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, June 9, 2015

China wants "stable" military ties with Sri Lanka

Tue Jun 9, 2015 
ReutersChina's defence minister told the head of the Sri Lankan navy on Tuesday he wanted to ensure a "continuous and stable" development of military ties, after Sri Lanka ruled out future Chinese submarine visits to the country.
Defence Minister Chang Wanquan told Jayantha Perera that China was willing to continue and deepen cooperation with Sri Lanka, including efforts to train personnel, China's Defence Ministry said in a statement.
"China is willing to work hard with Sri Lanka ... to ensure the continuous and stable development of relations between the two militaries and make positive efforts to further deepen ties," the ministry paraphrased Chang as saying.
New Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has unnerved China with his re-examination of certain projects in which China has invested, including a $1.5-billion "port city" project in the capital, Colombo.
 
China has built a seaport and airport in Sri Lanka's south, raising fears it is seeking influence in a country with which India has traditionally had deep ties.
India's concern grew after the previous government allowed the Chinese submarines to dock. Visiting Beijing in February, Sri Lanka's foreign minister said future such visits were unlikely.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

How Arumugan Thondaman Milked Milco

thonda Tuesday, 09 June 2015
Laska.asia unearthed the startling revelation on how Arumugan Thondaman, a man of no singnificance and little importance managed to take Milco with 900 million in cash reserves to a bankrupt company with over a billion in debt when he left.

Why he was protected and nurtured by the former regime is unsure but we are sure about the following :)
If you ever wondered how….
The former Minister buys a Lavish House for over 100 million at # 135 Kumbukduwa maw, Parliament road, with a gov. salary of less than 100,000rs a month
Naushard, the former working director of Milco starts Travel company and Buys land In Kalpitiya and now lives in Australia
Sunil (chairman) invests in Asian Alliance and gets Director post while building a Lavish House in Kandy, and now living in a lavish apartment in Colombo 07
The Scam :
The Purchase of UHT Machines
Alleged Missaporation ;
over 500 million Rs
The Players ;
1.former Minister of Livestock – Arumugam Thondaman
2.The Chairman Milco – Sunil Wickremasinghe (0777352415)
3.Working Director Milco …. Naushard Junaid (0777707000), (0717707000)
4.Thondi’s Secretary – Cader
5.Industrial Stainless Steel Fabrication (Pvt) Ltd (ISF)- 3/4 Rockwood place, Colombo 7
** A company “BLACK LISTED” by MILCO in 2006**
6. Chariman – N. Sivakumaran, Director Anjula Sivakumar & CEO of ISF, mr. Ravitharan (tel # 077-2078455)
The Game;
A tender was called on the 19th of November 2010 for the purchase of 2 UHT plants (MLRCD/2010-01) (proof 1) to increase the production and to diversify into the UHT market! That the excuse but here’s the scam…
Industrial Stainless Steel Fabrication (pvt) ltd, of ¾ Rockwood Place, Colombo 7 (good luck if you could find that office) was awarded the contract ….. (proof 2) although they were 4,000,000 US dollars more than the other bidders!!! (proof 3) That a cool 450,000,000rs more!!!
For example ISF quoted 4,280,000 Euro cif and an additional 11,200,000rs as local charges (proof 2) while another bidder offered the similar product for 1,950,600 usd with 1,980,000rs as local charges!!(proof 3)
long before the Tender was called it is common knowledge that the chairman of ISF N. Sivakumaran and Arumugan Thondaman were very close friends as N. Sivakumar is based in Chennai in whose house the former minister frequently stays.
The Crime
1.The Tender was awarded to ISF which was Blacklisted and taken to Courts by Milco in 2006 for supplying a yogurt making machine when they ordered a ICE cream making machine!!!! Causing a loss of 100,000,000rs!!!!!
2.Using the Tax payers money to purchase machinery at three times the market price and worst of all using Milco reserves as collateral to finance the purchase
3. In this case two tenders were called … one for product and another for Price
4.this effectively prevented the cabinet approved committee finding out the 450 million price difference for both machines
5. The catch …, ISF gave MILCO the specification required for the tender !! :) so no other supplier had a fair shot
6. The former Chairman played his role to support Thondi by bringing in retired ex-Nestle staff members (2 in total) and 2 of his planter friends as directors of Milco, one of them called Mr. Yapa was the most important member in the technical committee….!
The machines have been imported from Europe (Finland) but the L/C was opened to India!…why?
why was a L/c Opened to India when Machines are coming from Finland?? Simple…. because Europe will never give Commissions over 5% , to overcome this they had to open another L/C from a ISF account in India, also ISF has Charged an additional 11 million in rupees for local fabrication and installation charges which is their part of the deal, so there was no reason for Milco to open the L/C to India when the Supplier is actually in FINLAND!!! The machines arrived on the 26th of July 2011 to the Pollanaruwa factory and two weeks later another for the digana factory
Ironically the biggest Crime is not the Crazy markup, but the simple fact that the machines are useless!!
we have gone around looking for these UHT milk pouches and still couldn’t find any, maybe there are small quantities somewhere, but what a waste of public funds
The National Milk Board which was formed government agency involved in dairy development, milk collection, milk processing and marketing since 1956 to 1986. In 1986, it was converted into Milk Industries of Lanka Co. Limited under the World Bank project. All properties and functions of N M B were transferred to Milco. Milco is a public company therefor its the Tax payers money these people messed with.
UHT other offer 300x220
UHT calling for tender 1 243x300UHT award of tender 276x300

Judaism rejects the state of Israel



A leading Israeli news site, Haaretz recently published an article stating that the world’s oldest complete copy of the Ten Commandments is going on rare display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem which was part of the Dead Sea scroll discoveries from years gone by.[1]
Violence ravaging Yemen’s heritage as UNESCO sites damaged 
UNESCO representatives say the situation for Yemeni heritage is akin to what we are seeing in Iraq and Syria 
Qahira castle, which overlooks Taiz city, was recently captured by the Houthis and reportedly struck by the Saudi-led coalition (Twitter/@AmyFeldtmann) 
Charlene Rodrigues's picture
HomeCharlene Rodrigues--Tuesday 9 June 2015
Sala Khaled and her friends used to climb up the 3,000-year-old Qahira fortress, overlooking Taiz city in south Yemen. The fortified stucco building is reminiscent of her childhood, where she learnt photography with her friends. 
“Qahira castle is what made Taiz special and Taizis proud. I was afraid they would attack it and unfortunately, they did,” said Khaled.

Indian army hunts militants on Myanmar border days after ambush

Reuters
Tue Jun 9, 2015
India's army conducted a military operation against separatist guerrillas near the border with Myanmar on Tuesday, it said, days after 20 of its soldiers were killed in the deadliest attack on security forces in the remote area in two decades.
Representative image: A member of the security forces stands guard along a roadside at Naranseina Bazar, south of Imphal January 24, 2012. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/FilesIndia's army conducted a military operation against separatist guerrillas near the border with Myanmar on Tuesday, it said, days after 20 of its soldiers were killed in the deadliest attack on security forces in the remote area in two decades.
The army said in a statement it had engaged with two groups of militants along the border and inflicted "significant casualties".
Indian television channels said special forces carried out "surgical strikes" inside Myanmar where the guerrillas had fled to, something that was not confirmed by the army.
The operation took place in the Indian states of Nagaland and Manipur, where the soldiers were killed last week in an ambush on their convoy. The army said it had received intelligence that the guerrillas were plotting further ambushes.
 
India's remote northeast is home to dozens of insurgent groups, fighting for either greater autonomy or secession. For decades, the army has been deployed to the area that has borders with China, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Bhutan but it has not been known to carry out cross-border raids.
The army said it was in communication with Myanmar authorities regarding its operations against the guerrillas. "There is a history of close cooperation between the two militaries," it said, adding it would firmly deal with any threat to India's security.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has sought better relations with neighbours to help fight cross-border terrorism and build tighter economic links. But his administration has also repeatedly said it would deal with militants firmly.

(Reporting by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Russian-Backed Rebels Are Restarting the War in Ukraine

The “pincer” tank strategy has returned to the battlefields of eastern Europe.
Russian-Backed Rebels Are Restarting the War in Ukraine
BY JAMES MILLER-JUNE 8, 2015
Last week, Russian-backed forces in eastern Ukraine launched a significant offensive against Marinka, a town less than 10 miles west-southwest of Donetsk, the separatists’ capital. While the Ukrainian military repulsed the attack, there is now renewed fighting across eastern Ukraine. Not only has this fighting shattered February’s “Minsk II” cease-fire, which was already frayed, it may also have permanently destroyed the peace process with which the international community was seeking to end this war. And the rebels’ latest moves give a sense of what the Kremlin and its proxies could have planned next.
On June 3, Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk warned that Russia’s “terrorists” had launched a major military offensive in eastern Ukraine just hours after Moscow canceled a meeting of the trilateral contact group — which includes representatives of Ukraine, Russia, and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and is tasked with negotiating a settlement to the crisis.
As the fighting began, citizens in Donetsk took video of outgoing artillery fire from positions right next to residential high-rises, seemingly another example of a pledge made by a separatist military commander nearly a year ago to burrow into the city of Donetsk and use its residents as human shields.
Within hours, it was clear that hundreds of rebel fighters were leading a direct ground assault on Marinka. The OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine witnessed around 100 separatist artillery attacks, but they also saw dozens of separatist armored vehicles, trucks, artillery pieces, and Grad rocket launchers deploying to the battle, including T-72 Main Battle Tanks. Other accounts of the June 3 battle corroborate the OSCE report.
The OSCE report and other testimony make clear that the separatists, not the Ukrainian military, were the aggressors. According to the OSCE, their attempts to contact separatist leaders and calls for a renewed cease-fire were ignored. Moreover, many of the separatist tanks observed by the OSCE were T-72s, tanks that Ukraine has not used in this conflict — indicating that they were almost certainly supplied or perhaps even directly operated by the Russian military.
By the end of the day, at least five Ukrainian soldiers were killed, according to Ukrainian authorities, and another 39 were wounded. Both the Ukrainian government and the separatists report that 10 to 14 separatist fighters were killed and more than 80 were injured. Though the reports are disputed, a number of civilians were also killed or injured. According to one United Nations official, nine civilians were killed in Marinka alone.
In order to fend off the rebel attack, Kiev had to mobilize a significant number of troops and equipment; the government is warning that the real fight is just over the horizon. President Petro Poroshenko told parliament on June 4 that the assault on Marinka represented a “colossal threat,” and his government is preparing for the prospect of a “full-scale invasion” of Russian troops.
Indeed, Russia and its eastern Ukrainian proxies appear to be gearing up for a renewed fight. Throughout the end of April and the beginning of May, significant numbers of military convoys in separatist-held Ukraine werespotted by citizen observers, journalists, and OSCE international monitors. Those convoys included T-72 tanks, as well as Strela-10 anti-aircraft weapons, designed to guard against fast-moving strike craft on the front lines.
In recent months, both NATO nations and the Ukrainian government warned that the Russian military was once again escalating its support for the separatists by supplying new weapons. In April, Gen. Philip Breedlove, NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, warned that Russia was preparing for a new offensive and was taking advantage of the nominal cease-fire to reposition its troops and equipment and to train and supply the separatists. The separatists don’t seem to disagree: In late April, Alexander Zakharchenko, the head of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic, told Vice News that he did not want the Minsk cease-fire to hold.
In the days since the attack on Marinka, Russian-backed forces have launched smaller offensives north and northwest of Donetsk and from positions east of Mariupol. On June 8, the Ukrainian military reported that heavy fighting is once again raging in Marinka, and the Ukrainian military also seems increasingly concerned about attacks on the towns of Artyomovsk and Gorlovka, both north-northeast of Donetsk. Clearly, the June 3 attack on Marinka was part of a wider pattern and, presumably, a wider strategy of the separatists.
The target of this new offensive is not necessarily Marinka or Donetsk, the area of this newest wave of fighting, but the areas north and northwest of Luhansk, north and west of Gorlovka, and north and east of Mariupol. By conducting surprise attacks along the narrow corridors of the front lines, the rebels have been able to secure finger-like strips of land which, once expanded, could threaten to trap pockets of Ukrainian troops and the towns they defend in “pincers,” grinding Kiev’s forces like dough between fingers as they close into a fist. The separatists employed this same strategy to great effect last August in the battle for Ilovaisk and in the capture of Debaltseve in February.
Each of these recent attacks has begun with little warning, much like the assault on Marinka. Each attack seems to benefit the Russian-backed fighters in several ways: They test the Ukrainian force’s front lines and force leadership to constantly second guess where the next attack will come from. Meanwhile, each attack threatens the possibility of driving these “fingers” deeper into Ukrainian-held territory. This strategy has been successful in retaking territory without the benefit of requiring a headline-making major offensive. In fact, the Ukrainian government released a report on May 6 saying that since the signing of the second Minsk cease-fire deal on Feb. 18, the separatist fighters have captured 28 towns or villages — a significant number considering that this occurred during what was supposed to be a cessation of hostilities.
The battle for Marinka may have ended in defeat for the rebels, but Ukraine could still be losing the war. From their positions around Donetsk, the rebels have the ability to strike at any number of important towns and key highways, further encroaching on territory held by Kiev’s forces. Meanwhile, the Ukrainian military has been forced to mobilize a significant amount of soldiers just to defend Marinka.
It’s not clear if the government in Kiev can sustain this strategy, since a large amount of its forces and heavy equipment are stationed near Mariupol, the key coastal city south of Donetsk, near the Russian border and on the road between Russian territory and Crimea. It’s not clear if the Russian-backed separatists have enough firepower to ever capture Mariupol, but it is clear the Ukrainian military cannot risk losing the city, which is both the most important economic prize on the coast and a crucial bulwark against Russia establishing a land bridge to Crimea.
Not only are large parts of its military resources stuck defending Mariupol, the Ukrainian military also has to take any enemy advances north of the city very seriously in order to ensure that it does not become surrounded. The focus on the front lines between Donetsk and Mariupol, which include towns such as Marinka, could leave the Ukrainian lines between Donetsk and Luhansk more vulnerable to the creeping advances of the Russian-backed fighters, which have been progressing — despite multiple cease-fires — since August.
In many ways, the Minsk deals of August and February have been farces. Fighting has not stopped, and the rebels have continued to retake territory. The Russian military took advantage of the deals and continued to supply weapons and troops to the separatists, and this conflict is not any closer to resolution than it was before the deals were signed. On the other hand, each carried with it at least a temporary de-escalation in fighting, bringing needed reprieve for civilians who have been stuck in the crossfire.
On June 3, amid the heaviest fighting, the Ukrainian military general staffannounced that it would have to redeploy its heavy armor and artillery to the front lines — equipment which had been withdrawn to comply with Minsk II — in order to confront this new threat. The Kremlin, predictably, has alreadycalled that development a provocation, again twisting the reality that it is Moscow, not Kiev, driving this fight. This serves as yet another piece of evidence, however, that Russia may escalate this conflict — with tanks and rhetoric — in the coming weeks and months.
But the battle for Marinka has also already had at least one tremendous consequence. Three days after the attack, Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini, who was in charge of the OSCE mission, resigned. She had been overseeing not just the monitoring of fighting in eastern Ukraine but also the cease-fire negotiations between Kiev, the rebels, and Russia. Tagliavini’s resignation is a sure sign that there is frustration within the OSCE about the deterioration of the situation in eastern Ukraine. But with Tagliavini out, it may not be possible to find a replacement who both Russia and the West can agree to support.
If such an agreement cannot be met, the peace process in eastern Ukraine is dead. The consequence could be open war between Ukraine and Russia, war that has been so carefully avoided and yet war which some have feared has always, thanks to Putin’s aggressive intentions, been unavoidable. The Marinka attack does not augur well for the prospects of peace.
Photo credit:  DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images

Ukraine fuel depot explosion: firemen feared dead

Several firemen are feared to have been killed in a huge blaze at a fuel depot near Kiev.

Channel 4 NewsTUESDAY 09 JUNE 2015
Three firemen, who had been battling to stop the blaze from spreading, are reported missing following a powerful explosion.
Earlier today, the fire had spread to at least 16 fuel tanks, most of them containing petrol, sending a huge pall of smoke over the depot near Vasylkiv, 19 miles from Kiev.
The emergency services are trying to stop the fire from engulfing another fuel depot nearby.
At least 11 people were injured in the fire and one later died in hospital, local media reported.
Police are investigating three possible causes: arson, technical malfunction, or violations of fuel storage regulations.

What’s a little oil between neighbors? Venezuela-Guyana tensions flare.

Newly elected President David Granger of Guyana after voting at the Enterprise Primary School in Georgetown Guyana, on May 11. (AP Photo/Adrian Narine)
By Nick Miroff-June 9
There's a border somewhere in the vast no-man's land of jungles and rivers between Venezuela and Guyana, but for more than a century the two countries have not been able to agree where it is.
The dispute flares up periodically whenever there's something at stake. Only now it's extending out into the ocean.
That's where Exxon Mobil Corp., drilling with a license from Guyana, said it made a significant petroleum discovery last month, 120 miles offshore in an area known as the Stabroek Block.
Venezuela, which has the world's largest proven petroleum reserves, promptly reasserted its claim on the area, in the form of a May 27 territorial decree by President Nicolas Maduro, whose government is in the throes of a deep financial crisis.
The decree rests on Venezuela's long-standing claim to the disputed area on shore, which is equal to roughly two-thirds of Guyana-controlled territory. It encompasses the resource-rich forests and savannas west of the Essequibo River, the largest waterway between South America's mighty Amazon and Orinoco rivers.
Maduro's decree essentially projects Venezuela's claim out into the Atlantic Ocean, calling the area an "operational zone for maritime defense."
On Monday, the clash intensified when the government of newly elected President David Granger issued a statement calling Venezuela's claim a "threat to regional peace and security" and a "flagrant violation of international law."
Guyana's Foreign Ministry warned that any attempt by Venezuela to enforce its claim would be "vigorously resisted."
"It is international law that must reign supreme and not the ambitions of a larger State which wishes to trample upon the rights of a smaller country in order to obstruct the sovereign right of Guyana to develop its natural resources," the statement said.
The border disagreement between the two countries stretches back to an 1899 court ruling that Venezuela has never recognized. At the time, the United States backed Venezuela's claims against Guyana, a former British colony.
Before his death in 2013, the late Venezuela leader Hugo Chavez alleviated the standoff with shipments of subsidized oil to Guyana's left-leaning government.
But the election of Granger, a former army general, unseated Guyana's long-ruling People's Progressive Party and has also shaken up relations with Venezuela, which gets 96 percent of its export earnings from oil.
Venezuela's Foreign Ministry has not tried to interfere with Exxon Mobil's operations in the area, but it has repeatedly warned the company that it does not recognize the drilling license issued by the Guyanese government.
In 2013, Venezuela's navy detained a ship and drilling crew working for Texas-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. in another disputed offshore area.
Venezuela and Exxon Mobil have a long-standing dispute of their own. Last year, an international arbitration court ruled that Caracas owes the company$1.6 billion in compensation for properties nationalized by Chavez in 2007.
Nick Miroff is a Latin America correspondent for The Post, roaming from the U.S.-Mexico borderlands to South America’s southern cone. He has been a staff writer since 2006.

Will the next UN SG be a woman from Eastern Europe?

by S. V. Kirubaharan
( June 8, 2015, Paris, Sri Lanka Guardian) The United Nations consist of 195 states, including two observer states. There are independent states which are not members of the UN due to various political reasons. Only member states have the right to vote. So, the Vatican (Holy See) and Palestine, who have observer status, cannot vote.
Since the UN was established in 24 October 1945, it has practiced regional rotation for high profile jobs, including the post of the UN Secretary General – SG.
UN member countries are categorized into five Regional groups – African Group, Asia-Pacific Group, Latin American and Caribbean Group (GRULAC), Western European and Others Group (WEOG) and Eastern European Group. Except WEOG, all other regional groups consist of countries within their region. But in the WEOG – USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Israel and Turkey are included. Whereas Kiribati, located in the Pacific Ocean geographically near to Australia and New Zealand, is part of the Asia-Pacific Group. It is very strange that Israel is part of the WEOG. It is neither in Asia nor in Africa. This shows the political duplicity of the United Nations.
When the UN was established, Gladwyn Jebb of Britain was the first to hold the post of Acting UN Secretary General. In fact, he was appointed for nearly four months from October 1945, until Trygvie Lie of Norway from the Western Europe was elected in February 1946. As the former USSR didn’t endorsed Trygve for the second term, he served until November 1952. He was succeeded by Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl Hammarskjöld of Sweden in April 1953.  Dag Hjalmar was killed in a plane crash in 1961.
Then U Thant of Burma (now Myanmar) from the Asian group took over and served until December 1971. U Thant’s successor was Kurt Waldheim of Austria from the Western Europe group. He served until December 1981.
There are many mysterious stories about Waldheim. He was accused of being a member of Hitler’s National Socialist (Nazi) Party and an officer in the Wehrmacht (German armed forces) during World War II. In other words, he must have known about the transfer of Jewish people to concentration camps and massacres. But Waldheim denied his participation in crimes carried out by the Nazis. These accusations were brought to public only after he left the UN, while trying to contest for the second time in the Presidential elections in Austria.
At the end of Waldheim’s term, Javier Perez de Cuellar of Peru from GRULAC took over and served until December 1991. His successor was Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt from the African group. Due to many political reasons Boutros-Ghali could not serve his second term and he was succeeded by Kofi Annan of Ghana in January 1997. Kofi Annan served his two terms successfully until 2006. Then it was the turn of the Asia-Pacific group and Ban Ki-Moon of South Korea, has been serving since January 2007.
When the entire list of UN SGs is considered, there are two obvious facts – not one of them is a woman and no-one has served from the new regional group of Eastern Europe. This concern had been raised by some Eastern European countries and many have raised the gender equality issue on numerous occasions.
As these two serious concerns are being raised globally, will this persuade a woman from Eastern Europe to become the next Secretary General? Will the men who are already in the forefront allow a woman to be the next SG?
The general understanding among the five permanent members of the UN Security Council – France, UK, USA, Russia and China is that they will not nominate a candidate from their countries.
As the present Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon started his second term on 1 January 2012, procedures for the selection of the next SG will start next year.
When we talk about the post of SG, it’s notable that Kofi Annan once said that ‘SG’ stands for ‘Scapegoat’. The Secretary General has to take on many responsibilities, burdens, criticisms and accusations.
Possible candidates for the next SG
So far there are four female candidates from Eastern Europe who have shown their interest in this high profile job. They are, former Foreign Minister of Bulgaria and Director General of UNESCO Irina Bokova; President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite; Deputy President of Croatia Vesna Pusic and Bulgarian Economist and European Commissioner for the Budget, Kristalina Ivanova Georgieva.
At the same time, there are six male candidates from the same region who also have shown their interest. They are, Danilo Turo former President of Slovenia. Danilo Turo has held many high positions in the UN. He was the Assistant Secretary General from 2000 to 2005, the President of the UN Security Council from 1998 to 1993 and a member of UN Human Rights Committee; Vuk Jeremić former Foreign Minister of Serbia and the President of the UN General Assembly until September 2013; János Áder, President of Hungary; Dan Mircea Geoana former Foreign Minister of Romania; Miroslav Lajcak, the deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Slovakia and Jan Kubi, who is a former Foreign Minister of Slovakia.
Other than these possible candidates from Eastern Europe, there are some from WEOG who have shown interest. UN High Commissioner for Refugees and former Prime Minister of Portugal, Mr. Antonia Guteres; Prime Minister of Denmark Mrs. Helle Thorning-Schmidtand former Prime Ministers of Australia Kevin Rudd and New Zealand Mrs Helen Clark have their eye on this prestigious job. In the regional grouping, Australia and New Zealand come under WEOG.
If we consider the regional groups and their turn to have the UN Secretary General post, each region gets their chance only once in 40 or 50 years. But the Western European group had at least three elected SGs.
In the selection of the SG, the former USSR and USA used their veto power on two occasions. In 1950, USSR used it on the re-appointment of the first Secretary General of the UN, Trygve Lie of Norway. He resigned his post in November 1952. USA in November 1996, under President Clinton’s administration, vetoed the re-appointment of Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt. So it is a difficult task to find someone acceptable to all five permanent members.
Let us wait and see whether the world’s most popular inter-governmental body will respect gender equality and regional rotation, in the next selection of the UN Secretary General.
UN Secretary Generals
Name                                     Country                     From                          To
Ban Ki-Moon                          South Korea               January 2007             To-date
Kofi Anna                               Ghana                        January 1997             December 2006
Boutros Boutros-Ghali           Egypt                          January 1992             December 1996
Javier Perez de Cuellar         Peru                            January 1982             December 1991
Kurt Waldheim                       Austria                        January 1972             December 1981
U Thant                                  Myanmar (Burma)     November 1961          December 1971
Dag Hjalmar                           Sweden                      April 1953                   September 1961
Trygve Lie                              Norway                       February 1946            November 1952
Gladwyn Jebb                        British                         October 1945             February 1946

Indian police arrest minister over 'fake' law degree

Jitendra Singh Tomar, on the extreme right of the picture, waves to Aam Aadmi supporters alongside fellow leaders of the party after it won power in Delhi in February. Photograph: Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images

Agence France-Presse in Delhi-Tuesday 9 June 2015

Jitendra Singh Tomar, a Delhi state minister, faces conspiracy, cheating and forgery charges, but his party claims he has been targeted by the ruling BJP

Indian police say they arrested a minister in the Delhi state government on suspicion of faking his law degree, sparking accusations of political interference by the country’s ruling party.
Jitendra Singh Tomar, who holds a number of portfolios in the Delhi government including justice, appeared in court on Tuesday to be formally charged with criminal conspiracy, cheating and forgery.
A Delhi police spokesman, Rajan Bhagat, said Tomar, who denies the charges, was arrested following a complaint from the Bar Council of Delhi, which regulates lawyers in the capital.
“Based on the investigations and prima facie evidence, a case was filed against Tomar and he was arrested for cheating, forgery and criminal conspiracy,” he said.
The arrest has exposed a power struggle between the Delhi government led by the anti-corruption Aam Aadmi party (AAP) and India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), which lost elections in India’s capital earlier this year.
Sanjay Singh, a senior AAP leader, claimed Tomar’s arrest was part of the national government’s “pressure tactics”. The federal government of Narendra Modicontrols the Delhi police force as well as some of the city’s bureaucracy.

South Korean officials say MERS outbreak may have peaked

People wear masks as a precaution against the MERS virus in Seoul. Pic: AP.People wear masks as a precaution against the MERS virus in Seoul. Pic: AP.

By  Jun 09, 2015
South Korea believes the country’s MERS virus outbreak may have peaked.
Experts said Tuesday that the next several days would be critical to determining whether the government’s belated efforts have successfully stymied the disease.
Officials confirmed Tuesday that a seventh person has died from the MERS virus.
The total number of cases also continued to grow with eight more infections confirmed Tuesday, bringing the total to 95. It is the largest MERS outbreak to occur outside Saudi Arabia, where the virus originated.
Meanwhile, more than 2,000 schools remained closed Tuesday with more than 2,500 people quarantined.
Officials say all new cases have taken place at hospitals, with transmission occurring only between patients, medical staff and close family members.
The U.N. health agency has reported that there’s no evidence yet in South Korea of “sustained transmission in the community.” However, fears are mounting among the public in South Korea that authorities are not able to contain the outbreak.
Elementary school students wear masks as a precaution against the MERS virus as they arrive at Midong Elementary School in Seoul, South Korea, Monday. Pic: AP.Elementary school students wear masks as a precaution against the MERS virus as they arrive at Midong Elementary School in Seoul, South Korea, Monday. Pic: AP.
Reuters reported Monday that Singapore had cancelled or postponed all school trips to South Korea.
While the virus has no vaccine, health experts say it spreads through close contact with infected people and not through the air.
The first fatality from the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) was recorded in Saudi Arabia in June 2012. Hundreds of people have died of the disease there since, with more cases in neighbouring countries.
MERS belongs to the family of coronaviruses that includes the common cold and SARS, and can cause fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure. There is no cure or vaccine for the illness to date.
The virus has a death rate of 27%, according to the World Health Organization.