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

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

If presidency not abolished in his lifetime Vasu to Commit suicide

By Kavindya Thomas-2014-12-11
Minister of National Languages and Social Integration, Vasudeva Nanayakkara stated he will take his own life, if the executive presidential system was not abolished during his lifetime.The statement was made at a media briefing held in Colombo yesterday (10).
During the briefing, he said the abolishment of the executive presidential system was essential and the executive powers should be bestowed upon the Parliament as a whole, since that was where the democratically elected representatives were in action.
The Democratic Left Front (DLF), General Secretary issued a 'people-friendly' public proposal of action for the government, to be put into action during a five-year period from 2015-2020. This proposal addressed several issues such as the abolishment of the executive presidency, a change in the electoral system as well as the introduction of an amicable tariff system. According to party members, the proposal was issued in order to strengthen the developmental approach this government had adopted back in 2005, when it came to power.

Furthermore, the minister said he was completely against nepotism and believed in the decentralization of power and authority.
"From 1977- 2005, the governing system was influenced by western reforms. But that changed when Mahinda Rajapaksa came to power in 2005. From 2005-2014, the governing system changed completely. What is happening currently is a struggle between these two forces,", the minister said.

Legal Action Against Colombo Mayor Over Illegal Hoardings Of President


Colombo Telegraph
December 10, 2014 
Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) said legal action will be filed against the Mayor of Colombo and the Colombo Municipal Commissioner by tomorrow against their failure to comply with the letter of demand sent by the organization concerning the illegal hoardings of President Rajapaksa that have been put up all over Colombo.
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
BASL officials said charges against the two officials will be filed under the Presidential elections act and property laws as the majority of the hoardings, cutouts and posters that have been put up bearing President Rajapaksa’s image are illegal since required permission has not been sought and neither have the relevant fees been paid.
The BASL said that over 1800 bearing the image of President Rajapaksa and details/images of development projects launched during his tenure have been put up within the city limits of Colombo and is in direct violation of the by-laws published in the Gazette Notification issued in 1989 and Advertising Guidelines of the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC) that were introduced in 2006.
Moreover, these illegal hoardings have also been put up within the premises of state institutions including Ministries, state departments and other state-managed establishments.

“Govt Lost 02 Dep. Ministers 04 PC Members & 34 PS Members After President’s Thirupathy Visit”: Harin

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Sri Lanka BriefOpposition Leader of the Uva Provincial Council and former UNP Parliamentarian Harin Fernando said President Mahinda Rajapaksa lost two Hindu deputy ministers of his government following his trip to Thirupathy with former UNP General Secretary Tissa Attanayake.
“In addition,” he said, “four Provincial Councilors and 34 Pradeshiya Sabha members have also left the ruling party and extended their support to Common Candidate Maithripala Sirisena.”
Fernando made these remarks referring to the crossovers of P. Digambaram and V. Ramakrishnan who attended a press conference this evening at the Opposition’s Leaders Office after joining the common opposition. With this new move, the ruling party has lost four Parliamentarians from the Nuwaraeliya District over the past three weeks.
Previously P. Rajathurai and Navin Dissanayake, who represent the Nuwaraeliya District, also joined the opposition.
With the latest crossovers, the government has so far left 13 Parliamentarians and managed to get the support of two defectors of the United National Party, including its General Secretary Tissa Attanayake.
Meanwhile, addressing media at the Opposition Leader’s Office, Fernando said he would not leave the party, but he would change the composition of the Uva Provincial Council in the near future. He has already stated that he would topple the Provincial Council with the support of three defectors from the ruling party.
Commenting on rumours, Fernando said there was no meeting with Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa yesterday and he was in Kandy, participating in the election rally held in support of the Common Candidate of the opposition.

Video: President on the mat

lankaturthWEDNESDAY, 10 DECEMBER 2014
Mr Mahinda Rajapaksa, who appears as a devoted Buddhist and engages in religious practices sitting on high chairs goes suddenly to Thirupathy Hindu Temple after handing over nominations and sits on the floor to get blessings from gods.

Billions of rupees in public money have to be used to take a ‘SriLankan’ flight to go abroad. The allocation for the President from the budget was Rs.8570 million. However, it was increased later to Rs.10490 million for such wasteful spending.
Immediately after handing over nomination papers on the 8th the President participated in a religious ceremony at Viddyalankara Pirivena at Peliyagoda. There he sat on a comfortable chair during the ceremony.
At At Thrirupathy Kovil:
At Viddyanlankara:

Basil Was My Father’s PRO, He Has Forgotten That Today: Navin


December 10, 2014
Colombo TelegraphFormer government Minister Navin Dissanayake speaking at the inaugural presidential election campaigning rally of the common Opposition movement today said Minister Basil Rajapaksa used to be a staunch UNP supporter, even though he has conveniently forgotten that past today.
NavinAddressing the gathering at the rally held in Kandy this evening, Dissanayake said, “Basil Rajapaksa was my father’s PRO in the Mahaweli project. Until my father employed him, he did not even have Rs. 10,000. He worked in that position for about eight years and even actively campaigned for the UNP, but today he has forgotten it all.”
Meanwhile, common candidate Maithripala Sirisena who attended the rally clad in a Modi-styled outfit said for the past six months the government spent over Rs. one billion in producing dramas, printing books and preparing DVDs containing defamatory material on the Opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe because the Rajapaksas were convinced that the Presidential battle would be against Wickramasinghe.
“But little did he know that the man who would rise up against him was right there inside Temple Trees,” he said.
JHU frontliner, Champika Ranawaka who also spoke at the meeting pledged to oust Mahinda Rajapaksa from his seat on January 8, in the same way they paved way for him to take up the President’s seat in 2005 when he did not have either the party members or his brothers around him.
Meanwhile, President Rajapaksa flew to India today seeking divine intervention towards his victory at the upcoming polls. Indian media reported he is due to visit the Thirupathi Kovil in Andra Pradesh where he is to engage in religious rituals and receive blessings to ensure his victory at the Presidential election.

The antagonism towards Malala in Pakistan


Malala YousafzaiIn this photograph taken on October 9, 2013 Pakistani girls attend class at a school in Mingora, a town in Swat valley, on the first anniversary of the shooting of Malala Yousafzai by the Taliban

By M Ilyas Khan-10 October 2014
BBC
Abdus SalamWinning any Nobel Prize - let alone the celebrated Nobel Peace Prize - is usually a cause for national jubilation.
But in Pakistan the excitement felt by some at the news that 17-year-old Malala Yousafzai has become the youngest person ever to win the peace prize has been met in equal part by antagonism.
On social media congratulatory messages were followed closely by scornful and sarcastic ones.

Chinese arms from Sri Lanka to Tamil Nadu give Kerala Naxals a boost
The rise of Kerala's naxal movement
OneindiaWritten by: OneIndia Contributor-Wednesday, December 10, 2014

The Naxalites appear to have raised their ugly head and this time the concern is Kerala. The problem came to light when an incident in which exchange of fire was reported by the police and Naxals at the Vellamunda police limits at Waynad two days back.

Afghanistan’s uncertainties set to aggravate


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Afghan labourers work at a plastics recycling factory in Herat on December 8, 2014. Poverty and an ongoing insurgency by the ousted Taliban still pose a threat to the stability of the country. AFP


In considering the history of Western involvement in Afghanistan in particular and South-West Asia in general, it must be remembered that although the very latest compulsion for Western military incursion into the region came with 9/11 and the West’s pursuit of the Al-Qaeda, the US first came into South-West Asia in a major way, in contemporary times, in the aftermath of the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979. The latter was a watershed event that led to the US losing its influence and control in the region. Until the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Western interests in the region were upheld by the Shah of Iran.

Why are Chechen fighters on the Ukraine border? - video

Channel 4 News


WEDNESDAY 10 DECEMBER 2014
Chanting "Allahu Akbar", dozens of armed pro-Russian separatists from the Chechen "death battalion" train in self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, eastern Ukraine.


Palestinian official killed in Israeli troop clash

Member of the Palestinian Cabinet dies after a clash with Israeli troops during protest, say witnesses

Mahmoud Aloul, a leading member of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement, said Cabinet member, Ziad Abu Ain, died after being hit by a tear gas canister fired by Israeli troopsZiad Abu Ein was injured during a clash near the village of Turmusiya and later died en route to hospital Photo: AP
By , Jerusalem-10 Dec 2014
Palestinian minister died after a confrontation with the Israeli army on Wednesday, further inflaming tensions amid claims that he collapsed after being headbutted by a soldier wearing an anti-riot helmet.
Ziad Abu Ein, 55, a minister without portfolio, fainted after a scuffle with security forces as he tried to accompany a group of Palestinian landowners to an olive grove near the village of Turmusayya, north of Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank.
He later died in an ambulance en route to hospital – becoming the highest-ranking Palestinian official to die in the conflict with Israel since the end of the intifada (uprising) nearly a decade ago.
His death drew an angry response from Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority leader, who called it a “barbaric” killing and vowed to take “necessary measures” even as the Israeli military offered to establish a joint investigation.
“All options are open for discussion and implementation,” Mr Abbas told an emergency session of the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah amid speculation that security cooperation with Israel could be shelved.
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, sent a message to the Palestinian Authority pledging to investigate the incident, a statement from his office said.
"The Prime Minister, who has been holding security consultations throughout the day, pointed to the need to calm the situation and act responsibly," the statement said.
The Israeli army said Wednesday’s incident occurred after soldiers used riot dispersal means to confront “approximately 200 rioters” trying to enter the Israeli settlement of Adei-Ad.
Palestinian witnesses insisted the procession was peaceful and that security forces had fired tear gas and stun grenades as they tried to plant olive trees on their own land in an area called Da’arat.
Several said Mr Abu Ein was addressing soldiers and television cameras simultaneously when one member of the security forces suddenly butted him on the chest without provocation.
“The soldiers prevented us from reaching our land, saying they had set up a checkpoint,” said Abla Kook, 49, a local councillor and headmistress of Turmusayya high school. “The minister then came and started arguing with them, saying this is a peaceful event and asking why we couldn’t go.
“At that point, a soldier put his helmet on and headbutted the minister on the chest.”
After the alleged assault, Mr Abu Ein crouched on the ground before passing out, witnesses said. Bystanders tried to revive him with water, before taking him to a clinic in Turmusayya, from where he was transported to hospital in Ramallah. A post-mortem into his death was due to be conducted on Wednesday evening.
Television footage from the incident appeared to be inconclusive but showed security forces jostling the gathering, while one elderly Palestinian man was seen striking a soldier with a flag.
Shortly before he collapsed, Mr Abu Ein launched a verbal assault on the army’s conduct, telling Palestinian TV: “We came to plant trees on Palestinian land, and they launch into an attack on us from the first moment. Nobody threw a single stone.”
The army said it was “reviewing” the circumstances of Mr Abu Ein’s “participation [in the confrontation] ... and later death”.
Mr Abu Ein – a member of the revolutionary council of Mr Abbas’ Fatah faction – spent a total of 15 years inside Israeli jails. He was extradited from the US in 1982 and subsequently convicted of the death of two Israelis in a 1979 bombing.
A Palestinian official said his death was “not just any killing” and was likely to lead to policy changes.
“This event is big. It will change things,” he said. “I think it will push our side to move on the international arena more quickly. People are now screaming as to why were are not now members of the International Criminal Court.”

Coming Clean, With Bloodstained Hands

Why the release of the damning, horrific Senate torture report could be a bright spot for American democracy.
BY David Rothkopf-DECEMBER 9, 2014
Coming Clean, With Bloodstained Hands Foreign PolicyThe release of the report by the Senate Intelligence Committee on the Central Intelligence Agency’s use of torture during the War on Terror is a vital step toward bringing to an end the Age of Fear that has perverted American national security policy and, more importantly, undercut our most basic national values for almost a decade and a half. Indeed, the core abuses listed in the report — and they can go by no other name than torture — are the signal failure of U.S. leadership of that era, worse even than the invasion of Iraq. Both were disastrous. Both damaged us. But the use of torture cut deeper into the fiber of who we are, and who we have always aspired to be as a nation. The issue the report raises is not just what we did to these people, but what we became by doing it.
CIA report: 'Torture is a crime and those responsible must be brought to justice'
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other rights advocates say prosecutions must follow Senate’s CIA torture report
dick cheneyObama at the White House.






A US flag at Guantanamo Bay.




The former US vice-president Dick Cheney has defended the CIA torture programme as ‘absolutely, totally justified’. Photograph: Joshua Roberts/Reuters
The Guardian home
Wednesday 10 December 2014
The UN, human rights activists and legal experts have renewed calls for the Obama administration to prosecute US officials responsible for the CIA torture programme revealed in extensive detail following the release of a damning report by the Senate intelligence committee.
CIA Report 'Torture is a Crime and Those Responsible Must Be Brought to Justice' by Thavam Ratna

camp counts down last hours

Main Hong Kong protest camp counts down last hoursA yellow banner reading "We'll be back" is displayed by protesters at the occupied area outside government headquarters in Hong Kong Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2014. Police warned Hong Kong pro-democracy activists that they have until Thursday to leave a sprawling protest camp which has blocked traffic in the Chinese financial hub for more than two months. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)(Credit: AP)
, ASSOCIATED PRESS-WEDNESDAY, DEC 10, 2014
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong student protest leaders vowed Wednesday to stay until the last minute and peacefully resist a police operation to clear them off a highway where they’ve been camped out for more than two months.
Dozens of activists and hundreds of tents remained on the normally busy thoroughfare outside of the specially administered Chinese city’s government headquarters less than a day before court workers assisted by police are scheduled to sweep them out.
Two student groups that have played key roles in organizing the protests called for supporters to join them at the site before midnight, when police were rumored to be planning to seal off the area. Authorities, however, have announced that they will move in at 9 a.m., and a senior police officer denied there was any plan to seal off the area at midnight.
“We will still resist till the last moment,” said Alex Chow, secretary general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students. He said the reason for staying until the end is “not simply for us be arrested, but to demonstrate our spirit” of civil disobedience.
Joshua Wong, the 18-year-old head of the Scholarism group and the movement’s most prominent leader, urged supporters to stick to their nonviolent principles and not obstruct court workers or police.
“If the government wants to use police to clear the site, don’t forget, the clearance can’t resolve political conflicts, it can’t resolve society’s dilemma,” he said.
While some protesters had already packed up their belongings, many promised it would not be the end of the pro-democracy movement, using large yellow banners or balloon letters stuck on a wall to declare “We’ll be back.”
Many other supporters, as well as tourists and office workers, visited the site for one final photo opportunity as a reminder of what’s come to be known as the “Umbrella Movement,” after the protesters’ preferred method of deflecting police pepper spray.
The sprawling encampment in Hong Kong’s Admiralty section, on the edge of the financial district, has become the symbolic nucleus of the protest movement, now in its 74th day.
On Sept. 28, thousands of protesters angry over the prolonged detention of key student leaders swarmed onto the road to confront police, who fired dozens of tear gas rounds in a bid to disperse them. But that only stoked further public anger and kick-started the pro-democracy movement, which came to include two other protest sites in Hong Kong.
The student-led protesters reject Beijing’s restrictions on the first election for the city’s top leader, scheduled for 2017, but have failed to win any concessions from Hong Kong’s government.
“When they come tomorrow, I feel it will be such a pity,” said Pang Tsz-kwan, a 35-year-old clerk. “We’ve stayed for such a long time in this place that I’ve come to feel deep affection for it and I’m unwilling to leave.”
“I hope to stay until the last second,” added Pang, who said he would volunteer with first-aid teams to assist anyone injured in the operation.
Hong Kong’s second-highest ranking government official, Chief Secretary Carrie Lam, stepped up pleas for protesters to leave the site, warning people not to heed student leaders’ calls to return to the scene.
“This is most undesirable, because once the police operation is underway, and knowing very well that there are some radical elements amongst the protesters, confrontation might become inevitable,” Lam said.
The government said the headquarters complex would shut down for the day and that 3,000 staff would not need to come to work Thursday while police carry out their operation.

Appeals Court to Hear Oral Arguments in

 Idaho Woman's Case Against NSA Spying


HomeDecember 4, 2014

EFF, ACLU Support Smith in Fighting Mass Surveillance Before Ninth Circuit
Seattle - An appeals court will hear oral arguments in Smith v. Obama, a case filed by an Idaho nurse against a controversial National Security Agency (NSA) telephone data collection program, in Seattle on Monday, Dec. 8.
Anna Smith, a neonatal nurse from Coeur d'Alene, filed her lawsuit against President Barack Obama and several U.S. intelligence agencies in June 2013, shortly after the government confirmed that the NSA was collecting telephone records on a massive scale under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. Smith, a Verizon customer, argues the program violated her Fourth Amendment rights by amassing a wealth of detail about her familial, political, professional, religious, and intimate associations. Following a district court ruling against Smith, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho joined the case as co-counsel in July 2014 to assist in crafting the appeal.
Anna Smith's husband, Peter Smith of Lukins & Annis, P.S., who filed the case and argued on Anna's behalf to the trial court, will present oral arguments before a panel of three judges (Hon. Michael Daly Hawkins, Hon. M. Margaret McKeown, and Hon. Richard C. Tallman) at the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
EFF presented appellate oral arguments in a similar case, Klayman v. Obama, last month. On Dec. 18, EFF will present arguments in San Francisco in Jewel v. NSA, asking the court to find that the NSA's mass copying of Internet communications violates the Fourth Amendment. EFF's other challenge to NSA surveillance, First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles v. NSA, remains pending before a trial judge.
What: Oral Argument in Smith v. Obama
Who: Peter Smith, counsel for Anna Smith
Date: Monday, Dec. 8, 2014
Time: 9:00 am PT (Smith is third on the calendar)
Where: William K. Nakamura Courthouse
7th Floor, Courtroom 2
1010 Fifth Ave.
Seattle, WA 98104
EFF and ACLU staff will be available for interviews following the arguments.
For Smith's appellate briefs:

Contact:

Dave Maass
   Media Relations Coordinator
   Electronic Frontier Foundation
   press@eff.org