Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, July 27, 2015

Turkey agrees plan for 'Isis-free zone' along Syrian border

Landmark deal is diplomatic victory for Ankara, which has long demanded a safe haven in northern Syria as precondition to join fight against Isis
 Turkish soldiers patrol the Syrian border near Kilis, south-east Turkey, last week. Photograph: Deniz Toprak/EPA


 in Beirut and  in Istanbul-Monday 27 July 2015
Turkey and the US have agreed on the outlines of a plan to drive Islamic State out of a strip of land along the Turkey-Syria border, according to reports, in a landmark deal that will draw Turkey further into Syria’s civil war and looks likely to increase the intensity of the US air war against Isis.

SPYING ON OUR FRIENDS IS NOT A GOOD IDEA


25 July 2015
There’s been so much dramatic news these days – from Greece’s miseries to Iran, China from blowhard Donald Trump – that the shocking story of how America’s National Security Agency has been spying on German and French  leadership has gone almost unnoticed.
Last year, it was revealed that the NSA had intercepted Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cell phone.  She is supposed to be one of Washington’s most important allies and the key power in Europe. There was quiet outrage in always subservient Germany, but no serious punitive action.
Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, was also bugged by American intelligence.  Her predecessor, Luiz Lula Da Silva, was also apparently bugged.
This year, came revelations that NSA and perhaps CIA had tapped the phones of France’s President, Francois Hollande and his two predecessors,  Nicholas Sarkozy and Jacques Chirac.   Hollande ate humble pie and could only summon some faint peeps of protest to Washington.  Luckily for the US, Charles de Gaulle was not around.  After the US tried to strong-arm France, ‘le Grand Charles’ kicked the US and NATO out  of France.
This week, Wikileaks revealed that the US NSA had bugged the phone of Germany’s foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, for over a decade.  Imagine the uproar and cries “the Gestapo is back” if it were revealed that German intelligence had bugged the phones of President Barack Obama or Secretary of State John Kerry.
A lot of Germans were really angry that their nation was being treated by the Americans as a northern banana republic.  Many recalled that in the bad old days of East Germany its intelligence agency, Stasi, monitored everyone’s communications under the direct supervision of KGB big brother at Moscow Center.
The National Security Agency and CIA claim their electronic spying is only aimed at thwarting attacks by anti-American groups (aka “terrorism”).   This claim, as shown by recent events, is untrue. One supposes the rational must be a twist on the old adage “keep your enemies close, but your friends even closer.”
Ironically, the political leaders listed above – save perhaps Brazil’s da Silva – are all notably pro-American and responsive to Washington’s demands.  
Why would the US risk alienating and humiliating  some of its closet allies? 
One suspects the reason is sheer arrogance…and because  US intelligence could do it. But must US intelligence really know what Mr Merkel is making Mrs Merkel for dinner? 
Until Wikileaks blew the whistle, some European leaders may have known they were being spied upon but chose to close their eyes and avoid making an issue.   Raising a fuss would have forced them to take action against the mighty US.
Besides, British, Italian and French intelligence are widely believed to have bugged most communications since the 1950’s.  But not, of course, the White House or Pentagon.  The only nation believed to have gotten away with bugging the White House was Israel during the Clinton years.  The Pentagon was bugged by a number of foreign nations, including Israel, China and Russia.
Humiliating Europe’s leaders in this fashion is a gift to the growing numbers of Europeans who believe their nations are being treated by the US as vassal states. 
There is widespread belief in Western Europe that US strategic policy aims at preventing deeper integration of the EU and thwarting a common foreign policy or a powerful European military.  Britain serves as a Trojan horse for America’s strategic interests in Europe.
Way back in the 1960’s, then German defense minister Franz Josef Strauss, an ardent proponent of a truly united Europe, thundered that Europeans would not play spearmen to America’s atomic knights.  But, of course, that’s just what happened. 
The US still runs and finances NATO in the same way the Soviet Union commanded the Warsaw Pact.  Washington calls on Europe for troop contingents in its Mideast and south Asian colonial wars in the same way that the Persian Empire summoned its vassals to war. 
Many Germans and French, both right and left, would like their leaders to react more forcefully to NSA’s ham-handed spying.   However, Mrs Merkel and President Holland are both political jellyfish eager to evade any confrontation with Big Brother in Washington.  Maybe he has too much dirt on them.
But a confrontation is inevitable one day if Europe is to regain its true independence that was lost after World War II.  

 Copyright  Eric S. Margolis 2015

Euro-capital imposes U-turn on Tsipras

Abject capitulation or a Brest-Litovsk moment?


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by Kumar David-

It is the most humiliating surrender of a leftwing government in living memory, but others may say it is a Brest-Litovsk moment when it survived to fight and perhaps to win on another day. If Tsipras was Lenin, I would not hesitate to endorse the surrender - but is he? Was it capitulation or a Brest-Litovsk moment? The 5 June referendum ratified two points: (a) No further austerity and (b) Greece must remain in the Eurozone. The political powers in Europe torpedoed the linkage: Either swallow harsher austerity and surrender national sovereignty, or get out of the Euro and face instant catastrophe; crumbling banks, economic strangulation and social turmoil. Tsipras buckled as he saw the alternative as Armageddon. This has a parallel with the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty of March 1918 when the four month old revolutionary government in Russia capitulated, ceded huge territory, agreed to pay compensation for war time Tsarist acquisition of German property and signed a humiliating treaty with the Central Powers.

Burma’s Moment of Truth

Burma’s halting progress toward democracy has stalled. It’s time for the United States to get off the fence.
Burma’s Moment of Truth  BY CHRISTIAN CARYL-JULY 27, 2015
So the Burmese government has finally set a date for the next national election. That’s good news. At least we know that there’s definitely going to be a vote. The government’s dithering had raised fears that it might be angling for a postponement.
Yet Burma’s tribulations are far from over.The country’s nascent democracy is in deep trouble. And you don’t have to rely on me as the source. Just ask the Burmese.

The Sok Bun assault and violence against women in Cambodia

Sok Bun, left, and his victim EkSocheata, aka Miss SaSa

Sok Bun, left, and the victim View image on TwitterCambodian actress Miss Sasa, 28, whose real name is Ek Socheata, speaks to journalists after the vicious assault. Pic: AP.A red circle shows Sok Bun's bodyguard, in the top center image, grabbing his pistol as the actress throws her phone at the tycoon. Pic: AP.

By Alexandra Demetrianova-By  Jul 27, 2015

It took one real estate tycoon and a TV celebrity to bring the daily reality for many women in Cambodia under an unprecedented spotlight. Violence on women is widespread, but rarely it has been discussed so openly as is the case this time. Millionaire Sok Bun’s assault on TV icon Ek Socheata, also known as Miss SaSa, in one of Phnom Penh’s restaurant was so brutal and the video leaked online so graphic that no one could let it pass. Even PM Hun Sen commented on the case and publicly called on Sok Bun to come forward, saying: “Your money won’t solve this.”

President Obama (Please) Support African Civil Society in Visit to Sub-Saharan Africa


Jul-24-2015

A plea to the President to affirm solidarity for African pro-democracy and human rights activists
President Barack Obama
President Barack Obama
Photo: White House
(LONDON) -
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President:
I am William Nicholas Gomes, Human rights defender and Freelance journalist.
I welcome your decision to visit sub-Saharan Africa once again, and we applaud your support for African human rights defenders through your Stand with Civil Society initiative.
The U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit held last year demonstrated your commitment to engage constructively with leaders on a number of key economic, political and security issues.
Your upcoming trip to Ethiopia and Kenya offers another timely opportunity to demonstrate America’s commitment to helping to build strong democratic institutions to benefit the continent’s one billion citizens.
Ethiopia and Kenya face grave and worsening human rights challenges, and I trust those issues will be at the forefront of your discussions.
The longstanding crackdown on human rights groups and journalists in Ethiopia and the use of so-called “anti-terror” laws to stifle the legitimate work of civil society actors in both Kenya and Ethiopia underscore their overall failure to adhere to democratic principles and international human rights standards.
For example, in April 2014, six Ethiopian bloggers and three journalists associated with the Zone 9 blogging collective were accused of “creating serious risk to the safety or health of the public” and arrested under the country’s vague anti-terrorism law.
While I welcome the recent release of five of those arrested, four remain behind bars today. Also, on April 7 of this year, two Kenyan human rights groups, Muslims for Human Rights (MUHURI) and Haki Africa -- with which many international human rights groups and donors have worked for many years -- were officially listed by the government as “Entities Suspected to be Associated with Al-Shabaab.”
As a result, their bank accounts remain frozen, and the NGO Coordination Board has commenced investigations into these two prominent groups, which may well lead to their deregistration.
These recent examples illustrate a much broader and worrying trend in the region that affects the ability of civil society to freely operate without governmental intimidation or harassment.
I believe it imperative that you take the opportunity of your visits to meet publicly with pro-democracy and human rights activists, especially those at risk. By doing so, you would be affirming your solidarity with them, while demonstrating the concern we know you share regarding the troublesome developments described above.
You would also call attention to the need to protect shrinking civic space in Kenya, Ethiopia, and the broader region, thereby sending a strong message that your administration remains committed to integrating human rights and good governance concerns into its official bilateral relations with all nations.
Most importantly, meeting with activists will provide them with the necessary protection as they go about working on behalf of the same human rights issues the United States stands behind.
I would be pleased to work with you and your staff on arranging such a meeting during your upcoming trip, including helping to identify civil society groups and other key issues to address.
Thank you for your time and for your thoughtful consideration of these important issues.
Sincerely,
William Nicholas Gomes
Human Rights Defender & Freelance Journalist
Twitter @wnicholasgomes
Email: william@williamnicholasgomes.com
www.facebook.com/williamnicholasgomes

______________________________
Salem-News.com Human Rights Ambassador William Nicholas Gomes is a Bangladeshi journalist, human rights activist. As an investigative journalist has written widely for leading European and Asian media outlets. William Gomes concentrates on humanity; his advocacy of human beings in dangerous, preventable circumstances does in fact lead to some of our most vital reports, because they give a voice to the voiceless.
William Gomes said, "I am against any form of intolerance alongside xenophobia and antisemitism. I am and will always stand strong in combating all forms of racial discrimination and intolerance any where." Read his letters and reports to see what the new generation of world journalists are doing to preserve human rights worldwide. 

Immediately Kills The Black Dots On The Face!

honey-mask-720x340 (1)
Health Online CentralJune 3, 2015
If you really want to have soft and smooth skin without spending a lot of funds from the family budget fortune on beauty products? We suggest you try this simple and very effective homemade mask.
Honey will help to remove bacteria and shrinking pores, thereby gives greater vitality, elasticity and freshness.
Baking soda serves as a natural exfoliating agent which reduces the irritation of the skin and stimulates blood circulation. The best thing about home mask is that is suitable for all skin types.
Ingredients:
One teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon of honey
a teaspoon of olive oil
Preparation:
All the ingredients mix in a separate vessel and stirred until obtaining a homogeneous mixture. Apply the mask on preliminary cleaned face and leave on for 10 minutes, then wash it with lukewarm water.
Repeat this procedure once a week to keep your skin smooth, shiny and beautiful.

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Activists commemorate ‘Black July’ in Sri Lanka


<p>Activists demonstrate in Colombo July 24, 2015 to mark the anniversary of “Black July”. (Photo by ucanews.com reporter)</p>Activists demonstrate in Colombo July 24, 2015 to mark the anniversary of “Black July”. (Photo by ucanews.com reporter)
    UCANEWS
  • July 25, 2015
As Sri Lankan Tamils mark the anniversary of the “Black July” riots, which triggered a quarter-century of civil war, activists say the lines of division still run deep through the island nation.
On July 23, 1983, fighters with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, commonly known as the Tamil Tigers, attacked a military patrol, killing 13 soldiers. Over the next week, mobs of Sinhalese, Sri Lanka’s majority ethnic group, took revenge on Tamil civilians.
Rights groups say up to 3,000 Tamils nationwide died in the ensuing days, though previous government figures have pegged the number much lower.
Vimala Rajanayagam, a Tamil from Colombo who lost family members that week, said he witnessed mobs chasing down Tamils in the streets.
“In riots, Tamils were beaten and burned to death because of racial hatred, but still the situation has not changed much,” said Rajanayagam, who runs a clothing shop in Colombo. “Tamils still live in fear in the country.”
The violence of “Black July” effectively set off Sri Lanka’s civil war, which only ended in 2009 with the defeat of the Tamil Tigers.
Sri Lanka’s current government has pledged a new approach to reconciliation between Sinhalese and Tamils.
But Father M. Sakthivel, a priest and convenor of the Colombo-based Christian Solidarity Movement, believes there must be true justice before reconciliation can be achieved.
“[There is] still no justice for Tamil families. How can we believe in reconciliation for lasting peace in the country,” he told ucanews.com in an interview.
He noted that Bodu Bala Sena, an influential Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist group, plans to play a role in the upcoming August 17 parliamentary elections.
“Thirty-two years have passed but racism still continues in the country and politicians use extremist groups like Bodu Bala Sena as a tool,” the priest said.
On July 24 in Colombo, activists demonstrated to mark the anniversary of “Black July”.
Kumari Kumaragamage, a Sri Lankan writer and poet who attended the demonstration, said Sri Lankans have not learned the lessons of the past.
“Violence against Tamils and Muslims still continues,” she said. “Therefore, we should protest to say ‘no more violence’ in the country.”
Activist Britto Fernando of the Negombo-based Right to Life Human Rights Center said civil society groups have a major role to play.
“We should pressure the government not to give room to spread racism in the country,” Fernando said.
ITJP to document evidence of sexual violence and torture under new Sri Lanka government



26 July 2015
At least 8 accounts of torture and sexual violence under Sri Lanka’s new government are expected to be documented in a report released by the International Turth and Justice Project Sri Lanka (ITJP) this week.
The ITJP will release a report that expands on a previous study entitled “An Unfinished War:Torture and Sexual Violence in Sri Lanka, 2009-2014,” reports Ceylon Today.
The updated study will exhibit 180 cases of post-war torture and sexual violence in Sri Lanka, including eight accounts that occurred after the presidential elections of Jan 8 2015 and fourteen cases which took place in 2014.
The head of the ITJP Yasmin Sooka, who also co-authored the UN panel of Experts Report into Sri Lanka’s mass atrocities, previously said that sexual violence and torture against Tamils was a “systematic part of policy framework.”

Does President Sirisena Require A Professional Speech Writer?


By Darshanie Ratnawalli –July 26, 2015
 Darshanie Ratnawalli
Darshanie Ratnawalli
Colombo Telegraph
The sixth Executive President has become known for his note-less, teleprompter-less, stream of consciousness style of speechifying. Reports suggest that in the aftermath of the controversial ‘I have nothing to do with Mahinda’ speech, the need for some sort of notes has occurred to his political allies and even to the President himself. According to some Sunday political commentaries he admitted to Ranil Wickremesinghe in a telephone conversation that even things he hadn’t planned to say came out.
Maithripala Sirisena 13, July 15 Prz mediaIn this speech the President forgot to hold up the official version that after assuming office he had met the former President only twice. After starting to say at 25.31 of the speech, “as all of you know, Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa and I met three times” Sirisena seems to recollect the official version and proceeds to validate only the first two meetings through description. After hearing the revelation ‘three times’ a viewer’s excitement would mount because media reports of the third meeting had been firmly denied by both parties earlier. He or she would listen breathlessly between 25.31 and 28.58, only to be disappointed when the President moves on to another topic after saying that the second meeting concluded without any result.
The second inadvertent revelation by President Sirisena comes around 39.53 in his speech when he declares “Mahinda Rajapaksa who was defeated on January 8th will be defeated again.” Less than a minute later however there is a seeming contradiction when Sirisena makes the definitive prediction (40.48-41.04) that if Rajapaksa and Co “did not receive nominations from the UPFA they will come to Parliament from another party. And that coming to parliament cannot be stopped.” There seems to be a certain attempt (perhaps unconscious) in the English translation provided by the President’s Media Division to dilute the definitiveness of this statement when they translate “ethakota sandhanayen nama yojana nolebuna nam e golla wenath pakshekin parlimenthu enawa. Ethakota e parlimenthuwata ena eka walakwanna behe” as “if they did not receive nominations from the UPFA still they could have contested from another party and come to Parliament and it could not have been stopped.”

The return of the exile

sunanda 0sunanda 2

 Sunday, 26 July 2015
Activist, journalist and blogger, Sunanda Deshapriya talks to Dilrukshi Handunnetti on journalism in exile, digital platforms of advocacy, media reforms and the crucial need for public service media

Rajapaksa comeback bid checked by Sri Lanka bribery probe

Former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa speaks to his supporters at his residence in Medamulana July 1, 2015. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte/FilesFormer Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa speaks to his supporters at his residence in Medamulana July 1, 2015.-REUTERS/DINUKA LIYANAWATTE/FILES
Reuters Fri Jul 24, 2015
Sri Lanka is investigating a Chinese firm on suspicion of offering a bribe to Mahinda Rajapaksa's failed presidential re-election campaign, a source close to the investigation said, weeks before he seeks to pull off a comeback in a general election.
Ousted by erstwhile ally Maithripala Sirisena in January, Rajapaksa is now seeking to turn the tables at the Aug. 17 parliamentary polls but continues to be dogged by allegations of sleaze that led to his defeat after two terms as president.
At the centre of an investigation by the police and central bank is China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC), which under Rajapaksa landed a $1.4 billion deal to build a port city in Colombo that has been suspended by the current government.
CHEC, a subsidiary of state-owned China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), denied as "baseless and false" any suggestion that it bribed Rajapaksa.
"CHEC calls on all the relevant Sri Lankan officials and parties not to misunderstand their responsible and cooperative partner, and not to send a wrong signal to the investors from China and all other countries," it said in a stateRajapaksa was not immediately available for comment.

CHINESE PROJECTS
The state-run Daily News reported on Wednesday that police were investigating an allegation that CHEC paid 149 million rupees ($1.1 million) to Rajapaksa through various proxies.
Police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara confirmed to Reuters that the investigation was being conducted by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and the central bank's Finance Intelligence Unit (FIU). He declined to elaborate.
A source, with knowledge of the FIU's investigations, said the investigation had "found a certain amount of money had gone out of the CHEC account". It was investigating whether this payment constituted a bribe.
Shan Wijetunga, senior manager at Transparency International Sri Lanka said there are no laws barring companies or individuals funding political campaigns. However, if there are any vested interests it can be considered as bribe.
Sirisena, after his election on Jan. 8, suspended most of the Chinese-backed infrastructure projects started under Rajapaksa, who denies allegations of corruption and overpricing in contract awards.
The general election will see a battle between current Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Rajapaksa, who helped crush a 26-year insurgency against Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009 and who retains a strong following among the electorate.
Allies say if that if Rajapaksa, 69, returns to power, he would immediately resume the Chinese projects suspended by the Sirisena government.

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Ralph Boulton)

Seeking Victory By Default


By Emil van der Poorten –July 26, 2015 
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
Colombo Telegraph
One thing that strikes anyone with any experience of participating in and/or running political campaigns of any description in any part of the world is the ineptitude of the UNP’s strategists during the days since the writ was dropped for a general election.
MahindaWhen/if the Ranil Wickremesinghe/UNP coalition, whose long title escapes me at this time, wins the forthcoming election it will be due to one or both of two factors: the public’s monumental distaste for all that Mahinda and his Minions stand for and did while in power or pure, unadulterated good luck!
The Rajapaksa-led opposition, for its part seems to be stuck for something to use in any “attack-is-the-best-form-of-defence” strategy. Instead they are running around the country, transporting, wining and dining hordes of “catchers” much as they did prior to the Presidential election in an attempt to convince those subscribing to a “hooray for the winning side” (“dinung-paththata hoiyya”) that they better back the Rajapaksa horse in this particular race! There is also the endless bleating about the “Affaire Mahendran,” which is not particularly effective because, apart from the transaction involving a sum of money beyond the comprehension of most Sri Lankans, 99% of those being preached at wouldn’t understand a bond from the proverbial hole in the ground! The UNP coalition, of course, in one of its grosser acts of ineptitude, sought an injunction against publication of the COPE report on the subject, immediately keeping the issue alive and lending credibility to the allegation that they had a great deal to hide! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot (while walking backwards, at that!). As a footnote to that business, the most violent and venal group to ever govern Sri Lanka keep whining about the fact that not every one of the 100-day targets of the Sirisena/Wickremesinghe coalition was achieved. Coming from a government that singularly distinguished itself by its ability to “disappear” its opponents via white vans and was certainly without par in the matter of self-aggrandisement, complaining about the non-fulfillment of someone else’s 100-day national targets takes nerve!
What has fascinated me most about all of this posturing by both sides has been the fact that Mahinda Rajapaksa and his henchmen who are facing time in the crowbar hotel if he doesn’t make a comeback, keep claiming – continuously and without contradiction – that MR single-handedly vanquished the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).                                       Read More

I Saved MR From The Electric Chair – Ranil

By Santhush Fernando0- Sunday, July 26, 2015
The upcoming August 17 General Election would solidify the historic people’s revolution won on January 8 and the government-hopeful United National Front’s Five-fold Plan (Pancha Widha Kriyawaliya) gives the much-needed boost to make Sri Lanka a global knowledge economy, emphasized UNP Party Leader and United National Front for Good Governance prime min50isterial candidate Ranil Wickremesinghe, in an interview with The Sunday Leader.  
Following are excerpts of the interview:
Q: How do you see the success rate of your government during the 100-Day Programme?