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

Friday, June 12, 2015

No discussion on LTTE ban at TNA-GTF meet: Mangala

No discussion on LTTE ban at TNA-GTF meet: Mangala
logoJune 13, 2015 
Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister says that topics such as  lifting the proscription of the LTTE or war crimes allegations did not feature in his recent discussion with the Global Tamil Forum and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in London. 
“There was absolutely no discussion of lifting the proscription of the LTTE. That was never discussed,” Mangala Samaraweera said.
“And also we did not discuss any issues regarding a political solution. Nor did we discuss about the impending domestic mechanism which the government, at the moment, is preparing,” he told Parliament on Friday (12). 
Responding to questions raised by the Leader of Opposition relating to the discussions, which was given immense publicity in sections of the media, Samaraweera stated the needs of the displaced people and prisoners held under the PTA without charges were the main subjects discussed.  
He also said that the annual review of the persons listed under gazetted regulations 1758/19 dated 15th May 2012 and 1760 of 31st May 2012 (by the previous Government) to give effect to UN Resolutions 1373 and 1267, was discussed. 
“This annual review is mandatory as per the regulations that have been gazetted by the previous Government,” he said. 
Samaraweera said he considers the proscribing of over 400 Tamil diaspora individuals in 2014 as “an election gimmick” because it was “not well considered at all.” 
“There were people who were included in the list who had died several years before this list came out. That shows that it was a hurriedly compiled list without taking into consideration the actual facts,” he charged.   
The foreign minister said that the discussion was attended by TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran, GTF representative Suren Surendiran, representative of the Office for National Unity and Reconciliation M.S. Jayasinghe, a representative from the South African Government, a representative from the Swiss Government, former Norwegian Ambassador to Sri Lanka Mr. Tore Hattrem and Mr. Eric Solheim, who participated briefly on the 1st day to share his experiences in engaging the diaspora. 

Please accept ministerial positions I will not dissolve the parliament – President

deputyministers 11

 Created On Friday, 12 June 2015 

Before appointing the SLFP deputy ministers yesterday 10th during the meeting held with the president the MP’s have urged the president that they don’t want ministerial positions for two weeks. President who has responded has said “Please accept ministerial positions. I have the power to dissolve the parliament. I will not do it right now. I will appoint ministers for all districts and strengthen the party at ground level and dissolve the parliament and go for an election. It can be by end of this year. You all can take the ministerial positions and render your help to me”.

SLFP MP’s who were happy with the presidents answer has obtained the deputy ministerial positions. The specialty of these appointments is that in order to frail Mangala Samaraweera and Sagala Rathnayake deputy ministerial positions were given to Sanath Jayasuriya from Matara and to Wijaya Dahanayake from Deniyaya.

Text: No Confidence Motion Against PM Ranil Wickremasinghe

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Sri Lanka Brief12/06/2015
Whereas the Hon. Ranil Wickremasinghe, Prime Minister performing the functions of the Office of Prime Minister without enquiring the consent of the majority in Parliament in contravention of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka,
And whereas depriving a large number of persons employed in many large and small scale development projects of their means of livelihood and self-employment by suspending such projects;
And whereas politicizing the Sri Lanka Police in a serious manner for inflicting political victimization and intimidation, in contravention of the Police Ordinance;
And whereas creating a crisis in terms of cost of living by not granting government certified prices for tea, rubber and paddy and the escalation of prices of food items essential for the life of the community;
And whereas appointing a person who is not a citizen of Sri Lanka and has renounced his allegiance and devotion to Sri Lanka by way of the pledge he has given to a foreign country to the office of Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, the post which bears foremost responsibility for the handling of the whole financial system of Sri Lanka;
And whereas being responsible for the largest financial fraud to have occurred in the history of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka by the controversial Treasury Bonds issue and for the consequent financial loss to Sri Lanka that continues in a manner unbearable to the country;
And whereas damaging severely the international relations with the countries and governments that extended maximum friendship and support to the country in times of difficulty, through the arbitrary and short-sighted action followed in respect of such countries and governments;
And whereas implementing fiscal policies in a manner that discourages the private sector, which makes a high contribution to Sri Lanka’s economic development process; That this Parliament resolves that it has no confidence on the Hon. Ranil Wickremesinghe, Prime Minister in his ability as functioning as the Prime Minister in the said Office.
Read the Motion with signatures as a PDF  NO Confidence Motion against PM Ranil W.

More Than Rs Half A Million Written Off By Sport Minister Navin For Mum’s ‘Dog Show’

Colombo Telegraph
June 12, 2015
The Kennel Association of Sri Lanka headed by its Patron the current Sports Minister’s mum Srima Dissanayake and driven by President Manisha Wimalasekere has created more controversy than staging the dog show itself, when auditors doing a routine check found out that based on a letter provided by the current Minister Navin Dissanayake, the stadium officials were instructed to under charge the Kennel Association of Sri Lanka a whopping sum of Rs 580,000.
Minister Navin Dissanayake
Minister Navin Dissanayake
Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium officials confirmed that they received Rs 200,000 as opposed to Rs 780,000 that they would have normally generated from such an event, which included the air conditioning comforts for the dogs throughout the day.
Usually ‘Dog Shows’ are held in an outdoor environment and by staging this event in the indoor stadium, the expensive carpet laid on the professional and expensively laid floors had been soiled by the 150 canines urine and excrement throughout the day.
“The kennel Association of Sri Lanka and ‘Dog Shows’ don’t fall under the Ministry of Sports and it was surprising to note that the normalcy of not permitting animals into the indoor stadium had been broken” said Panduka Keerthinanda the former Chairman of the Sugathadasa Stadium when contacted by Colombo Telegraph.
Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that in the sports stadium’s 32 year old history not a single Chairman had entertained any events for animals within the indoor stadium, maintaining strict disciplines and protecting the expensive facilities of the stadium where International events also are held.
When Colombo Telegraph contacted the Stadium officials to get booking and rates and details for staging a similar event, we were informed that this was the first and last time that they were going to rent out the premises for any animal event to to be held. “ We have received immense flak over staging this event and the management is not permitting anymore ‘Dog Show’ bookings the official said.Read More

An open letter to Bandula Padmakumara, from media collateral

BandulaBandula,-Friday, 12 June 2015
The statement you made on the 4th asserting that you did not take revenge from anybody when you were serving as the chairman at Lake House during the earlier period induced me to write this open letter.
I personally know you took victimized many journalists and workers in the Lake House during your tenure. Following is what happened to me.
When you were appointed as the chairman of Lake House I was working as the feature editor of “Silumina”. Few days of your appointment I was transferred to the former Presidents media unit. I was entrusted to arrange president’s important speech, announcements and statements. (I know that you had a dislike for this) Mahinda Illeperuma was in charge of the section and reviewed by the president’s secretary Lalith Weerathinga. That was the time I had to go on retirement. I would have requested an extension of my service. It is usual to receive an extension for the first time. Although many others got an extension but my first extension was discarded by none other than you.
It was the usual habit of the former president to call state newspaper media heads and brief them on important issues. In one occasion when the former president asked you about my service extension at once you said “that is done”
Subsequently you called me and said “president asked me about your matter, I hope you know the details, Illeperuma would have told you” when I said “yes” you said “ok then we will do that” Then immediately you told me “I am in a big problem now, can you correct the grammar of this?” and gave me the proof of the annual Buddhist magazine of Lake House. I immediately corrected that and gave you but you never did my work. Later I tried to meet you eight times. You cleverly evaded me. Your secretary understood that I have a problem and inquired me. I said “I came to meet the chairman eight times but he evaded so I will not come back again” She told me not to do that and she voluntarily arranged a meeting with you and me on the next day. On the next day when I met her she was astonished and said “he is a strange person, no response at all”
I immediately briefed the situation to president’s secretary Lalith Weerathunga. In response to that he replied to me and stated that he would correct the injustice happened to me with all his effort. Further he sent the service extension approved by the president in writing to you and sent me a copy. You again undermined that. You undermined the second and the third orders of the president and showed me that you are powerful than the president. You rejected the executive president’s power. Oh what a Hero you are?
Today you are at home. I am still with the “Nelum Wila” which I write for the past decade. I am not left alone in the media world. You lost your chairman seat and the “First Page” in the TV.
Vengeful ironic senile price, cheers for you !
Gunasinghe Hettiarachchi
11-6-2015

Brief raid by India in far-off Myanmar has Pakistan fuming

Security force personnel patrol a road at a village in the Chandel district, south of Imphal January 23, 2012. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/FilesSecurity force personnel patrol a road at a village in the Chandel district, south of Imphal January 23, 2012.-REUTERS/RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI/FILES
NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD 
ReutersFri Jun 12, 2015
The Indian army's brief foray this week into Myanmar to hunt militants set alarm bells ringing in far-away Pakistan, Delhi's arch-rival whom it blames for stoking a rebellion in the disputed region of Kashmir.
By suggesting the Myanmar incident could set a precedent for more cross-border raids, including into Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, a junior Indian minister took the row one step further.
Bellicose language is nothing new between the nuclear-armed neighbours, but Pakistanis say recent events have further hurt relations already strained since India's nationalist leader Narendra Modi came to power.
And as long as the talk is of threats and retaliation, hopes of finding a way out of decades of war and suspicion look slim.
 
It is also not without its risks.
"Very bad news often follows when adversaries give up on improved relations," Michael Krepon, co-founder of the Stimson Center in Washington, wrote in a blogpost on the Arms Control Wonk.
"We're at this juncture now on the Subcontinent," added Krepon, an authority on nuclear security in South Asia.
"Absent top-down initiatives to mend fences, initiatives that New Delhi appears unwilling to take and that Pakistan's civilian government is handcuffed from taking, the stage will be set for another nuclear-tinged crisis in the region."

FAR-OFF MYANMAR
One trigger for this week's bitter verbal exchanges was India's action thousands of kilometres east of Pakistan.
Hours after 70 Indian special forces crossed into Myanmar from two northeastern states and killed an unspecified number of rebels, junior minister Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore said it was a message to Pakistan that India will go after militants anywhere.
That was a thinly veiled reference to Muslim-majority Kashmir, where India blames Pakistan for fomenting a militant rebellion in the part of the Himalayan region held by Delhi.
Pakistan, in turn, has accused India of stoking trouble in Baluchistan, a province torn by militant and separatist violence which is key to the country's economic prospects.
Pakistan shared evidence of Indian meddling in Baluchistan with the United States in February this year, a senior official with knowledge of Pakistan's policy toward India told Reuters.
Tuesday's rare cross-border raid into Myanmar bolsters the Modi government's claims of a robust response to security threats from Pakistan, though that is a more complex challenge; the sides have fought three wars since partition in 1947.
As an immediate consequence, Indian and Pakistani troops strung out along the bitterly contested de facto Kashmir border are likely to raise alert levels to discourage cross border incursions, Indian military officials said.
On Thursday the two armies exchanged gunfire in the Poonch sector of Kashmir, the Indian army said, blaming Pakistani troops for starting the fighting. The Pakistan military was not immediately available for comment.
As well as a more hawkish leader, India's top security team is led by National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, a former intelligence operative who has suggested India may look to retaliate if Pakistan interferes in Kashmir or elsewhere.
In Pakistan, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif made peace with India a top campaign promise in 2013 elections, but those ambitions have been dashed as the influential military tightens its grip on power and Modi keeps the door shut.

REGIONAL PLAY
The tensions go far beyond Kashmir.
India risks losing a foothold in Afghanistan, now that President Ashraf Ghani has reached out to Pakistan to help him pursue peace with Taliban militants. Ghani's predecessor, Hamid Karzai, was far more friendly towards India.
Meanwhile, Modi has wooed Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka by offering credit lines and a share in India's fast-growing economy, while giving Pakistan the cold shoulder.
"Every now and then Pakistan keeps disturbing India, creates nuisance, promotes terrorism and such incidents keep recurring," he said during a visit to Bangladesh last weekend, remarks that drew a sharp retort from Islamabad.
Pakistan believes Modi is seeking to isolate it, and seeks to counter that strategy by inviting China into the region, a development that causes major concern to New Delhi.
China's tightening embrace of Pakistan could give it a bridgehead into South Asia and the Indian Ocean, reinforcing India's worst fears of a conflict on two fronts.
Chinese President Xi Jinping launched plans for a $46 billion economic corridor during a recent visit to Pakistan. The route will provide a road running from China to a deepwater Pakistani port, vastly expanding the reach of the Chinese navy.
According to Indian officials, Modi told Xi during his visit to China last month that a corridor through Kashmir was "unacceptable."
Even a relatively modest proposal by Pakistan cricket authorities to play against the Indian team in a neutral venue like Dubai was met by stony silence from the Indian government.

(Additional reporting by Mehreen Zahra-Malik; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

Gaza beach killings: no justice in Israeli exoneration, says victim's father

Mohammed Bakr condemns lack of culpability for four boys’ deaths as new questions emerge over scope and accuracy of inquiry
 Salwa and Mohamed Bakr lost their 11-year-old son during the air strike on Gaza City’s beach in July 2014. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
 in Jerusalem-Friday 12 June 2015


The father of one of four Palestinian children killed on a Gaza City beach during last summer’s war between Hamas and Israel has said he is outraged that anIsraeli investigation into the killings has been closed without finding anyone culpable for their deaths.

IS-led violence as an aspect of ‘international anarchy’


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Iraqi Shiite fighters from the Popular Mobilisation units flash the "V" sign of victory as they ride on the back of a vehicle in the city of Baiji, north of Tikrit, as they fight alongside Iraqi forces against the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group to try to retake the strategic northern Iraqi town for a second time, on June 9, 2015. Baghdad regained control of Baiji — located on the road to IS hub Mosul and near the country’s largest oil refinery — last year, but subsequently lost it again. AFP

In fact the US has a lot of explaining to do as regards Iraq and Afghanistan. The missions undertaken by the US-led military alliances in these states could only be described as half or less accomplished. Sectarian strife has increased in ferocity in Iraq, although the West thought it safe to effect a withdrawal of troops from that country some time back and the Taliban-led rebellion seems to be gathering in strength in Afghanistan. So, how have the US-led military operations in these states helped them? Little, if at all, is the answer because these hapless lands are continuing to be in the bloodiest turmoil.

One year on, it seems obvious that the US-led military campaign against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is proving counter-productive. Instead of a militarily-neutralized IS, what one finds is a spiral of violence in areas where the IS and its allies hold sway, and an intensification of the brutality linked with the species of violence triggered by religious extremism and sectarianism. In other words, ‘international anarchy’ and ‘disorder’ are on the upswing.

If one needs evidence to support the thesis that military means alone would not help In resolving violent upheavals associated with identity-based conflicts, then, we have such proof in the Middle East of today. However, Afghanistan too is living proof of the same thesis and the multifarious identity conflicts in South Asia, including that in Sri Lanka, clinch the same point. This evidence is amply visible in the principal Arab-Israeli conflict as well as in the violence welling in the IS-dominated areas of the Middle East. The question for the US in particular is: How has its military campaign against the IS and its allies helped in bringing even a semblance of normalcy to the theater of conflict in question?

In fact the US has a lot of explaining to do as regards Iraq and Afghanistan. The missions undertaken by the US-led military alliances in these states could only be described as half or less accomplished. Sectarian strife has increased in ferocity in Iraq, although the West thought it safe to effect a withdrawal of troops from that country some time back and the Taliban-led rebellion seems to be gathering in strength in Afghanistan. So, how have the US-led military operations in these states helped them? Little, if at all, is the answer because these hapless lands are continuing to be in the bloodiest turmoil.

Accordingly, ‘anarchy’ or ‘disorder’ could be said to be on the increase in the world. One is compelled to this inference not only because the world’s conflict zones are increasingly turning into unsettling ‘Killing Fields’ of the international system but also on account of the fact that what the major powers see as their national interest is tending to take the place of the core values of the UN system, which, on paper, upholds the collective interests of mankind. This proclivity on the part of the bigger powers, in particular, contributes substantially to the present state of ‘disorder’.

The US and its allies’ military involvements in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, for instance, do not have their origins in any altruistic considerations. They are rooted in what these powers see as their national interests. For example, the Western powers need to be physically present in these oil rich regions or have some controlling influence over them through the installation of West-friendly local governments. It must be borne in mind that the Gulf is of great strategic importance to the West and Iraq has been coveted by it over the past century and more on account of its vast oil resources. In decades past, the Baghdad Pact, the Central Treaty Organization and the South East Asia Treaty Organizations, essentially, served the same Western purposes.

Over the years, one cannot see a diminishing of these West-inspired processes. On the contrary, since the early nineties, consequent to the collapse of communism, the world has seen a renewed acceleration of these trends which substantiate the view that ‘disorder’ rather than order is the dominant characteristic of the current global political order.

It was Western political scientist Samuel Huntingdon who propounded the now well known thesis that a ‘Clash of Civilizations’ is upon the world in view of the military challenges currently posed to Western hegemony by militant religious fundamentalism in particularly the developing world. The political scientist cannot be faulted for inclining to this view because this confrontation between ‘East and West’ is indeed a principal conflict at present in world politics. Since the crumbling of communism and the Cold War, we are having a civilizational clash of sorts, but over the past two decades, it could be said that this ‘Clash’ has been compounded by intra-civilizational violence within the ‘East’ or in the arena of religious extremism. This ‘intra-civilizational’ violence takes the form of brutal sectarian clashes in the Middle East; the Sunni-Shia confrontation, for example.

The point could be made, therefore, that the ‘Civilizational Clash’ in question is further degenerating into relentless bloodletting between armed formations in the world of religious extremism. Currently, the confrontation between extremist forces in the Sunni and Shia camps in Iraq and Syria has the potential of triggering a region-wide armed conflict in the Middle East. This is on account of the considerable spill-over effects of the sectarian violence in Syria and Iraq.

But a dominant factor which is feeding such religious extremism is the NATO-led bombing campaign in Syria and Iraq. While the West and its Saudi-headed allies in the Middle East may be aiming at weakening formations such as the IS through their military campaign, little of the sort seems to be happening. For, religious extremism may only be gaining in strength as a result of the perception that the Muslim world is being bombed into subservience and silence. As a result, the West’s current military efforts in the Middle East may not yield the desired results.

Adding to the sense of ‘anarchy’ is the harm being visited on Western society itself by the US-led military measures in the Middle East. It is no secret that Western nationals in disconcerting numbers are siding with the IS on account of the perception that the Muslim world is being victimized by the West. Such female sympathizers have been even braving the journey to Syria and Iraq to join the IS. Meanwhile, other persons of Middle East origin in the West are being put through much inconvenience by law and order measures adopted by Western states.

Accordingly, the West and its allies need to take a long hard look at their conflict-resolution measures in the Middle East and outside. Political means also need to be adopted to put identity groups in the world’s hot spots at ease. Regional peace could very well depend on such farsightedness.

The Worst of All Horrors

Psychologists in Iraq, a country long afflicted by violence, say they’ve never seen more terrible trauma than that caused by the Islamic State.
The Worst of All Horrors
BY LAUREN WOLFE-JUNE 11, 2015
These days, no one seems to have endured just one kind of life-jarring experience in the conflict areas of Iraq. The suffering is multilayered: trauma caused by having witnessed or being victims of Islamic State violence, being displaced or living in an area that may come under attack, facing torture or sexualized violence — the list goes on and on.
Take the case of a teenage girl from the Sinjar area in northwestern Iraq. She and her family didn’t have the means to escape to a safe place when the Islamic State attacked her town a few months ago, nor did they have weapons to fight, says her treating psychotherapist, Sherwan A. Hassan of the Jiyan Foundation for Human Rights, a group that offers free rehabilitation services to survivors of torture and inhuman treatment in Iraq. Eventually, the family fled into the dusty mountains, where they spent 10 days without food and with very little water or sleep. They were terrified of being attacked again. The adults and their daughter made it through; a baby brother and sister, however, died.
After crisscrossing into Syria and back into Iraq on an arduous journey, the parents of the girl realized she needed help. She wasn’t speaking and was physically unable to get up much of the time. A trip over the border into Turkey to seek care proved fruitless — there were no professionals who knew what to do with her. Finally, after arriving in the Iraqi Kurdistan city of Dohuk, the family was referred to the Jiyan Foundation. By now living in a state of prolonged displacement, the girl was cutting her arms and saying things like, “I am crazy,” “I am worthless,” and “I have lost my mind,” Hassan recounts.
Hassan, who looked very tired in a recent Skype interview, describes how, in his first six sessions with the girl, he tried relaxation therapy and family therapy. In the next session, he will try scream therapy, which is when a patient vents repressed anger or frustration through yelling. Whatever works at this point. The same goes for the three or four other patients Hassan treats each day.
It is the complexity of cases, in which there is trauma on top of trauma, that psychologists and social workers in Iraq are trying desperately to get a handle on. Youth psychotherapist Salah Ahmad, who founded the Jiyan Foundation and has been treating patients in Iraq for 10 years, says he has never seen “such a degree of violence and such deeply traumatized persons as those who have fallen victim to the Islamic State.” And the needs — both the number of people and the severity of what they are enduring — are so extraordinarily overwhelming that experts admit they are failing and will continue to do so without further commitments of financial support from the international community.
Some 3.3 million Iraqis are internally displaced, and more than 400,000 have become refugees, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center in Geneva. The number of trained doctors is extremely limited. Hassan has only been working as a psychotherapist for five years, and in trauma for two and a half. “Our therapists need more supervision and special training and must, at the same time, be supported in coping with these extreme cases,” Ahmad explains. Put simply, unless something changes, the job of treating a multiply-traumatized population currently seems insurmountable.
* * *
This most recent mental health epidemic to befall Iraq follows on years of the coalition-led war — which were preceded by more than two decades of Saddam Hussein’s punishing reign. Among the rising number of people Ahmad now sees are “former patients who had long finished their therapies have started to come back as they were once again confronted with memories of terror, persecution, war, and violence.” People persecuted under the Saddam regime are now having flashbacks. (He partly blames journalists for this: “The media constantly floods people with horrifying images, and the news of [the Islamic State] coming closer.”)
Direct survivors of the Islamic State are also flooding his center. Some are women and girls who have been held by the terrorist group, “almost all of whom have experienced and/or witnessed different forms of sexual violence,” he says. Jiyan is planning to open a rehabilitation center specifically for female survivors later this year.
What everyone has in common, Ahmad says, is that they have been “at risk of being killed at any moment.”
Another of Hassan’s patients became pregnant after being abducted and raped by Islamic State fighters, he says. The Yazidi woman, in her early 20s, was kidnapped from Sinjar and held for three months. When she made it to Dohuk, she decided to keep the baby. But the woman’s parents want the pregnancy terminated. The woman now shakes, faints, and dissociates, her doctor says. She’s in her fifth month of pregnancy.
For patients unable to travel to Dohuk, a team at Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has been taking convoys of two trucks into conflict-affected areas. “We travel tightly,” says Sybilla Rulf, psychotherapist and MSF’s mental health activity manager in Dohuk. Towns and villages are in terrible straits; governance is usually absent, hospitals and schools have been destroyed.
Rulf described several patients to me: a man in his 30s who developed an eating disorder from stress and is terrified the Islamic State will come back to his home and find his six sisters and five children. An 11-year-old boy who was shot in the leg and has flashbacks to the event, envisioning the bullet hitting his leg over and over. A Yazidi woman kidnapped while in the last stages of pregnancy, who had the baby in captivity and left it behind — at just 10 days old — when she had the opportunity to escape. “She falls now because she’s so weak and thinks she doesn’t deserve to live,” Rulf says. “Her husband’s brother says that in his community, there are 10 to 15 cases like that.”
MSF has limited time and resources to treat these difficult cases. “You have to work quickly and with very simple tools,” Rulf says. MSF’s field team consists of only two psychologists (neither of whom are clinically trained, only educated) and two social workers. Rulf is coaching them as they work. Currently, she is still looking for a good translator to assist her.
Group therapy is the aim, with so many patients to treat. Rulf says the method can be highly effective. (It has also been used by groups such the Syrian American Medical Society.) She also points out that some of her staff is deeply affected by the work and have their own mental health needs. “A lot of the people who are working for us are from this region — refugees or Iraqi Kurds,” she explains. “They’re close to some of the people who have experienced this.”
While there is a great need for counselors — and for counselors to treat those counselors — Erin Gallagher, who has conducted research in Iraq for Physicians for Human Rights, sees possibilities that can be seized right now. For instance, it’s inevitable that women and girls will continue to be forced into captivity by the Islamic State, and that many will escape or be freed. “Historically, the international community has not often had the luxury to respond to a crisis before it worsens,” Gallagher says. “This is a rare chance to help develop a comprehensive response with local organizations to sexual violence survivors before they return.” Doctors and local hospitals are already treating some survivors, and there has been documentation of abuse; survivors have been willing to speak, and community leaders have helped smooth the way for their reintegration into society. Gallagher says this has created the “perfect situation for the international community to provide the remaining pieces that could create a model response and greatly ease the suffering of survivors and future returnees.”
The Jiyan Foundation, for its part, is looking to the Iraqi government to strengthen local NGOs and invest in improved mental health services. After so many years of horror and so little action taken, could the brutality of the Islamic State finally be the tipping point that brings long-needed care to the traumatized population of Iraq? Rulf says it’s too soon to tell: “That depends on the future of this war. Things can be destroyed again and again, and people can be traumatized yet again.”
Safin Hamed/AFP/Getty Images

You shouldn’t ask an intellectual how to live a fulfilling life

Avery Morrow says you probably shouldn’t ask an intellectual how to live a fulfilling life

A philosopher, academic, or any kind of writer is the worst person to ask about how to live a fulfilling life. Their obligation to themselves is not to resolve their own problems, but to plumb the depths of their own discontent, seeking after a truth in unhappiness…
by Avery Morrow-Jun 10, 2015
( June 10, 2015, Tokyo, Sri Lanka Guardian) One of the most famous letters in Chinese history was sent by the historian Sima Qian to his friend Ren An. In this letter, Sima Qian bemoans his castration at the hands of an arbitrary emperor after he tried to speak out in defense of a good man. He proclaims that he will devote his life to completing his history, and speaks of the conviction that keeps people writing in devastating tone:
When Xibo, the Earl of the West, was imprisoned at Youli, he expanded the I Ching. Confucius was in distress when he made the Spring and Autumn Annals. Qu Yuan was banished and he composed his poem “Encountering Sorrow.” After Zuo Qiu lost his sight, he wrote the Conversations from the States. When Sun Tzu had his feet amputated in punishment, he set forth the Art of War. Lü Buwei was banished to Shu but his Spring and Autumn of Mr. Lü has been handed down through the ages. While Han Fei Zi was held prisoner in Qin he wrote “The Difficulties of Disputation” and “The Sorrow of Standing Alone.” Most of the three hundred poems of the Odes were written when the sages poured out their anger and dissatisfaction. All these men had a rankling in their hearts, for they were not able to accomplish what they wished. Those like Zuo Qiu, who was blind, or Sun Tzu, who had no feet, could never hold office, so they retired to compose books in order to set forth their thoughts and indignation, handing down their writings so they could show posterity who they were.
I too have ventured not to be modest but have entrusted myself to my useless writings. I have gathered up and brought together the old traditions of the world that were scattered and lost. I have examined events of the past and investigated the principles behind their success and failure, their rise and decay, in 130 chapters. I wished to examine into all that concerns heaven and humankind, to penetrate the changes of the past and present, putting forth my views as one school of interpretation. […] When I have truly completed this work, I will deposit it in the Famous Mountain archives. If it may be handed down to those who will appreciate it and penetrate to the villages and great cities, then though I should suffer a thousand mutilations, what regret would I have? (Translated in Burton Watson, Records of the Grand Historian: Qin Dynasty, appendix 2)
This must stand alongside the world’s greatest critiques of writing. Writing, says Sima Qian, is just an elaborate way to tell the world about your indignation. Writing is a therapeutic behavior which you must resort to because you have been wronged or defeated. These are the bitter words of a man whose romantic belief in standing up for goodness and justice was viscerally mutilated by reality.
Sima Qian confides to Ren An that “such matters as these may be discussed with a wise man, but it is difficult to explain them to ordinary people.” The life of the mind is defined by knowing other people write from a state of discontent, not only with local injustices, but with the human condition itself. Those who have never known such deep discontent make poor conversation partners. Conversely, those who have come to peace with the human condition have no need to defend their views in public. This is the meaning of the Tao Te Ching’s verse, “Those who know, do not speak. Those who speak, do not know.”
In this sense, a philosopher, academic, or any kind of writer is the worst person to ask about how to live a fulfilling life. Their obligation to themselves is not to resolve their own problems, but to plumb the depths of their own discontent, seeking after a truth in unhappiness. It is not likely that anything that can be articulated in an intellectually honest essay can bestow a fulfilling life on you.
But in a terribly significant way, Sima Qian leaves out the other side of writing. He is convinced that if he writes something great, then posterity will read it. It turned out that his conviction was entirely right. But why was it necessary that his writing be great? Why does he need to go to the extent of examining everything that happened in the past and analyzing it? Why didn’t he just write a book about how the emperor castrated him and how he suffered? He must have seen something more important than himself in the history of his land.
In this letter, Sima Qian lets his bitterness shine through. But in his magisterial history, that bitterness is intertwined with a capacity for selecting, critiquing, and recording historical facts that ranks him among the greatest of all human civilization. Perhaps we can’t merely be told how to live a happy, fulfilling life with simple instructions. But reading can tell us about the dreams of centuries of men and women, and about what they did to realize them. In their dreams and their struggles, perhaps, we can see hints of transcendence, and find our own fulfillment.
COLLEGE SEXUAL ASSAULTS-1 in 5 college women say they were violated

 Nick AndersonScott Clement- Evelyn Hockstein-June 12, 2015


Twenty percent of young women who attended college during the past four years say they were sexually assaulted, according to a Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation poll. But the circle of victims on the nation’s campuses is probably even larger.

A legacy of sexual assault passed from mother to daughter

A mother and daughter share their experiences of being sexually assaulted at the same college, decades apart.

Dirty gold: shocking plight of the Philippines' child miners

Channel 4 NewsFRIDAY 12 JUNE 2015


Driven by poverty, the gold miners of the eastern Philippines stop at nothing to dig out a few flecks of the precious metal - including risking the lives of their children.

Air bubbled through the surface of the water making it look like boiling lava, then slowly a head emerged through the bubbles, then a face, a thick plastic tube clenched between his teeth, writes Evan Williams.
It was Gerald, 16, and he had been 30 feet below the surface for three hours, compressed air forced into his lungs by an old petrol-driven pump.
Gerald
Above: 16-year-old gold miner Gerald
We are on the far east coast of the Philippines' main island of Luzon, Asia's Gold Coast. Gerald had been down there for three hours, chiseling away at a seam of gold bearing rock in a narrow cavern under the river, neck-deep in water.
"I do get afraid," he said, very quietly spoken. "It's hard chiseling and I fear the earth collapsing and getting caught underneath."

Turning a blind eye

Gerald is involved in what's called compressor mining – a form of searching for gold where the miners hold the compressor hose in their teeth, descend 30 or more feet in the completely submerged mine shafts and hack away searching for tiny specs of gold.
If the tube gets blocked, twisted or broken, the air stops and the miner suffocates and drowns. Children are often used as their lungs have not been yet damaged by exhaust fumes sucked into the tubes.
It's so dangerous it has been specifically banned in the Philippines - yet there is little sign of enforcement, and the authorities tell us they feel they need to turn a blind eye to compressor mining as there is no alternative for the 15,000 miners in this region alone to make money to feed their families.
The local mayor tells me they try to intervene but more and more children are forced into gold mining to help their fathers earn just enough to feed their families.
News
I had seen some pictures of compressor mining but I was not prepared for level of danger to these men and children once I was there.
It was bad enough when I was on the bamboo and palm leaf rig used by the teams to dive from in to the depths below the river surface. To see them disappear beneath the surface in to the gloom.
But then one of the miners agree to put a go-pro camera on his head and follow Gerald down the flooded shaft so we could see the conditions they work in.
The images we got back are some of the most chilling pictures I have seen.
We follow Gerald's face as he dives deeper in the gloom, pushing himself down the narrow bamboo walls of the mine shaft, the tube between his teeth the only lifeline of air pumped from the surface.
Larry Lasap
Above: gold miner Larry lasap and his family
For this he earns not more than a few dollars a day but he does it to help feed his five younger brothers and sisters. He doesn't do it every day but is here enough to know the risks.
As he gets deeper, the water turns to black, the sounds eerie. Once he reaches the bottom he swims a further 20 feet under the river bank and emerges in a small cavern neck deep in water.
Here Gerald and the other men chisel the seam of gold-bearing rock, filling bags that are then hauled to the surface by the same men watching their air tubes. The rocks are scoured for even the tiniest spec of gold to be processed with mercury – a poisonous metal causing brain and organ damage, especially in children.
The gold is then largely sold to brokers who repress the process to increase their profits. They sell largely on the black market to avoid taxes, and much of the gold goes to China and then the rest of the world.
News
Many of the children we met work in gold mining because it helps their fathers almost double what they can earn. Without them, they can't afford to feed and school their large families.
But poverty creates a vicious cycle. The search for gold means many children are missing their education, and without an education they remain trapped in a cycle of poverty... and danger.