Peace for the World

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

Monday, October 5, 2015

NATO warns Russia over airspace violations as Syria airstrikes widen

The actions, quickly criticized by Washington, add an unpredictable element to a multilayered war.

The actions, quickly criticized by Washington, add an unpredictable element to a multilayered war.
By Liz Sly and Brian Murphy-October 5

BEIRUT — NATO warned Russia to stay away from Turkey on Monday after the Turkish Air Force intercepted Russian warplanes that strayed into its airspace from Syria, underscoring the heightened risk of a wider conflagration as Russia escalates its intervention in the Syrian conflict.

Here's what you need to know about Russia's airstrikes in Syria. The Russian military claims the strikes target the Islamic State, but U.S. officials say it's not helping. (Jason Aldag/The Washington Post)
Russia has said it will not send ground forces to Syria, but it is possible that Moscow will call on irregular volunteers such as those that have fought in Ukraine to supplement the wearied and depleted Syrian army in an offensive to reclaim territory.

Iran’s Identity Crisis

Both Washington and Tehran have insisted the nuclear deal won’t affect Iran’s political direction or the broader rivalry for power in the Middle East. They’re both wrong: The struggle over Iran’s place in the world community has just begun.
Iran’s Identity Crisis

BY KIM GHATTAS-OCTOBER 5, 2015
On the flight from Istanbul to Imam Khomeini International Airport, I was struck by how few of the women were veiled. There were barely a handful of scarves amidst the stylish young women in tight jeans and high heels or sneakers and the older women wearing an array of everyday city clothes.

 Meat and murder threaten Modi's inclusive agenda

Asgari Begum, mother of Akhalaq Saifi, who was killed by a mob, mourns his death inside her house at Bisara village in Uttar Pradesh, India, October 2, 2015.


ReutersBISARA, INDIA Mon Oct 5, 2015
The murder by a Hindu mob of a Muslim man rumoured to have slaughtered a cow has thrown a spotlight on the hardline, polarising agenda of some followers of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, undermining his promise of development for all.
On a tour of Silicon Valley last month where he was feted by U.S. tech gurus and Indian emigres, Modi won a pledge from Microsoft to provide low-cost Internet for 500,000 villages to back his vision of a globally networked "Digital India".
One such village is Bisara, 50 km from the capital New Delhi, where a crowd of assailants broke into Mohammed Akhlaq's home last Monday night, beat him to death and dragged his body out into the street.
The local member of parliament, Mahesh Sharma, is also Modi's culture minister and has hit the headlines of late with statements that show a different side to their ruling Hindu nationalist party. In one recent speech, Sharma vowed to cleanse public life "polluted" by Western influences.
Visiting Bisara this week to pay his respects to Akhlaq's family, Sharma said the killing could have been an "accident".
"How can the leader call my husband's murder an accident?" Akhlaq's widow Ikraman, who suffered facial injuries, told Reuters at the family home. "I don't think the minister knows the difference between an accident and murder."
Critics say Sharma's comment implicitly condoned Akhlaq's lynching and pandered to fringe Hindu militants who have recently become active in the district.
Eating beef is a taboo for many Hindus, who make up 80 percent of India's population of 1.25 billion people, but not for the country's 175 million Muslims.

BLOOD ON THE WALLS
Communal clashes had never erupted in Bisara, home to 400 landowning Hindu and 35 Muslim families, even when religious riots have broken out in the region. In 2013, 65 people died in sectarian strife around the northern town of Muzaffarnagar.
But an announcement by a Hindu priest over his temple loudspeakers that Akhlaq had butchered a cow and that his wife was cooking beef for dinner brought a sudden end to the village's tradition of tolerance, according to family members and villagers who heard the call.
Within minutes a mob stormed into Akhlaq's house, vandalised the kitchen in search of beef and beat the 56-year-old blacksmith to death with bricks and stones. His body was dragged out in front of his family.
Akhlaq's youngest son, who suffered severe head injuries, is fighting for his life in a hospital intensive care unit after undergoing two brain operations.
His widow says he was killed for a crime he did not commit.
"Even now I can't believe that my Hindu neighbours killed my husband. My neighbours were like my extended family," said Ikraman, who will spend a month in mourning in a room near the bloodstained murder scene.

PREMEDITATED ATTACK?
Local Muslims say Akhlaq's killing was a pre-meditated attack aimed at polarising the village on religious lines by militant Hindu groups loyal to Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which won power in the May 2014 general election.
Sharma and Modi are both members of an umbrella group, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), that is the BJP's ideological parent. The movement propagates an ideology of Hindutva, or Hindu-ness, which asserts that India is a Hindu nation.
Police have arrested seven Hindu youths over the murder and one paramilitary soldier accused of planning the attack.
Investigators are also searching for Hindu activists who spread rumours and online posts stating that Akhlaq had stored 6 kg of beef in his refrigerator.
The region holds village council elections next week and Bisara has, in the wake of the killing, become a magnet for campaigning politicians. One BJP lawmaker accused of instigating the Muzaffarnagar riots came to Bisara on Sunday and warned of a "befitting reply" if the suspects were prosecuted, according to news reports.
Many states, including Uttar Pradesh, where Bisara is situated, have banned cow slaughter for more than two decades.
Modi's party has, in states where it rules, clamped down further on eating beef - even though India is the second largest exporter and fifth biggest consumer in the world. In recent months, government leaders have advocated a national ban on cow slaughter.

BEEF VIGILANTES
Critics say tougher anti-beef laws discriminate against Muslims, Christians and lower-caste Hindus who rely on the cheap meat for protein.
The crackdown has, meanwhile, provided cover for the rise of Hindu vigilante groups.
Such groups attack cattle trucks, track religious conversions in villages and towns, and warn Hindu girls against falling in love with Muslim boys. Modi has expressed no disapproval towards them.
"Those who spread this poison enjoy his (Modi's) patronage," political analyst Pratap Bhanu Mehta wrote in the Indian Express. "This government has set a tone that is threatening, mean-spirited and inimical to freedom."
​Sharma's office said the minister was demanding an independent federal investigation into Akhlaq's murder. ​Calls on Sunday to three officials in Modi's office went unanswered.
At least 16 men from Bisara joined a new militant Hindu outfit called the Samadhan Sena (Solution Army) in August. The group is not formally tied to the RSS but two members told Reuters they would enforce its agenda in every village.
"Akhlaq should not have butchered a cow," said Ajay Singh, a member of the Samadhan Sena in Bisara. "He should not have forgotten that India belongs to Hindus first."

(Editing by Douglas Busvine and Alex Richardson)

William C Campbell, Satoshi Ōmura and Youyou Tu win Nobel prize in medicine


 Science editor-Monday 5 October 2015

Campbell and Ōmura win for their work on a therapy against roundworm, sharing the prize with Tu for her work on a therapy against malaria

Three scientists from Ireland, Japan and China have won the Nobel prize in medicine for discoveries that helped doctors fight malaria and infections caused by roundworm parasites.
Youyou Tu discovered one of the most effective treatments for malaria while working on a secret military project during China’s Cultural Revolution.
The 84-year-old pharmacologist was awarded half of the prestigious 8m Swedish kronor (£631,000) prize for her discovery of artemisinin, a drug that proved to be an improvement on chloroquine, which had become far less effective as the malaria parasites developed resistance.
Two other researchers, 80-year-old Satoshi Ōmura, an expert in soil microbes at Kitasato University, and William Campbell, an Irish-born parasitologist at Drew University in New Jersey, share the other half of the prize, for the discovery of avermectin, a treatment for roundworm parasites.
Together, the scientists have transformed the lives of millions of people in the developing world, where parasitic diseases that cause illness and death are most rife.

Air France shirtless bosses flee from angry protesters


BBCOct 5, 2015
Air France managers have fled a meeting about mass job cuts after angry staff waving banners and flags stormed the room.
Two managers had their shirts ripped off as they escaped from their co-workers, scaled a fence and fled under police protection.

4 Ways to Get Energized Without Caffeine

COFFEE NIGHT
The Huffington Post
By Amanda Woerner for Life by DailyBurn-10/04/2015
It's the middle of the workday and you've officially entered zombie mode. You're staring aimlessly at your computer scream, as your eyelids hang heavy and your brain feels sluggish. And all you can think is: Must. Get. Coffee.
2015-09-28-1443474263-2380630-caffeine22.jpgHold up, though. While your first instinct might be to caffeinate ASAP, you might get away with doing (and spending) less. In fact, that late afternoon cup might keep you up at night, leaving you in the same place this time tomorrow.
Whether you're sleep deprived, experiencing low blood sugar or simply need a break from your computer, there are many ways to rev your energy in less time than it will take you to get to the nearest Starbucks. "Sometimes it's just a matter of increasing blood flow to the brain and to the body," says Anne Milasincic Andrews, Ph.D., the Shirley M. Hatos Endowed Chair in Clinical Neuropharmacology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Rather than give in to your cold brew cravings, try these easy mental tricks next time you're nodding off in front of an Excel spreadsheet.
4 Ways to Stay Awake Without Caffeine
1. Watch A Viral Video
Pausing your day to watch a bunch of kids do the Whip/Nae Nae could actually make you feel more alert (plus...it's amazing). That's because tuning in to something entertaining helps you lose that zoned-out feeling you get when you've been staring at your computer screen for too long, Andrews says. "Changing your focus for a few moments, engaging in something pleasurable -- even if it's a mental activity -- can break that mesmerization," she says.
If you're addicted to Candy Crush, playing for a few minutes can help perk you up, too. "Switching your focus to any kind of other activity, be it visual or another stimulatory activity that you find pleasurable, will be enough to improve alertness," Andrews says.
2. Drink a Glass of Water
If you're working out nearly every day, it might not just by muscle fatigue that's slowing you down. "I think that dehydration probably is under-appreciated, particularly for people who are regular about exercise," Andrews says.
Being dehydrated can actually affect the way blood moves to your brain. "One of the main systems that feels the effects [of dehydration] is blood volume, and when blood volume is decreased you may be getting reduced blood flow and nutrients to the brain," Andrews says. Pausing to down a glass of water might be just the wake-up call you need.
3. Go Outdoors
Sure, taking a stroll around your office will probably help you shake the urge to snooze, but hitting the streets is even better. "Certainly getting outside and raising your heart rate a little more and exposing yourself to sunlight can even be more effective for some people in terms of improving alertness." Some research indicates exposure to light can improve mental awareness, Andrews adds.
And even if you only have a few minutes, that could be enough. "You probably only need brief physical activity to break that effect of sitting still and focusing," Andrews says.
4. Pop a Mint
If you're like most people, you know the afternoon can be a danger zone for snacking. "Your blood glucose will reach its lowest point about three hours after a meal, so you can imagine that time period is a collision of effects for many people," Andrews says.
Before you reach for a cupcake, consider your alternatives. "Something as simple as putting a mint in your mouth can be enough to counteract that zombie-like feeling you get late in the afternoon, once again, just having sensory stimulation," Andrews says.
But What If You Still Want Coffee?
Simply can't wake up? You're probably sleep deprived, Andrews says. "All of these things we've talked about are really to combat problems with psychological alertness, but none can overcome chronic sleep deprivation," she notes.
You might need to seriously commit to getting more shut-eye. "People are just staying up too late, they get up to the alarm clock every day and by Friday they are down as many as 10 hours of sleep," Andrews says. "And that's really going to effect your performance, athletically, physically and mentally."

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Continued threats of landgrab in Kilinochchi


03 October 2015
The Sri Lankan army's landgrab efforts in a Kilinochchi village have been frustrated by fierce protest by landowners and locals.

Over 20 acres of privately owned land in Paramankirai have reportedly been spared from appropriation, although neighbouring villages in the district have now come under threat from landgrabs.

Concerned property owners and locals, as well as some local politicians, gathered after surveyors were seen measuring and inspecting lands. Government officials reportedly left the sites in anticipation of disputes breaking out.

Attempts by the military to also seize the site of the old Pooneryn hospital are still ongoing.

Parliamentary Raviraj Murderer In Custody

NR119
Sri Lanka Brief04/10/2015 
The murderer of Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) parliamentarian Nadaraja Raviraj has been taken into custody along with another individual allegedly connected with the 2006 assassination of the Tamil politician.
The Sunday Leader learns that the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) has taken into custody the individual who had allegedly assassinated Raviraj as well as the individual who had transported the alleged assassin following the murder.
The two individuals in custody is a Navy Petty Officer names Senevi and a former police constable named Manamperi. According to the investigation, Senevi has been identified as the individual who had carried out the assassination.
Sources from the CID said that the weapon that was used to assassinate Raviraj was initially issued to a former LTTE leader from the East, Pillayan by Colonel Shammi Karunaratne, who is currently detained by the CID over the case in to the disappearance of journalist Prageeth Eknaligoda.
The Sunday Leader learns that the Raviraj murder investigation has revealed that the weapon used for the assassination was handed over to an individual named Charan from Pillayan, who is believed to have handed over the weapon to Senevi.
However, Charan is believed to be overseas and the CID is has sought Interpol assistance to locate and arrest him.
According to CID sources, Senevi had been transported to the scene of the murder on November 10, 2006 in a three wheeler and had been taken to safe house after the assassination by Manamperi in a motorbike.
The CID it is learnt is to arrest several other suspects involved in the murder in the next few weeks.
SL
Ekneligoda case: CID granted leave to investigate Army camp 

2015-10-04
Homagama Magistrate R.B.Nelumdeniya granted leave to the CID to photograph the Girithale Army Intelligence Corps Camp, where journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda had been allegedly detained, and to examine the books and documents maintained by the camp authorities. 

The magistrate also ordered the Army Commander to provide all necessary facilities to the CID officers and also to detail Military Police officers to provide security for them. 

The CID informed Court that investigations had been initiated following a complaint by Ekneligoda's wife Sandya Ekneligoda, and that consequent upon the investigations, two lieutenant colonels and several intelligence officers had been detained and were being interrogated. 

CID submitted to Court a further report on the progress of the investigations.

Attorney Dilipa Pieris, who appeared on behalf of the complainant said that it has been revealed that kidnapped journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda had been detained in the Girithale Intelligence Corps Camp, and sought the Court's permission to examine the relevant sections of the camp and also to photograph them.

Attorney Peiris further said the intelligence officers had tape recorded a discussion in which Ekneligoda had taken part on 27 August, 2009 on a land in Sigiriya belonging to Ekneligoda; and that the recording had been sent the Director of Intelligence on the following day. He sought Court's permission to produce the said recording plus the documents sent to the Director of Intelligence and also the mobile phone numbers of the intelligence officers concerned. 

The other documents needed for the investigations are the movement register maintained at the main gate to record the arrival and departure of officers who leave the camp premises, the book in which permission to go more than 20 kilometres from the camp is recorded. The attorney sought a court order to obtain these records as they were needed for their investigations. 

After considering the submissions of the CID, the magistrate granted permission for ASP Shani Abeysekere and other officers of the CID to visit the Girithale Intelligence Corps Camp and conduct the necessary investigations. 

A Proposal For The 2016 Budget: An Open Letter To The PM

By Chandra Jayaratne –October 4, 2015
Chandra JayaratneColombo Telegraph
Chandra Jayaratne
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
Prime Minister and Minister of Policy Planning and Economic Affairs,
Prime Minister’s Office,
58, Sir Ernest De Silva Mawatha,
Colombo 7.
Dear Mr. Prime Minister,
A Proposal for the 2016 Budget to Address Key Issues of Regional Disparities in Household Incomes, and Achieve Sustainable Development, Reconciliation and Create New Livelihood Opportunities
This proposal supports the vision of the President as articulated in his recent address at the United Nations General Assembly, where he stated that “the edifice of sustainable development should be built upon the foundation of self-discipline and equity. If this could be practiced at a personal, community, national and global level, it would mark a giant leap forward for humankind” and proposed that “national leaders, take cognizance of this self-discipline and equity-based approach when drawing relevant Action Plans for the future”.
This proposal recognizes the policy commitment of the new government
  • To create one million new job opportunities;
  • To take steps to minimize the income disparity, thereby further broaden the middle class;
  • To ensure that development is spread equally to all parts of the country;
  • Especially, to ensure the fruits of development reach the conflict-affected areas in the North and East, so-called border areas of those provinces that suffered due to the conflict and under developed areas in other parts of the country, it being the responsibility of the government to ensure all areas of the country are equally developed;
  • To establish twenty five economic zones in selected districts;
  • In regard to the challenges in preparing this country for that new era to be dawned in order to fulfill the ambitions of that new generation with future in mind, whilst protecting the shared values of our culture which bind the Sri Lankan nation.
                           Read More

Missing Persons Comm. Commences Investigations in North

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( Missing persons commission in sittings)
Sri Lanka Brief04/10/2015
The Special Investigative Team appointed by the Presidential Commission to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons has commenced investigations in the North into cases identified by the Commission during the conducting of Public Sittings, states Commission Chairman Maxwell Paranagama in a release.
The release states: “The Investigative Team is headed by a Senior Retired High Court Judge and consists of five senior ex-Police Officers specialized in carrying out investigations.
A lady investigative Officer has also been included in the iv investigative team, chosen from the areas in which investigations are to be conducted.
“Subsequent to carrying out in depth investigations into cases identified by the Commission, a report would be submitted by the head of the investigative Team to the Chairman head of the investigative Team to the Chairman of the Commission who will, based upon the Report, take steps to recommend to H. E. the President to refer the matters which needs legal action to the Attorney General to initiate legal action against any person/persons/ organizations who are found to be responsible for the violation of human rights of persons during the conflict period.
“The Investigative Team has visited the Magazine Prison, Colombo, and Detention Centrers in order to collect Information regarding missing persons. The Commission has provided details of persons who were admitted to various hospitals to the investigative Team in order to facilitate their work.
“The Commission assures the families of missing persons who have given evidence before the Commission during Public Sitting,s and persons who have submitted their complaints to the Commission, of its commitment to ensure that justice is meted out to them and address their grievances in terms of the powers vested to the Commission under the Special Presidential Commissions of Inquiry Act. Representatives from all communities form the Investigative Team.
The Commission has also taken steps to individually inform the families of missing persons in writing the outcome of the investigations into the disappearance of their loved ones”.

Tamils should not get fear about the Geneva investigations – Opposition leader Sambanthan

Tamils should not get fear about the Geneva investigations – Opposition leader Sambanthan
Lankanewsweb.netOct 04, 2015
Opposition leader R. Sambanthan said that the Tamil people should not have fear or create any doubts of the investigations conducted by the UNHRC regarding the alleged Human Rights violation committed during the war. The Tamil national Alliance which raised a stern voice locally and internationally for the war crimes urging an international inquiry has now agreed for a domestic inquiry.

Opposition leader Sambanthan said that he and the Tamil politicians are carefully observing the following investigations therefore the Tamil people should not get agitated and create unnecessary troubles.
The opposition leader raised this point when the latter addressed few journalists in Jaffna.
He has said although a domestic investigation was conducted it would be exercised by international mediation therefore trust can be placed. He said the Tamil people should have any doubts regarding this.

PM assures security forces chiefs over Geneva resolution



  • Champika, Ruwan pledge that Army will be protected
  • Ranil concerned about attitude of pro-Rajapaksa official; issues to be sorted out on his return from Japan
  • President says international community now supports Lanka, calls all-party conference to discuss reconciliation issues
  • UN office in Colombo hits back at Wigneswaran; tells him to come through the central government
Placed on the table as they took their seats at the conference room of ‘Temple Trees’ was the English text of the US backed resolution on Sri Lanka together with a translated Sinhala text.  Army officers of two-star rank or Majors General and above were there. So were the equivalent counterparts, Rear Admirals of the Sri Lanka Navy and Air Vice Marshals of the Sri Lanka Air Force. From the Police there were those above the rank of Deputy Inspectors General.

Does the PM really mean business?

Firm action can smash MR-rabble and WUDU proto-fascists


article_image
Does he intend to rally the nation against chauvinist rabble?

by Kumar David- 

The crucial clause in the UNHRC September 2015 Resolution on Sri Lanka reads as follows:

"Welcomes the government’s recognition that accountability is essential to uphold the rule of law and build confidence in the people of all communities of Sri Lanka in the justice system, takes note with appreciation of the Government of Sri Lanka’s proposal to establish a Judicial Mechanism with a Special Counsel to investigate allegations of violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law, as applicable; and affirms that a credible justice process should include independent judicial and prosecutorial institutions led by individuals known for integrity and impartiality; and further affirms in this regard the importance of participation in a Sri Lankan judicial mechanism, including the Special Counsel’s office, of Commonwealth and other foreign judges, defence lawyers, and authorized prosecutors and investigators".

AN Analysis of UNHRC Resolution on Sri Lanka; Reasons for the Changes

MS-UNHRC-1-600x400
( Sri Lanka FM made a huge impact on HRC through his address to the council in Sep. 2015)
Sri Lanka Brief04/10/2015  
HRC 30th Session – Draft Resolution.
Item 2: Promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lank.a
The Human Rights Council,
Preambular Paragraphs.A
Comment: Preambular paragraphs in a resolution are drafted to reflect the background and spirit of the resolution. They are not the binding part of the resolution as the operative paragraphs are, but explain the thinking and logic behind the resolution. They are also useful tools in interpreting the text of the operative paragraphs. Often, in the event an operative paragraph is unclear or could be interpreted in more than one way, the preambular paragraphs could be useful in determining what the text of the resolution actually means.