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, January 10, 2015

Maithripala Sirisena’s Victory: Winning the Hearts of Women



GroundviewsAs the campaigning for both candidates has ended, and the celebrations for the victory of Maithripala Sirisena have begun, larger battles are still being waged, and will be still more important now that the elections are over. The elections held yesterday represent something much greater than a face-off between two personalities, or two different political parties. For many, it was a battle against ccorruption, nepotism, authoritarianism, religious extremism, fear, intimidation and significantly for many in Sri Lanka – discrimination against women.
Women collectively constitute over 50% of the population. It is in the best (and even selfish) interests of all politicians and leaders to address issues that matter to them. Not only because they collectively form over 50% of the voter base, but because economically and socially Sri Lanka would not be able to function without the contributions of women. Maithripala Sirisena and his team succeeded because they realized that without winning the hearts of women, this election could not be won. Mahinda Rajapaksa, and his cabinet of Ministers, failed up to the very last few days to realize that being disrespectful and insulting towards women would only affect their own results at electoral politics.
The Maithripala Sirisena campaign for “A New Sri Lanka for Women” has succeeded at reaching millions of women in Sri Lanka, and raising considerable awareness on a variety of issues. It is because Maithripala Sirisena and his team committed themselves to acknowledging the genuine concerns of women under the Rajapaksa regime, and then addressing them directly in his media campaign, social media campaign, manifesto, at gatherings such as the women’s conference at Vihara Maha Devi Park, and also in his official pledge to women, that his campaign has been so successful with these voters. It is because of the dedication and hard work of female political actors like Rosy Senanayake MP, Hirunika Premachandra, Jeevanee Kariyawasam, Anoma Fonseka, Samanmalee Gunasinghe, Sandhya Ekanligoda, Chandrika Kumaratunga, Thalatha Atukorala MP, the district coordinators of the Lak Vanitha, and other local government politicians, that the message succeeded in getting through to those who needed to hear it. It is thanks to the many women activists working behind the scenes that the message was effective, intelligent and powerful. It is because male politicians also felt encouraged to address the specific concerns of women in their rallies and pocket meetings, that the message was ever more prevalent.
Women did respond positively to this acknowledgement of their grievances. Over time women who supported Mahinda Rajapaksa reacted to political messaging by the opposition targeted at them that kindled the idea that women deserved better. The women who have shared posts and information on inequality during this election, and who were aggrieved by insensitivity towards them, have proved that they are capable of thinking independently from their households yet also collectively as women and then executing their will at the ballot box. Women are a group in Sri Lanka with an identity as or more pronounced as any other ethnic group or demographic. They share certain rituals and particular cultures unique to them, they have grievances as strong or stronger than any of the persecuted communities in this country, and their identity is both biologically entrenched and socially moulded.
In this election, women have shown that issues such as freedom from fear (rape, harassment, gender based violence), increasing cost of education and healthcare, barriers to safe drinking water, rising cost of living and high levels of malnutrition, a culture of respect (versus the current disrespectful attitudes towards women), child abuse, and low representations of women in leadership positions are issues that matter to them. Women workers have shown through the ballot box the need for significant reforms with regards to garment sector workers, migrant workers, domestic workers, and estate workers – many of who are women.
How could women possibly vote for a government that has denied them equal pay for equal work, that prevents them from equal opportunities and recognitions, that denies women workers who uphold our economy basic legal protections and in which Ministers publicly make derogatory remarks towards them? Women have stood in the Presidential Elections of 2015 in solidarity against these injustices, proving without a doubt that they will be crucial and savvy players in electoral politics in the years to come. One of the greatest follies of the Rajapaksa regime was to take women for granted in this election – to think that tbey would be foolishly deceived by staged baby-kissing photos, while at the same time his close associates openly held unacceptable attitudes towards them – all without impunity. Women’s message to Sri Lanka at this juncture of history was clear – that the authoritative, hyper-masculine, patriarchal model of leader that was adored in the past should be replaced with a compassionate, sensitive and concerned leader in the future. All intelligent leaders and politicians will know better than to ever take women so lightly again. It is up to them to see that the promises made towards women, specifically the promise for “A New Sri Lanka for Women” will be sincerely adhered to. Women will be watching.

Sri Lanka wakes up to new era under President Sirisena

Former farmer and veteran politician ousts increasingly authoritarian Rajapaksa with vow to repeal constitutional reform


Newspapers at a stall in Colombo show headlines about Sri Lanka's new president Maithripala Sirisena. Photograph: Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images
Newspapers at a stall in Colombo show headlines about Sri Lanka's new president Maithripala SirisenaThe Guardian home
 in Delhi and  in Colombo-Saturday 10 January 2015
Early, the streets of Colombo were quiet. Then came scattered firecrackers, then small groups cheering and singing. Until finally, at dusk on Friday came the swearing in, with thousands coming to see Maithripala Sirisena become president of Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka: Govt. To Nab Former Minister Weerawansa Over Sexual Assault Charges?



( January 10, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The newly appointed government is planning to nab a former Minister Wimal Weerawansa over sexual assault charges, reliable source said.

Record From The History: Wimal Weerawansa accused of sexual harassment

We are re-publishing the following report on the former Minister Wimal Weerawansa, who is responsibility for sever sexual assaults on an innocent women. The article was originally published by the Sunday Leader, when late Lasantha was editing it, on November 2006. 
Politico’s wife threatened me - victim

A Fragmented Nation Has Decided

Colombo Telegraph
By Hilmy Ahamed -January 10, 2015
Hilmy Ahamed
Hilmy Ahamed
Sri Lanka has decided on its future with its bets placed heavily on PresidentMaithripala Sirisena to embark on compassionate governance to unite the fragmented communities and build a truly reconciled nation.
The voting pattern in the just concluded presidential election is probably the saddest indictment of a divided society. The majority of the Buddhist community voted in favor of a hardline president who believed that he did not need the vote of the minority communities to be re-elected to the august position of the President of our nation. His reliance on just the majoritySinhala Buddhist vote not only deprived him of his third term, but also created a very divided nation. His last minute attempt to woo minority votes fell on deaf ears.
Maitthri oaths 2015 Photo Via FCAOSLThe voting patterns of the people of a once peaceful nation who co-existed as different communities are a cause for concern. The Sinhala Buddhist majority voted for a Presidency where the racial divide will be entrenched in its future governance, while the minorities trusted in a change, for a better and peaceful nation under a compassionate leader that they could trust.
*Maithri takes oaths- Photo courtesy Foreign Correspondents’ Association of Sri Lanka Facebook page
It would have been difficult for Maithripala Sirisena to win if the minority communities had divided their loyalties between the two main contending Presidential candidates or abstained from exercising their franchise.

                                     Read More

Rajapaksa Henchmen Rajpal And Dinesh Missing

Colombo Telegraph
January 10, 2015
Rajapaksa henchmen Rajpal Abeynayake – Editor of Daily News and Dinesh Weerawansa – Editor of Sunday Observer have vansihed into thin air since the defeat of Mahinda Rajapaksa yesterday, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Rajpal
Rajpal
The two Editors who were staunch supporters ofMahinda Rajapaksa had not reported to work today and have been uncontactable since yesterday. In his editorial on Friday (9) Rajpal had written that the Opposition victory is ‘a figment of the imagination of various interested parties’. Rajpal’s Twitter account has also been inactive since January 8.
Similar situations have emerged in other state media including the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation and the ITN where most of the top ranking officials have left their positions.
Chairman of SLBC Hudson Samarasinghe and Deputy General Manager of ITN Sudharman Radaliyagoda, who has two oustansind warrants in his name have also reportedly fled the country.


article_image
 
Deputy Minister of Power and Energy, Premalal Jayasekara was arrested on Friday night in connection with the death of a party supporter at Kahawatte recently.

The suspect was arrested at Aluthgama by a police squad detailed for investigations. Later, he was produced before the Colombo Chief Magistrate and remanded until January 20, 2015.

The party supporter was critically injured when he was shot at while decorating the stage with some others for a political rally of common candidate Maithripala Sirisena during the presidential poll campaign. He later succumbed to his injuries.

On January 5, the Pelmadulla Magistrate issued an arrest warrant on Jayasekara over his alleged involvement in the shooting incident.

The UN Secretary-General congratulates Sri Lanka

un logoThe United Nation Secretary-General congratulates the people of Sri Lanka on the successful conclusion of the presidential election, and welcomes the constitutional transfer of power.
The Secretary-General congratulates the people of Sri Lanka on the successful conclusion of the presidential election, and welcomes the constitutional transfer of power.
The Secretary-General applauds the Sri Lankan Elections Commission for its professionalism in ensuring a peaceful and credible election. He also commends the efforts of the candidates, including in particular outgoing President Mahinda Rajapaksa, law enforcement agencies and civil society for upholding and respecting democratic governance.
The Secretary-General looks forward to working with President Maithripala Sirisena and the people of Sri Lanka. He affirms the continuous support of the United Nations for development, reconciliation, political dialogue and accountability in Sri Lanka.

Nigeria: bomb blast kills at least 19 at crowded market in Maiduguri

Reports suggest young girl of about 10 was source of explosion in capital of Borno State
A Nigerian soldier patrols in an armoured vehicle in Maiduguri, Nigeria
A Nigerian soldier patrols in an armoured vehicle in Maiduguri, Nigeria. Photograph: Sunday Alamba/AP
The Guardian home
 and agencies-Saturday 10 January 2015
At least 19 people have been killed in a bomb blast at a crowded market in the northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, with some reports suggesting a young girl of about 10 was the source of the explosion.
The powerful blast rocked the city’s Monday Market on Saturday at about 12.40pm (1140 GMT) while packed with shoppers and traders.
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, is often attacked as it lies in the heartland of an insurgency by Islamist militants Boko Haram. The same market was struck twice by suicide bombers late last year.
This latest atrocity comes a week after a major Boko Haram attack on the fishing town of Baga, also in Borno state, which has been described as the “deadliest massacre” in the history of the Islamist insurgent group.
Amnesty International says that the town was razed and as many as 2,000 people could have been killed, with 20,000 forced to flee their homes.
No group has yet claimed responsibility for the Maiduguri bombing. Ashiru Mustapha, a witness to the attack, told AFP the explosives detonated as the young girl was searched at the market’s entrance.
“The girl was about 10 years old and I doubt if she actually knew what was strapped to her body.
“In fact, she was searched at the entrance of the market and the metal detector indicated that she was carrying something.
“But sadly, the explosion went off before she was isolated.”
Borno State police spokesman Gideon Jubrin said 19 people were killed and 18 others were injured but warned that the death toll could rise.
A Red Cross official told AFP: “Many people sustained life-threatening injuries.”
At least two other people were killed when a car exploded at a police station in Potiskum, also in northeast Nigeria, report AFP.
The blast happened at a facility attached to the Potiskum Area Command at around 3.30pm (1430 GMT) and involved the driver of a vehicle which had earlier raised suspicions at a checkpoint outside the city.
“It was while they were at the gates of the police station undergoing security checks that the car exploded,” said a police officer to AFP.
“The policeman and the driver have been confirmed dead but details of other casualties are not clear yet.”
The city was the target of attacks by Boko Haram militants last November, when a suicide bomber disguised in school uniform blew himself up at morning assembly before lessons at the Government Comprehensive Senior Science Secondary School, killing 58.
Fighting has continued around Baga, a town on the border with Chad where insurgents seized a key military base on 3 January and attacked again on Wednesday.
District head Baba Abba Hassan said most victims are children, women and elderly people who could not run fast enough when insurgents drove into Baga, firing rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles on town residents.
“The human carnage perpetrated by Boko Haram terrorists in Baga was enormous,” Muhammad Abba Gava, a spokesman for poorly armed civilians in a defence group that fights Boko Haram, told the Associated Press.
He said the civilian fighters gave up on trying to count all the bodies. “No one could attend to the corpses and even the seriously injured ones who may have died by now,” Gava said.
These attacks come five weeks away from presidential elections which are likely to trigger even more bloodshed. Already under a state of emergency, the three northeastern states worst hit by Boko Haram asked the central government for more troops earlier this week. The government has said voting will take place across Borno State although the worsening insecurity means few international observers are likely to get clearance to oversee voting in an area that is traditionally opposition-supporting.
The US has condemned the escalating violence in Nigeria. “The United States condemns the recent escalation of attacks on civilians carried out by Boko Haram, which shows no regard for human life. All those responsible for these recurring terrorist attacks must be held accountable,” the State Department said in a statement late on Friday.

BREAKING NEWS: France's most wanted woman is in SYRIA after 'crossing the border to Spain and flying from Madrid to Istanbul'


Cornered: French police have named the hostage taker as Amedy Coulibaly (left), 32, while also claimed a woman named Hayat Boumeddiene (right), 26, is involvedCornered: French police have named the hostage taker as Amedy Coulibaly (left), 32, while also claimed a woman named Hayat Boumeddiene (right), 26, is involved
Cornered: French police named the hostage taker as Amedy Coulibaly (left), 32, but Boumeddiene (right), 26, is not thought to have been at his side at the time


    'Armed and dangerous': It is becoming clear that the one-time cashier was radicalised after meeting the man she would marryMailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health stories
  • Hayat Boumeddiene, 26, is the 'wife' of gunman Amedy Coulibaly
  • He killed a policewoman and then four hostages in a kosher bakery
  • Police source said Boumeddiene flew to Turkey via Madrid on January 2
  • She was believed to have crossed the Turkey- Syria border on Thursday
  • Police are interrogating wives of Kouachi brothers in a bid to trace her
  • Coulibaly was killed as commandos stormed the kosher bakery

The wife of the Paris supermarket gunman may be in Syria, police sources have said.
Hayat Boumeddiene, 26, is partner of Amedy Coulibaly, who killed a policewoman and then four hostages at a kosher bakery.
A police source said she flew to Turkey via Madrid on January 2, despite alleged sightings of her in Paris on Thursday.
Authorities in Istanbul then reported seeing a woman matching her description cross the Turkey- Syria border on Thursday, the day her husband killed policewoman Clarissa Jean-Phillipe.

'Buttes Chaumont' network behind Paris attacks

Channel 4 News
FRIDAY 09 JANUARY 2015
A suspect in the killing of a policewoman and supermarket hostage taking in Paris, and suspects in the Charlie Hebdo murders, are reported to be part of the same jihadi network in Paris.
News
The suspect in the murder of a policewoman yesterday and hostage taking at a kosher supermarket today was a member of the same jihadi group as the suspects of the Charlie Hebdo newspaper murders.
The men are reported by French media today to all be part of the "Buttes Chaumont" terror group, named after a park in France's 19th district, also known as the 19th network or the "Nineteenth Arrondissement Iraqi Networks".
Amedy Coulibaly, suspected of murdering of a policewoman yesterday and hostage taking today, was jailed in 2010 for taking part in an attempt to break out of jail Smaïn Aït Ali Belkacem, an Algerian terrorist behind the 1995 Paris metro bombing that killed eight people.
Cherif Kouachi, a member of the group and a suspect in the Charlie Hebdo killings, was also investigated over the jail-break plot, but was not sentenced.
Police today said that Coulibaly has links to the Kouachi brothers, the gunmen involved in the Charlie Hebdo killing.
Kalashnikov bullets were said to have been found at Coulibaly's home during the investigation into the jail break plot.
Said and Cherif Kouachi are known members of the group, with Cherif Kouachi jailed in 2008 for his part in the group sending men to fight in Iraq.
French radio station RTL also said today that it was thought that Coulibaly was part of the Buttes Chaumont group with the Kouachi brothers in 2004-05. Other media report that they may have met in prison.

What is the 'Buttes Chaumont' terror group?

Buttes Chaumont is a name taken from the park where a group of like-minded radical French-Algerians met and did physical training.
The group's main aim was to facilitate sending men to fight against US coalition forces in Iraq. The group also has connections to al-Qaeda in Yemen.
Kouachi was reported in a French television report video to have said he was radicalised by the self-taught preacher Farid Benyettou, who was jailed alongside him.
Benyettou, a former janitor, is considered to be the spiritual leader of the group, who radicalised Cherif in a matter of months.
Cherif says Benyettou told him that "the scriptures offered proof of the goodness of suicide attacks. It is written in the scriptures that it's good to die a martyr".
Other members of the group include Peter Cherif and Cheikhou Diakhabi, who were captured by US forces in Iraq, while Tarek Ouinis was killed and Mohamed el-Ayouni was detained in Syria before being sent back to France.
Redaoune el-Hakim and Abdelhalim Badjoudj were killed in a suicide attack in Iraq, while Thamer Bouchnak is alleged to have participated in helping pay for men to go to fight in Iraq.
Le Point newspaper in Paris reported that the Buttes Chaumont group may have reactivated after being dismantled by authorities in 2005.
Video from Pièces à Conviction, France 3, translated by Channel 4 News, on Charif's radicalisation:

Japan wrestles with wartime legacy as it starts selling weapons


North Korea offers to suspend nuclear tests if U.S. suspends military drills

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un gives field guidance at the newly built Wisong Scientists Residential District in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang October 14, 2014.REUTERS/KCNA/FilesNorth Korean leader Kim Jong Un gives field guidance at the newly built Wisong Scientists Residential District in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang October 14, 2014.
SEOUL Sat Jan 10, 2015
Reuters(Reuters) - North Korea said on Saturday it was willing to suspend nuclear tests if the United States agreed to call off annual military drills held jointly with South Korea, but Washington rejected the proposal as a veiled threat.
The offer, which the North's official KCNA news agency said was conveyed to Washington on Friday through "a relevant channel", follows an often repeated demand by Pyongyang for an end to the large-scale defensive drills by the allies.
"The message proposed (that) the U.S. contribute to easing tension on the Korean peninsula by temporarily suspending joint military exercises in South Korea and its vicinity this year," KCNA said in a report.
"(The message) said that in this case the DPRK is ready to take such a responsive step as temporarily suspending the nuclear test over which the U.S. is concerned," KCNA said, using the short form for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the nuclear tests and military exercises were separate issues.
"The DPRK statement that inappropriately links routine US-ROK exercises to the possibility of a nuclear test by North Korea is an implicit threat," Psaki told reporters travelling with Secretary of State John Kerry in Europe.
The United States and South Korea have carried out the joint military exercises for roughly 40 years, she added.
Psaki said the United States remained open to dialogue with North Korea and urged Pyongyang to "immediately cease all threats, reduce tensions, and take the necessary steps toward denuclearization needed to resume credible negotiations."
North Korea has conducted three nuclear tests, the last in February 2013, and is under U.N. sanctions for defying international warnings not to set off atomic devices in pursuit of a nuclear arsenal, which Pyongyang calls its "sacred sword".
It often promises to call off nuclear and missile tests in return for comparable steps by Washington to ease tensions. It reached such a deal in February 2012 with the United States for an arms tests moratorium only to scrap it two months later.
The United States and South Korea have stressed that the annual drills, which in some years involved U.S. aircraft carriers, are purely defensive in nature, aimed at testing the allies' readiness to confront any North Korean aggression.
Tension peaked on the Korean peninsula in March 2013 when the North ratcheted up rhetoric during the annual drills, with Pyongyang threatening war and putting its forces in a state of combat readiness.
(Reporting by Jack Kim; Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed in Munich; Editing by Doina Chiacu and Dominic Evans)
If Beijing decided to pull a Putin on its neighbors, would the United States have any real options besides war?

The Sanctions-Proof Superpower
BY DANIEL ALTMAN-JANUARY 9, 2015
Foreign PolicyWith the ruble in the dumps and the Russian economy in shambles, Vladimir Putin’s compatriots can easily count the cost of his territorial ambitions. Moscow depends on other countries for financing, capital investment, and export markets. Make those countries angry, and pillars of the Russian economy begin to collapse. Yet China, which has its own territorial claims, could be far more difficult to corral.
If Russia were not so reliant on the rest of the global economy, then the toll of its actions in Ukraine would be far less stark. Limits on Russian banks’ international activities, transactions with Russian energy countries, exports of energy-related products to Russia, financing to underpin Russian trade, and travel by Russian executives and officials are among the sanctions imposed by the United States, European Union, Japan, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, and Norway. The effect has been a huge exodus of foreign capital from Russia, the collapse of the ruble, and the possibility — only recently unimaginable — of another Russian default.
China, of course, is also exposed internationally. Its exports in 2013 were equivalent to roughly 26 percent of its gross domestic product, similar to Russia’s 28 percent. And foreign portfolio investment in China amounted to $775 billion in 2013, or 8.4 percent of GDP, versus $206 billion, or 9.8 percent of GDP, in Russia.
The exit of those billions would be a challenge to the renminbi, just as with the ruble in Russia. Tens of billions of dollars were already fleeing China last year, most likely because of fears of a bubble in local housing and financial markets, and long-term political uncertainty. The rush to invest abroad is set to continue this year, and illegal outflows may make the total much bigger than official figures.
But Beijing is in much a better position than Moscow to sustain a similar set of sanctions, and its resilience may be increasing.
For starters, the People’s Bank of China has well over $4 trillion in reserves of foreign currencies, or around five times the level of portfolio investment from abroad. At the end of 2013, Russia’s central bank had $456 billion in foreign exchange reserves, a little more than twice foreign holdings. By the end of November (the last month for which figures are available), that total was down to $374 billion as a result of money being pulled out of the country, and today the central bank is essentially unable to support the ruble.
For China, the consequences would hardly be as dire. Let’s say the entire decline in Russian reserves came from withdrawals of foreign holdings, to the tune of about 40 percent of the total. If withdrawals in the same proportions occurred in China, its central bank would still have about $4 trillion in foreign reserves left, more than enough to fight off a speculative attack on the renminbi.
China’s trade is also less vulnerable than Russia’s. The countries imposing sanctions on Moscow had a relatively simple task, since so much of the Russian economy depends on energy; squeeze the energy companies and the banks that provide their financing, and a quarter of the Russian economy suffers. Sanctions on Russian energy were especially convenient given the simultaneous fall in oil prices, which disguised any additional costs Russian oil might have incurred in coming to market.
By contrast, no single industry in China represents as big a share of national output and trade as energy does in Russia. Moreover, while oil is a fungible commodity whose production is rising around the world, there are few similarly priced and immediately available alternatives for China’s cheap manufactures. With each industry added to a slate of sanctions against China, more complications would arise for importers and consumers in the sanctioning countries.
Despite the integration of China into the global economy, the leverage that other powers might impose on it will probably weaken in the years to come. Beijing’s explicit policy is to shift its economy away from dependence on exports and towards domestic demand — that is, purchasing by its own consumers. It will still need to import raw materials and other goods from other countries, but its own exports will no longer be such a crucial source of employment and growth.
As a result, China may be able to act with more impunity as it pursues the tracts of land and sea that its government believes are within its domain. From the Indian states on its western border to the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands off its eastern coastline — to say nothing of Taiwan — these claims are numerous and controversial. In some cases, regional bullying by China would risk a military response by its neighbors and their allies. Were it to come to that, and with Washington’s economic response increasingly likely to be toothless, violence might be even harder to avoid.