimacy, the U.N. should enforce the zones, Davutoglu said, but failing that, the international coalition could provide the air cover needed.
"Turkey could provide all the help necessary if such protection zones are created. But when such protection zones do not exist, to ask Turkey to intervene on its own is to ask Turkey to shoulder this risk on its own."
Turkish officials are optimistic they can convince coalition partners to meet some of their demands, at which point Ankara would play a more active role, although it is unclear how long negotiations might take.
U.S. officials say creating safe zones is not a priority and NATO said last week it was not discussing such a move.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday reiterated Damascus' opposition to "buffer zones" - the phrase used by some Turkish officials - warning they would be a gross violation of international law, the Syrian state agency Sana reported.
"(The Syrian people) won’t allow anyone to interfere in their affairs, and are bent on defending their sovereignty,” the Foreign Ministry statement said.

(Additional reporting Seda Sezer and Dasha Afansieva in Istanbul and Oliver Holmes and Sylvia Westall in Beirut; Writing by Jonny Hogg; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Haqqani senior members arrested in eastern Afghanistan

Afghan intelligence service claims detention of Anis Haqqani and Hafiz Rashid is a major blow to al-Qaida-linked militants
Hafiz Rashid and Anis Haqqani
Hafiz Rashid and Anis Haqqani. Photograph: AP
The Guardian home
Associated Press in Kabul-Thursday 16 October 2014
Two senior members of the al-Qaida-linked Haqqani network have been arrested in Khost, a province in eastern Afghanistan, the Afghan intelligence service has said, claiming a major blow to the Pakistan-based militant group.
Anis Haqqani, a brother of the network’s leader, and Hafiz Rashid, who allegedly helped equip suicide bombers and select targets for attacks, were detained on Tuesday in a special operation, the National Directorate of Security said in a statement.
“It is one of the biggest and most important arrests by NDS, and has strategic impact on this network and can cause disorder in its operations and weaken its fighting capabilities,” the statement said, without providing details. The statement said Haqqani was an expert in computers and use of propaganda through social networks, and played a key role in the group’s strategic decisions as deputy to his brother, network leader Sirajuddin Haqqani.
“[Anis] was responsible for collecting and preparing funds from Arabic countries to carry out operations of this network,” the NDS said. Rashid was responsible for choosing targets and providing equipment to suicide bombers in Afghanistan, it said.
The Haqqanis are allied with al-Qaida and the Afghan Taliban and are accused of staging many cross-border attacks from their base in North Waziristan, Pakistan, including a 19-hour siege at the US embassy in Kabul in 2011.

Hong Kong leader ready to meet with students


WATCH: Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying states that he is ready to begin a dialogue with pro-democracy demonstrators.
@globalnewsto

By The Associated Press-October 16, 2014


HONG KONG – Hong Kong’s leader said Thursday he is ready to start talks as soon as next week with student leaders of the pro-democracy protests that have rocked the city for nearly three weeks.
The announcement suggests a breakthrough in a bitter standoff between the authorities and pro-democracy protesters, who have taken over major roads and streets in the city centre since Sept. 28 to press for a greater say in choosing the city’s leader.
Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said officials have been negotiating with the students through middlemen in the past few days, and announced that authorities are keen to discuss details of democratic reform with them.
“As long as students or other sectors in Hong Kong are prepared to focus on this issue, yes we are ready, we are prepared to start the dialogue,” he told reporters. “This is why over the past few days … we expressed the wish to students that we’d like to start the dialogue to discuss universal suffrage as soon as we can, and hopefully within the following week.”
Authorities angered protesters when they called off a scheduled meeting with student leaders last week, saying talks were unlikely to produce constructive results.
It is unclear whether the proposed meeting can overcome the vast differences between the two sides.
Protesters oppose the Chinese central government’s ruling that a committee stacked with pro-Beijing elites should screen candidates in the territory’s first direct elections, promised in 2017. That effectively means that Beijing can vet the nominees before they go a public vote.
Leung reiterated Thursday that Beijing will not retract its decision. However, he said there is scope for negotiations in how the committee that nominates candidates is formed.
“In the second round of consultation, we can still listen to everyone’s views. There is still room to discuss issues including the exact formation of the nomination committee,” he said.
Tensions between the two sides have escalated in the past few days, as riot police armed with pepper spray and batons moved to clear activists from the occupied streets.
Public anger over the aggressive tactics used by police erupted Wednesday after local TV showed several officers taking a protester around a dark corner and kicking him repeatedly on the ground. Police said they will investigate, and seven officers allegedly involved in the incident have been reassigned.
China’s central government is becoming increasingly impatient with the mostly peaceful demonstrations, the biggest challenge to its authority since China took control of the former British colony in 1997. There were no signs, however, that Beijing was planning to become directly involved in suppressing them.
© Shaw Media, 2014
Blackmail in the Buffer Zone

The U.S. needs Turkey to join the fight against the Islamic State. But Turkey won't do it without dragging the U.S. deeper into Syria's civil war.

The White House and its allies are pressing Turkey to join the military fight against the self-proclaimed Islamic State as the terrorist organization continues fighting for a complete conquest of the Syrian border town of Kobani. But Turkey has drawn a line in the sand: Unless the United States and its coalition partners create a "buffer zone" along the Syrian-Turkish border, it's planning to sit this one out.
Blackmail in the Buffer Zone by Thavam

Jet breaking sound barrier looks like this

GrindTVPhotographer Joe Broyles tried for five years before finally capturing split-second moment an aircraft hit the speed of sound, forming a vapor cone around it

Jet breaking sound barrier
Photo captures split-second moment jet breaks the sound barrier. Photo by Joe Broyles/Caters news
A photographer spent five years attempting to photograph the moment a jet breaks the sound barrier and finally succeeded, capturing the split-second moment the aircraft reached “transonic velocity,” or the speed of sound at 766 mph.
Joe Broyles, 61, attending an air show at the Oceania Naval Air Station in Virginia Beach, Virginia, picked a spot in the sky and snapped eight images in less than two seconds, hoping he’d get lucky, according to Caters News Agency.
“They move so fast it’s near impossible to time when to start pushing the shutter button,” Broyles told Caters.
Luck was on his side as Broyles captured the moment an F-18 Super Hornet 2 jet broke the sound barrier, forming a vapor cone around the jet that lasted tenths of a second.
Broyles had been to several air shows in the past attempting to get his tough-to-get photo. Not only is it difficult because of the speed of the aircraft but so is judging the height that the jet will pass overhead.
“I didn’t know if he would come in high, low, or somewhere in the middle,” he said. “I have experienced all three.”
Now he’s finally experienced success.
“When I saw the photograph, I was absolutely ecstatic,” Broyles said. “I’ve been waiting for this moment for at least five years, so when I saw the image I raised my arm with a closed fist—I finally got it.”

So just how contagious is Ebola, really?


ebola head
GEEKBy  Oct. 7, 2014
As history’s worst outbreak of Ebola continues to ravage many poor countries, the first cases of the disease are now popping up on affluent North American shores — first by plane-ride from Africa, and now by a single (as of this writing) domestic infection. Virtually every news program in the country ran a prominent story about about the disease’s possible spread, but anyone over ten years of age will remember many similar stories only too well.
From West Nile to SARS to H1N1, the narrative for every new outbreak of a foreign disease is essentially identical to the one we’re hearing about Ebola today: be very, very afraid. Yet the scare-plagues of the past have always broken against the Western world’s skill in public health; is there any reason to think Ebola will turn out differently?
No. Despite its horrifying symptoms, Ebola actually has fairly low contagiousness in the scheme of things. Its R0 value (said “R-naught”) is just two, meaning that during an average outbreak an average diseased person will infect two other people before either dying or beating the disease. That might sound alarming, but notice that many other diseases have much higher R0 values — SARS has an R0 value of 4, Measles of 18. Ebola is actually quite inept at host-to-host transmission, as unlike most virulent diseases it is not contagious until the infected start showing visible symptoms.
This makes disease carriers immobile and simple to spot; in theory, it ought to be easy to avoid new infections. While there is no cure for Ebola, quarantine does work at ending new infections — and thanks to the digital age, it’s never been easier to track interactions.
Image courtesy of Adam Cole, NPR.
Image courtesy of Adam Cole, NPR.
The game Pandemic teaches the principles of viral spread quite well; from the perspective of a disease, it makes far more sense to lay low and leave the infected alive and spreading as long as possible. A disease with the properties of Ebola could never go on to win in that game — nor could it in the real world. Remember that basically none of the claims made about historical short-lived health scares were wrong — they were just misleading. It’s absolutely true that West Nile is skilled at spreading through populations, but it’s also true that we humans are quite skilled at stopping it. That’s the inherent inaccuracy at the center of most of these scares: their predictions mostly play out as idealized thought experiments that assume we can’t or won’t take the proper steps in our own defense.
Of course, while an R0 value of 2 is low in the context of horrible diseases, it still means that the infected population could as much as double every 1-2 weeks; all by itself, Ebola’s R0 value can explain the disease’s rampant spread across the third world. Tragically, scientifically ignorant African societies have basically conducted themselves like the idealized actors of the R0 thought experiments, as locals often hide their symptoms from health workers and even family members, essentially doing Ebola’s work for it. Here in North America, that sort of behavior is unthinkable outside of cult compounds which are, by their nature, cut off from the rest of society.
Ebola is an enormous, worm-like virus tailored to quick and painful reproduction in a host.
Ebola is an enormous, worm-like virus tailored to quick and painful reproduction in a host.
We need to start thinking about worldwide public health efforts much more metaphorically, giving as much respect and funding to pro-vaccination education as to the physical dissemination of medicine and care. This fascinating article in Nature lays out the case for anthropologists and local cultural experts as a necessary part of public health in foreign countries. This outbreak has had something like 70% lethality, meaning that unless we invent a full-fledged cure the best course is clearly to focus on preventing infections, rather than treating them.
The basic take-away from all this is that while Ebola is horribly dangerous to you, it is not at all dangerous to us. I worry that unwarranted fear about a domestic Ebola outbreak will take money and attention from the real problem: in Africa, Ebola has found a playground with virtually no restrictions. Rather than any few infected individuals on our own shores, it’s the masses of infected (and soon-to-be-infected) people across Africa that are by far the biggest threat to American citizens. If we don’t acknowledge this fact, then Africa will be the staging ground for many, many more Ebola outbreaks in the future. Even if we concern ourselves solely with saving American lives, that’s a trend we simply have to stop.
Now read: Sub-zero secret serum saves two American Ebola patients