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

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Bomb kills nine Afghan children, 10 adults; key district falls in north
Taliban fighters in the north captured a key district on the frontline of the battle for Kunduz city. (File Photo)

Jun 21, 2015,

KABUL: A roadside bomb killed at least 19 Afghan civilians including nine children in a southern province, while Taliban fighters in the north captured a key district on the frontline of the battle for Kunduz city, officials said on Sunday. 

Violence has spiralled in Afghanistan since the departure of most foreign forces at the end of last year. Insurgents are pushing to take territory from the NATO-trained Afghan security forces more than 13 years after the U.S.-led military intervention that toppled the Taliban from power.

READ ALSO: Afghanistan gets 'mini-Pentagon' as troops struggle

In the southern province of Helmand, police official Haji Janan Aqa said 19 people, including nine children and eight women, were killed on Saturday night. He said five people were wounded.

He said the villagers had recently fled fighting in

in Marjah district and were apparently trying to go home.

"They wanted to return to their village, but their van hit a roadside bomb planted by Taliban," Aqa said.

A Reuters witness said all of the dead children he saw at the scene were under the age of five.

No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing. The Taliban typically deny targeting civilians, although their tactic of planting roadside bombs has been harshly criticised by the United Nations.

In northern Kunduz province, officials said that Taliban forces advancing on the provincial capital Kunduz city on Saturday evening captured the outlying district of Chardara.

Heavy fighting was ongoing on Sunday just three kilometres away from the governor's compound, said Hamdullah Danishi, a deputy governor of the province.

Security officials held a meeting early on Sunday to plan a counter-offensive.

"Today we will take Chardara district back and you will witness this," Danishi said.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement that their fighters took control of Chardara district centre and 12 police check posts.

He also said 24 police and army soldiers were killed, 19 wounded and 25 captured. Mujahid said two of their fighters were killed and four wounded.

Danishi, however, said the government forces evacuated Chardara without any casualties. Both sides in the intensifying war downplay their own losses and exaggerate their enemies' casualties.

If the city centre of Kunduz were to fall, it would be a major embarrassment to Afghan forces fighting this year mostly without U.S. support.

Although American advisers and Afghan officials say Taliban rarely hold territory for long, the surge in violence and aggressive offensives around the country have rattled confidence in the U.S.-backed government.

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Yemeni rebels persist even as their home region is destroyed in war


By Ali al-Mujahed and Hugh Naylor June 21 

SANAA, Yemen — Yemen’s Houthi rebels are enduring fierce bombing raids in their northern strongholds, as a Saudi-led campaign pounds neighborhoods, markets and power facilities, according to residents and aid workers.
Leaks allege assassination plot hatched by Egypt and Sudan 

Document released by WikiLeaks claims to show that Egypt sent its 'most dangerous' agents to Sudan to plot killing of South Sudanese leader

Salva Kiir Mayardit, president of South Sudan, was allegedly the target of a joint plot (AFP)
HomeSunday 21 June 2015
Egypt and Sudan collaborated in a plot to assassinate the president of South Sudan seemingly after the country secured independence in 2011, according to a document allegedly leaked from Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
document released on Friday by WikiLeaks, part of the first batch of 500,000 set to be published in the coming weeks, appears to show that the Saudi Foreign Minister, Saud al-Faisal, wrote to the Saudi King, who also serves as the Prime Minister, about the plan to kill Salva Kiir Mayardit.
Kiir led the government of southern Sudan until the secession of South Sudan from the north in 2011, when he became president – the leaked letter is not dated, but refers to the statesman as “the president of South Sudan”.
According to the document text, Egypt’s intelligence apparatus sent “three of its most dangerous agents” to stay in the upmarket Khartoum district of Garden City.
“The aim of sending them to Khartoum is to formulate a joint plan with the Sudanese intelligence for the elimination and assassination” of Kiir and some of his aides, Faisal allegedly wrote.
The letter, which is not marked as confidential, ends with a plea for the Prime Minister to “examine” the contents of the document.
The Egyptian and Sudanese authorities have not given any official statement about the allegations.
In August 2014 rumours circulated of an assassination attempt against Kiir in Ethiopia as he attended an international conference.
The rumours were shrugged off by the presidency.
Sudan and South Sudan have long had a fractured relationship, with squabbles over how to divide the profits from oil rich South Sudan’s energy production leading to a military confrontation in 2012.
Egypt and South Sudan appear to enjoy positive bilateral relations, with Cairo attempting to woo Juba in a long-running dispute over Nile water distribution, and positioning itself as a mediator in the country’s internal political struggles.
Riyadh has not made any official statements regarding the alleged leak, which saw around 60,000 documents made public on Friday.
However, on Saturday the Saudi Bureau of Investigation and Public Prosecution published a string of warnings on Twitter, reminding followers that those who publish “secret information” could face up to 20 years in prison.



Translation: Spreading secret documents or information, or leaking them, is a crime punishable by up to 20 years in prison
A later image, also posted on the body’s Instagram account, warned that the law governing the publication of secret documents can be interpreted more strictly “if the crime is committed at a time of war”.
Saudi Arabia is currently leading a coalition of regional states in a bombing campaign targeting Yemen’s Houthi rebels that began in March.

One Woman Stands Against the Iranian Government

In a country that brooks no dissent, Nasrin Sotoudeh's remarkable solo protest keeps finding unlikely allies.
One Woman Stands Against the Iranian Government BY GOLNAZ ESFANDIARI-JUNE 16, 2015
On a warm, sunny morning in early June, Nasrin Sotoudeh arrived at the offices of the Iranian Bar Association in central Tehran shortly after 9 a.m. The bespectacled, petite 52-year-old was wearing a blue manteau, beige pants, and red shoes. To comply with the compulsory hijab law, Sotoudeh had covered her short hair with her favorite white scarf. On the scarf is a verse from a poem by Iran’s prominent pre-revolutionary feminist poet Forough Farrokhzad: “I will greet the sun again.”

Anti-austerity protests: thousands march against cuts

Flares, placards, whistles and a few celebrities - the streets of London are filled with protesters calling for an end to the government's austerity cuts.
ATURDAY 20 JUNE 2015
Channel 4 NewsProtest organisers said that a quarter of a million people are thought to have joined the march to Parliament Square on Saturday, though official police figures are yet to be released.
Among those marching was Charlotte Church, who told Channel 4 News that austerity is "not the only option".
"It's unnecessary, it's unethical and we're not going to have it," she said.
End Austerity march in London
The march began in London's financial district to the sound of drums and was led through the city by a brass band trio.
Placards waving in the crowd carried slogans such as "Cuts Kill", "Defy Tory Rule" and "End Austerity Now". There were also plenty of placards with more colourful language - aimed at the government and banks.
End Austerity march in London
The march has passed largely without incident. As protesters passed Downing Street a flare was let off and a loud boo erupted.
Later in the day a group of protesters set fire to placards on Great George Street, just off Parliament Square.

Bonfire started on great George Street. police moving in
In the square itself crowds heard from a range of speakers including Green Party MP Caroline Lucas, Russell Brand, Charlotte Church and Unite the Union General Secretary Len McCluskey.
"We're here to remind the government that 76 per cent of people did not vote for them," Ms Lucas said from the stage.
"I'm less worried about that building crumbling", she continued, indicating the Palace of Westminster, "and more worried about democracy crumbling."
End Austerity march in London
Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness also took to the stage, saying that "24 per cent is not a mandate for austerity" and that "David Cameron's cabinet of millionaires are the real spongers".
Labour leadership hopeful Jeremy Corbyn told the crowd: "The people who marched in this square in the 1850s with the people's charter were dismissed.
"Within 20 years we had universal education. Within 70 years we had a universal health service".
End Austerity march in London
Sam Fairbarn, of the People' Assembly - organisers of the march - said: David Cameron thinks that his small majority means that he can do whatever he wants to us over the next five years without opposition. "He's wrong. We are that opposition."
The crowd also heard poetry from Birmingham's poet laureate Stephen Morrison Burke.
And away from the streets of London, the protest was also gathering steam online. The #EndAusterityNow hashtag has featured in more than 100,000 tweets over the past 24 hours.

Greece crisis: creditors aim to strike deal to include six-month rescue extension

Deal may also include up to €18bn in rescue funds, and later debt relief, but EU officials stress Alexis Tsipras must make concessions
 The Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, arrives at this office in Athens on Saturday. His key demand is that the creditors offer debt relief to Greece. Photograph: Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters
 in Brussels and in Athens-Sunday 21 June 2015
Greece’s creditors are aiming to strike a deal on Monday to stop Athens defaulting on its debt and possibly tumbling out of the euro, by extending its bailout by six months, supplying up to €18bn in rescue funds and pledging later debt relief for the austerity-battered country.

Moonshine kills at least 94 in Mumbai slum

Toxic homemade liquor has killed at least 94 slum dwellers in Mumbai, with more than 45 in hospital, police said on Sunday, in the latest disaster involving moonshine.
People carry the body of a victim who died after consuming bootleg liquor at a slum in Mumbai, June 20, 2015.
A relative sits inside an ambulance with the body of a victim who died after consuming bootleg liquor at a cremation ground in Mumbai, June 20, 2015.
ReutersSun Jun 21, 2015
Police have arrested five people in connection with the deaths in a western neighbourhood of the city, on the west coast of India, which started on Wednesday.
"More than 150 have consumed this alcohol. The death toll may rise," said Dhananjay Kulkarni, Mumbai's deputy police commissioner, adding that eight police officials had been suspended for suspected negligence.
Homemade liquor, often using poisonous industrial methanol, is popular among the poor in India because it is cheap. More than 140 people were killed in West Bengal in 2011 from drinking homemade liquor.
(Reporting by Abhishek Vishnoi and Rafael Nam; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Social Engineering and the Imposition of a “Free Market” Totalitarian Ideology

The Masses as Goats and Dogs: Townsend and Sade’s Doctrines Rule the World

central-banks-economy

By John Stanton-June 20, 2015
“The citizens whose lives are split between business and private life, their private life between ostentation and intimacy, their intimacy between the sullen community of marriage and the bitter solace of being entirely alone, at odds with themselves and with everyone, are virtually already Nazis who are at once enthusiastic and fed up or the city dwellers of today who can imagine friendship only as a social contract between the inwardly connected.” The Dialectic of Enlightenment, Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno (1944).

The Best 7 Foods for Breast Cancer Prevention

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Healthy and Natural WorldFebruary 22, 2015
Breast cancer is one of the most frequently diagnosed cancers and is the second leading cause of cancer death in American women. By changing your diet, you can do a lot to reduce your risk of getting it. Cancer research UK estimates that 9 out of 100 cancers can be prevented if you change your eating habits.

The evidence base behind certain foods’ anticancer potential is rapidly growing, but more evidence is needed and the research in this field is ongoing.
Healthy body weight, which goes hand in hand with healthy eating, is another factor that can reduce the risk of many cancers and also needs to be considered. By changing your diet for the better, you will likely influence your body weight as well and bring your BMI into the healthy range.

Breast cancer and diet

Scientists have difficulty studying the role of diet in cancer development. It is not easy to single out one factor and make direct links to cancer. Different studies don’t always reach the same conclusion and there is inconsistency in this area of research.
There are some clues, however, that show there is a connection between diet and breast cancer development. For example, Japanese women have a lower risk of breast cancer compared to American women. But if they emigrate to the US, their risk becomes equal to that of their American counterparts. One of the most obvious changes in America is the food; fish and vegetables are replaced by processed foods and sugars. It seems that diet alteration makes the Japanese newcomers more susceptible to this deadly disease.
What follows is a description of foods that have been researched in relation to breast cancer prevention and have received some scientific backing.
Fiber
Fiber, the indigestible part of plant foods, is often associated with a healthy diet. Fiber is found in fruits, vegetables and whole meal cereals. Wheat bran is a particularly good source of dietary fiber when it comes to cancer prevention. Amongst other things, it lowers the levels of hormone estrogen in pre-menopausal women which reduces the risk of breast cancer. It has been suggested that 25 grams of fiber should be consumed per day to help with breast cancer prevention in women who had not yet had their menopause. Fiber is also a great natural remedy for constipation.
Generally speaking, if you eat a plant-rich diet, you will most likely be consuming fiber galore. Some researchers believe that it might not be the fiber itself that lowers the risk of cancer. More likely, a fiber-rich diet automatically means you are ingesting less sugar and more antioxidants, which makes you less prone to cancer.
Fruits
Fruits are a good source of fiber and antioxidants. Fruits that are rich in vitamins A, C, E and selenium have a particularly potent antioxidant effect.
Antioxidants prevent chemical reactions that can lead to gene and cell changes. An abnormal change to the cell can mean the start of a cancer growth. The ominous changes can happen during the oxidation process when oxygen joins with another molecule, so antioxidants work by stopping this process.
Carotenoids
Carotenoids are natural pigments that give some plants their distinct color and are found in the chloroplasts and chromoplasts of plants. There are over 600 different types of this coloring. Studies have shown that women who have higher levels of carotenoids in their blood might have a lower risk of breast cancer. Some of the most common sources include:
Flavonols and flavones
Flavonols and flavones, also known as flavonoids, are protective compounds found in plants. Women who consume them in greater amounts have been found to have a lower risk of breast cancer.
Good sources of flavonols include:
  • Onion
  • Broccoli
  • Black tea, green tea, oolong tea
  • Fruits
  • Dark chocolate – I’ve also written on how to use dark chocolate as a medicine)
  • Berries – You can find more information about the amazing healing properties of berries in my e-book The Healing Berry Guide which will teach you how to transform your health with berries, and is a must for berry lovers.
The following foods are rich in flavones:
  • Aromatic herbs (such as parsley)
  • Chamomile tea
  • Celery
All in all, a plant-based diet is definitely a step in the right direction and is a good choice if you are serious about cancer prevention.
Vitamin D
Many studies have shown that vitamin D has anticancer potential and I’ve already written about 12 common diseases caused by vitamin D deficiency. It blocks cancer cell growth and regulates cell cycle.
Women with higher vitamin D intake have been observed to have lower breast density on mammograms. Lower breast density is associated with lower risk for cancer. One study showed that post-menopausal women with the highest levels of vitamin D had up to 70% reduction in their breast cancer risk.
Exposure to sun is very important for vitamin D production. Surprisingly, dark skinned people need to spend more time in the sun than people with fairer skin to produce the same amount of vitamin D. The vitamin is also present in fatty fish, fish liver oils and fortified milk.
The amount of vitamin D you might need to supplement varies on your individual needs and sun exposure. Older women are usually recommended to take 800 to 1,000 IU of vitamin D daily, which also provides protection for their bones. Vitamin D deficiency can also cause lead to dementia.
Pomegranate
Pomegranate has many medicinal uses and is rich in beneficial flavonoids and polyphenols. This exotic fruit is now being studied for its anticancer potential. In mice, pomegranate extract and pomegranate seed oil reduced the occurrence of breast cancer by 87%. No matter the dose, the fruits have no side effects.
For health effects and cancer prevention, consider eating one medium size fruit daily. Pure juices can be a good alternative as well. Pomegranate can also unblock your arteries and can prevent Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Curcumin
Curcumin is the active ingredient in turmeric spice and is used to prepare many delicious curry dishes.
Curcumin causes the death of cancer cells and it appears to be effective even in cases of breast cancer resistant to traditional chemotherapy. Turmeric is also one of the top 14 foods that protect against cancer development. You do need to be aware that turmeric has low absorption and rapid metabolism that lead to relatively low bioavailability in the body. But you can greatly enhance turmeric’s bioavailability by consuming certain foods and you can learn about them in my post on how to optimize turmeric’s absorption. Curcumin has other amazing health benefits: it is anti-inflammatory, can be used for treating knee osteoarthritis and can also rejuvenate your skin. If you love turmeric and are interested in herbal remedies, you can find more useful information about turmeric and other herbs in the e-book Herbal Remedies Guide.
Researchers warn that there isn’t one single fruit, fiber or nutrient that will grant you breast cancer protection. It is usually the combination of different foods that are able to work together and optimize health and cancer protection.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Sri Lanka returns land confiscated by military during decades-long war


Kasthuri Udayakumaran stands in front of her family’s destroyed house
By Amantha Perera-20 June 2015
TELLIPALLAI, 19 June 2015 (IRIN) - As a young girl, Kasthuri Udayakumaran’s grandmother would tell her of a house where birds chirped as the morning sunlight streamed through the thick foliage of a peaceful village. It seemed like a fantasy, a world away from her home in the northern city of Jaffna where soldiers manned checkpoints and claymore mines exploded on dusty streets
The house was real: Udayakumaran’s family left it behind in 1990 when they fled the town of Tellipallai, about 30 km north of Jaffna, after the military confiscated their land. With a decades-long war now over and Sri Lanka’s new government backing a program to release land from military occupation, 18-year-old Udayakumaran and her family have been visiting their former home over the past month.

“We have been coming here every weekend to clear the land. We found our land, but our house has been totally destroyed,” she said, standing next to the wreckage with large trees growing up through the roofless structure.

Sri Lanka’s civil war erupted in the early 1980s when the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or Tamil Tigers, began fighting for an independent homeland for the ethnic Tamil minority, which had suffered discrimination under the ethnic Sinhalese majority. The conflict finally ended in May 2009 with the defeat of the Tamil Tigers, but by then more than 100,000 people had been killed on both sides, most of them civilians.

Between 1990 and 2009, the military confiscated 11,629 acres in the northern tip of Sri Lanka – the Tamil heartland – to create the Palaly High Security Zone (HSZ). Residents of Tellipallai and other communities were evicted, but they were finally allowed to return in April this year when some land was released by the government of President Maithripala Sirisena.
His government hopes the land reform program will promote reconciliation with the mainly Tamil population in the north and east who suffered the brunt of decades of war.

A man burns debris in front of a destroyed house in Tellipallai 
Sirisena took power in January, amid dissatisfaction with the previous government, which had been criticized for not sufficiently reaching out to the former rebels.

The land reform program began under the former government, but the new administration has sped up the process, according to Kabir Hashim, general secretary of Sirisena’s United National Party. The previous government released only 5,255 acres between October 2010 and the end of 2014, while the new administration has released 1,000 acres so far this year, Hashim told reporters last week.

“Winning the hearts and minds of these people is a hard task and will take years,” government spokesperson Rajitha Senarathana told IRIN.

Some former residents who had land returned to them remain skeptical that the plan will work since the military maintains such a heavy presence in the area.

Despite the risk, Jambulingam Sudhakaran and his family decided to go home. They are the only family to move back to Tellipallai, while others visit to clear bush from their land. Sudhakaran’s family is staying in the former library building while they prepare to build a small house on their plot, across the road from a large military base.

“There is always a sense that things can turn bad here,” said Sudhakaran.

And questions remain about exactly how much land was confiscated by the military and how much remains under its control.

Graffiti left by soldiers
The government says the High Security Zone in the north accounts for less than 10,000 acres, but the figure could actually be far higher, according to Mirak Raheem, a researcher who has written about the subject for the Centre for Policy Alternatives, a think tank in the capital, Colombo.
“We have never had a proper account of what has been used, and in some instances private land once used by the Tamil Tigers was simply taken over the army,” he said.

Others wonder how the program will achieve the goal of releasing all confiscated land to its original owners without scaling down the presence of troops based in the north, which the Sirisena government has ruled out.

“With so much military, if you don’t want to reduce the numbers, the government has no other option but to keep some of these private lands,” said Shanmulingam Sajeewan, a member from the Vallikamam East local urban council representing the Tamil National Alliance, a coalition of Tamil political parties.

“Put simply, there is no land to set up more camps,” he said.

ap/jf/ha