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

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Jerusalem, on a Knife's Edge

Stabbing attacks and random acts of Palestinian terror have brought the violence in Gaza and the West Bank into the heart of Israel.

This is not the Third Intifada. At least, it probably isn't. But the persistent violence that has racked Jerusalem could certainly spark a wider popular protest movement across the Palestinian territories. Call it Jerusalem's Arab Awakening.
Jerusalem, On a Knife's Edge by Thavam Ratna

South Korea fires warning shots near border with North

South Korean army soldiers stand guard at a military check point near the border with North Korea. Pic: AP.
South Korean army soldiers stand guard at a military check point near the border with North Korea. Pic: AP.
By  Nov 10, 2014
Asian CorrespondentSEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Seoul defense officials say South Korean troops have fired warning shots after North Korean soldiers approached too close to the border separating the rival countries.
The officials say Monday’s incident happened near the military demarcation line inside the 4-kilometer-wide (2.5-mile-wide) Demilitarized Zone that divides the Korean Peninsula.
They say North Korean soldiers retreated after South Korean troops fired 20 rounds of warning shots. There were no reports of casualties.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with office policy.
Tensions between the Koreas remain high after troops exchanged gunfire along the border twice last month, though there have been no reports of casualties.
The Korean Peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War in the 1950s ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

Syrian rebel leader: US-led attacks on Isis are undermining anti-Assad forces


The Guardian homeHadi al-Bahra claims Syrians see US-led coalition turning a blind eye to Assad’s forces while failing to liaise with Free Syrian Army

kobani air strike
, Middle East editor-Monday 10 November 2014
Hadi al-Bahra claims air strikes against Isis forces are only addressing the symptom – when the main cause of problems in Syria is Bashar al-Assad's regime. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
US-led attacks on the jihadis of the Islamic State (Isis) are the product of a confused policy that is “turning a blind eye” to the crimes of President Bashar al-Assad, according to the leader of Syria’s main western-backed opposition group
Hadi al-Bahra, president of the Syrian National Coalition (SNC), warned in an interview on Monday that air strikes against Isis by the international coalition assembled by Barack Obama were weakening support inside Syria for already embattled non-extremist anti-Assad forces.
“The coalition is fighting the symptom of the problem, which is Isis, without addressing the main cause, which is the regime,” Bahra told the Guardian before a meeting of the 11-nation Friends of Syria forum in London. “People see coalition planes hitting Isis targets but turning a blind eye to Assad’s air force, which is using barrel bombs and rockets against civilian targets in Aleppo and elsewhere.”
Assad’s office said on Monday that a UN proposal for a freeze on fighting in Aleppo, which is divided into rebel- and government-held areas, was “worth studying”.
However, Bahra said local ceasefires would only benefit the regime unless they were part of a comprehensive, negotiated political solution to a conflict that has cost 200,000 Syrian lives and displaced half the population since March 2011.
However, his main message was about the damage to the anti-Assad cause since the US and four Arab allies began targeting Isis in Syria in late September in tandem with parallel attacks across the border in Iraq. “People feel there is a hidden agenda and cooperation between the coalition and Assad’s forces because Assad assumes he has a free hand,” he said. “Syrian public opinion is a front which we need to win.”
Hitting targets other than Isis – such as the al-Qaida-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra – was also playing into the hands of the Damascus government, he said.
Bahra decried the fact that the US-led coalition was not liaising with the fighters of the Free Syrian Army, a loose alliance of anti-Assad units linked to the SNC. The only exception has been at Kobani on the Turkish border, where Kurdish and FSA forces worked in coordination with coalition air strikes to push back Isis.
“The FSA is being ignored completely and this is weakening the international coalition operation because it is not able to achieve results on the ground,” he said. “The whole operation has been confused. Air strikes will not be able to win the battle against extremism. You have to defeat Isis on the ground. And you have to deal with the main cause and source of extremism, which is the regime itself.”
Bahra played down recent defeats for two US-backed rebel groups in the Idlib area and insisted there were plenty of other nationalist fighting forces available to take part in a planned $500m (£315m) “train and equip” programme. But he admitted there had been many negative aspects to opposition military strategy.
“Isis works under one command and with a clear ideology,” he said. “Aid to the FSA was delivered to battalion commanders so fighters got sick and tired of belonging to an individual and not to a united national force which works to achieve the aspirations of the Syrian people.”
Bahra also made clear his opposition to ceasefire proposals being explored by the UN envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, which have been discussed in recent days in a flurry of unofficial reports and leaks.
“The lives of Syrians are our top priority but we need to look at this from a strategic point of view,” the opposition leader said. “Ceasefires and limiting existing violence provide a temporary solution but not a permanent resolution of the crisis. Ceasefires without a clear vision for a full and comprehensive political solution will give the regime time to regroup and reorganise itself to continue its crimes against the Syrian people at a later stage.”
At the meeting in London, Bahra met the foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, who said afterwards that Assad’s regime was “unwilling and unable to take effective action” against Isis. Hammond added: “I reaffirmed today to President al-Bahra that Assad can play no future role in Syria.”
Bahra, a US-educated engineer with close ties to Saudi Arabia, has battled to improve the image of the SNC, scarred by infighting and manipulation by Turkey and Gulf sponsors. Activists on the ground routinely attack it for being out of touch, unrepresentative and ineffective. Last July, Jon Wilks, the UK government envoy to the opposition, warned privately that if the body behaved like a “mafia” it would adversely affect donor funding.
Its position has worsened recently because the Isis security threat has led some western governments to consider reopening channels to Assad and dealing with him as the “lesser evil” to the jihadis. “At this point it doesn’t look good,” Bahra admitted. “But sooner or later the international community will have to find a permanent solution.”
Bahra headed the opposition delegation to the Geneva II talks last January, which petered out without any progress and were followed by Assad’s re-election for a third term as president. Bahra said he saw little prospect for a return to negotiations.
The allies of the Syrian opposition, especially the US, had been generous with humanitarian aid but had provided far less financial and military support than Iran and Russia had given Assad, Bahra said. “Our friends are not serious enough in providing the proper amount of aid and support to help us to create enough military pressure inside Syria to press the regime to return to the negotiating table to achieve a full political solution.”

Hezbollah blames Israel for killing of five nuclear engineers in Syria

bannerOne of the scientists was Iranian; Hezbollah suspects Syrian rebels working for Israel carried out the attack.

Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, left, speaks with Syrian President Bashar Assad

This file photo shows Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, left, speaks with Syrian President Bashar Assad, right. February 25, 2010. Photo by AP

Nov. 11, 2014
Hezbollah is blaming Israel for the deaths of five nuclear engineers, four Syrians and one Iranian, on Monday in Damascus.
Initial Syrian reports said that four Syrians were killed in an ambush, but later Syrian state television admitted that a fifth scientist, an Iranian, was also among the victims.
The five were killed after gunmen opened fire on their bus in an area not affected by the fighting between rebel groups and Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces.
"We can confirm that five scientific experts were martyred by terrorists as part of the ongoing plots of the Zionist entity," an unnamed Hezbollah commander based in Beirut said in a report published Tuesday by theSydney morning Herald.
The Hezbollah commander said that he saw a pattern in the method used to kill the scientists, and that of the 2013 assassination of high-ranking Hezbollah operative Hassan Laqis, who was shot by an unknown gunman at close range outside a suburban Beirut safe house – a killing also blamed on Israel.
He believes that Syrian rebels, acting on Israel’s behalf, were behind the killing of the scientists.
"We have long determined that the Zionist entity works closely with a number of the so-called rebel groups for anti-Hezbollah and anti-Syrian regime operations," he was quoted as saying.
A Syrian government newspaper, Al-Watan, reported Monday that the scientists were headed to the Scientific Research Center near the Syrian capital when they were attacked. It suggested the Al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front was behind the assault.
Syrian facilities suspected of being used for military and nuclear research have been targeted in the past.
Last May, a military and scientific research center in Damascus was struck in an attack attributed to Israel. In January, Syrian officials accused Israel of striking another scientific research center northwest of Damascus.
In 2007, Israel bombed a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor — an attack confirmed by U.S. officials. Israel has never commented on the incident. 

Xi urges faster APEC talks on China-backed free trade area

 U.S. President Barack Obama (centre, L) and Chinese President Xi Jinping (centre, R) walk together before dinner at Zhongnanhai, during the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing
U.S. President Barack Obama (centre, L) and Chinese President Xi Jinping (centre, R) walk together before dinner at Zhongnanhai, during the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing November 11, 2014.REUTERS-Kevin LamarqueReuters
China's President Xi Jinping (C) makes opening remarks as U.S. President Barack Obama (L) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin listen at an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit plenary
China's President Xi Jinping (C) makes opening remarks as U.S. President Barack Obama (L) and Russia's President Vladimir Putin listen at an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit plenary session at the International Convention Center at Yanqi Lake in Beijing, November 11, 2014. REUTERS-Pablo Martinez Monsivais-Pool
BY MICHAEL MARTINA-BEIJING Tue Nov 11, 2014
(Reuters) - The global economic recovery is unstable and nations in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) bloc should speed up free trade talks to spur growth, Chinese President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday.
Speaking at this year's APEC summit in Beijing, Xi said the 21-member forum had agreed that economic integration was the "driving force" behind sustained strong growth and APEC "should continue to play a leading and coordinating role in pushing forward this process".
APEC, which includes the United States, China, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and Canada, groups countries which account for 40 percent of the world's population, 54 percent of its economic output and 44 percent of trade.
Xi urged members to speed up talks on a trade liberalisation framework called the Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific (FTAAP) that is being pushed by Beijing. APEC had approved work towards the establishment of FTAAP, which Xi said was a "historic step".
"Currently, the global economic recovery still faces many unstable and uncertain factors. Facing the new situation, we should further promote regional economic integration and create a pattern of opening up that is conducive to long-term development," Xi said.
"We should vigorously promote the Asia-Pacific free trade zone, setting the goal, direction and roadmap and turn the vision into reality as soon as possible."
Some see a proposed study on the FTAAP plan, which will eventually be presented to APEC leaders for approval, as a way to divert attention from the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement backed by the United States.
China is not part of the TPP and has not been enthusiastic about the initiative. Beijing fears that the TPP is being used by Washington to either force it to open markets by signing up or else isolate it from other regional economies as trade is diverted to TPP signatories.
The TPP is widely seen as the economic backbone of U.S. President Barack Obama's "pivot" to Asia, what some experts view as an attempt to balance China's rise by establishing a larger U.S. presence in the region.
U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman told reporters there was significant momentum toward building the TPP.
"All the countries are very focused on doing that, but we want to make sure that we get it right," he said.
Business leaders attending the APEC forum have been looking for signs of progress on the TPP, which had been stalled since September, especially as China continues to push for the FTAAP.
Xi was quoted by state news agency Xinhua on Monday as saying that FTAAP "does not go against existing free trade arrangements which are potential pathways to realise FTAAP's goals".
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe welcomed China's efforts this year on crafting a roadmap for the FTAAP scheme.
"Looking beyond TPP, we also have in sight the realisation of FTAAP that will create an even bigger market," Abe told a news conference. "At this APEC summit, we were able to create a roadmap for that."
Efforts must also be made to regain trust in World Trade Organisation talks, which are "endangered due to opposition from a small number of members," Abe told a morning session of the APEC forum, according to Japan's foreign ministry.

(Additional reporting by Sui-Lee Wee, Koh Gui Qing, Leika Kihara, Matt Spetalnick and Megha Rajagopalan; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Nick Macfie)

they stay, the harder it is to keep support


Mexico wakes up to corrupt politics and brutal cartels

Jose Luis Abarca and Maria de los Angeles PinedaMexico gang violenceMexico gang student deaths
Channel 4 News
TUESDAY 11 NOVEMBER 2014
The disappearance of 43 students in Mexico sparks a wave of violent clashes against the government and its brutal cartels. Guillermo Galdos travels to the country as Mexicans begin to demand answers.
Forty-four days ago, 43 students were detained by the Mexican police in front of dozens of witnesses in the city of Iguala, in the state of Guerrero.
Mexico Wakes Up to Corrupt Politics and Brutal Cartels by Thavam Ratna

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Kidneys: The Super Filters

AyurvedaKidney disease accounts for 26 million chronic kidney disease (CKD) adult cases, in the United States alone. People suffering from diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure and those who are older than 60 years old are more prone to this dilapidating disease. A family history of kidney disease can also put you at risk. Suffering from other ailments like Obesity, autoimmune diseases, and urinary tract infections also enhance your risk of developing kidney disease.
Apart from maintaining your weight, regularly monitoring your blood pressure, cholesterol and blood glucose level, and exercising regularly, taking the effort to change to healthy dietary habits would improve your chances to stave off renal problems. Eating a diet rich in fruits and vegetables, and low in salt or oxalate-rich food, can help prevent abnormal mineral build up. Additionally, drinking lots of water throughout the day, especially if you exercise frequently, is important for kidney health.
Check these articles written by Curejoy experts on the importance of Kidney health and natural ways to take care of these vital organs:
  1. 22 Things You Should Avoid To Prevent Kidney Damage.

  2. It’s High Time You Rewarded The Most Hardworking Cleaners That Keep You Alive: Your Kidneys.

  3. Kidneys- The Super Filters

  4. 10 Natural Remedies For Kidney Stones

  5. How to care for your kidneys

  6. Can eating too many nuts cause kidney stones?

  7. Will eating tomatoes lead to kidney stones?

  8. Does milk actually cause kidney stones?

  9. Is soda really bad for your kidneys?

Monday, November 10, 2014

State racism and sexism in post-war Sri Lanka


1983_rioters _2
HomeCHULANI KODIKARA 10 November 2014

Central to the resurgence of Sinhala Buddhist nationalism in post-war Sri Lanka is a redefinition of gender role and identities. Familial ideology is a key pillar of this discourse with serious adverse implications for women and gender equality
The bloody end to Sri Lanka’s civil war in May 2009 inaugurated a renewed upsurge in Sinhala Buddhist ethno-nationalism. Its outlines were clarified by President Rajapakse himself in his first post-war speech to parliament when he said: “the word minorities have been removed from our vocabulary” and claimed that “no longer are the Tamils, Muslims, Burghers, Malays and any others minorities.” He did not however say that there are no longer any majorities for that would take away the very corner stone of the post-war national identity (re)building project.
State Racism and Sexism in Post-war Sri Lanka by Thavam
டயகமவில் தீ விபத்து; 24 வீடுகள் எரிந்து சாம்பலாகின (படம் இணைப்பு)
2014-11-10 22:59:56 | General

டயகம பொலிஸ் பிரிவுக்கு உட்பட்ட டயகம மேற்கு தோட்டத்தின் 2ம் இலக்க பிரிவில் இன்று இரவு(நேற்று) 7 மணியளவில் ஏற்பட்ட தீ விபத்தில் 24 தொழிலாளர் குடியிருப்பு அறைகள் முற்றாக எாிந்து சாம்பலாகியுள்ளது.

வீட்டில் இருந்தவா்கள் கூச்சலிட்டதை அடுத்து அயலவர்கள் ஓடி வந்து தீயை அணைக்க முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்ட போதிலும் தீயை கட்டுப்பாட்டுக்குள் கொண்டு வர முடியவில்லை.

எனினும் சில வீடுகளில் இருந்த சில பொருட்களை மாத்திரம் அவர்களால் தீக்கு இரையாகாமல் வெளியில் கொண்டு வர முடிந்துள்ளது. பெருமளவிலான வீட்டுபகரணங்கள், பெறுமதியான ஆவணங்கள், சிறிது சிறிதாக சேகரித்த தங்க நகைகள், பாடசாலை மாணவர்களின் சீருடைகள் மற்றும் பாடப் புத்தகங்கள் என பெருமளவிலான பொருட்கள் தீக்கு இரையாகியுள்ளன.

இந்த தீ விபத்தினால் லயன் தொகுதியில் அமைந்திருந்த 24 வீடுகள் சேதமடைந்ததுடன் இந்த வீடுகளில் குடியிருந்த 24 குடும்பங்களை சேர்ந்த 100ற்கும் மேற்பட்டவர்கள் தற்காலிகமாக ஆலய மண்டபங்களில் தங்க வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

WORK TOGETHER INSTEAD OF POLITICISING TRAGEDY—JEHAN PERERA


10 November 2014
The readiness to politicize any issue came to the fore in the course of the landslide tragedy at Haldamulla. With presidential elections on the near horizon, there was competition to be seen as caring more for the victims than the other. The President, ministers, leaders of political parties and their party members all were seen on the media taking relief supplies to the area and commiserating with the victims. The government had the advantage as it could control access to the area. The media showed visuals of the relief supplies taken by the Democratic Party dumped on the side of the road as they could not gain access to site of the tragedy.
Work Together Instead of Politicising Tragedy Jehan Perera by Thavam

Sri Lanka: Karuna’s Allegations About IPKF’s Human Rights Violations



| by Col. R. Hariharan
( November 10, 2014, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lanka Deputy Minister Vinayagamurthi Muralitharan, known as Karuna Amman in his earlier incarnation as LTTE commander of Batticaloa, accused the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) of rape and killings during its war against the LTTE in Sri Lanka between 1987 and 90.
Speaking in Parliament on November 4, he said the IPKF had raped several Tamil women and also killed Tamils and “there is evidence for that.”

All Prospects Lead But To The Brink In Sri Lanka


Colombo Telegraph
By S. Sivathasan -November 10, 2014
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
Hype and hyperbole
At the risk of appearing to talk nonsense I tell you that the National Socialist movement will go on for 1,000 years!… Don’t forget how people laughed at me 15 years ago when I declared that one day I would govern Germany. They laugh now, just as foolishly, when I declare that I shall remain in power!” - Adolf Hitler in Berlin, June 1934
Divested of the hyperbole the picture is little different in Sri Lanka. Where does the country stand today? Pursued by a menacing evil with likely rescuers yet to unite. To redeem the people and to change course, there is strength enough. But to subordinate self-interest, patriotic fervor needs to supervene. In no time if the dross gets burnt out in the fever heat of unity, evil is sure to be overrun.  What gives credence to optimism? Voters in the mass are on the verge of showing the power of the ballot when a unified leadership comes forward with regime change as the watchword and a robustly new political order as both message and programme.
History Fails to Teach.                      
Mahinda HitlerHistory is replete with many a tragedy. Two among them were seen most explicitly in Germany. An inexplicable first was the ease with which Hitler proceeded as if to a predestined goal. In the twenties the ground work was laid for one party rule dominated by a single forceful ruler. Historical circumstances obtaining in Europe after the world war facilitated the emergence of a strong leader. The Treaty of Versailles humiliating to the German psyche needed decisive rejection. Europe shuddering at Russian Bolshevism desired the advance checked and repulsed. In Hitler’s Germany it saw a developing bulwark that was uncompromising. There was thus a growing spirit of accommodation to Hitler’s ascent to power. A situation that was turning in his favor, he capitalized on to the full.
Hype and high expectations apart, were Europe’s hopes of comfort. Prime Minister Neville Chamberlin’s words “Peace for our time” made in 1938, well past 9 years of Hitler in the limelight, were a misreading of Hitler and his times. In Sri Lanka the polity can make no mistake after seeing the President’s exploits for 9 years. Nor can the comity of nations err in its judgment and remain complacent.
Hitler ‘Chinthana’                                  Read More

Do we enjoy universal adult Franchise?