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, September 6, 2015

'Viber, not India, helped in unseating Rajapaksa'

Chandrika Kumaratunga at a media interaction in New Delhi on Saturday. — Photo: R.V. Moorthy
Chandrika Kumaratunga at a media interaction in New Delhi on Saturday.
— Photo: R.V. MoorthySUHASINI HAIDAR-September 6, 2015

Return to frontpageFormer Sri Lankan president Chandrika Bandarnaike Kumaratunga is in India for her first visit since the surprise defeat of her successor Mahinda Rajapaksa, a man who was once a close associate and now a political enemy whose regime she was instrumental in overturning. She spoke for the first time to a group of Indian journalists including The Hindu’s Suhasini Haidar about how the opposition and Mr. Rajapaksa’s own party members were united. Excerpts from interaction with former President Kumaratunga on September 5th,2015:

Qn: You are in India to attend the Hindu-Buddhist conclave in Bodh Gaya on behalf of Sri Lanka…what is the importance of this conclave that PM Modi also attended?
Chandrika Kumaratunga: I think its very important for Sri Lanka because the protagonists are from these two communities. So if we can find common ground between the two religions as opposed to diversities it would be useful. Of course the Tamil question never involved the religious aspect.

Qn: This is also your first official visit to India since President Sirisena’s government was sworn in, and you have been appointed the envoy for reconciliation. How do you see India-Sri Lanka ties at present?

Chandrika Kumaratunga: Historically all Sri Lankan governments have had excellent relations with India. Except one government before Rajapaksa had various problems, which exacerbated the war in Sri Lanka. And the Rajapaksa regime did not have easy relations with India. But for our (Sirisena) government it wasn’t difficult to pick up from where my Presidency left off (in 2005). We saw the bad consequences of Rajapaksa’s policies towards India.

Qn: Did India have any role in Mr. Rajapaksa’s electoral defeat? In an interview to The Hindu he had blamed Indian intelligency agency R&AW and Western countries of a conspiracy against him.

Chandrika Kumaratunga:That’s not true. No outside force had anything to do with. Except that right through Rajapaksa’s regime, international community lamented his policies, and asked me why I wasn’t returning to politics. But apart from that they had nothing to do with it. We can manage our own affairs….Because he expected to win the election, he was in shock when he lost, and tried to look for scapegoats.

Qn: You had a pivotal role in bringing together the opposition in defeating him. How did that happen?

Chandrika Kumaratunga: It just happened. Because everyone in the country starting from about two years into President Rajapaksa’s regime began to turn away from him. Even people from the opposition who normally would not have accepted my leadership, civil society in a big way came and asked me to return to politics. I said no, because I was very clear I wouldn’t return to electoral politics, not to hold positions. After the end of the war when President Rajapaksa won the elections in 2010 I thought he would improve. But that wasn’t the case, he was getting worse. You cant force the hand of history. So we couldn’t force a coup, it is the people who must want a change. So when people started protesting, civil society, fishermen, university professors, it was evident people wanted the change. People called me and said, I had brought the President in, I had to do something about him . I did feel I had done enough, my family had done enough, but I was ready to help. The real problem was that the opposition didn’t have someone who could win the election against Rajapaksa. So I had to start looking around, under great difficulties. Mr. Rajapaksa had forbidden every single person of our party the SLFP from talking to me. MPs used to run when they saw me. Otherwise they would get a call from the President. Amidst such circumstances, I identified Maithripala Sirisena. There weren’t many more to identify as it was to difficult to find anyone in the SLFP who wasn’t known to be corrupt or a murderer (laughs). It was very difficult to find someone from my party at a leadership level like that. I had worked with Maithripala and I knew he fitted the bill, atleast somewhat. Nobody’s perfect. Now I had to send messages through people to him. Sometimes I used messengers. The same messenger couldn’t go often, because it would be reported. It was a police state.
Qn: Is there any truth to the story India provided communication devices, DRDO made satellite phones?

Chandrika Kumaratunga: No..completely false. We were using Viber. And the government didn’t know how to tap Viber. Apparently it is difficult for any intelligence agency anywhere to tap into Viber, although some can identify out who is calling whom. But Sri Lanka didn’t have that technology, otherwise we would have all been dead. I couldn’t afford a big office, I could only hire 2 people as Rajapaksa had closed down my office. But we managed somehow, and I can say that the main reason we were successful is that civil society really rose up. They were allies along with the UNP. Ranil Wickremshinghe wasn’t afraid to meet. I realised that we would need an alliance, because the opposition in our country had been weakened. So I had a hand in bringing them all together, and that was it. Eventually the common enemy brought us together.

Qn: Given that, how much were you worried about Mr. Rajapaksa’s return to power in the recent elections that were won by the UNP? Especially given the strain within the party over the SLFP party ticket given by President Sirisena to Mr. Rajapaksa…

Chandrika Kumaratunga: Yes there was a strain between all of us, not only between the President and the PM. But that has since been resolved. And President Sirisena has redeemed himself during the campaign by his actions and statements during the campaign. I know that he was determined not to let the “baddies” come back. But the President was trying to keep the party together, and was misled by the two secretaries of the party who deceived him because they were for Rajapaksa. Finally he did sack them, but we felt he should have sacked them much earlier.

The King Is Dead. Long Live The King


By Saliya Pieris –September 6, 2015 
Saliya Pieris
Saliya Pieris
Colombo Telegraph
The King is dead. Long live the King.” In Britain the passing away of the old monarch and the advent of the new, is heralded by these words. In Sri Lanka, Wijithamuni Zoysa, Member of Parliament, echoed these same thoughts, in somewhat cruder terms in his infamous “Appachchi Mala” speech.
After the Parliamentary Elections, the speed at which scores of Parliamentarians from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party switched their allegiance from the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to President Maithripala Sirisena marks a new low even for politicians in Sri Lanka. Gone are the days when politicians at least kept a decent interval and in the very least offered some excuse when switching sides. Today no interval is necessary and no excuse offered.
The Surrender Of The Rajapaksa Camp 
As for President Sirisena, he has now regained substantial control over the machinery of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, which perhaps just over a month ago had side-lined him or as some claim was on the verge of removing him as party leader. The day was saved only by an order from the District Court.
MahindaHours after the Parliamentary election it was clear that many of those who were on the Rajapaksa camp including Susil Premajayanth and Anura Priyadarshana Yapa had raised the white flag of surrender. So complete is the surrender that they have accepted ministerial office from the very President who just weeks ago suspended them from their Secretary posts.                    Read More

Now Corbyn! What’s up with Europe’s left!

Jeremy Corbin likely British Labour Party leader


article_imageJeremy Corbyn: Likely Labour Party leader and possible British Prime Minister

Young writer and political activist Owen Jones

by Kumar David- 
Britain is stunned that a bearded septuagenarian is front runner for Labour Party leadership all because the man had principles and stuck with them through a 32 year parliamentary career. How shocking! Isn’t party leadership reserved for hypocrites like teflon Blair, vulpine Gordon and hither-and-thither Miliband? Labour youth and rank and file are trekking back; membership has risen by 80,000 since the last election and 150,000 additional supporters have registered. About 550,000 are now eligible to vote in the leadership contest. The party machine is on a witch-hunt to weed out pro-Corbyn applicants; the attack by the rightwing press and the rightwing of the Labour Party is so heated that predictions are difficult. Nevertheless, when the 12 September deadline is crossed the stunning feat of a principled leader at the helm of the Labour party may have come to pass.

Portfolio greedy Nimal Siripala goes berserk –some sound advice to this self fattening moron…


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -06.Sep.2015, 6.30PM) Nimal Siripala De Silva , the roly poly, inky pinky folly who took oaths as minister of transport on 4th, and  better  known as the best illustration of the inverse relationship between brawn and brain, in keeping with his inescapable inborn weaknesses  demonstrated  his mental handicap well and truly while taking  oaths as minister of transport when he went  berserk like how a Montessori class mentally retarded   child would when deprived of his soother.
Just because the ‘aviation services’ was not tagged on to his transport ministry portfolio this mentally feeble minister threw away the appointment letter while screaming he would sit in the opposition tomorrow, thereby betraying his baser instincts and inordinate greed for ministerial posts and powers subordinating service to  the people ,after entering parliament on people’s votes promising to represent the people sans pursuit of  selfish self seeking agendas. 
Need  we remind this stupid all brawn nil brain minister that he is representing not only the   electorate he represents  but an entire Badulla district,  his party UPFA  was trounced humiliatingly at the general elections.
The people have need to remind something to Nimal Siripala and his discarded group that grabbed ministerial portfolios : All of you are a group that is in the camp that has been  rejected by the people – and not welcomed, and a majority of the people are against granting of portfolios to you and your despicable group.
The majority of people did not oppose these appointments to you and your group of rotters , and burn down your houses not out of love for you or your group because you and your group are good, but because they are more intelligent and put country and its future before self unlike you and your group . Moreover they  have learnt better conduct and discipline in their homes and schools which you and your deplorable  self seeking group have not unfortunately learnt  or been taught . 
What is of national importance in the country is to resolve the minority issue peacefully , and build the nation as a whole by successfully adopting  the new constitution with a two third majority.
Undoubtedly, after having suffered going through traumatic experiences and turbulent times under the Rajapakse  regime , the people are not that gullible now to trust  those of you doing  lip service to good governance while you are conducting  yourself in a manner that is absolutely and diametrically  opposed to it. 
When one wants to enter Buddhist priesthood , effort is imperative which includes , shaving one’s head , wearing the robe and  carrying the bowl . Therefore your mere utterances  that you are for good governance without making an effort to truly understand and  integrate yourself with it , will not be believed by the people under any circumstance.

All of you  are accomplished liars, cheats  and notorious rogues. For 20 years this country was robbed by pretenders and masqueraders like you and your clan. Don’t forget a most vital fact if you are trying to bask in the presidency of Mathripala Sirisena and exploit him to the full , please remember none of you supported  the people’s mandate on which  Maithripala became  president of the country.
The simple inference that can be drawn going by the  conduct of  stupid  Nimal Siripala who is stubbornly insisting on having the aviation services portfolio and indignant for not getting it is : his aim is not to selflessly work in the best interests of the country   and fulfill the sincere primary agendas of the government of good governance , but rather selfishly achieve his personal ambitions in keeping with the perfidious and hypocritical goals in the same way as they were fondly chased after by those of the  past MaRa regime . That is,  plundering  ministerial portfolios , regardless of national interests.

Nimal Siripala who is well known locally and internationally for  falling asleep wherever he goes surely must be sleeping even when he goes to the lavatory. No wonder he forgets even to do what he should compulsorily before leaving the lavatory  as a human being . It is because the people know what a stinking lazy lousy politician is Nimal Siripala De Silva , he was rejected  in his own electorate , district and country.
It is to be noted , Ranjan Ramanayake, Sujeewa Senasinghe and  Buddhika Pathirane who were high in the polling list based on the people’s mandate , have not uttered a  word against the ministerial appointments, despite their not receiving  ministerial portfolios,  is because they have put the country before self unlike Nimal Siripala whose gaze is only fixed on portfolios  and personal gains. Not only Nimal Siripala  possessed of  self centered self seeking mentality, but even President Maithripala should understand this.
It is worthy of special mention that it is only the people of Sri Lanka in the whole wide world and world  history who had been successful democratically for the first time in  defeating a  dictatorial Rajapakse regime twice without spilling a drop of blood. President Maithripala and prime minister (P.M.) Ranil Wickremesinghe secured a people’s mandate thereby.
Needless to  remind , Nimal Siripala and those  UPFA political scoundrels of his caliber  who received ministerial portfolios,  that they ought to follow their conscience and should not behave  forgetting the people’s true mandate.
Let them also be  warned that the people are not going to permit them to play the fool as they did in the past .Over 100 organizations of the people are standing together as one and patiently watching the moves. 
The brutal corrupt Rajapakse stooges and scoundrels should by now understand that the political landscape and history in SL have changed so much so that they cannot any longer think or act on the evil lines ‘ we shall live , people shall die.’ On the contrary ,they must appreciate that  they got  a lease of life now because of the sympathy  shown towards  them by  the supporters for government of good governance that is successful. Indeed , they must show their gratitude to these supporters   therefore by paying homage daily by burning  incense before the  inscription ‘ it is because of you  we are having at least this little  place in the sun.’
The Sri Lankans as a  nation this time issued a strong warning that the traditional belief nursed by a  politician hitherto that the power entrusted by the people to him  is his own acquisition out of his own labor, is no longer tenable.  
Footnote :
Let us also make it abundantly clear all what had been related regarding Nimal Siripala De Silva whose hair never turns grey any day even when his mind is clearly manifesting signs of   acute senile decay , shall be carefully taken note of by Dayasiri Jayasekera the political renegade who runs amok  destroying everything from which people can derive benefit. 
By Jahamanya 
Translated by Jeff

The land belonged to the Sports Ministry was legally transferred to the “Royal Turf Club”

The land belonged to the Sports Ministry was legally transferred to the “Royal Turf Club”
Lankanewsweb.netSep 06, 2015
The prejudiced party has sent us an email through their lawyer Panduka Keerthinanda following the article published on our website on the 3rd of September under the caption “A land belonged to the sports ministry is illegally owned by a knave”. We are publishing the email which we received in English without any alteration. We are hoping to publish a reply to the email as soon as we receive a response from our source.

Reply to the lankanewsweb.net article published on the 03rd September, 2015 under the heading “A Land belonged to the sports ministry is illegally owned by a knave”.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN 
I refer to the above article and I wish to reply as follows.
The above land is a property of Ministry of Sports Sri Lanka and which is maintain and supervise by their trading arm, the Sugathadasa National Sports Complex Authority, which is govern by act No. 17 of 1999 and this said authority have the legal right to rent, maintain and manage any sports complexes which is coming under their umbrella.

This Act has been passed by Parliament of Sri Lanka and the sports authority is being administrated and managed by a board of management appointed by the minister of sports in Sri Lanka. Secretary to the ministry of sports or the representative also a member of the said board of management and the Director General of sports in Sri Lanka is also a member of the board. A representative from the treasury of the Sri Lanka (Finance Ministry) also member of the board and the Chairman and seven members are appointed by the sports minister. The main functions and the responsibilities of the authority to provide necessary infrastructure facilities for sportsmen and women and for the sports society.

Sri Lanka Turf Club had been in the possession for 99-year lease and in year 2000, the 99 lease was expired and thereafter the Government of Sri Lanka under gazette notification it was vested to Ministry of Sports for the purpose of providing facilities for sportsmen and women and also to build a High Altitude sports training center in Nuwara Eliya. After acquiring the Nuwara Eliya Race Course, Sri Lanka Turf Club was given this property on annual rental basis.
In year 2015, Sri Lanka Turf Club did not obtain the rights to function and use the said premises due to nonpayment of annual rental to Sugathadasa Sports Complex Authority. Therefore, Royal Turf Club Nuwara Eliya a newly incorporated Club under the companies act no 07of 2007 bearing registration number GA 3072 obtain this legally by signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) for two years commencing from July 2015 to July 2017. This was approved by said board of management (SNSCA) and also to the secretary to the ministry of sports has granted written consent for the said MOU.
In year 2015 April races, certain members of the Sri Lanka Turf Club was allegedly charged for doping in sports, under the anti-doping laws of Sri Lanka. Presently the matter has been referred by the Nuwara Eliya Police to Attorney Generals Department of Sri Lanka. Due to the above matter the certain members of Sri Lanka turf club facing charges under the said law.
Mr Rienzy Edward and their family members had the opportunity to win the prestige’s governor’s cup in 2015 in a honest fair manner. But unfortunately the winners’ cup was not given to the winner by manipulating the rules and regulations of the races by turf club officials.

Further refereeing to your article I wish to state that, Mr Rienzy Edward has transferred the foreign money legally from a foreign bank to Sri Lanka bank and also he has obtained approval from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and therefore this entire transaction is a legitimate and which is not a financial crime whatsoever.
As per the prevention of money laundering act No 05 of 2006, a petition has been sent to FCID in Colombo and presently it is being investigated preliminary under the said act and FCID has obtained a court order under the provisions of the said act to start preliminary investigation as a normal procedure. There are no suspects have been taken into custody or even have not been taken any statement. Therefore, as per your article, which is incorrect and unfair to mention that this is an illegal transaction. 

And therefore it is clearly evident that, certain unruly elements have taken a revenge to tarnish the reputation of Mr Rienzy Edward who is a genuine businessman and also sports loving individual.
However, it is clearly evident that this information has given to your website in a misleading manner. Therefore, kindly be good enough to remove the article which was published in your website.
Yours truly
Panduka Keerthinanda 
Attorney at Law

Saudi-led coalition jets bomb Houthis in Yemeni capital - residents


Smoke billows from the site of Saudi-led air strikes on al-Dailami air base in Yemen's capital Sanaa September 6, 2015.-REUTERS/KHALED ABDULLAH
Reuters
Smoke billows from the site of Saudi-led air strikes on al-Dailami air base in Yemen's capital Sanaa September 6, 2015. REUTERS/Khaled AbdullahSun Sep 6, 2015
Saudi-led coalition jets bombed a Houthi military position and army bases in the Yemeni capital Sanaa through the night and into Sunday morning in what appeared to be further retaliation for the killing of dozens of coalition soldiers two days ago.
The air strikes targeted troops loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, an ally of the Houthis, and a Houthi base in what was the al-Imam University, a religious school in northern Sanaa, residents said.
Residents said explosions could be heard all night and buildings had been levelled, but the bombing stopped around noon. A Reuters reporter said there were unconfirmed reports of two deaths.
The al-Sabeen maternity and children's hospital said it had also sustained damage, with patients trapped inside by the bombardment, and appealed to international organisations to help it evacuate patients.
"The hospital had been badly damaged due to the bombardment of areas around it," the Houthi-run state news agency quoted a hospital statement as saying.
The Saudi-led coalition says it does not target civilian facilities. But on Saturday, at least 27 members of two families were killed in Sanaa by air strikes targeting Houthi positions in the city, according to hospital officials.
DEADLY ATTACK
On Friday, the Iranian-allied Houthis had attacked a weapons storage facility in Marib, where forces loyal to exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi had been massing troops and equipment in preparation for an assault on Sanaa.
The attack killed 45 soldiers from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), five Bahrainis, 10 Saudis and four Yemenis.
It was the heaviest toll suffered by the Saudi-led alliance since it began its air war in March to try to restore Hadi to power after the Houthis began advancing on his main base, the southern port city of Aden.
Hadi was installed in 2012 under a Gulf Arab-sponsored deal that saw Saleh, Yemen's leader of three decades, step down after months of street protests. He fled Sanaa when the Houthis seized the city almost a year ago.
UAE forces were important in helping Hadi's forces drive the Houthis and their allies out of Aden, a big win for the Arab coalition.
But security has yet to be restored in the port city, where unidentified vandals dug up several graves and smashed headstones at a cemetery that Britain, the city's former colonial ruler, had maintained after it left some 50 years ago, a local official said.
A local Yemeni official accused the Houthis of hiring the vandals to destabilise the city and prevent order returning. The Houthis say al Qaeda is operating in areas under Hadi's control.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari in Sanaa and Mohammed Mukhashaf in Aden; Writing by Sami Aboudi; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Russia remains ally but won't confirm military advance, Syrian officials say

Obama administration concerned after US officials say temporary housing suggests Russia could deploy up to 1,000 military personnel
 Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, speaks with Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, left, in Damascus, Syria, on Thursday Photograph: Uncredited/AP

 in Damascus-Sunday 6 September 2015

Syrian officials have refused to confirm reports of an enhanced Russian military build-up in the country, over which the US has expressed concern to Moscow. Damascus insists, however, that Russia remains a loyal and supportive ally.

Media reports on Friday quoted Obama administration officials as saying Russia had sent a military advance team to Syria, as well as sending prefabricated housing units for hundreds of people to an airfield near Latakia, which the officials said also received a portable air traffic control station.
US officials said the temporary housing suggested Russia could deploy up to 1,000 advisers or other military personnel to the airfield, which is near the ancestral home of the ruling Assad family, the New York Times reported.
In a telephone conversation on Saturday, Secretary of State John Kerry told his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov of his concern.
“The secretary made clear that if such reports were accurate, these actions could further escalate the conflict, lead to greater loss of innocent life, increase refugee flows and risk confrontation with the [anti-Islamic State] coalition operating inSyria,” the State Department said.
Kerry and Lavrov agreed that discussions on Syria would continue this month in New York, where the United Nations general assembly meets.
The Los Angeles Times reported that US intelligence has gathered evidence of possible military housing from satellite reconnaissance photos.
Russia has backed Assad to the hilt since the start of the country’s bloody civil war in March 2011. Following a flurry of international diplomatic activity that suggested a possible shift in that position, President Bashar al-Assad said in a recent interview that Vladimir Putin was standing by the Syrian government.
Assad is understood not to have commented on the issue when he met Russian journalists in Damascus on Sunday – though their interviews were not immediately published.
The US and Russia have been at loggerheads over Syria. Russia has supported Assad, while the US advocates a political transition to end his rule while backing armed opposition groups.
A US security source told Reuters the US would be watching to see whether any increased Russian might in Syria will be used to push back the Islamic State (Isis) or to bolster Assad.
The US statement appears at odds with recent hopes for greater co-operation between Washington and Moscow over the Syrian crisis. Western diplomats have said they believe that in the wake of July’s landmark nuclear agreement with Iran – Assad’s most important regional ally – Kerry is now ready to focus far more closely on Syria.
Russia has also held talks with Saudi Arabia, a key backer of the anti-Assad opposition.
The view in London and other European capitals is that there are new prospects for diplomacy, in part because of the intense attention being paid to the refugee crisis, but also because Russia is concerned by the increasingly prominent role being played by Iran in Syria.
Moscow has been reaching out to elements of the Syrian opposition in the hope of promoting a “managed transition” in Damascus. But it is unclear how an enhanced Russian military role, as reported, would be consistent with that.
  • Reuters contributed to this report
Netanyahu will not allow Israel to be 'submerged' by refugees 

Prime minister announces the start of construction of a fence along Israel's border with Jordan
We must control our borders,' says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (AFP) 


Home
Sunday 6 September 2015
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday said he would not allow his country to be "submerged" by refugees after calls for Israel to take in those fleeing Syria's war.
Speaking at the weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu also announced the start of construction of a fence along Israel's border with Jordan, according to his office.
"We will not allow Israel to be submerged by a wave of illegal migrants and terrorist activists," Netanyahu said.
"Israel is not indifferent to the human tragedy of Syrian and African refugees ... but Israel is a small country - very small - without demographic or geographic depth. That is why we must control our borders."
Opposition leader Isaac Herzog on Saturday said Israel should take in Syrian refugees, recalling the plight of Jews who sought refuge from past conflicts.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas also called for Israel to allow Palestinians from refugee camps in Syria to travel to the Palestinian territories, whose external borders are controlled by Israel.
There is already hostility in Israel toward asylum-seekers from Africa and a concerted government effort to repatriate them.
Rights groups say thousands of African asylum seekers have been coerced into "voluntary" departures.
Official figures show 45,000 illegal immigrants are in Israel, almost all from Eritrea and Sudan. Most of those not in detention live in poor areas of southern Tel Aviv, where there have been several protests against them.

'To the Golan heights'

The start of construction of the 30-kilometre (19-mile) fence announced by Netanyahu involves extension of a security barrier to part of its eastern border with Jordan.
Netanyahu said when it was approved in June that the new fence was a continuation of a 240-kilometre barrier built along the Egyptian border which "blocked the entry of illegal migrants into Israel and the various terrorist movements".
In its first stage, the new fence is being built along Israel's eastern border between Eilat and where a new airport will be built in the Timna Valley.
"We will continue the fence up to the Golan Heights," Netanyahu said.
That would take it into the Israeli-occupied West Bank along the Jordan Valley, a Palestinian area that is already under Israeli military control.
Israel has insisted on maintaining troops in the area in any final peace agreement, a stance completely rejected by the Palestinians, who say it would be a violation of their sovereignty and merely perpetuate the occupation.
Israel also has a fence that runs along the Syrian frontier through the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Those fences are in addition to a barrier that runs through the West Bank, which Israel began building during the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, which lasted from 2000-2005.
Israel seized 1,200 square kilometres (460 square miles) of the Golan from Syria in the 1967 Six Day War and annexed it 14 years later, a move condemned by the international community.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/netanyahu-will-not-allow-israel-be-submerged-refugees-1060065747#sthash.7Whmju59.dpuf

The Venezuelan President’s Birther Problem

The Venezuelan President’s Birther Problem
BY DANIEL LANSBERG-RODRÍGUEZ-SEPTEMBER 4, 2015
Over the past two weeks, the Venezuelan government has expelled 1,000 Colombian migrants back to their homeland, producing a flood of harrowing images. The exiles give heartbreaking accounts of families separated, personal belongings seized, and of wanton physical abuse. Venezuelan National Guardsmen have even taken to spray-painting the homes of the soon-to be-banished, marking their dwellings with an “R” for reviewed, or else a “D” for demolition.
Nearly 5,000 other Colombians, hoping to salvage some of their property and avoid the brutal treatment befalling their compatriots, have fled preemptively, wading across the shallow river marking the porous border between the two countries with whatever possessions they can carry. The Colombian border city of Cúcuta, the regional epicenter of transit and trade, has struggled to handle this influx, housing refugees in makeshift tents set up in local schools and stadiums.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who first sealed the border on August 19th with the declaration of a “state of emergency,” has justified his heavy-handed action in terms reminiscent of U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump. “They come here, and all they bring with them is needs and poverty,” Maduro said in a speech earlier this summer. “They all come looking for education, work, health and home.” He even accused Colombia of becoming “a net exporter of poverty to Venezuela.” This isn’t the first time he’s tried this trick. As Venezuela’s social and economic collapse intensifies, the Maduro regime has tried repeatedly to manufacture geopolitical crises in hopes of rallying nationalist sentiment – or, at the very least, distracting Venezuelans from their plummeting standard of living.
It turns out, though, that 
Maduro’s connection with this particular bogeyman is rather more intimate than he lets on. Although much of his past remains obscure, many Venezuelans, and more than a few Colombians, claim the self-proclaimed “son of Hugo Chávez” is actually from Cúcuta himself — which would make him a Colombian citizen. Revolutionary rhetoric notwithstanding, Maduro also had biological parents, and we know from Colombian records that his motherwas actually born in Cúcuta in 1929. Maduro’s father was enrolled as a student at a Cúcuta-area secondary school in 1947 (though his precise birthplace is unclear). We also know that both of Maduro’s parents still resided in the city when they were married in 1956, and baptismal records show that his oldest sister María was born there soon after.
So at some subsequent point, the young family must have crossed the border — or, as Maduro himself might put it, “exported themselves” — in search of greener Venezuelan pastures. When exactly this all took place, under what circumstances, or whether Maduro was already with them, remains a mystery. He doesn’t talk about it, and as is so often characteristic of border regions and Latin American backcountry alike, there are simply no records available.
Since Venezuela’s constitution requires that the president be Venezuelan-born and bars dual citizens from the highest office, this question has generated considerable interest. The opposition’s accusations that Maduro is a crypto-Colombian have dogged him since before taking office, resulting in a robust “birther”-style movement championed by nearly all of Venezuela’s most visible opposition leaders, including twice-presidential candidate Henrique Capriles, as well as international allies such as Guillermo Cochez, a former ambassador to the Organization of American States from Panama.
Maduro himself has long claimed to be a Caracas native, since even before he could realistically have aspired to the presidency. Certainly by 2006, when he was first plucked from the national legislature and appointed foreign minister by Chávez, American embassy dossiers (available in Wiki-leaked version here) were referring to him as born in Caracas. Traces of Maduro’s early life in Caracas prior to his political rise, are scarce, however, and no credible records of his residence there have materialized. We do know that he studied in Cuba for a time (he remains close with the Castros) and that he first gained notice in Caracas during the 1980s and 1990s, when he was working as a public transport conductor and union organizer, playing bass guitar in leftist rock bands, and sporadically hiring himself out as a political bodyguard for various radical candidates: most notably Chávez himself in 1998.
Within the ruling socialist party, other leaders have also referred to Maduro’s birthplace as Caracas – albeit sometimes different areas of it — or else Tachira (as alleged by Tachira’s current Chavista governor). The Colombian government has thus far remained mum on the matter. In Cúcuta itself, though, many claim to have known the future leader as a child. On Saturday, Univision reporter Yezid Baquero visited what is alleged by locals to have been Maduro’s childhood home, interviewing an elderly neighbor who chortled that Maduro was “such a fat little boy” back then. It bears noting that other witnesses have contradicted this recollection, remembering Maduro, but in the context of his visiting an “aunt” who lived there.
Ironically for a country where young mothers are routinely required to bring their children’s birth certificates to market simply to procure strictly rationed diapers and formula, regime authorities have thus far failed to make Maduro’s birth certificate public. The head of the regime’s electoral authoritydid appear once on state television holding what was ostensibly a copy, at which time she declared it authentic, and Maduro legally entitled to govern.
Maduro’s opponents are still quick to point out various oddities, however, such as the fact that he and two of his sisters hold three consecutive national ID numbers, which could only have happened if they registered at the same time (as is more common among immigrant families.) But while it can be easy to get lost down such rabbit holes, in the end it is unlikely to matter. Venezuela’s revolutionary government has never been one to get hung up on legal technicalities, especially when this might prove inconvenient to those in charge.
Even so, there’s a certain poetic justice to the idea. After all, Colombia once had a Venezuelan president in independence hero Simón Bolívar (so an exchange, if hardly a fair one.) One still has to wonder, though: If Maduro had been in charge when his mother first came to Venezuela seeking a better life, would he have marked her door with an “R” or a “D” before having her unceremoniously shuttled back to Cúcuta?
In the photo, Nicolás Maduro — then still Venezuela’s foreign minister — visits Cúcuta in 2010.
Photo credit: GUILLERMO LEGARIA/AFP/Getty Images

Opinion: Low stakes for Thai military junta in constitution draft vote

(Pic: AP)
(Pic: AP)
UPDATE (11.00 AM, Sunday, September 6, 2015):

The National Reform Council has REJECTED the constitutional draft with 134 to 105 votes and 7 abstentions. A new constitution has to be drafted and thus a whole new process with an all new committee is set in motion, while the whole timetable to possible future elections will be delayed by at least 6 months. The Thai military junta and the interim constitution (incl. the catch-all Article 44) will still stay in power in the meantime to at least roughly early 2017.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE (Published earlier Sunday morning before NRC vote)

One could say that it’s a sign of dedication if you’re coming to work on a Sunday. Others would say that they have no other choice – which is rather ironic since the very reason they’re currently convening this morning (as of of writing) is about a vote.

The National Reform Committee (NRC) is coming together this Sunday morning to deliberate and vote on the draft for Thailand’s next constitution, a crucial step that decides the political direction of the foreseeable future in the country.

Since the beginning of the year, the Constitutional Drafting Committee (CDC) has been busy penning the country’s charter No. 20 after the previous 2007 version (enacted after the military coup of 2006) was suspended after the military coup of May 2014. They were so busy in fact that they needed another month to put on the finishing touches.

Despite all the polish and trimming (from a 315 article behemoth to ‘just’ 285), there aremany members of the NRC who are not entirely happy with many of its contents and have already voiced their opposition to it. Does this mean a possible bump in the road back to democracy in Thailand and a sign of trouble for the military junta (which has appointed all NRC members, by the way), which has kept the whole political discourse strictly in line until now?

The answer is rather simple: it doesn’t really matter for them either way!

On one hand, a positive outcome for the draft would constitutionally enshrine the undemocratic nature of the junta’s ‘reforms’ to Thai politics that enables non-elected elements to intervene any elected government at almost any time. One of these clauses is the recently added Article 260, the “Committee for Reform Strategy and National Reconciliation” – a euphemism for a politburo-style executive committee co-existing for five years alongside an elected government (still with a 4-year term limit) with powers to take over at anytime in a yet-to-be-defined ‘crisis’ situation. Also, this and other bodies would be created to deter any substantial constitutional amendments that could dismantle these bodies.

On the other hand, a ”no” vote would also come in handy for the military junta since the timetable for this whole drafting process – which took round about 8 months – would start anew as stipulated in the interim constitution. We have pointed out several times that anendless loop of drafting and rejecting would technically be possible and this legislative limbo would be the junta’s Groundhog Day. In other words, the military government would be able to prolong their direct rule.

Either way, the stakes are incredibly low for the military junta.
Also, if the NRC members were really concerned about the undemocratic nature of the draft, they wouldn’t and shouldn’t have agreed to take part in this kabuki theater, as this process only creates the illusion of choice and proper process.

Same goes for the public referendum (in case this draft gets passed) scheduled early next year, which decides when (or rather if) the next election is going to be held. But the people’s choice itself could seemingly become a moot point, since the junta’s law experts ‘just’ happen to discover that it is seemingly nearly impossible to even reach a minimum quota of positive votes for the constitution draft thanks to the wording in the interim constitution, unless that hole get patched pretty soon. And even if everything goes smoothly up until that point, the latest suggestion for new elections is for the end of 2016, which is a whole year later than what the junta originally promised.

Either way, we’ll soon know more about where Thailand’s political future goes next – until that most people would have likely woken up on this Sunday morning.
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About the author:
Saksith Saiyasombut blogs extensively about Thai politics and current affairs since 2010 and works as an international freelance broadcast journalist. Read his full bio on about.me/saksith.