Peace for the World

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

Friday, September 18, 2015

UN Report Is Well-Balanced And Unbiased: FM Mangala Samaraweera


Colombo TelegraphSeptember 18, 2015 
Sri Lanka would have faced economic sanctions from the US and EU countries if the Rajapaksa regime had been in power today, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said addressing both foreign and local media in Colombo yesterday.
Speaking for the first time after the release of the much anticipated report of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on Sri Lankan war, Samaraweera said that broken promises by the former Rajapaksa regime had led to a possible international intervention on issues which otherwise could have been solved locally.
MangalaThe 300-page OHCHR report, among other things, called on the Sri Lankan government to set up a “hybrid special court” with international judges and investigators to investigate the crimes against humanity committed during the war and bring the perpetrators to the justice.
Blaming the Rajapaksa regime for the present imbroglio Samaraweera said soon after the war ended in 2009 the government made a Joint Statement with the UN at the conclusion of the UN Secretary-General’s visit to Sri Lanka, promising to take certain steps including on accountability.
Soon after Samaraweera said that Sri Lanka proposed a Resolution in the UN Human Rights Council containing a series of measures to be taken by Sri Lanka including investigating war crimes charges and punishing those responsible.                     Read More

The “OISL” investigation: Frequently asked questions

Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and JusticeSep 18, 2015
Every day we will be blogging one of our one-page mini essays that make up our media pack that accompanies the release of the UN report. You can download the entire pack here.
Bombed out cars
The biggest question of all – how did we allow this to happen?

Why was an investigation not launched immediately after the war?

In early 2009, there was a fair deal of concern among the international community and the United Nations as to how the war was being fought and the number of civilian deaths. However, a lack of credible information coming from the front lines (in part due to the Government’s media blackout and restrictions on NGOs) and a sense of ambivalence from key international leaders, many of whom were glad to see the back of the LTTE, ensured that a strong and co-ordinated international response did not materialise. Furthermore, the conflict was overshadowed by the far smaller but higher profile conflict that was occurring in Gaza at the same time, “Operation Cast Lead”. All this led to a muted response from the international community.

What is this report called?

The ‘OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka’ or ‘OISL’ for short (pronounced oy-sul by some and O-I-S-L by others). OHCHR stands for Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Haven’t war crimes and crimes against humanity already been established?

War crimes and crimes against humanity have been widely established by NGOs, by independent legal opinions, and by Peoples’ Tribunals. The UN itself has determined that there is “credible evidence” that war crimes and crimes against humanity took place, and the commission of such crimes was implied by the UN’s internal review in 2012. However, this will be the first time that the UN has the mandate to establish these as fact.

what is the report’s mandate?

OISL was mandated by the United Nations Human Rights Council Resolution 25/1 in March 2014. The Human Rights Council, in this resolution on “Promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka”, requested the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights “to undertake a comprehensive investigation into alleged serious violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes by both parties in Sri Lanka”. The period under investigation is 21 February 2002 until 15 November 2011 – as this was the period covered by the Sri Lankan government’s own flawed domestic investigation (the LLRC). Its mandate requires OISL to investigate violations by applying Sri Lanka’s obligations under international human rights law, customary international law, international humanitarian law, and international criminal law.

What methods did it use?

With the support of experts such as the UN special rapporteurs and advice from three international experts (Martti Ahtisaari, former President of Finland; Silvia Cartwright, former High Court judge of New Zealand; and Asma Jahangir, former President of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan), OISL has conducted a desk review, documented testimonies of witnesses and alleged perpetrators, and analysed information from other relevant sources, such as satellite images. The previous government of Sri Lanka refused to cooperate with the OISL investigation and it is unclear whether the current Government offered any assistance. The findings will be based on a “reasonable grounds to believe” standard of proof.

The Liberal Party of Canada welcomes UN report on Sri Lanka

September 17, 2015
September 17, 2015–MONTREAL–Today, the Liberal Party of Canada welcomed the Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on Promoting Reconciliation, Accountability and Human Rights in Sri Lanka released in Geneva yesterday.  The UN report is the result of 6 years of intense work by victims groups, Non-Governmental Organizations and the United Nations Human Rights Council.
“The victims of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in Sri Lanka have waited far too long for answers.”  Said Marc Garneau Liberal Candidate for Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Westmount.  “This report, for the first time, gives some hope on the road to accountability and peace in Sri Lanka.  We commend the witnesses for coming forward with their stories – and braving all odds, and at times taking extraordinary risks to be heard so that justice can be achieved.”
Based on its investigation, the UN report concludes that there are reasonable grounds to believe that violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, war crimes and crimes against humanity took place in Sri Lanka.
“Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party have long maintained that accountability is a precursor to lasting peace in Sri Lanka and an essential starting point for justice to be delivered to the victims and survivors,” said Mr. Garneau. “We are encouraged by the UN report and are confident that it can be the basis of an internationally mandated accountability mechanism that is independent of the Sri Lankan state.”
The Liberal Party of Canada remains committed to working with the international community to ensure that Canada does its part in seeking justice in Sri Lanka. This includes exercising the universal jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute those perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide who may be in Canada.  We will also implement a travel ban against those who might have been part of the chain of command within the Sri Lankan armed forces.
UNHRC report Milder than expected- President


2015-09-19
President Maithripala Sirisena said yesterday the report on Sri Lanka presented at the ongoing UNHRC sessions in Geneva was 100 or even 1,000 times less harmful than the report that would have been presented at the UNHRC if not for the change that took place on January 8. 

At a meeting with the Editors and media organization heads at the President’s House, the President flanked by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said the action taken by the government to address Human Rights and Governance issues and moves towards reconciliation had resulted in the International Community’s growing confidence in Sri Lanka.

 He said there was a danger of several names being included in the report, but the positive image presented to the world by the current government had prevented such an eventuality. The President said the international community had given a good response to the work done by the government where there were many concerns earlier. 

He said the government was following a non-aligned foreign policy which was bearing fruit and that the 19th Amendment which pruned certain Executive Powers of the President and broadened the democratic space was not only beneficial to the citizens of the country but also built up Sri Lanka’s image internationally. 

The President said it was best for the country to have a government without Mahinda Rajapaksa to move forward and added that certain extremist elements were trying unsuccessfully to create problems. 

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said the names did not come up in the UNHRC probe report because of the hard work of the government in the international front.  He said it was the successive steps taken by the previous Rajapaksa regime after it entered into an agreement with United Nations Secretary General which led to the probe on Sri Lanka.  

 The Prime Minister said he was not even given a chance to meet the UN Secretary General when he came to Sri Lanka at that time and when he saw the agreement which was reached he knew it was going to be troublesome for the country.  

He said now the current government was working in a positive manner to deal with those issues and address the concerns through a domestic mechanism and that the matters would be dealt with after the Paranagama and Udalagama commission reports are presented.  Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said on October 30, the international community which was divided over Sri Lanka earlier would stand behind the country in a united manner.

 Justice and Buddha Sasana Minister Wijedasa Rajapakshe and Media Minister Gayantha Karunatilleka were also present at the meeting. 
Ex-Army Chief welcomes UN probe

  • Fonseka says no human rights violations happened under his command, Govt. should support probe to bring culprits before law
sarath-fonseka
Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka

logoBy Shanika Sriyananda-Friday, 18 September 2015
Former Army Chief Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka, welcoming the new report released by the United Nations Human Rights Commissioner and its recommendation to set up a special court to investigate alleged human rights violations, said that he would fully support the investigation process to ensure justice.
Fonseka, who commanded the final military operations to eliminate the LTTE and end the 30-year-old conflict in 2009, said the Government had to assist the UN investigation and also needed help to bring the culpritswho had committed grave human rights violationsbefore the law.
“Justice has to be done for the people of this country. We don’t have to panic unnecessarily about the report or the investigations. We always can settle these issues one by one amicably, mainly to clear the image of our country,” he told the reporters at a media briefing held at his office in Pelawatte.
The UN report, identifying the patterns of grave violations in Sri Lanka between 2002 and 2011, has strongly indicated that war crimes and crimes against humanity were most likely committed by both sides to the conflict.
The report recommends the establishment of a hybrid special court, integrating international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators, as an essential step towards justice.
“Our investigation has laid bare the horrific level of violations and abuses that occurred in Sri Lanka, including indiscriminate shelling, extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, harrowing accounts of torture and sexual violence, recruitment of children and other grave crimes,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights ZeidRa’ad Al Hussein said releasing the report.
“Importantly, the report reveals violations that are among the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole,” he added.
Fonseka, explaining certain allegations mentioned in the report, said some of the cases mentioned in the report had taken place during the final stages of the war when he was the SLA Chief but he was unaware of such incidents taking place under his command.
“Some of the cases mentioned like the killings of those who had surrendered, the assassination of the Parliamentarian Raviraj and disappearance and abduction of cartoonist PregeethEknaligoda also happened when I was the Army Commander. I think the Army and the military as law enforcement authorities have to face the reality,” he said, adding that the military should be in a position to answer the allegations reasonably and clear the minds and doubts of those who are accusing the military.
Fonseka strongly denied that human rights violations had taken place under his commandduring the final phase of the war. “All the divisional commanders leading the troops in the final battle had strictly followed my commands and there is no evidence that they overruled my instructions. But if somebody had given different instructions for some troops, they should be punished,” he urged.
Fonseka said that it was the responsibility of the Government to identify the culpritswho had committed the alleged human rights violations, based on credible evidence.
“I think nobody is in a position to reject the investigation now but everybody has to support to find out whether such human rights violations had taken place and who is responsible,” he said.
Fonseka also said that it was a good opportunity for the Sri Lankan military to clear its name on the alleged human rights violations and also to protect their image as a responsible and professional military.

Sri Lanka government at risk of claims by Chinese port city project - document

Reuters
Fri Sep 18, 2015
Sri Lanka would be exposed to the risk of claims from the firm managing a suspended Chinese-backed real estate project if the government fails to obtain approvals needed by the project within 60 days, a government document showed on Thursday.
The $1.4 billion Colombo port city project was suspended by President Maithripala Sirisena's new government in March because it was found not to have the proper permits and approvals.
In a cabinet paper requesting a six-month extension for the project, Ports Minister Arjuna Ranatunga said the attorney general had brought to his attention that the obligation to obtain the required approvals "for the reclamation works rests with the government".
Ranatunga's cabinet paper comes after CHEC Port City Colombo (Pvt) Ltd, the local company handling the project, proposed two alternative clauses to its original agreement signed last year that would allow the project to be extended by six months.
In the paper, Ranatunga said "if such required approvals cannot be obtained within a period of sixty days as required ... by the project company, the government would be exposed the risk of receiving claims from the project company for losses suffered by the project company as a result of not being able to commence the reclamation work".
Last month Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake said Sri Lanka is offering a compromise that could allow the port city project to restart, and renegotiating the deal.
The project, emblematic of China's strategy of developing a maritime Silk Road from Asia to Europe, has alarmed Sri Lanka's larger neighbour India, which sees it as a threat in its backyard and has been sympathetic to Sirisena's reformist rule.
India has raised concern over the planned acquisition by Chinese developers of 20 hectares of freehold land for the waterfront project, which lies a stone's throw from the business district of Sri Lanka's largest city.
Government officials have said they may not allow the land purchase, which was agreed by China-friendly former president Mahinda Rajapaksa.
China Communications Construction Co Ltd (CCCC) (601800.SS), which funds the port city project, estimated when it was suspended in March that the shutdown would result in losses of more than $380,000 a day.
The project to build apartments, shopping malls, a water sports area, a golf course, hotels and marinas is now a fenced-off tract of boulders dumped by what used to be a sandy beach.

(Reporting by Shihar Aneez; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Catherine Evans)

Paddy Purchase Only By Permit: The Best Solution!

By Hema Senanayake –September 18, 2015
Hema Senanayake
Hema Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
It has been reported that Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake told theSunday Times that President Maithripala Sirisena had appointed a six-member cabinet sub-committee, comprising, among others, Agriculture Minister Duminda Dissanayake and Rural Economic Affairs Minister P. Harrison, to streamline the purchasing of paddy. Still, by the time of writing this article, I could not find out who the other members of the said cabinet sub-committee and what the committee’s terms of references are. However, in this article, I intend to discuss a possible solution in streamlining paddy purchase. Therefore, the ideas I discuss here might be useful to the above mentioned six member cabinet sub-committee appointed by the President and to the farmers.
First, no matter whether it is right or wrong, now the government has declared a guaranteed price for the purchase of paddy. The guaranteed price is Rs.50 per Kilo of paddy which has less than 4% of moisture. In general paddy farmers understand the quality requirements stipulated by the government or by the private buyers. In this regard paddy farmers are reasonably good people.
Paddy RiceWhen the government declared a guaranteed price, the government intends that paddy stock would be purchased at the guaranteed price by the paddy buyers. Unfortunately, from past experiences, the government knew that private paddy buyers sometimes purchase paddy at half rate of the guaranteed price. In fact this was the case. Then, as a possible solution, the government had directed the Paddy Marketing Board (PMB) to purchase paddy at the guaranteed price. Unfortunately, the monetary allocation provided to PMB was just sufficient to buy 5% of the paddy stock. What happens to the balance 95%? Would that stock be purchased at guaranteed price by private buyers? You know the answer to this question. It is common sense that buying 5% of the paddy stock at guaranteed price by PMB cannot resolve this issue. Therefore, the real solution must be a total solution which solution can only be possible with inclusive of private sector buyers. Even paddy farmers understand it.           Read More         

Nawaloka Construction wins ‘No-Tender’ project award from Maldives


article_image
by Sanath Nanayakkare-

Nawaloka Construction Company has been awarded a construction contract for a hotel project worth US$ 60 million in the Republic of Maldives, without having to go through any tender procedures, the media learnt on Wednesday, at a press briefing held at the Nawaloka Auditorium in Colombo.

The reason behind winning this contract award has been the Company's success-traits, its financial strength and its key parameters influencing effective project performance, Kalana Alwis, Director/CEO, Nawaloka Construction Company (Pvt) said.

"Nawaloka Construction's project-performance and its control systems to improve project outcomes solely helped us gain entry to the global construction market, and our maiden oversees undertaking of the hotel project in the Republic of Maldives worth US$ 60 million had nothing to with tenders," he emphasized.

"EFZY Holdings Pvt. Ltd. has designed to develop a luxury resort of 150 units located in Vakkaru Island. Total 120 Villas include 55 water villas and SPA, the rest being island villas with all other modern Five Star facilities. This construction project has been awarded to us purely on the merits of the work done by the Company so far. We are sure that the successful completion of this project will place the Nawaloka Construction Company in the Republic of Maldives for future construction projects and also on the global list of International Construction Companies," Alwis said.

"We undertook several high-profile projects in the recent past and have completed several leading projects that set the benchmark in the country's construction industry. Among them is the flagship project--not only for the Company but also for Sri Lanka--the Prima Sri Lanka silo project in Trincomalee which comprises of 50 silos of 60-metre high", he noted.

"The construction of the Residence of the Ambassador of Kuwait in Sri Lanka, Razvi Medical Complex affiliated to the Maharagama Cancer Hospital, Road Development Authority, Head Office, Battaramulla,(design and build contract) the Readywear Office Complex at Braybrook Road, Hydepark Corner and our latest award symbol are some of the Company's iconic accomplishments".

"Another iconic project outside Colombo is the ultra-sophisticated Cargils Square Super Market Complex in Jaffna of which the Northern Province is proud of. The Company has also executed road sector projects throughout the country, including Colombo, Jaffna, Trincomalee, Ampara and Kalutara, Kegalle and Ratnapura for the Road Development Authority and Provincial Road Development Authorities," Alwis pointed out.

Nawaloka Construction Company is the local Joint Venture Partner of the Water Front Project which is among the few recently started mixed development projects undertaken by Foreign Construction Companies.

Jayantha Dharmadasa- Nawaloka Group Chairman speaks to the media on Wednesday (above) along with a scene of the construction site of the Nawaloka Car Park Project adjoining the Company's hospital premises in Colombo.

Exclusive: The Pentagon Is Preparing New War Plans for a Baltic Battle Against Russia

But the really troubling thing is that in the war games being played, the United States keeps losing.
Exclusive: The Pentagon Is Preparing New War Plans for a Baltic Battle Against Russia



For the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the U.S. Department of Defense is reviewing and updating its contingency plans for armed conflict with Russia.
The Pentagon generates contingency plans continuously, planning for every possible scenario — anything from armed confrontation with North Korea tozombie attacks. But those plans are also ranked and worked on according to priority and probability.

Migrants: Croatia refuses to become 'hotspot'

Channel 4 News
FRIDAY 18 SEPTEMBER 2015
Croatia says it cannot cope with the thousands of migrants who have crossed its borders this week and is moving people on to other countries.
Syrian and Afghan migrants clash in Croatia (Reuters)
(Above: Syrians and Afghans clash at the railway station at Beli Manastir, Croatia)
The 13,000 migrants, many of them refugees from the Middle East and Africa, have been arriving in Croatia since Wednesday, after Hungary blocked their path with a metal fence and riot police at its border with Serbia.
"We cannot register and accommodate these people any longer," Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic said. "They will get food, water and medical help, and then they can move on. The European Union must know that Croatia will not become a migrant hotspot. We have hearts, but we also have heads."
A record 473,887 refugees and migrants have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe so far this year, the International Organisation for Migration said, most of them from countries at war, such as Syria.
Hundreds of thousands have been making their way across the Balkan peninsula to reach the richer European countries in the north and west, especially Germany, which is preparing to accept 800,000 asylum seekers this year.

Quotas

The 28-member EU has not been able to agree a quota system for absorbing migrants in what has become the biggest movement of people since the Second World War.
Hungary, used by migrants en route to Austria and Germany, has closed its border with its southern neighbour Serbia, leaving thousands of people scattered across the Balkans searching for alternative routes.
When some of these people made their way to Croatia, Zagreb allowed them in, but has subsequently said it cannot register them all and has closed seven of eight border crossings.
Some migrants have travelled to Slovenia instead, trekking through fields to evade the police, but the Slovenian government has now stopped trains on the main rail line from Croatia.

There have been angry reactions from some migrants to the obstacles put in their way. At the Croatian town of Beli Manastir, just over the border from Hungary, groups of Syrian and Afghan men fought outside a ticket office as they waited for trains to Zagreb (watch video above).
At Tovarnik railway station in Croatia, around 3,000 migrants waited in the heat for buses and trains. "I didn't expect such a reaction from Europe," said Dara Jaffar, from Aleppo in Syria. "They first open the doors then they close them. They punish the people."
Several EU states, including Germany, have temporarily suspended Schengen rules on the free movement of people. Other countries have refused to accept any refugees and blame Germany for encouraging them to come.
Tensions flare, protests intensify over Al-Aqsa Mosque compound 

Israeli police set up checkpoints across Jerusalem's Old City on Friday, preventing young men and others from going to the Al-Aqsa Mosque (MEE/Mahfouz Abu Turk) 

Sheren Khalel-Friday 18 September 2015
Middle East Eye
'If this doesn’t end, I will not be surprised if this leads to something very much bigger than sparks of clashes,' Aqsa mosque director tells MEE. 
JERUSALEM - Israeli forces increased their presence at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Friday, with local media reporting hundreds of extra Israeli troops deployed in the surrounding area.

Has Canada’s love affair with Israel reached its climax?



Palestine solidarity protestors march toward Parliament Hill in Ottawa to rally against Israel’s assault on Gaza, 26 July 2014.
 Chris WattieReuters

Supporters of Israel have had it good in Canada.
The outgoing government is wildly supportive and the opposition New Democratic Party has purged a number of candidates for publicly expressing pro-Palestinian sympathies.

India's dream of borderless trade grinds to a halt at checkpoints

Truck drivers and helpers sit under a parked truck while waiting to get their loads cleared to cross a checkpoint at the Commercial Taxes Department check post at Walayar in Palakkad district in Kerala, India, September 5, 2015.
REUTERS/SIVARAM V

WALAYAR/NEW DELHI, INDIA 
ReutersFri Sep 18, 2015

Truck drivers and helpers wait for their turn to submit their documents to get their loads cleared to cross a checkpoint at the Commercial Taxes Department check post at Walayar in Palakkad district in Kerala, India, September 5, 2015.

At the Walayar checkpoint in southern India, lines of idle trucks stretch as far as the eye can see in both directions along the tree-lined interstate highway, waiting for clearance from tax inspectors that can take days to complete.
Delays are so bad that textile entrepreneur D Bala Sundaram has stopped sending his trucks to the international container terminal at nearby Cochin, instead diverting them hundreds of kilometres to a smaller regional port and onwards via Sri Lanka.
"Our containers would get stuck for four to five days," said Sundaram, who runs a firm with an annual turnover of $150 million. "Officials at the checkpost are finicky."
The rollout of a nationwide goods and services tax (GST) from April was supposed to sweep away hundreds of checkposts on India's state borders, paving the way for the seamless movement of goods from the tropical south to the Himalayas in the north.
But political opposition and the dilution of some of the tax's key tenets mean hopes are fading that the checkposts will be demolished any time soon, a major blow for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reform agenda - and for India's economy.
The rollout of the long-delayed GST regularly tops the list of demands made by CEOs of Indian and foreign companies.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley calls the new sales tax a "game changer" that will subsume a slew of federal and state levies, making Asia's third-largest economy one of the world's largest single markets and bumping up economic growth.
But opposition parties prevented a vote on the GST in the last session of parliament, making a rollout next April unlikely.

BARRIERS REMAIN
Even when the tax is eventually implemented, concessions made to win support from states mean many of the obstructions to a customs union will stay.
For example, while the GST will be collected on goods and services in states where they are consumed, Jaitley allowed a 1 percent additional levy on the cross-border transport of goods, to please states with large manufacturing bases.
Items such as alcohol, tobacco and petrol have been kept out of the new tax bill. States have also been given the flexibility to fix their GST rates within a band, providing arbitrage in the inter-state movement of goods.
"Enforcement is definitely required, we cannot do away with it at any point," said a senior state government official in Tamil Nadu. "We will need checkposts."
Other provinces have similar plans to check tax evasion. States such as Maharashtra, which includes commercial capital Mumbai, are even erecting new checkpoints.

LOGISTICAL HASSLES
India has more than 650 interstate checkpoints, which studies say increase truck travel time by a quarter.
Road traffic accounts for about 60 percent of all freight movement in India and such delays, McKinsey estimates, inflate logistics costs to 13 percent of India's gross domestic product.
Sundaram, whose KG Group is one of the biggest firms in western Tamil Nadu, says sending his shipments from the industrial city of Coimbatore hundreds of kilometres in the wrong direction to Tuticorin port, on Tamil Nadu's southern coast, has pushed up his freight costs by 20 percent.
Unlike Cochin, the Tuticorin port is not a container terminal, so his cargo must go from there to Colombo, where it is loaded on to a container ship to be sent around the globe. But the additional cost is worth it for Sundaram, who says it means he can honour his commitments on time.
"We can give our clients an exact date when the cargo will reach its destination," he said. "With the Cochin port, we simply cannot be sure when or whether our cargo will reach the port itself."

EASE OF DOING BUSINESS
These travails underscore the challenge for Modi, who has set an ambitious goal of improving India's position on a World Bank "Doing Business" ranking from a woeful 142 of 189 to the top 50 by 2017.
Jaitley views the GST rollout as the biggest push in achieving that target. He and his aides argue that, over time, higher tax collections and better compliance under the GST will encourage states to start dismantling the border checkposts.
"Once you start tracking sales online, there will be less need to have checkposts," Rashmi Verma, a senior official in the finance ministry revenue department, told Reuters. "The cost of maintaining these checkposts will far outweigh the benefits."
Saloni Roy, senior director at tax consultants Deloitte, agrees that the new tax will be a big improvement, but is not sure it will herald a borderless trade.
"When you have a system that is target driven, there is an incentive for tax officials to squeeze every drop that they can," she said.

(Writing by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Alex Richardson)

Egypt's 'zero schoolgirl' demands independent inquiry into exam results

Mariam Malak, 19, had pursued legal action following her shock failure on her final exams, saying the handwriting on the test was not her own
 Egyptian student Mariam Malak, 19, talks to the media outside the Forensic Medical Authority headquarters in Cairo. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images
AFP in Cairo-Thursday 17 September 2015
The lawyer for an Egyptian student who became an anti-corruption symbol after claiming she was failed when her exam results were replaced has called for an enquiry after prosecution experts denied her allegations.
Mariam Malak, 19, dreams of becoming a doctor like her two brothers.
Now nicknamed the “zero schoolgirl” in the local press, Malak scored 97% in her previous two years and expected a similar result in her final year.
So she was shocked to find that she had failed, saying her answers had been replaced with someone else’s – clearly not in her handwriting.
But the prosecution has said the handwriting was indeed hers.
Malak, who has met the prime minister amid a highly publicised campaign to overturn the result, told a press conference Thursday the prosecution’s investigation had not delivered her “rights.”
Her lawyers have said her exam answers had been switched, possibly with those of the child of an influential person.
Lawyer Ihab Ramzi insisted Thursday that Malak was a victim of corruption and demanded that the prosecution appoint a panel of “independent experts” to study the handwriting in the exam answers.
Malak’s case had seized the public imagination as Egypt reels from a corruption scandal that led to the arrest of the agriculture minister.