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, November 1, 2014

It’s not just on Ebola that good science must prevail

Nay-sayers are all too quick to decry scientific findings if they don’t agree with their own cracked views
Kaci Hickox Ebola nurse
Kaci Hickox, an American nurse who treated Ebola patients in Sierra Leone, and then defied a quarantine order after returning home to Maine. Photograph: Robert F Bukaty/AP

Nick Cohen

Picture of Nick CohenThe Guardian homeKaci Hickox embodies all the American values conservatives say they admire. She’s tough – you don’t volunteer to leave New England to stem the spread of Ebola in Sierra Leone unless you have courage. She’s a rugged individualist, filled with the pioneering spirit, who makes her own way, without waiting for the say-so of “big government”. No tax-dollar funded politician or bureaucrat is going to lock her up in the land of the free.
She knows, as every doctor knows, that Ebola is only transmitted through direct contact with bodily fluids of a “symptomatic” person – that is a carrier who has developed or gone beyond the early symptoms offevers and fatigue. Hickox has no symptoms and sees no reason to undergo house arrest to please an over-mighty state.
You’d have thought that American Republicans would applaud her. Instead, they want “big government” to bring her into line. The right-wing media negates their own selfish philosophy and condemn her as “self-centred, self-entitled”. Paul LePage, Maine’s loud-mouthed, know-nothing blubberball of a governor, threatens to place her under effective house arrest.
There’s an election on, as you may have guessed. About 80% of Americans believe, on the basis of no evidence whatsoever, that US citizens returning from West Africa should be quarantined. Paranoia is running riot. Parents in Oklahoma demanded that the authorities quarantine a teacher who went to Rwanda, which is nowhere near West Africa. A Connecticut school banned a child because she went to Nigeria, which has been declared free of the virus.
Most seriously, Louisiana politicians have wrecked a conference on tropical diseases due to begin today in New Orleans. Its embarrassed organisers told those doctors who have been to West Africa within the past 21 days – that is, those doctors who are most likely to know what should be done – to stay away or be quarantined. “We see no utility in you travelling to New Orleans to simply be confined to your room,” their sheepish email read.
Assorted wackos from religious apologists to postmodern relativists rage against the oppressive ideology of “scientism”. They say its arrogant disciples insist that only truths that stand the test of the scientific method can be believed. They force their doctrines, which cranks always insist are no more “true” than the doctrines of alternative health/religion/intelligent design/Holocaust denial (delete where applicable) on the rest of society, allowing no dissent. One only has to look at the Ebola panic to see the falsity of the myth of the imperial scientist. It cannot restrain a hysterical public and the seedy politicians who egg them on. Neither cares that if Ebola is to be stopped thousands more men and women with the courage of Hickox must go to West Africa, and they may well be deterred if puffed-up demagogues boom they are selfish rather than selfless and try to lock them up to placate popular prejudice.
Ah, I hear you say, the hysterics in question are American hysterics, from a land famed for its stupidity. The patriot in me would like to believe the British will behave better after our first Ebola death. But, let’s face it, many among us will not. Ukip knows as well as the Tea Party the electoral advantages of noisily proclaimed ignorance. I do not expect it to welcome home men and women who have been trying to save the lives of black Africans, nor after his pathetic capitulation to the far right do I expect David Cameron to make a stand.
Perhaps he will prove me wrong, but as of last week we have a debased prime minister who would rather leave refugees to drown in the Mediterranean than challenge extremists. His record on fighting irrational prejudice is just as dismal as his record on immigration. Older readers will remember that Cameron once presented himself as a moderate, modern conservative. When he fought for the leadership, hecalled for “alternative ways, including the possibility of legalisation and regulation, to tackle the global drugs dilemma”. A decade on, he still knows the alternatives work. He still knows prohibition feeds organised crime. Someone must have told him that Portugal saw a 50% drop in drug addiction after it decriminalised drug use. And his own Home Office certainly told him that harsh punishments have no effect
But the British prime minister is such a fool that he ignores evidence that inconveniences him and such a coward he condemns liberals for advocating the policies he once advocated in the vain hope of placating a right that will always hate him. We should show a little humility before we allow ourselves to feel superior to “stupid” America.
Amid all the bombast of last week, the scientific journal Nature and the campaign group Sense About Science awarded the annual John Maddox prize to writers who challenge superstition. The joint winners confronted beliefs that are as prevalent in Britain as America: that vaccination causes autism, that homeopathic medicines work, that manmade climate change does not exist and that adding fluoride to the water supply is a threat to health. (I didn’t know it until the prize jury told me but Sinn Féin is leading a vigorous anti-fluoride campaign in Dublin – well, I suppose it’s progress for the IRA to go from blowing off peoples’ heads to merely rotting their teeth.)
David Robert Grimes, one of the winners, said that, contrary to the myth of the scientific bully, most of his colleagues wanted to keep out of public debate, presumably because they did not wish to receive the threats of violence fanatics and quacks have directed at him. If we are to improve public policy in areas as diverse as the fight against Ebola to the treatment of drug addicts, they need to be a braver, and more willing to tell the public, which so often funds their research, what they have learned.
Grimes makes a useful distinction. Most people just want more information and scientists should be prepared to make their case clearly and concisely. Then there are the rest – Ukip, the Tea Party, governors of Maine, Sinn Féin, David Cameron, climate change deniers – who will block out any evidence that contradicts their beliefs. They confirm the truth of Paul Simon’s line: “All lies and jest, still the man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest.”
They can’t be convinced. They just have to be fought.

Home remedies to remove the skin moles naturally

skin-moles
Skin moles are dropping your appearance when they are on your face. They are not allowed to show your body if they are on the body. They make you shy and feel bad about you in the people. Some moles bring the additional beauty to your face. But these are not good for any one. They are come due to cosmetic and dermatology problems. Below are the some of the best home remedies to remove the skin moles naturally.

Natural remedies to remove the skin moles

  •  Take some hot water in bowl and add the white vinegar or apple cider vinegar to it. Soak the cotton ball in it. Apply this ball on the area of mole. Leave it for 30 minutes. Then wash it.
  •  Take Asprin tablet make it powder and mix the powder in water make it as paste. Apply it on skin mole area. Wash after 15 minutes.
  •  Make paste with baking soda and water and apply it on the skin mole. Wash these after 15 minutes .It is the best popular usable remedy.
  •  Make paste with castor oil and baking soda. Apply it on the mole. Leave it for hour. Then wash it with hot water. Do it for a week to get the result.
  •  Rub the dandelion stem on the mole. Do it for 4 days to remove the mole.
  • Apply the garlic paste on the mole area with cotton cloth leave it for 12 hours. Better to apply this on the night. Wash it on the early morning.
  •  Finely chopped red onions and salt mix the both make as gel. Apply this with cotton cloth on mole area. Leave it for 3 hours and wash with water.
  • Grape fruit seed extracts are also helpful in curing the moles. Apply these extracts on the affected area. Then wash with water after 2 hours.

Friday, October 31, 2014

Northern Province HND Holders Receive Positions As Graduate Trainees

Colombo Telegraph
October 31, 2014 
A group of Higher National Diploma holders from the Northern province who filed a fundamental rights petition seeking justice for being deprived of appointments as graduate trainees yesterday withdrew their petition after the Supreme Court recommended that all petitioners be accepted as graduate trainees, provided they fulfil other necessary requirements.
Supreme_Court_Colombo telegraphDuring the case that was taken up yesterday the SC also recommended that all permanent appointments of the petitioners should be backdated once they completed their training.
The petition was submitted by a group of 228 petitioners on July 31, 2012. Although they all held HNDs – a qualification that was consistently recognized as an equivalent  to a university degree to enter the public service – they were prevented from applying for the post of graduate trainees, although similarly qualified individuals were recruited into the public service as graduate trainees.
When the case was taken up on September 29, 2014, the Senior state counsel representing the Attorney General’s Department informed the Court that a settlement was under consideration but that several would be ineligible to enter the public service as a result of a policy decision to accept applicants who were only below 35 years.
The same fact was mentioned once again before the Court yesterday in order to reach a settlement.  The State counsel informed Court that only 213 petitioners have been accepted into the public service as graduate trainees due to the age restriction.
This argument was however countered by the Counsel representing the petitioners who referred to a circular issued by the Additional Secretary to the Ministry of Public administration and home affairs in May, 2013 that instructed all District Secretaries to accept applications of all those aged between 35 – 45 years for the graduate trainee positions.
Based on that fact the Counsel informed that the petitioners who currently remained ineligible were entitled to have their appointments and that all the petitioners were entitled to have their permanent appointments backdated to July 2013.
Related posts;

Negotiations towards a Political Solution: Sampanthan Sets the Record Straight

Sampanthan 6_CI
Sri Lanka BriefBy R. Sampanthan, MP, TNA-31/10/2014 
During his speech, Sir, His Excellency the President has also referred to political issues. I refer to points 2.6 and 2.7 in his speech. He has talked about the need for a political solution. He has insinuated that the Tamil National Alliance is not cooperating with the Government in regard to a political solution. He has also alleged that the Tamil National Alliance is responsible for the present stalemate regarding a suitable political solution. I do not think, Sir, that these statements of the President are in accordance with the true position. I do not intend to engage in a confrontation, but I do think when the President has made a statement of this nature, the truth needs to be put on record, and that, we need to respond. We are committed to the evolution of a political solution within the framework of a united and undivided Sri Lanka. It is true that there was a demand for the restoration of sovereignty of the Tamil people consequent to the enactment of the 1972 Constitution, which denied them everything and made them second class citizens. The Indo-Sri Lanka Agreement, ever since its inception, the date of Agreement is 29th July 1987 – the first commitment in the agreement is that the unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka must be preserved. Ever since then, Sir, the demand for separation has not been pursued. It is the expectation of the vast majority of Tamil people that there will be a political solution that would enable them to live as equal citizens within a united and undivided Sri Lanka. They would much prefer and indeed want to be equal Sri Lankans rather than pursue a separatist goal. It is in this background, Sir, that I propose to analyze what the President has said in the course of his Budget Speech and all that has happened, particularly, after President Rajapaksa’s assumption of office for the first time in 2005.

RWB PUTS TEN FACES TO ITS 


#FIGHTIMPUNITY CAMPAIGN

PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY 30 OCTOBER 2014.

Prageeth Eknaligoda

Reporters Without Borders

Reporters Without Borders is highlighting ten emblematic cases of impunity as part of its #FightImpunity campaign for the first International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists. The aim is to involve the general public and step up pressure on governments to bring those responsible for these crimes to justice.
When the UN General Assembly created International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists on 13 December 2013, it designated 2 November, the anniversary of the murder of the twoRadio France Internationale journalists, Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon in Kidal, Mali, in 2013.

Reporters Without Borders has chosen these 10 cases to put names and faces to the tragic statistics and to show the scale and different forms that impunity can take. The resources deployed by authorities to solve these and many other cases have been either non-existent or hopelessly inadequate. More than 90 percent of crimes against journalists are never solved and therefore never punished.

These ten impunity cases are presented on a specially created website, http://fightimpunity.org/en. Some of the victims disappeared, such Mexican crime reporter María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe, Abidjan-based French journalist Guy-André Kieffer, Iranian newspaper editor Pirouz Davani and Sri Lankan political analyst and cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda.

Some were murdered such as Pakistani reporter Syed Saleem Shahzad, the young Serbian journalistDada Vujasinovic, the Beirut-based columnist Samir Kassir and the Dagestani journalistAkhmednabi Akhmednabiyev, who was gunned down in 2013.

Dawit Isaak, a journalist with Swedish and Eritrean dual nationality, has been held incommunicado in Eritrean President Issayas Aferworki’s hellish prison camps for the past 13 years, while police officers tortured Bahraini reporter Nazeeha Saeed for covering pro-democracy demonstrations.

We must never abandon journalists who are the victims of crimes, not even posthumously,” Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. “The ten impunity cases we are presenting are shocking examples of incompetence or wilful inaction by officials who should be punishing despicable crimes against those who have tried to describe reality as it is.

“Such a level of impunity just encourages those who commit these abuses. International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists is an occasion for paying tribute to the victims, reminding governments of their obligation to protect journalists and combat impunity, and reminding those who target journalists that one day they will be held to account for their actions.

Whether killed execution-style, blown-up by a bomb, tortured to death or disappeared, these journalists paid the price for their commitment to freedom of information. They were targeted for investigating corruption or drug trafficking, for criticizing the government or intelligence agencies or for drawing attention to human rights violations. Some of the cases have become emblematic, others are less well known.

Those responsible were many and varied, and include governments, armed groups and hit-men. RWB blames the shortcomings of police and justice systems for the failures to solve these cases or to convict the perpetrators and instigators.

Around 800 journalists have been killed in connection with their work in the past decade. The deadliest year was 2012, with 88 journalists killed. The number of killed fell slightly in 2013 but the figures for physical attacks and threats against journalists continued to rise. At total of 56 journalists have been killed since the start of 2014.

RWB’s recommendations

To combat impunity, Reporters Without Borders is calling for the creation of the position of special adviser to the UN secretary-general on the safety of journalists. Creating such a post at the heart of the UN system would enable monitoring and verification of states’ compliance with their obligations under UN Security Council Resolution 1738 and the General Assembly resolution of 18 December 2013.
Adopted on 23 December 2006, Resolution 1738 reminds states of their “obligations under international law to end impunity.” The resolution passed by the UN General Assembly on 18 December 2013 calls on states to conduct “impartial, speedy and effective investigations into all alleged violence against journalists (…) to bring the perpetrators of such crimes to justice and ensure that victims have access to appropriate remedies.”

A resolution adopted by the UN Human Rights Council on 19 September called in similar terms for an end to impunity. A proper international monitoring and verification mechanism is needed so that all these resolutions can be implemented.

RWB is also calling for an amendment to article 8 of the International Criminal Court’s statute so that deliberate attacks on journalists, media workers and associated personnel are defined as war crimes. As a member of the French coalition of the ICC, it is urging states to pass legislation allowing them, under the principle of universal jurisdiction, to prosecute those in their territory who committed grave crimes in another country.

The European Court of Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights have ruled that respect for freedom of information not only requires states to abstain from arbitrarily interfering in the use of the right to information but also requires them to protect journalists and prosecute those who target them.

RWB calls on states to implement these provisions by conducting immediate, effective and independent investigations into attacks against journalists and prosecuting those responsible.

The authorities that conduct these investigations must be able to resist any political, diplomatic or technical pressure or obstacles they may encounter. In some ongoing cases, RWB has seen how the threat of ending a judicial investigation represents a victory for impunity.

Securely communicate with Groundviews



GroundviewsThe Editor of Groundviews can now be reached over Telegram, a secure messaging app for mobiles and desktop chat clients.
Given the Snowden revelations in general and the pervasive surveillance architectures governing information flows in Sri Lanka, secure communications for whistleblowers, informants, human rights defenders and civil society activists is of paramount importance.
As noted on the web, “Telegram is a messaging app with a focus on speed and security. Unlike WhatsApp, Telegram is cloud-based and heavily encrypted. As a result, you can access your messages from several devices at once, including tablets and computers, and share an unlimited number of photos, videos and files (doc, zip, mp3, etc) of any size”.

Defense tools for Sri Lanka's online onslaught

Sanjana Hattotuwa, the founder of the citizen journalism website Groundviews, sent us the links to a new series of posters and videos focused on digital communications security. The material, which is aimed at a Sri Lankan audience, is available in English, Sinhala, and Tamil, but is relevant to anyone who uses the Internet or a mobile phone.Securely Communicate With Groundviews by Thavam

Sunday Leader To Remove Sumanthiran From Gota Case After Rigorous Cross-Examination


Colombo Telegraph
October 31, 2014
The Mount Lavinia District judge was told today (October 31, 2014) in defamation case number 6036/08, known as the MIG Case, filed against Leader Publications (Pvt) Ltd by Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Secretary to the Ministry of Defence (and brother of President Mahinda Rajapaksa), that the new management of Leader Publications now wants to retain fresh counsel to defend the company. This development comes, after Rajapaksa was subjected to rigorous cross-examination for several days, by a team of lawyers headed by senior counsel M. A. Sumanthiran, on behalf of the Sunday Leader. The cross-examination is still not over. Colombo Telegraph has previously reported that journalists were prevented from observing and reporting on these court proceedings, by the military.
Sumanthiran
Sumanthiran
The management change is as a result of a change of ownership in the Sunday Leader newspaper’s publisher, Leader Publications (Pvt) Ltd. The company is now bought over by interests represented by controversial businessman, Asanga Seneviratnewho is widely believed to be close to the Rajapaksa regime.
Some time ago, the counsel who appeared for the Sunday Leader against Rajapaksa to defend allegations of defamation were described as ‘traitors in black coats’ by the Defence Ministry website. This  caused the Bar Association and others to protest and strongly condemn the attempt to interfere with the right of all to legal representation and due process. The item was removed from the site, thereafter.
The court gave instructing attorney A. Ranagala who told court of the management decision, time to organize new counsel according to the wishes of the new management of Leader Publications.
Secretary Rajapaksa filed a defamation suit against The Sunday Leader newspaper which exposed details regarding the controversial purchase of MiG 29 by the ministry of defence in 2007.
Related posts;

Rain fails to prevent river of people to Nugegoda

lankaturth
FRIDAY, 31 OCTOBER 2014
The rally held at Nugegoda yesterday 30th) organized by ‘People’s Movement for Democracy (PMD) under the theme (30th) “No third term for Mahinda – No illegal presidential elections!” was attended by a large crowd despite heavy rain.
The rally was chaired by Senior Lecturer Ven. Dhambara Amila Thero.  Ven. Athuraliye Rathana Thero, former Chief Justice Sarath N. de Silva, the Leader of the JVP Anura Dissanayaka, The Chief Editor of ‘Ravaya’ K.W. Janaranjana, Parliamentarian Arjuna Ranatunga, The President of Federation of University Teachers Associations (FUTA) Senior Lecturer Chandraguptha Thenuwara, Attorney at Law Chandrapala Kumarage  representing Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL), Attorneys-at-Law, Chrismal Warnasuriya Chrismal Warnasuriya, Presidents Counsel Srinath Perera, Attorney-at Law Upul Kumaraperuma, Attorney-at-Law Sunil Watagala, renown Translator Gamini Viyangoda, the President of Sri Lanka Journalists Trade Union (SLJTU) Mandana Ismail were present on stage. Parliamentarian Ravi Karunanayaka joined those on the stage while the rally was progressing.
All speakers who addressed the rally spoke against holding an illegal presidential election.

The Rise Of Mahinda Rajapaksa, Democracy, Terrorism And The Muslim Factor In Sri Lanka

Colombo Telegraph
By Nishthar Idroos -October 31, 2014 |
Nishthar Idroos
Nishthar Idroos
Aluthgama ViolenceWinds heralding another round of elections loom high. Astrologers, fortune-tellers,  and every political soothsayer are busying themselves to make the kill. It’s that kind of season once again in Sri Lanka. The time to lubricate the palms big time if you’re someone or anyone endowed with the incomprehensible science of planetary movement. All of this can happen only in the resplendent island of Sri Lanka. Television channels compete with each other showcasing supposedly eligible and competent souls-of-clairvoyance confidently deciphering the science to the laity. Supposed god-men  escorted to the palace in utmost secrecy for on-the-spot consultations. Those opting for greater accuracy venture the quick flight over the Palk-straits to consult professionals whose names have reached the “stars”.
Government and opposition politicians alike engage in this kind of activities whenever elections come and even during non-election times. Whether you’re a product of Oxford, Harvard or a simple coward these rituals are considered sine-quo-none and are religiously observed. To add to the saga The Jathika Hela Urumaya an ultra-nationalist party in Sri Lanka recently told the Government and President Mahinda Rajapaksa to look at the holes on the ground before looking at the stars in the sky. It seems there is spell-binding pyrotechnics already embellishing the evening skies; this can only get pretty intense no sooner the election date is officially announced. This is not a Sri Lankan thing. Authentic and confirmed records have it that even President Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy were firm believers in the esoteric science.  So much for America’s faith in God and its near imperium on science.

An open letter urging the president to enact a “Recovery of Proceeds of Crime Act”

mr 23Dear Mr. President and Leaders of Political Parties,
The citizens and civil society are most grateful to Reverend Athureliye Rathana Thero, for leading the ‘Pivithuru Hetak’ (For a Just & Fair Society Tomorrow) Movement, in the development of the National Policy statement ‘Rata Gatha Yuthu Maga’: which programme has as one of its cornerstones, the assurance of good governance and a corruption free society in Sri Lanka.

Disappearances in Sri Lanka: Our Message to Govt by Brito Fernando

Brio Fernando at the Press Conference sowing on of the mud posters on 30th Oct 2014 At the 24th Commemoration
Sri Lanka Brief[Brito Fernando @ the 24th annual commemoration of the disappeared – October 27th 2014]
By Brito Fernando-31/10/2014 
At this 24th commemoration of the disappeared I would like to look back, as a person who has taken part in all previous 23 commemorations.
The first time we saw mass scale terror was in 1971.We saw burning bodies during the 1989 – 1990 period. We saw heads served from the bodies fixed to polls by the road side. It was Sinhalese who were crying at that time.Disappearances in Sri Lanka Our Message to Govt by Brito Fernando by Thavam