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

Monday, December 22, 2014

Tumbling of crude oil prices: Economic laws say that this is a temporary phenomenon



A drastic reduction in crude oil prices-December 22, 2014 
Crude oil prices in the world market have tumbled and they are still tumbling. The average price of the West Texas Intermediate category of crude oil stood at a level of $ 100 per barrel, which is equal to 159 litres a few months ago. It has now fallen to a level of $ 60 per barrel last week. This is practically a decline of 40% in an important commodity within a few months.

Canadian shot by U.S. border guards at Ambassador Bridge

Man accused of pointing replica handgun at border guards

U.S. border guards shot a Canadian man on the Ambassador Bridge on Sunday, after he allegedly got out of his vehicle and pointed a handgun replica in their direction.
U.S. border guards shot a Canadian man on the Ambassador Bridge on Sunday, after he allegedly got out of his vehicle and pointed a handgun replica in their direction. (Mark Spowart/Canadian Press)
cbc masthead logoDec 21, 2014 
A Canadian man shot by U.S. border guards at the Ambassador Bridge crossing between Windsor, Ont., and Detroit  was carrying a "replica of a handgun," U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement released late Sunday.
The agency had said earlier Sunday that the man stopped his car before the U.S. inspection booth at around 3 a.m. and started walking towards border officers while "waving a handgun." 
The officers ordered him to drop the weapon, the agency said, but the man instead pointed the gun in the officers' direction, prompting them to open fire.
In an updated statement released at 10 p.m. ET, CBP said it had reviewed video of the incident and interviewed five witnesses. Two border officers fired their weapons — one once and the other three times. One of the rounds hit the man in the arm.
"Investigators determined that the individual was holding a replica of a handgun," the statement said.
The man has had "previous encounters" with Canadian law enforcement.
The man, whose name has not been released, was treated and released from hospital before being taken into custody, the agency said.
The bridge re-opened after the scene was analyzed.

'Why haven't you shot me yet?'

Shortly before the incident at the border, Windsor police say they were called to a McDonald's parking lot at 2:40 a.m. ET to reports of a man with a gun.
According to a news release, the man got out of his vehicle when officers arrived and had a gun in his hand.
The man allegedly approached the restaurant, at which time police ordered him to drop his weapon.
Police say the man pointed the gun in the direction of the officers and asked, "Why haven't you shot me yet?"
Attempts were being made to de-escalate the situation, police said, but the man got into his vehicle and fled onto the EC Row Expressway.
"Police later learned that the suspect was involved in an incident in the United States with U.S. Customs and Border Protection Officers," according to the news release.

Hackers threaten South Korea nuclear firm

Channel 4 News
MONDAY 22 DECEMBER 2014
A threat is made to "stay away" from nuclear reactors in South Korea unless the government shuts three down before Christmas, after a cyber-attack on the power company running them.
Nuclear plant
Last week, designs and manuals of plant equipment owned by the state-run Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power company (KHNP) were leaked online.

A threat was made that unless three reactors were closed by Christmas, people should "stay away" from them.

The cyber-attacks come amid concerns that North Korea may attempt hacking industrial and social targets after accusations by the United States that Pyongyang was responsible for hacking Sony Pictures.

South Korea is still technically at war with the North.

'No risk'

South Korea's energy ministry said it was confident that its nuclear plants could block any infiltration by cyber attackers that could compromise the safety of the reactors.

"It's our judgment that the control system itself is designed in such a way and there is no risk whatsoever," the deputy energy minister Chung Yang-ho, said.

An official at KHNP said: "It is 100 per cent impossible that a hacker can stop nuclear power plants by attacking them because the control monitoring system is totally independent and closed."

Both the government and KHNP said they could not verify messages posted by a Twitter user claiming responsibility for the attacks and demanding the shutdown of three aging nuclear reactors by Thursday.

Bomb blast kills 3, hurts 5 in northeastern India



The body of a blast victim is seen as an Indian policeman stands at the site of an explosion in Imphal, the capital of Manipur state, India, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2014. An explosion in the parking lot of a bus station early Sunday killed and wounded less than a dozen people in India's remote northeastern state, where several separatist groups operate, police said. (AP Photo/Bullu Raj)

     - 

    December 22, 2014
GUWAHATI, India (AP) — An explosion in the parking lot of a bus station early Sunday killed three people and wounded five others in India's remote northeastern state, where several separatist groups operate, police said.

The homemade bomb went off in Imphal, the capital of Manipur state, killing three construction workers, said police Superintendent Ibomcha Singh.

Five other men were hospitalized.

No one has claimed responsibility for the blast.

Imphal is about 550 kilometers (340 miles) southeast of Guwahati, the biggest city in the region.

At least 17 separatist groups are active in Manipur state and often stage hit-and-run attacks on government forces. Their demands range from greater autonomy for the state to an independent homeland for the people of Manipur.

Boko Haram releases video of extremists killing civilians

Washington Post December 21 at 10:35 PM

 A new video from Nigeria’s home-grown Boko Haram extremists shows gunmen shooting civilians lying face down in a dormitory and a leader saying they are being killed because they are “infidels” or nonbelievers.
“We have made sure the floor of this hall is turned red with blood, and this is how it is going to be in all future attacks and arrests of infidels,” the group leader says in a message. “From now, killing, slaughtering, destructions and bombing will be our religious duty anywhere we invade.”
The video released to journalists late Saturday comes two days after fleeing villagers reported that the extremists were rounding up elderly people and killing them in two schools in Gwoza, in northeast Nigeria.
The setting of the latest video appears to be a long dormitory furnished with bunk beds, which the leader says is in Bama, a town 40 miles north of Gwoza. Students and schools are frequently targeted by Boko Haram, which means “Western education is sinful” in the Hausa language.
Previously, the militants told residents of villages and towns that they would kill only enemies and that they wanted people to live peacefully in the area they have dubbed an Islamic caliphate, a large swath along Nigeria’s northeastern border with Cameroon that they have controlled for more than three months.
In the video, the leader notes that the prophet Muhammad advised that the mostly adult male prisoners should be held, not killed, but says, “We felt this is not the right time for us to keep prisoners; that is why we will continue to see that the grounds are crimsoned with the flowing blood of prisoners.”
He says some of those killed may call themselves Muslims, but they are considered infidels by Boko Haram, a Sunni Islamist militant group that imposes strict sharia law.
Thousands of people have been killed and about 1.6 million driven from their homes in the five-year insurgency, which is spilling into Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Meanwhile, Cameroon’s army said Sunday that it had broken up a Boko Haram training camp in the Mayo-Danay district.
Lt. Col. Didier Badjeck, spokesman for Cameroon’s army, said he was traveling to the region and could not provide details until he had assessed the situation himself. The camp was dismantled Saturday.
Nigeria-based insurgents have expanded their operations in Cameroon in recent months, launching cross-border attacks as the government has become increasingly involved in regional efforts to contain them.
Jean-Pierre Mbida, a soldier with the Rapid Intervention Battalion tasked with fighting Boko Haram, said the area where the camp was discovered had been “relatively calm.”

Ex-minister Kudrin warns of "full-fledged crisis" in Russia

Russia's former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin attends the Reuters Russia Investment Summit in Moscow September 22, 2014. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/FilesRussia's former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin attends the Reuters Russia Investment Summit in Moscow September 22, 2014.
BY DARYA KORSUNSKAYA, LIDIA KELLY AND KATYA GOLUBKOVA-Mon Dec 22, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - Russia's government has pushed the country into an economic crisis by not tackling its financial problems fast enough, former finance minister Alexei Kudrin said on Monday, as evidence mounted of trouble spreading through the economy.
As he spoke President Vladimir Putin prepared to hold emergency talks with Western leaders to try to resolve the stand-off over Ukraine, the central bank bailed out its first victim of the collapsing currency and authorities announced a tax on grain exports to protect domestic stocks.
A Reuters poll of 11 economists predicted that Russia's gross domestic product would fall 3.6 percent next year, after only 0.5 percent growth this year.
Russia has been hit by what Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev recently called a "perfect storm" of plummeting oil prices, sanctions related to its military action in Ukraine, and a flight of investors' capital -- made worse by a lack of structural reforms that means the economy is overwhelmingly dependent on oil revenues..
Government officials have tried to minimise the impact of sanctions on the country and its rouble currency, which plunged 80 percent against the dollar last week despite a hike in interest rates to 17 percent. Putin has claimed "external factors" like oil were the key culprit behind the country's "tough times".
But Kudrin -- a darling of investors who is credited with building Russia's $170 billion sovereign wealth funds -- asserted that sanctions over Ukraine, not falling oil prices, were primarily behind the collapse of the rouble, and warned that Russia risked having its debt downgraded to junk status in 2015.
"Today, I can say that we have entered or are entering a real, full-fledged economic crisis. Next year we will feel it clearly," the former minister told a news conference.
"The government has not been quick enough to address the situation ... I am yet to hear ... its clear assessment of the current situation."
Kudrin, one of few to criticise President Vladimir Putin, quit in 2011 in protest at proposals to increase defence spending, though the two men are still believed to be close.
He has also criticised Putin's response to Western sanctions imposed following Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region and its subsequent support for loyalist fighters.
The Kremlin's foreign policy adviser said Putin would hold phone talks with the leaders of France, Germany and Ukraine on Monday that would "focus on the current crisis situation and prospects for the next meeting of the contact group."
MOUNTING PROBLEMS
Mounting evidence suggested that Russia's economic pain and isolation were starting to bite.
The country announced plans to impose a heavy tax on grain exports since rouble volatility and high global prices have caused exports to spike: Russian news agencies reported Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told a meeting with officials that the country needed to hang on to its stocks.
And Russia's central bank said it would have to bail out mid-sized Trust Bank with 30 billion roubles ($540 million) to stop it going bankrupt. Trust held 145 billion roubles ($2.63 billion) in private personal deposits as of Dec. 1, according to its accounts
The country's largest lender Sberbank was forced to deny a report from RIA news agency that it had suspended taking new requests for auto loans and mortgages.
Though Russia's biggest oil firm Rosneft partially eased some worries by saying it had made a $7 billion debt repayment from its own cash reserves -- investors had been concerned it could default because the sanctions cut off its access to Western finance -- it announced separately that a deal to acquire an oil trading business from Morgan Stanley had been terminated due to a refusal by regulators in the United States to clear it.
The termination of the deal is another blow for Rosneft after its partners including ExxonMobil withdrew from projects to develop Arctic offshore oil deposits after the sanctions were introduced.
Kudrin forecast a series of defaults among both medium and large companies -- though he said banks would probably be supported by the state -- which was likely to result in rating agencies downgrading Russia's debt to "junk" status.
Most agencies have put Russia this year one notch above junk status.
"Russia will get a downgrade," Kudrin said. "It will enter the 'junk' territory."
MISTRUST
The rouble firmed against the dollar on Monday, with exporters responding to Putin's urge to sell their foreign currency revenues on the market, and Brent crude prices stood close to $60 a barrel.
While the currency, down some 45 percent against the dollar so far this year, may stabilise in the first quarter of next year, its decline will likely help to push inflation to a rate of 12-15 percent in 2015, Kudrin said.
The central bank envisages next year's inflation at around 8 percent. Economists polled by Reuters see it at 9.2 percent.
Kudrin said he believed that between 25 and 35 percent of the decline in the rouble could be attributed to sanctions. The rest, he said, was down to a stronger dollar and investors' mistrust of Russian authorities and their actions.
His outlook for the economy next year was bleak: Even if the price of oil rose to $80 per barrel, gross domestic product was still likely to fall by more than 2 percent in 2015, Kudrin said. At $60 per barrel GDP would decline by 4 percent or more, he added, echoing the central bank's latest assessment, published last week.

(Additional reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Oksana Kobzeva and Polina Devitt; Editing by Sophie Walker)

Black Gold and Black Swans

Black Gold and Black Swans
Everybody is trying to get a handle on where oil prices will be next year after a whiplash-inducing slide of nearly 50 percent since summertime highs.
Black Gold and Black Swans by Thavam Ratna

Discussing climate change with the Ambassador of France in Sri Lanka



by   on 12/21/2014 
GroundviewsAs the COP20 comes to a close in Peru, France is starting to prepare the COP21 which it will host in 2015, H.E. Mr Jean-Paul Monchauthe Ambassador of France explains the importance of these conferences which are significant milestones in the field of international climate change mitigation. Interview conducted by staff at the French Embassy in Colombo. 
What was the COP20 and what is the COP21?

The Calcium Supplement Problem: As Serious As A Heart Attack


The Sleuth JournalCalcium supplement pillsDecember 18, 2014 | By Sayer Ji 
Osteoporosis is not caused by a lack of limestone, oyster shell or bone meal. Heart attack, however, may be caused by supplementation with these exact same “elemental” forms of calcium, according to two meta-analyses published in the British Medical Journal.
Back in July of 2011, the British Medical Journal published the results of a high-powered meta-analysis which looked at whether or not calcium supplementation had any effect on cardiovascular disease risk.  Indeed, this groundbreaking report, which was based on the results of five clinical trials conducted in the US, Britain and New Zealand, involving over 8,000 people, showed that taking elemental calcium supplements of 500 mg or more increased the relative risk of heart attack by 27%.  

ADHD drugs increasingly prescribed to treat hyperactivity in pre-schoolers

A fifth of educational psychologists say they know of children being given medication despite guidelines advising against it

Close-up of methylphenidate (Ritalin) tablets.
The report found that medication was seen as the main solution in the treatment of ADHD. Photograph: Phototake Inc./Alamy
The Guardian home
, education correspondent-Sunday 21 December 2014 
An “alarming” number of pre-school children are being prescribed drugs to treat hyperactivity – contrary to medical guidelines that say they should not be used on children under six – because overstretched health workers go straight to medication rather than offering psychological interventions.
The Calcium Supplement Problem as Serious as a Heart Attack by Thavam Ratna

Sunday, December 21, 2014


2014-12-21 16:51:59 | Leftinraj
ஐக்கிய நாடுகள் மனித உரிமைப் பேரவையின் முன்னாள் ஆணையர் நவநீதம்பிள்ளைக்கு போர்க்குற்றச் செயல்கள் தொடர்பாக 15,000 கடிதங்கள் அனுப்பி வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

போர்க்குற்றச் செயல்கள் மற்றும் காணாமல் போனது தொடர்பாக சாட்சியங்கள் அடங்கிய கடிதங்கள் அனுப்பி வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

கடத்தப்பட்ட காணாமல் போனவர்களின் மற்றும் உயிரிழந்த பெற்றோர் அமைப்பு இந்த கடிதங்களை அனுப்பி வைத்துள்ளது.

நவநீதம்பிள்ளையினால் நியமிக்கப்பட்ட போர்க்குற்றச் செயல்கள் தொடர்பான விசாரணைக் குழுவினர் இந்த கடிதங்களை பரிசீலனை செய்து விசாரிப்பார்கள் என அந்த அமைப்பு தெரிவித்துள்ளதாக கொழும்பு ஊடகமொன்று செய்தி வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.

Controversy Over The Abolition


| by Laksiri Fernando
( December 21, 2014, Sydney, Sril Lanka Guardian) The controversy raised by Professor Kumar David over the ‘abolition’ of the executive presidential system, proposed in Maithripala Sirisena’s Manifesto, is simply unfortunate.
If there is any retraction of the move to abolish the executive presidential system after giving such a promise, by anyone, could arise out of two main reasons: (1) outright treachery (2) practical difficulties. It cannot arise out of the wording of a Manifesto. Such a situation therefore cannot be rectified by revising the Manifesto.
It appears to me that the wording of the Manifesto is formulated considering some of the practical issues without deviating from central issue of abolition of the executive presidential system.
Abolition of the arbitrary or authoritarian powers of the executive presidential system within 100 days is constitutionally feasible. This may amount to the abolition of the existing presidential system. That is what was indicated in the main MOU signed with the UNP and other political parties, as far as I understand. Then there is no need for a referendum. The procedure may be similar to the procedure of the 18th Amendment. If a complete abolition is attempted, for example the system of election of the President, that definitely require a referendum. Those aspects in fact are not the controversial aspects.
 
A referendum is also feasible within 100 days, if that is a single issue. But anyone who goes through the Manifesto could easily realize that it is not a single issue manifesto. Kumar David may be dissatisfied with that. 
However, the abolition of the executive presidential system has taken the pivotal status in the manifesto. In this respect Kumar David is vindicated. It is the first section of the manifesto. Political measures are outlined to make the necessary constitutional amendment feasible. I have not seen any previous manifesto going into such details of changing the presidential system.
It is possible to argue that if six months were taken instead of three months (100 days), the complete abolition of the executive presidential system is possible with a referendum. Then when are we going to have a new constitution? It is best that task is left for the parliamentary elections. The design of a new constitution obviously requires and should take more time. A referendum is not something a country can have every other day. If the effort of a new president were for a single issue of abolition of the presidential system with a referendum, then it could have easily destabilize the country.
As the Manifesto has admirably outlined, there are other tasks such as the curtailment of corruption, punishing the perpetrators, fixing the Foreign Service, alleviating the economic grievances of the masses that should also take priority within 100 days. The main title of the Manifesto is quite admirable in this respect: “A Compassionate Governance; A Stable Country.”
Kumar has erroneously quoted one paragraph translated from the Sinhala Manifesto as follows.
“In place of the executive presidency with arbitrary powers, a constitutional structure with an executive tied to Parliament through a Cabinet of Ministers will be established”.
My translation of the same paragraphs would read as follows.
“The new constitutional structure would definitely be a constitutional structure with an executive amalgamated to Parliament through the Cabinet instead of the present authoritarian Executive Presidential System.”
There is also a formal translation in the English version of the Manifesto which I would not quote here not to confuse the readers. I do understand why Kumar went for an independent translation for this paragraph while an English version is available. However, he should have re-checked the translation before firing his usual gun.
I am not saying that the Sinhala formulations are ideal or completely clear/correct. It is formulated in broad terms for the general reader. It has not used the term ‘abolition’ (ahosikirima). The terms used in the overall section are ‘change’ (venas kirima) and ‘revision’ (sansodanaya kirima). If one goes through the whole manifesto the language is not ‘revolutionary.’ It is a sober language akin to soft spoken Sirisena.
But what is terribly missing in the translation that Kumar has presented is the phrase “instead of the present authoritarian Executive Presidential System” (daneta pavathina aththanomathika vidayaka janadipathi kramaya venuwata). Then he has also missed a crucial word “new” (nava) before what to be introduced instead of the present.
I cannot claim my translation is perfect. However, I have also given the Sinhala phrase or words (within brackets) that are missing in Kumar’s translation.
I do admit however that in the above (Kumar quoted) one sentence paragraph there is some ambiguity not in respect of constitutional change but in respect of the relationship between the ‘executive and parliament.’ The Sinhala word in the original is ‘sambandawu.’ Kumar has translated it as ‘tied.’ I have has used the term ‘amalgamated.’ The English Manifesto used the term ‘allied.’ I think none is clear because the original Sinhala word (sambandawu) is also not clear and not a constitutional term.
As Kumar has been (or claimed to be) the forerunner of the ‘single issue campaign’ and until recently he appeared to be supporting the ‘common candidate,’ I think he or one his colleagues should have asked a clarification directly from Maithripala Sirisena before coming out openly and calling it ‘treachery.’
It appears to me that Kumar has already made a considerable damage to the opposition movement. Mahinda Rajapaksa must be gleefully laughing. What a tragedy?

Sirisena Must Avoid Mixed Signals


Colombo Telegraph
By Kumar David -December 21, 2014 
Prof. Kumar David
Prof. Kumar David
After I dispatched this article I received Maithripala Sirisena’s Election Manifesto. I was shocked and then Dr Jayampathy Wickremaratne was kind enough to provide a more exact English translation of the Sinhala original. His translation of the relevant portion follows:
In place of the executive presidency with arbitrary powers, a constitutional structure with an executive tied to Parliament through a Cabinet of Ministers will be established”.
This is TREACHERY! It goes back on all the sacred promises Sirisena made to the nation only four weeks ago that the Executive Presidency would be ABOLISHED. I have issued a brief statement on the matter which appears elsewhere.
In last week’s column, I made the following comment (abridged): “There is alarm in the minority communities of an alleged Maithri-JHU anti Tamil-Muslim alliance which could be a threat to them and to 13A. This is endangering 18% of the vote (Ceylon Tamils and Muslims; 24% if you count Upcountry Tamils)), but what for? The JHU can pull hardly 3% of the ultra-chauvinist vote away from Mahinda”. This was in response to panic buttons that many Tamils both at home and the diaspora had pressed in e-mails and conversations with me. [I do not use the diminutive My3 any longer as a reader found it offensive].
Maithripala Matale 19 12 2014To retain perspective and restrain panic I balanced it with a more reassuring take on the scene after regime change: “The state will remain unitary; there will be no further devolution (that is no 13A+). But 13A may be more genuinely implemented. (Ranil and CBK are liberals; that helps). Wigneswaran and the NPC will have a freer hand, cussed obstacles put in his way by Rajapaksa will ease, and there could be some reduction in militarization”. This remark assumes regime change, which though desirable I have always cautioned, is by no means still certain. While there seems to be a landslide against Rajapaksa in city and urban areas and in minority communities, rural trends have still to crystallise. There are complaints that the UNP campaign is top-heavy and neglects grassroots organisation. Forecasters should not make the mistake they made with Sarath Fonseka four years ago! With these few words I leave the question of predictions to one side; the subject is not my forte.Read More

PRIORITIES FOR THE NEXT PRESIDENT

A talk given at ICES, 17th December 2014. Photo courtesy Al Jazeera.



GroundviewsI want to thank Mario and the family of ICES for asking me to make this presentation on what should be the priorities for the next president. There are of course many issues but I will present what I think are the most important aspects.
Priorities for the Next President by Thavam Ratna