Peace for the World

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

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Farmers block Uhana – Weeragoda Road

2015-09-08
Over 100 farmers are currently protesting in front of the Government paddy store in Kongas handiya area in Uhana police division, Police Media Unit told Ceylon Today Online. The farmers have resorted to protesting as the Government paddy store refused to purchase their harvest.
They have blocked the Uhana –Weeragoda Road with about seven vehicles, Police Media Unit said.

Modi’s Master Stroke For India’s Unification – A Lesson For Sri Lanka


Colombo TelegraphBy S. Sivathasan –September 8, 2015
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
In the evolution of Indian unity, there has been a quantum leap in 2015. Through a strengthening of the states, Modi has set the pace for meaningful national integration. Not spending time playing on patriotic fervor, he has put his finger on the correct lever to move the economy and to touch on people’s materialistic aspirations. Investment of local financial resources further augmented by foreign inflows is the strategy. Such a mode was not unknown to his illustrious predecessors. Then, wherein lies the difference? Identifying the most sympathetic chord that resonates with the states, distinguishes his uniqueness. With a sense of pragmatism he seeks to add verve to it.
Over Centralism
ModiIn the last century and more the flow of thought and insights was that India’s downfall came through her political disintegration. This in turn it was perceived, derived from weakness at the centre at varying times in her history. The years preceding independence were plagued by unmanageable religious conflict. Partition of India heralding her independence was a traumatic experience. Princely fiefdoms, 563 in all tore at the seams of the Indian fabric. The iron hand of Vallabhai Patel was needed to keep India together. Nehru had the intellectuality to know it all. Historians and men of learning provided the academic back up to political leaders. The result was a single India. The casualty was a unified India.
Excessive obsession with unity struck at the very roots of unification. The problems that India faced in embarking on the modern were Himalayan. Even a century was inadequate. Seven decades are now very nearly past and yet India has miles to go even to touch the very periphery of parity with developed nations. Nehru’s strategy of linguistic states was a great achievement that consolidated major ethnic groups into a composite entity. The policy implemented in 1956, abated tensions that were growing and spoiling unity even within states.

Constitutional Council in place by Sept. 22


By Dasun Edirisinghe- 

Minister of Justice and Buddhasasana, Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe yesterday said that the appointment of members to the Constitutional Council would be completed by next week, but they would have to wait until Parliament met on September 22 to get its approval for the civil society members of the CC.

Addressing the media after assuming duties at the Ministry of Buddhasasana, Rajapaksa said that the government would effect some changes, through Parliament, to the permanent Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption.

A new Bribery Commission would be appointed after the Constitutional Council was formed, the Minister said.

Rajapaksa said three ex-officio members of the ten member Constitutional Council were already known––the Prime Minister, the Speaker and the Opposition leader. The Prime Minister, President and Opposition leader would name their representatives who are MPs and the other member from the minority parties represented in Parliament would also be named next week, Minister Rajapakshe said.

Rajapaksa said that once the Commission was set up, the new Commissioners to the CIABOC would be appointed and the present Commission would cease to function automatically with the new appointments.

Champika to be charged for Contempt of Court!

Champika to be charged for Contempt of Court!
BY STANLEY SAMARASINGHE-2015-09-09

Three lawyers from Belmont Street, Colombo 12 filed a Contempt of Court Petition against Minister of Megapolis and Western Province Development, Patali Champika Ranawaka.The petition, filed under Section 105(3) of the Constitution states that a news bulletin announced on a TV channel on 26 July 2015 had telecast a footage of Minister Ranawaka making malicious and contemptuous utterances regarding the Supreme Court.

Petitioners Roshan Devinda Ranaweera, Ranjith Ranasinghe and Nimal Weerakkody in their petition have cited Patali Champika Ranawaka, the IGP and the Attorney General as respondents.The petition, filed by Attorney-at-Law Aruna Vishvajith Pathirana Arachchi, was also supported by a compact disk (CD) containing the televised news footage.
The petitioners state that utterances made by the first respondent are malicious and contemptuous of the Supreme Court. They were delayed in coming to Court earlier because they could not obtain the transcript of the CD early, the petition added.
Therefore, the petitioners requested Court to issue notice on the respondents and to direct the Registrar of the Supreme Court to summon the News Editor of the TV station in question to ascertain the veracity of the utterances made by Patali Champika Ranawaka.

The petitioners also request Court to take necessary steps to punish Patali Champika Ranawaka for his reported malicious and contemptuous statement.

Revisiting Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka: The Rhetoric, Realities & Opportunities

2015 witnessed two national elections in Sri Lanka- Presidential and Parliamentary, with a mandate given to President Maithripala Sirisena’s government to usher in much needed reforms. This reform project is likely to include a broad and diverse set of issues including those related to the past and reconciliation, ideally focusing on the four pillars of transitional justice- truth, justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence. There is also talk of establishing what is being tagged as a ‘credible domestic mechanism’, but so far limited progress has been made beyond the rhetoric. Although time and care are needed in the design and deliberations, there is also an urgency in terms of the fundamental issue of the right of victims to truth and justice. It is in this context that one hopes the reform project demonstrates the same commitment, energy and enthusiasm towards transitional justice as is likely to be evident with other issues.

A Decisive Blow At The Ballot Box


By Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena –September 8, 2015 
Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena
Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena
Colombo Telegraph
For too long, the international news focus on Sri Lanka had been overwhelmingly negative. A relentless civil war between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and majority Sinhalese governments transformed this small island nation balancing precariously off the tip of Southern India from being the pride of South Asia at the time of shaking off its colonial fetters to the British Raj in 1948, to a land of profound agony.
Sri Lanka was able to foster an independent judiciary, a critical media and a strong public service for only a few decades after independence. Ethnic conflict was not the sole reason for this regression. In the 1970’s and more radically in the 1980’s, Southern Sinhala Marxist revolutionaries were brutally crushed by government forces which carried out reprisals against entire villages.
The State militarily combated (majority) Sinhalese revolutionaries and (minority) Tamil separatists without rationally identifying causes of unrest for either. Constitutional protection of civil liberties by a judiciary once respected throughout the Commonwealth yielded to political expediency. The consequences were devastating.
Mahinda MaithriIn the war ravaged North and East inhabited by predominantly Tamil speaking civilians, state forces targetedLTTE and innocent Tamils alike. In other parts of the country, the majority Sinhalese were targeted by LTTE suicide squads. The Muslims constituting Sri Lanka’s other minority were ruthlessly evicted by the LTTE from what they termed as Tamil homelands in the East. Sri Lanka brought itself under emergency rule amidst unprecedented human rights abuses by state and non-state actors. Journalists, human rights defenders and public interest lawyers began fighting to protect the few precious freedoms left, with their backs metaphorically – and sometimes literally – to the wall.      Read More

Making sense of the 48 portfolios in the new Cabinet 


Ranil Wickremesinghe no doubt would have liked to have a lean and mean Cabinet but the voters of this country have forced his hands otherwise
BUP_DFT_DFT-14-13logoWednesday, 9 September 2015
Untitled-2The increase of ministerial portfolios from 30 to 48 in the context of a National Government has caused consternation all around.
During the Rajapaksa presidency we had to watch with resignation the endless parade of ministers, including a minister for botanical gardens, being sworn in. Civil society seems to have forgotten how close the country was to a continuation of the Rajapaksa presidency to several decades or more.

Wasim Thajudeen’s mobile phone recovered

Wasim Thajudeen’s mobile phone recovered
logoSeptember 8, 2015
A mobile phone, which was reportedly used by former Sri Lankan Rugby player Wasim Thajudeen, has been found from the possession of a youth in Agarapatana area in Nuwara Eliya, the police say.
The mobile phone was apparently given to the youth by his father who is the owner of a shop in Narahenpita, Police Spokesperson ASP Ruwan Gunasekara said.
Thajudeen was found dead inside his car which had apparently crashed into a wall in Narahenpita on May 17, 2012.
The body of Wasim Thajudeen was exhumed, last month. The remains have been placed under the custody of the Colombo Judicial Medical Officer. 
The Colombo Additional Magistrate had earlier ordered the JMO of the Colombo National Hospital to exhume the remains of Thajudeen, who had died under suspicious circumstances.

MR’s First Cousin Prasanna Wickremasuriya To Be Probed Over Missing Gold


Colombo TelegraphSeptember 8, 2015 
Prasanna Wickramasuriya, the former head of the Airport and Aviation Services Limited is to be probed over gold, jewelery, gems and other valuable goods worth millions of rupees which had gone missing from a safe at the Bandaranaike International Airport in Katunayake during his tenure as its Chairman.
Prasanna Wickramasuriya
Prasanna Wickramasuriya
Wickramasuriya, first cousin of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa will come under the microscope of either the CID or the FCID on the above case shortly, sources said.
Some employees of the Airport have complained to the Presidential Commission Investigating Corruption and Fraud that a large amount of gems, gold jewellery and other valuables had dissapeared mysteriously after Wickramasuriya vacated office following his cousin Rajapaksa’s defeat at the last Presidential elections.
According to sources Wickremasuriya who had stayed abroad for a long period is currently in Sri Lanka and could be called for questioning within the next few days.
The items which were locked up in a safe are said to be ones which have been recovered by airport officers over a long period.
These are said to be items which had been abandoned by smugglers at the airport premises fearing detection by customs or security officers.

Multi million rupee fraud of State information dept. Ex Director Generals committed since 2007 detected..!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -08.Sep.2015, 4.45PM) Liquor  license No. R.B. 13 A issued by the Excise department to the Government information department to run a restaurant for Sri Lanka media personnel alias ‘The Press club’  had been granted to a private henchman since 2007 without calling for suitable bidders in a transparent manner and selecting the best, thereby depriving the state of ite revenue by many millions of rupees, according to reports reaching Lanka e news. Even now, the Press club is being run at No.30, Olcott mawatha , Fort , and the stooge Nimal Abeywardena is still using the liquor license No. R.B. 13 A , to carry  on a flourishing liquor business.
According to the Government information department’s  relevant file   ,the previous director generals of the State information department as far back as from the year 2007 until the year 2015 , have recommended the liquor license to this individual without following proper procedure .The worst part ? and the most unpardonable corruption tainting these deals is, no agreement whatsoever has been signed with the henchman Nimal Abeywardena in regard to this license issued.
The crucial question is : what happened to the many millions of rupees lost by the government via these corrupt deals by issuing the license sans following procedures duly  and  whose pockets did these colossal sums of monies go into ? Even though an audit investigation was conducted into this , that was suppressed.
This malpractice and grave irregularity of granting a liquor license of  the government  department to an outsider without choosing the right contractor duly, has not only  engendered  many  millions of rupees loss to the state revenue but flagrantly and outrageously violated procedures and  laws .In other words , a grave financial irregularity by these ex Director Generals has been committed detrimental to the State and the people.
The State information deprtment was launched in 1948; and it is after the appointment of Dr.Dharshani Gunatileke as the Directress general to this department ,following   the advent of the new government of good governance, this corrupt activity that had been carried on for 8 long years was uncovered.
Those  media coolies of course who were pleased when a free bottle of liquor is offered to them by Nimal Abeywardena whenever they visited the club kept silent in abject surrender to liquor and in keeping with their squalor.
The people who brought about the welcome change via victory of the government of good governance are now eagerly waiting and watching ,what welcome  change ‘good governance’ is going to effect on their behalf , by conducting an investigation duly summoning the director generals involved since 2007 , with a view to  punishing  those culprits who were responsible for the multi milllion rupees loss to country’s revenue.    


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by     (2015-09-08 11:13:13)

New Buddhasasana Minister promises reforms shortly


By Dasun Edirisinghe-

New laws would soon be introduced for the betterment of Buddha Sasana, newly appointed Justice and Buddhasana Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe said yesterday. He also hold the Justice portfolio.

After assuming duties at the Buddhasasana Ministry in the presence of President Maithripala Sirisena, Minister of Housing and Construction Sajith Premadasa and Minister of Parliamentary Reforms and Media Gayantha Karunathilake, Rajapakshe said that amendments to the old Buddhist Temporalities Ordinance of 1931 (Vihara Gam Devala Act) had already been approved by the Cabinet.

The Minister said that a new Bill on Bhikku Discipline had already been drafted and approved by the Cabinet. The government had also prepared the Buddhist Publication Regulatory Act, he added.

"We will present the new Bills and amendments to the Temple and Devala Lands Act to Parliament shortly," Rajapakshe said.

He said that an International Buddhist Sangayana (Council) would be held in Sri Lanka with the participation of representatives from other countries in 2018. The governmetn also expected to commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Anagarika Dharmapala on a grand scale, he said.

The construction of the Mahaweli Maha Seya at Kotmale and Vidyalankara International Buddhist Centre would be completed and opened shortly, Rajapakshe said.

There were thousands of Buddhist temples in remote areas without even basic facilities for monks and the ministry expected to rectify those serious shortcomings, he said.

Minister Rajapakshe said that Daham Schools would be developed.

"About 43% of prisoners are serving sentences for narcotic related offences," Rajapakshe said, adding that Daham schools would help build a better society.


Mawbima journalist killed by wild elephant


BY Cassendra Doole-2015-09-09

A provincial reporter, 46-year-old Priyantha Ratnayake, a correspondent attached to Mawbima and Ceylon Today, who was covering an assignment on wild elephants with other reporters in Samagipura was killed yesterday by one of the elephants, police said.
The reporter was charged and killed by one of the elephants while covering a wildlife episode featuring wildlife officials attempting to drive away wild jumbos in a village in Minneriya.
The incident happened in the Papisiya Wewa area in Minneriya.
His body was taken to the Hingurakgoda Base Hospital, police said.
On 18 September 1951, famed photographer Eric Swan was also killed in a wild elephant attack while attempting to photograph wild elephants in Tamankaduwa, 27 miles from Polonnaruwa.

MTV Newsfirst Removes President’s Daughter Chathu’s “Boasting Video” From Facebook

Colombo TelegraphSeptember 8, 2015 
The Maharaja Television Network’s social media site ‘Newsfirst.lk Facebook page today removed their published video clip which aired President Maithripala Sirisena’s daughter Chathurika Sirisena chairing a meeting at the Pollonnaruwa District Government Agent’s Office which was held yesterday.
Maithripala - Chathurika SirisenaColombo Telegraph launched an investigation and questioned the President’s Media Unit regarding Chathurika Sirisena’s official stance. We asked the Head of President’s media to tell us on what basis/capacity does she go around the country accompanied with state officials. Shortly there after we noticed that the Newsfirst.lk Facebook page posting on Chathurika’s meeting has been removed. A top MTV official speaking to Colombo Telegraph on the condition of anonymity said that they had to remove the said video from the official Facebook page due to the viewers’ comments but they haven’t removed it from YouTube.
The President’s office is yet to answer queries that were put forward by Colombo Telegraph

Will the photo of Alan Kurdi change anything?

When the electoral jostling is over, will the migrant boy's death push Canadians to reopen this country’s closing doors for those yet to seek our help?

A paramilitary police officer carries the lifeless body of Aylan Kurdi, 3, after a a boat ferrying the boy and other migrants to the Greek island of Kos capsized.
A paramilitary police officer carries the lifeless body of Aylan Kurdi, 3, after a a boat ferrying the boy and other migrants to the Greek island of Kos capsized.By: Humera Jabir Published on Sun Sep 06 2015
Conservative officials’ sudden-onset compassion for refugees stinks of insincerity. Refugee-bashing rhetoric, manoeuvring to deny and decrease protection, and ramped-up efforts to detain and deport asylum-seekers have been the hallmarks of the last decade of Ottawa’s refugee policy. That Conservative officials today have changed their vituperative tune after the shocking death of three-year-old Alan Kurdi, his brother, and mother is too late and too hard to believe by far.
In the last decade, the prime minister, former immigration minister Jason Kenney, and the current immigration minister, Chris Alexander, have worked tirelessly to paint an image of asylum-seekers coming to Canada as “bogus” claimants, “queue-jumpers” and abusers of Canada’s immigration system.
Alexander appeared on air Wednesday to defend the government’s record on refugee protection, claiming that Canada “remains a model of humanitarian action” and is “the most generous country to refugees in the world.” But the Conservative record on asylum-seekers is anything but generous or humanitarian; it is one of open hostility at worst and foot-dragging at best.
This bold avowal of humanitarianism comes from the very minister who not one year ago admonished the Ontario government for providing refugee claimants with access to primary and urgent health care after Ottawa cut those benefits, saying “[s]imply arriving on our shores and claiming hardships isn’t good enough. This isn’t a self-selection bonanza, or social program buffet.” The Federal Court of Canada has since ruled that the government’s policy amounted to cruel and unusual treatment because it put at risk the very lives of “innocent and vulnerable children in a manner that shocks the conscience and outrages our standards of decency.”
Moreover, Harper officials now express aggrieved concern for the lives of migrants attempting treacherous crossings by boat in the Mediterranean, but never extended this generosity when asylum-seekers arrived at Canada’s own shores. When the MV Ocean Lady and MV Sun Sea, two ships carrying Tamil asylum-seekers, reached the West Coast in 2009 and 2010 respectively, the government turned the asylum-seekers, who had spent months at sea, into a public spectacle, portraying them as a boatload of potential terrorists and frauds. Many of the 492 asylum-seekers arriving on the MV Sun Sea were held in detention for months and called “bogus” claimants by Kenney, though nearly two-thirds of those whose cases have been resolved were finally accepted as refugees within five years of arrival.
The Conservative government’s paranoia towards asylum-seekers has reached such extremes that the United Nations in July raised concerns over Canada’s detention of irregular migrants for indefinite periods of time, calling on Canada to use detention as a “measure of last resort” and with “reasonable time limit[s].” Harsha Walia, writing in the Vancouver Sun this August noted that “[o]ver the past 10 years, the federal government jailed an average of 11,000 migrants per year, including up to 807 children, without charge. Canada is one of the only Western countries to have indefinite detention.”
Today, Conservative officials may stand at their election podiums and extend heartfelt condolences to the Kurdi family but these are crocodile tears. In practice, the Harper government views asylum-seekers who use human smugglers as criminals first rather than desperate, vulnerable, and even courageous people like the Kurdi family, whose circumstances forced them to take the most heart-wrenching of risks to seek a better life for themselves and their children.
Minister Alexander’s foot-dragging on resettling Syrian refugees from abroad is now infamous — not that that’s stopped the Conservatives from trying to politically exploit yet another promise to resettle 10,000 Syrian and Iraqi refugees if re-elected. What’s more, the Conservatives have also turned resettlement into a discriminatory practice focusing on religious minorities, even in the face of criticism from interfaith leaders who have called on Canada to resettle Syrians based on need not faith.
Whether or not more Syrians are admitted to Canada in the aftermath of the Kurdi family’s tragedy will not, however, change the fact that Canada’s refugee policy on the whole and in the long-term remains ungenerous and anti-humanitarian.
And once the photographs fade and the world inevitably forgets the pain of one family just as it has ignored the plight of millions before this week, what will remain unchanged is a decade of Conservative manipulation of the refugee system designed to make it more inaccessible, more discriminatory, and more difficult for refugee claimants to have their cases heard on their full merits.
And when the electoral jostling is over, will the death of the Kurdi children truly push Canadians to reopen this country’s closing doors for those yet to seek our help?
Humera Jabir is a law student at McGill University in Montreal.

Twenty Indians killed in Yemen as more foreign troops reported arriving

Photo
Tue Sep 8, 2015
Reuters


A Saudi-led alliance killed at least 20 Indian nationals in air strikes on fuel smugglers at a Yemeni port on Tuesday, fishermen said, and more foreign troops were reported to be arriving to intensify the campaign against Houthi forces.
The Houthi-run state news agency Saba also said that 15 citizens were killed in air strikes on Sanaa, and medical sources said at least 15 civilians were killed in similar attacks on Monday. It was not immediately possible to independently verify the figures.
The alliance, made up mainly of Gulf Arab countries, has increased air strikes on Sanaa and other parts of the country since Friday, when a Houthi missile attack killed at least 60 Saudi, Bahraini and United Arab Emirates soldiers at a military camp east of Sanaa.
They were part of a force preparing to assault the capital, which the Iranian-allied Houthis seized last September.
Friday's attack was the deadliest yet for Gulf soldiers in the war and may herald a turning point as Saudi-allied countries appear to be committing to a ground war they had so far avoided.
In western Yemen, local residents and fishermen said planes from the Saudi-led alliance struck two boats at al-Khokha, a small port near Hodeidah used by Indians to smuggle badly needed fuel supplies into the country, killing 20 of them.
Officials were not immediately available to comment on the report.
Qatari-owned Al Jazeera TV reported that the number of forces deployed by the alliance had risen to 10,000.
A Yemeni military official denied any foreign reinforcements had arrived on Tuesday and a source close to the exiled Yemeni government, now based in Riyadh, said he believed the number of foreign troops reported by al Jazeera might be exaggerated.
Al Jazeera on Monday said that 1,000 Qatari soldiers had crossed the al-Wadia border crossing from Saudi Arabia.
"A second contingent of Qatari soldiers has entered the al-Wadia border crossing," an Al Jazeera correspondent in southern Saudi Arabia was quoted as saying.

BOMBING, AIR POWER
A source close to the Qatari military confirmed the report.
"The operation in Sanaa will use extensive bombing, air power, to support the ground offensive," the source said.
Qatari and coalition officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Egyptian officials told Reuters that an unspecified number of Egyptian troops would arrive in Yemen on Tuesday and Saudi-owned Arabiya newspaper quoted sources as saying that 6,000 Sudanese troops would soon join the fight inside Yemen.
The Sudanese government did not comment on the report but it was corroborated by the source close to the Qatari military.
In Riyadh, a news agency run by Yemen's exiled government said that 10,000 loyalist troops were also preparing to take part in an advance on Sanaa.
The Yemeni government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi fled to Riyadh in March as Houthi forces closed in on their last redoubt in Aden, triggering the Saudi-led intervention and fighting which has killed more than 4,500 people, many of them civilians.
Loyalist Yemeni forces and Gulf soldiers took back Aden and most of Yemen's south in July but battle lines have barely moved since as the allied forces face stiff resistance in the Houthis' northern redoubts.
The Saudi-led alliance sees the campaign as a fight against creeping Iranian influence but the Houthis deny being beholden to Tehran and say the exiled government in Riyadh and the coalition are U.S. puppets. They say they deposed a corrupt government.

(Reporting By Noah Browning in Dubai and Tom Finn in Doha,; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Dominic Evans)

Did Iran Give Up the Khobar Towers Terrorist?

It sure looks like it. And that signals an interesting change in Iran’s post-nuclear deal relations with America.
Did Iran Give Up the Khobar Towers Terrorist?
BY ALI SOUFAN-SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
The capture of Ahmed al-Mughassil, the prime suspect in the June 1996 bombing of Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, was particularly and personally gratifying for me, a former FBI agent who spent years investigating and disrupting other terrorist attacks. But it’s unlikely that a lucky intelligence break alone led to Mughassil’s apparent capture in Hezbollah territory.
That’s not to take anything away from the impressive ability of intelligence agencies around the world to coordinate and track those like Mughassil, who’ve successfully evaded detection for years. Indeed, the “how” of his capture, which involved the intelligence and security services of Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and the United States, is the stuff of spy novels. But the question of why Hezbollah allowed Mughassil to be plucked from its own backyard — without any retaliation or even a tangible response — may be even more fascinating.
That “why” likely stems from the shifting self-interests of both Iran and Saudi Arabia — specifically, from the realities posed by the soon-to-be-enacted Iranian nuclear deal. With the historic accord now in Tehran’s back pocket, it will make less and less sense for the regime going forward to offer safe havens to wanted terrorist suspects (with American blood on their hands, no less), who present glaring political and diplomatic liabilities. To prove its skeptics wrong, Iran must continue to show a willingness to change its stance on harboring terrorists.
Mughassil’s capture fits squarely into this equation. A Shiite born in al-Qatif, Saudi Arabia, in 1967, he was a state-sponsored and then state-sheltered terrorist — the “state,” in each case, being Iran, working with its proxy Hezbollah. The bombing of Khobar Towers, which killed 19 U.S. Air Force personnel enforcing a no-fly zone over parts of Iraq and wounded hundreds of others, involved actors in four countries — Saudi Arabia, Iran, Lebanon, and Syria — working with the Iranian-supported Lebanese Hezbollah and the Iranian-supported, but Saudi Arabia-based, Hezbollah al-Hejaz (a separate group from the Lebanese Hezbollah but still ideologically aligned with them and Iran). After parking a massive truck bomb near the tower’s housing complex, Mughassil left the scene, remotely detonated the bomb with an explosive yield of 20,000 pounds of TNT-equivalent explosives, and fled to Iran, beyond the reach of U.S. and Saudi security and intelligence services.
The ensuing FBI-led investigation devolved into a discordant orchestra of mismatched musicians, reading different sheets of music and following the direction of competing conductors. Then-FBI Director Louis Freeh waspersonally involved, not only visiting the scene in the immediate aftermath but also pressing the issue for years, often to the irritation of the White House. The FBI never stopped pushing for more cooperation from the Saudis, who were reluctant (to put it mildly) to reveal to U.S. officials the depth of Iranian involvement in the plot.
Riyadh feared retaliation from Tehran if the United States attacked Iran based on information gathered from Saudi Arabia. The kingdom also feared being embarrassed by the revelation that fully capable terrorist cells, funded and trained by foreign powers, were operating within its borders.
Even as new terrorism cases took the spotlight, Khobar remained an FBI priority. During the East Africa embassy bombings in 1998 and the USS Cole attack in 2000, cases in which I was directly and deeply involved, the bureau never stopped collecting evidence or cajoling Saudi officials to turn over evidence in their possession. That the United States finally securedindictments in June 2001 — five years after the attacks — was a testament both to the geopolitical roadblocks and the determination to find a way around them. Mughassil was one of those indicted, yet he remained at large. Then, three months after the indictments, al Qaeda brought down the World Trade Center and crashed a plane into the Pentagon.
On Aug. 8, nearly 14 years later, Mughassil was taken into custody by Lebanese authorities after landing in Beirut on a flight from Iran, traveling under an alias with an Iranian passport. He was then transported — through Hezbollah-controlled territory — to Lebanese national police headquarters for questioning and processing, and then back to the airport to be handed over to Saudi officials.
Intelligence operations in Beirut are never easy or straightforward. That Mughassil’s capture went off without apparent notice or outrage suggests that the Iranians and Hezbollah either had no idea about his capture — unlikely — or, more likely, knew and stepped aside.
The entire operation should give us pause.After all, life for a state-sheltered terrorist can be pretty good — until politics change dramatically, that is. Historic regional rivalries and entrenched power dynamics rarely shift significantly in one’s lifetime, affording someone like Mughassil relative security and freedom within certain geographic and geopolitical boundaries. Yet such shifts do happen.
Sabri Khalil al-Banna, the feared Palestinian terrorist also known as Abu Nidal implicated in hundreds of deaths across the globe, found relative sanctuary in Libya in 1987 after his expulsion from Syria. Only after Libyan operatives were extradited in 1999 to the Hague and convened before a Scottish court as part of a deal over the 1988 bombing of Pan Am 103 did then-Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi decide Abu Nidal was no longer worth his trouble. He was kicked out in 1999 and ended up in Iraq, where he was shot and killed in 2002.
The same happened with the infamous Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, a.k.a. Carlos the Jackal, responsible for numerous terrorist attacks in Europe, including an attack on OPEC headquarters in Vienna and the murder of two French intelligence officers in Paris, both in 1975. As it became more or less palatable for countries to shelter him, Ramírez Sánchez bounced from one country to another. After being kicked out of Syria as part of the regional reshuffle that followed the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, Carlos the Jackal believed he had found permanent sanctuary in Sudan (Syria supported the 1991 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq because of regional hegemonic competition and then-President Hafez al-Assad’s hatred of Saddam).
Regional realignment during the war saw Arab militaries, for the first time, fighting with a Western coalition against another Arab country — and U.S. forces stationed in large numbers in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. As alliances and interests shifted yet again in the aftermath of the U.S.-led victory in Kuwait, Sudan reconsidered its decision to shelter Carlos the Jackal. Khartoum, as it turned out, was more interested in economic aid and commerce than in sheltering a terrorist that the French, who would end up playing a role in helping Sudan’s economy, wanted badly. In 1994, Sudanese officials tricked, drugged, and transported him to French custody.
The Jackal’s case helps us understand the strange politics that determine the fates of state-sponsored terrorists like Mughassil. Although the details of his capture remain spotty, Iran likely made a calculation: Sheltering a wanted terrorist was no longer in its best interests, given the sudden opportunity to reopen itself to the rest of the world both economically and diplomatically. Like Sudan in 1994, Iran wants to end its relative economic isolation. Its petro-dependent economy is in tatters, due to both sanctions and the low price of oil. And its proxy efforts in Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon are long-term expenses with uncertain benefits. “Giving up” Mughassil removes an irritant who provides little for a government now focused on accruing diplomatic capital.
The challenges facing this case — from a reluctant Saudi Arabia to subsequent terrorist attacks of a far greater scale — made it a perfect one to remain perpetually “under investigation.” The combination of shifting regional dynamics and the FBI’s unwavering focus likely brought about the capture of a terrorist who believed he had gotten away with his murders. Mughassil’s capture and arrest should be a lesson to state-sponsored terrorists everywhere: They are being played as pawns and are only safe as long as they are useful.
Whether or not Iran will shift away from using state-sponsored terrorism as a tactic remains to be seen. But the country must be ready to pivot in its relationship with longtime foes like the Saudis. The nuclear deal has forced Tehran to confront the obvious: Its sponsorship and arming of proxies like Hezbollah and its meddling across the Middle East — from Lebanon, to Iraq, to Syria — will increasingly come at cross-purposes with its mission to reengage with the world.
As history shows, once the liability of harboring a state-sponsored terrorist like Mughassil outweighs the utility, the state will gladly turn him out. Just ask Carlos the Jackal.
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