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

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Ship carrying weapons seized off Galle

2015-10-07
Navy Commander Ravindra Wijegunaratne said Today the Navy had launched an investigation into the Sri Lankan-flagged ship carrying a stock of 810 weapons taken into custody after being spotted in the sea some 12 nautical miles off Galle on Tuesday.

“The ship is being anchored at the Galle Harbour until we finish our investigations. Initially we are focusing on whether the ship had maintained proper records and whether it had a license for the weapons found on board,” the Navy Commander said.

He said some of the records submitted by the ship’s crew were contradictory and that a Ukrainian had been in charge of the ship at the time it was accosted though the ship’s records indicated that the Captain was a Sri Lankan.

“According to maritime law, they are bound to provide us information about the ship,” the Navy Commander said.

Meanwhile, Ports and Shipping Minister Arjuna Ranatunga confirmed that a ship was taken into custody with a stock of weapons on board and that the investigations were being handled by the Navy. (Lahiru Pothmulla) - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/90419/p-carrying-weapons-seized-off-galle#sthash.GRgNjI4K.dpuf

UK-based Business Tycoon Embroiled in SL’s Hunt for Stolen Assets

Sri Lanka Brief
08/10/2015
A UK based tycoon has been linked to investigations being conducted over billions of dollars allegedly stolen from Sri Lanka by associates of the previous regime, BuzzFeed News reported.
Subaskaran Allirajah
Subaskaran Allirajah
An investigation conducted by BuzzFeed News said that the offshore empire of the Lycamobile tycoon Subaskaran Allirajah is facing investigation as part of a sprawling international probe into allegations that billions of dollars were stolen from Sri Lanka by associates of the former government was effectively forced to pump around $10 million into a “completely flawed” venture owned jointly by a person linked to a powerful political family and a key offshore company in the Lycamobile business network.
Senior government and police officials in Colombo, Sri Lanka, told BuzzFeed News that the newly inaugurated financial crimes division of the Sri Lankan police is launching a probe into the venture, Sky Network, which they suspect was a “shell company” that the relative of the famous political family used to enrich himself through a “shady transaction”.
Allirajah has strongly denied allegations about his association with the previous regime of Sri Lanka. He insisted last year that he had no business in Sri Lanka and had never met the former President or dealt with his relatives. But now BuzzFeed News has obtained conclusive evidence – from corporate documents, insiders, and government officials – that his empire did business with some members of the powerful political family. Company filings in Colombo show that Sky Network was 95% owned by a key arm of Lycamobile’s corporate web and the former president’s nephew, who sat on the board alongside the telecoms giant’s then chief executive.
The revelations will pile further pressure on David Cameron to sever his ties with Allirajah, whose company has donated more than £1.3 million to the Tories. The party has previously brushed off explicit warnings about the donor’s links to Sri Lanka’s political family and continued accepting gifts running to more than £500,000 in this year alone.
The prime minister is already facing calls to hand back the money after BuzzFeed News yesterday revealed secret footage of three Lyca bagmen depositing rucksacks stuffed with hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash at Post Offices all over London. The company said it was a cash-rich business and that the deposits were just above-board “day to day banking” but experts including the former director of public prosecutions Lord MacDonald said they were “deeply suspicious” and called for an urgent investigation.
There is no evidence to suggest that the corruption claims in Colombo are connected to the company’s unusual cash deposits in London, but they raise further serious questions about the way the Lyca group conducts its business. The firm, which declared £1.1 billion in global turnover last year and is rapidly expanding in the United States, has avoided UK corporation tax for years by moving revenues out of the country through a complex offshore network. Some of that money ends up in Hastings Trading e Serviços Lda – the Madeira company that acquired 95% of Sky Network, with the president’s nephew retaining the other 5%.
BuzzFeed News interviewed two former executives at Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT) who said the majority state-owned firm was all but forced to pour millions of dollars into Sky Network and got nothing in return. A senior detective in the Sri Lankan police force said it had “started the legal process of investigation” into the deal, and the country’s deputy foreign minister confirmed that the new probe was part of the wider international hunt for assets allegedly stolen during Rajapaksa’s decade of Presidency.
Searching for Sri Lanka’s embezzled billions is a daunting task for the new regime, which came to power when former President Rajapaksa was finally ousted by voters in January this year, especially because it presides over a country still emerging from decades of civil war. Cabinet Spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told BuzzFeed News that investigators believe the political family under question had gone to extraordinary lengths to hide stolen assets from the state.
In total, the new government estimates that the bigwigs and associates of the previous regime have hidden at least $10 billion through a web of offshore accounts, various associates, and business ventures around the world. They believe $5.31 billion was taken out of Sri Lanka in 2013 alone. And they are determined to find the money and bring it home. (Buzzfeed News)

Thirteen Prison Officers Interdicted For Taking Bribes


Colombo TelegraphOctober 8, 2015
Thirteen Prison Officers at the Colombo’s main jail have been interdicted after authorities found that they have been receiving bribes from drug lord Samantha Kumara alias Wele Suda.
 Samantha Kumara
Samantha Kumara
According to Police sources, the number of prison officers who have received bribes from the notorious drug kingpin is said to be much higher.
Wele Suda is said to have coordinated his criminal activities and lived like a prince in the magazine prison by bribing officers.
Wele Suda was arrested in Pakistan and brought to Sri Lanka on January 14 by the CID in connection with a large number of cases connected to the drug dealings.
The suspect has amassed a massive wealth from drug trafficking and fled the country with his wife last year when police moved on him.
Wele Suda has revealed the names of over 30 persons allegedly involved in the drug racket in the country including a Colombo District parliamentarian and a former Inspector General of Police.
Wele Suda is said to have used a mobile cash payment system to bribe officers.

Charitha Ratwatte Promoting Nepotism

Charitha Ratwatte Promoting Nepotism
Lankanewsweb.net- Oct 07, 2015
Sri Lankan Airlines has appointed Charitha Ratwatte’s Brother as the New CEO of the Airline.
Captain Suren Ratwatte who was living in Dubai has been appointed as the new Chief Executive Officer of Sri Lankan Airlines.Suren Ratwatte who is currently employed by Emirates Airline is due to commence operations in his new role from October 2015.

UNP sources say that the UNP lost the 2004 general elections because of people like Charitha Ratwatte, have re-emerged back in the scene and taken control . He is currently an Advisor to the Prime Minister.
According to some UNP insiders Charita Ratwattw was not seen or heard during the dark days of the UNP and had even gone on record saying the current Prime Minister had lost his currency, is now back in government from retirement and taken control of doling subjects out to ministers and the appointment of people, insiders say he has made sure his friends and cronies were put to key positions in the government.
We understand the President was not aware the new CEO of Sri Lankan was Charitha Ratwatte's Brother.
The issue is to be raised in Parliament during the budget. UPFA MPs are keen to find out the people who sat in the selection panel and to table a list of candidates who applied for the post. 
Charitha Ratwatte's school mate is the current Chairman of Sri Lankan Airlines.
A good governance activist who spoke to us say this government is no better and while PM Wickramasingha has kept his family out of the administration and kept to his pledge, his friends have gone to other extremes by extending their hand of friendship to their school buddies and cronies.
The list which is being collected will be published soon in the interest of good governance.
Capt. Suren Ratwatte, brother of Charitha Ratwatte, has been appointed CEO of SriLankan Airlines in an instance of nepotism.
Suren had lived in Dubai, and until he assumed duties at SriLankan in October 2015, he had been employed at Emirates Airlines.
The UNP lost power in 2004 due to the faults of persons like Charitha. But, he has now returned, and is today an adviser to prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Sources in the UNP say Charitha was not there during the dark periods of the party. He had said that Wickremesinghe was a liquidating character. That person is today having a say in controlling ministers and appointing officials. His motive is to get his friends and associates appointed to top positions in the government.
We believe that the president was unaware of the appointment of Charitha’s brother as the SriLankan CEO. This is a matter that should be raised at the budget debate. The UPFA has been able to get its nominees included into lists by wining over members of the committee tasked with appointing persons to key positions.
The chairman of SriLankan is a schoolmate of Charitha.
A ‘Yaha Paalana’ activist told us that he has no confidence in this government. Although PM Wickremesinghe has distanced his family members from state administration, he has appointed his cronies to positions. Those persons are getting their schoolmates and followers appointed to other positions.
To conclude, what should be stressed here is that the predecessor to SriLankan Airlines, Air Lanka had a failed first chairman in Capt. Rakhitha Wickremanayake. At the time, president J.R. Jayewardene sought Singaporean prime minister Lew Kuan Yew’s opinion about a person for that position, and was told never to appoint a captain to the position. He has said that in his biography too. But, JR did not listen to him and appointed Rakhitha, a friend of his son, to the position. But, fortunately for him, Singapore Airline’s financial controller Kulasekaram was appointed the general manager. Singaporean Kulasekaram, who had served Air Lanka from 1978 to 1982, made the airline earn profits from within the first four years. The credit went to chairman Rakhitha. But, after Kulasekaram completed his service contract and left Air Lanka in 1982, the airline collapsed, showing Rakhitha’s administrative weaknesses. Then, he was ordered by JR to resign.
Senior employees, who know the airline’s history, say that after 35 years, history is repeating itself.
Good governance Activist

Palestinian free speech champion forcibly disappeared in Syria

Bassel Khartabil (Joi Ito/Flickr)
More than 30 prominent international human rights and free speech groups are calling on the Syrian government to disclose the whereabouts of Bassel Khartabil, a software developer of Palestinian origin who has been detained since 2012.
The free speech advocate had been held in a central prison but his family believes that he may have been transferred to one of the security forces’ “torture-rife” facilities.
“Khartabil managed to inform his family on 3 October that security officers had ordered him to pack but did not reveal his destination,” the groups stated on Wednesday.
Khartabil was held incommunicado for eight months after his March 2012 arrest, on the first anniversary of the uprising in Syria, and was subjected to weeks of torture.
The groups protesting Khartabil’s forced disappearance include Amnesty InternationalHuman Rights Watch, International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
“International law defines a disappearance as an action by state authorities to deprive a person of their liberty and then refuse to provide information regarding the person’s fate or whereabouts,” the organizations said.
They added that before Khartabil’s arrest, “he used his technical expertise to help advance freedom of speech and access to information via the Internet. Among other projects, he founded Creative Commons Syria, a nonprofit organization that enables people to share artistic and other work using free legal tools.”
Khartabil has received international recognition for his work, including the 2013 Index on Censorship Digital Freedom Award. He was named one of Foreign Policy’s Top 100 Global Thinkers in 2012.
Khartabil faces Military Field Court proceedings “for his peaceful activities in support of freedom of expression,” the groups stated.
“Military Field Courts in Syria are exceptional courts that have secret closed-door proceedings and do not allow for the right to defense. According to accounts of released detainees who appeared before them, the proceedings of these courts were perfunctory, lasting minutes, and in absolute disregard of international standards of minimum fairness,” the groups added.
Hundreds of supporters have signed an online petition calling for Khartabil’s release.

U.S. to sail warships near disputed South China Sea islands - reports

An aerial photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military plane shows the alleged on-going land reclamation by China on mischief reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, west of Palawan, Philippines, May 11, 2015. REUTERS/Ritchie B. Tongo/Pool/FilesAn aerial photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military plane shows the alleged on-going land reclamation by China on mischief reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, west of Palawan, Philippines, May 11, 2015.
ReutersThu Oct 8, 2015
REUTERS - The United States is expected to sail warships close to China’s artificial islands in the South China Sea within the next two weeks to signal it does not recognize Chinese territorial claims over the area, media reports said.
The ships will sail within the 12-nautical-mile zones that China claims as territory around some of the islands it has constructed in the Spratly chain, the Financial Times and the Navy Times reported.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular news briefing on Thursday that China was paying attention to such reports, and that it and the United States have maintained “extremely thorough communication” on the South China Sea issue.
“I believe the U.S. side is extremely clear about China’s relevant principled stance," she said. "We hope the U.S. side can objectively and fairly view the current situation in the South China Sea, and with China, genuinely play a constructive role in safeguarding peace and stability in the South China Sea.”
The White House declined to comment on potential classified naval operations. The U.S. State Department and Pentagon did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the report.
U.S. President Barack Obama said he told Chinese President Xi Jinping he had "significant concerns" about the islands when Xi made his first state visit to Washington late in September.
    Xi said the islands were not being militarized, but Washington analysts and U.S. officials say the militarization already has begun, and the only question is how much military hardware China will install.
    Admiral Harry Harris, commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, has said the development of the islands, including building a runway, was of "great concern" and a threat to the region.
China claims most of the South China Sea, where the Spratly islands are located and $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have overlapping claims.
(Reporting by Adam Rose in Beijing, Roberta Rampton and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Writing by Lisa Von Ahn; Editing by Bernadette Baum)

NATO warns of ‘troubling’ Russian escalation in Syria



This video released Wednesday by Russia's defense ministry shows Russian warships in the Caspian Sea launching cruise missiles on targets in Syria. (Russian Defense Ministry/YouTube)

By Erin Cunningham and Craig Whitlock-October 8

BEIRUT — NATO’s secretary general warned Thursday of a “troubling escalation” in Russian military activities in Syria, saying the alliance stands firmly behind member Turkey even as Moscow broadens its air and sea attacks.
“NATO is able and ready to defend all allies, including Turkey, against any threat,” Jens Stoltenberg said from the alliance’s headquarters in Brussels as defense ministers gathered for a meeting.

Why Putin Is So Committed to Keeping Assad in Power

Putin's growing military support for the beleaguered Syrian leader is meant to send a clear message to other anxious despots about Russian loyalty to its friends.
Why Putin Is So Committed to Keeping Assad in Power

BY COLUM LYNCH-OCTOBER 7, 2015
For more than three years, Russia’s top diplomats have time and again assured American, Arab, and European policymakers that they are not wedded to President Bashar al-Assad.
But with Russian airplanes escalating an air campaign against the groups trying to oust the beleaguered Syrian leader, Russian President Vladimir Putin is showing just how far he’ll go to keep Assad — Moscow’s key surviving Arab ally — in power.
Saving Assad from meeting the same fate as other regional despots like Libya’s Muammar al-Qaddafi and Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak is emerging as a key facet of Russia’s Middle East strategy. By propping up one of the region’s most vilified leaders, Moscow is sending a powerful message about its willingness to act aggressively in a region where many of America’s closest allies are feeling insecure — and questioning Washington’s commitment to have their backs in the future.
“The region is falling apart, and states are collapsing, and the Russians are willing to intervene to protect their interests and assert their power, and the United States is not,” said Andrew Tabler, an expert on Arab politics at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
“[Middle Eastern countries] want assertiveness and consistency, and they have not found that from the Obama administration,” Tabler added. “Even if you don’t back what the Russians are doing in Syria, people admire them because they are willing to put their money where their mouth is — as well as troops.”
There has long been little doubt that Syria, a longstanding military ally, is a critical piece in Russia’s security strategy in the Middle East.
The Syrian coastal city of Tartus hosts Russia’s only major naval port on the eastern Mediterranean. Some 800 to more than 2,000 Russian jihadis havetraveled to Syria to help fight in the country, as well as in Iraq, according to estimates from the Russian Foreign Ministry and independent experts. Since the Syrian conflict began in early 2011, Russia has provided invaluable diplomatic support to the Assad regime, casting vetoes multiple times to prevent the adoption of U.N. resolutions aimed at nudging him from power.
Last month, Moscow intervened militarily at Assad’s invitation, launching airstrikes against what it said were targets linked to the Islamic State, but in actuality hammering the Syrian opposition forces seeking to bring down the regime. It is now considering the deployment of irregular Russian troops, or “volunteers,” to carry out ground operations. On Wednesday, Syrian forces began a ground offensive as Russian warplanes blasted targets throughout western Syria, according to the Washington Post.
Russia maintains that it is fighting a war against extremists, including the Islamic State and al Qaeda. It has denounced the United States and its European and Arab allies for seeking the removal of Assad, saying their blasé tendency to topple regimes that fall out of favor is condemning the Middle East and North Africa to a future consumed by chaos.
“Saddam Hussein, hanged. Is Iraq a better place, a safer place?” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov rhetorically asked reporters at U.N. headquarters last month. “Qaddafi murdered — you know in front of viewers. Is Libya a better place? Now we are demonizing Assad. Can we try to draw lessons?”
U.S. policymakers believe that Putin is seeking to shore up his political popularity at home and bolster Russia’s regional influence, as well as embarrass Obama, who has pursued a cautious policy aimed at limiting U.S. military involvement in the Middle East. At a minimum, the United States believes Russia’s intervention is aimed at strengthening Assad’s hands in the event that a future political settlement is required to end the four-and-a half-year civil war that has left nearly 250,000 dead and triggered the worst refugee crisis since World War II. Most of the casualties have been blamed on Assad, whose forces regularly use lethal barrel bombs that are feared for their destructive force — and imprecise nature.
U.S. and Western officials seem to be placing their bets on Russia failing in its push to keep Assad in power and on Putin ultimately realizing that the only Syria exit strategy requires that Russia push the strongman out of office in exchange for playing a leading role in picking his successor.
Obama has mocked Putin’s military strategy as an act of desperation that will plunge Russia into a Middle East quagmire. Earlier this month, Obama reiterated the hope that Moscow will realize the folly of propping up a despised leader with no support at home “at the risk of alienating the entire Sunni world.”
“Mr. Putin had to go into Syria not out of strength but out of weakness, because his client, Mr. Assad, was crumbling,” Obama said at an Oct. 2 White House press conference. “We reject Russia’s theory that everybody opposed to Assad is a terrorist. We think that is self-defeating. It will get them into a quagmire. It will be used as a further recruitment tool for foreign fighters.”
Russia, though, seems committed to keeping Assad in power for as long as possible.
As far back as June 2012, Russia’s U.N. envoy, Vitaly Churkin, assured the United States and other key U.N. Security Council members that Moscow was not “wedded” to Assad. But he made clear that any decision regarding Assad’s fate would have to be determined by his own government and that Moscow would not force the Syrian leader’s hand or seek to name his successor.
That same month in New York, I sat down with Churkin at the Russian mission to the U.N. on East 67th Street over tea and cookies and asked him explain his country’s seemingly unshakeable commitment to the Syrian leader.
At the time, the Syria conflict was in its second year, and only 54,000 people were believed to have been killed. Russia was blocking a push for an Arab League plan for political transition that would have paved the way for Assad’s departure from power.
What was motivating Russia’s support for Assad’s government, I asked. Was it fear that the ouster of Assad would fuel terrorism that could reach back to Russia? Or was it concern that the ouster would undercut Russia’s interests in its naval base at Tartus?
Churkin said he would leave it to policymakers back home to calculate Russia’s national interests.
From a personal standpoint, he said, he considered it a matter of national honor to stand up for Russia’s friends. “We are stronger on our allegiances than others, I think, and this is being recognized internationally,” he said. “Being a Russian diplomat, for us, if you have good relations with a country, a government, for years, for decades, then it’s not so easy to ditch those politicians and those governments because of political expediency.”
Churkin’s remarks appeared aimed at the United States, which had overthrown Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and stood aside as Mubarak was pushed from power and ultimately replaced by Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. The United States had made peace with Qaddafi in 2006, only to cut him loose after leading what it described as a limited military intervention designed to prevent a mass slaughter in the city of Benghazi. Russia abstained on the U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing the intervention in Libya and later cited Qaddafi’s fall as further evidence that the West cynically invokes human rights to mask its efforts to remove regimes that have fallen from favor.
Churkin suggested that other leaders in the region would realize that when push comes to shove Russia could be trusted more than the United States to back its friends.
Three years later, the region’s newest leaders appear to have taken note.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, a former general who toppled Morsi in a 2013 coup, meanwhile, has paid four visits to Moscow since taking power.
Putin, meanwhile, was the first foreign leader of a major power to visit Cairo after Sisi’s coup.
The Russian leader received a “hero’s welcome,” with an Egyptian military band playing the Russian national anthem and school children chanting, “Putin, Putin, Sisi, Sisi,” according to an account in the Financial Times.
“I am filled with joy that President Vladimir Putin visits Cairo at this time to confirm Russia’s solidarity with Egypt in its war against terrorism,” Sisi told Putin, adding that the two countries would discuss stepped-up military cooperation.
But Gulf States like Saudi Arabia, which remains bitterly opposed to Russian support for Assad, have nevertheless been building bridges with Putin. In June, Saudi Arabia’s deputy crown prince and defense minister, Mohammed bin Salman, visited Putin in St. Petersburg, where he signed a number of agreements to share nuclear technology and step up cooperation in the oil and space exploration fields.
Even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has traditionally enjoyed cool relations with Putin, visited Moscow last month to lobby the Russian leader to do his best to ensure that advanced weapons in Syria won’t be used to help arm Hezbollah, with whom Israel fought a devastating war in 2006.
The “depth” of Egypt’s and other Arab governments’ relations with Russia may be “very shallow,” said Michael Hanna, an expert on Egypt at the Century Foundation. In times of crisis in relations with the United States, Arab governments “will try to curry favor with Moscow. And in some ways, it’s easy. Moscow asks no questions about human rights and democracy and elections — they just don’t care.”
But Hanna added: “I think there is a bizarre kind of grudging respect in parts of the Arab world for what they see as Russian steadfastness and decisiveness in contrast to what they perceive as the dithering of the United States.”
Photo credit: Sergei Chirikov/AFP/Getty Image

George Martorano, the Longest-Serving First-Time Non-Violent Offender in US Fed Prisons is FREE

My being truly truly thanks all of those upon moving earth, that care so much about me.
George Martorano and his attorney Theodore Simon on the day of his release (10/5/15) after 32 years in custody after release from Coleman Federal
George Martoranohttp://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg

Oct-07-2015
(SALEM, Ore.) - FREE AT LAST! George Martorano, the longest-serving first-time non-violent offender in the Federal Bureau of Prisons, HAS BEEN RELEASED. After 32 years, nearly an entire “life without parole” for marijuana trafficking.... he is HOME.
In 1982, George Martorano was caught with a truck of marijuana. In 1984, on the advice of his attorney Robert Simone, Martorano pled guilty to 19 counts of drug possession and distribution.

The prosecution had recommended a sentence of from 40 to 54 months, but Martorano was subsequently advised by both the prosecution and the judge, John Berne Hannum, that this plea could result in a sentence of LIFE without the possibility of parole.

On September 20, 1984, Martorano was indeed sentenced to LIFE in prison without the possibility of parole, the longest prison term ever imposed on a first-time non-violent offender in American history.

So why was such a harsh sentence handed to George Martorano?

According to the freegeorge.us, the common belief is that in the prosecution’s effort to send a message to George’s father, Raymond “Long John” Martorano, an alleged mafia figure. He was given the maximum sentence allowed by law; life with no parole.

Because he remained silent, they “locked him up and threw away the key,” put him in solitary confinement for four and one half years, and kept him in America’s most notorious prison: Marion, which is completely underground. Marion replaced Alcatraz when the U.S. Government closed it in 1962.
Then George began to write. He wrote and published a book about growing up in the old Italian-American neighborhood in Philadelphia, “South Philly", and continued to write.

He now has 31 works depicting life in prison as well as life on the outside. He teaches reading and writing, yoga, and even counsels suicidal inmates.

According to the WeBelieve Group, George could be “the poster boy” for the fight against Mandatory Minimum sentencing.

Martorano has distinguished himself during his decades. In addition to being a "model" prisoner, Martorano:
  • prevented the hijacking of an aircraft by prisoners while in transit from Philadelphia to Oklahoma, OK following the loss of his 33rd appeal. This incident has been documented by the FBI and FBOP and was called "extraordinary" by D.C. DeCamillus, SIS lieutenant.
  • is considered one of the most prolific writers in the Federal Prison System, having authored more than 31 books. He has also written numerous short stories, screenplays and poems.
  • He was recently asked by The Bureau of Prisons to teach a re-entry class to inmates that are ready to be released and the main subject of this class is “How to successfully transition from prison life to street life”, he authored a booklet for this class titled, The Shot Caller. The Shot Caller is a “How To Guide” and list many businesses that can be started with $1000.00 dollars. This publication has been approved by the Federal Bureau of Prisons (FBOP) for use in prisoner re-entry programs.
  • has developed a creative writing course - "The Write to Life" - which has assisted numerous inmates in earning GEDs and developing creative writing skills.
  • is a certified suicide watch counselor. He often uses himself as an example in this role, telling fellow inmates: "If I have hope facing what I am facing every day so can you."
  • was one of the first – if not the first – inmate in the FBOP system to exercise his First Amendment rights digitally, by publishing his work on his blog (www.freegeorge.us) and his website(www.webelievegroup.com)
  • recently developed a website www.childrenontheoutsidewithparentsontheinside.com, to help children of inmates cope with their parent's incarceration.
Martorano had a spotless prison record without an incident of violence in all of his twenty-plus years in America’s toughest jails.
He appealed the sentence tirelessly (with over 35 appeals). Finally....it is OVER.
My being truly truly thanks all of those upon moving earth, that care so much about me.
And yes, I am free... The morning roars at me with sunrise silence.
And my mind gallops.
Kisses and arms that wrap from loved ones, I feel fast to my heart.
And my mind gallops.
All forms of an uncaged life dance, perform at every jump of eye.
And my mind gallops.
What of me! Today tis to humble myself to all. For imprisoned 32 years I create and understanding of what mankind can be, shall try to be, through a somewhat leader as I.
And my mind gallops.
I subscribe myself,
George Martorano
10/5/15

Svetlana Alexievich wins 2015 Nobel prize in literature

Swedish Academy praises Belarusian writer’s work as a ‘monument to suffering in our time’
    Sara Danius, the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, calls Alexeivich an “extraordinary” writer.

    and agencies-Thursday 8 October 2015
    The Swedish Academy, announcing her win, praised Alexievich’s “polyphonic writings”, describing them as a “monument to suffering and courage in our time”.

How a little-known scientist landed China’s elusive Nobel prize

This 1950s photo shows Tu Youyou, right, a pharmacologist with the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, working with Prof. Lou Zhicen to study traditional Chinese medicine. Pic: AP.This 1950s photo shows Tu Youyou, right, a pharmacologist with the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, working with Prof. Lou Zhicen to study traditional Chinese medicine. Pic: AP.
By  Oct 08, 2015
Daniel MaxwellTHE 2015 Nobel Prize for medicine was awarded to Dr Tu Youyou this week for her discovery of artemisinin, the most effective treatment available for malaria today. Dr Tu shares this year’s award with Dr William Campbell, from Ireland, and Dr Satoshi Omura, from Japan, who were also awarded for their work against parasitic diseases. Dr Tu, who is the first Chinese national to receive a Nobel Prize for science, made the breakthrough in the 1970s, at the height of China’s Cultural Revolution, but her role in the fight against malaria remained little known until just a few years ago.
In May 1967, Chairman Mao initiated a secret drug discovery project, known as Project 523, to search for a malaria cure. The project was launched in response to a request from the North Vietnamese government whose soldiers, engaged in jungle warfare, were being killed by malaria in greater numbers than by American soldiers.
During the first few years Project 523 focused on developing a modern synthetic cure for malaria but yielded no results. The project then shifted its focus towards traditional medicines and that is when Dr Tu, who was a researcher at the Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Beijing, became involved. In the course of her research, Dr Tu began examining the properties of wormwood after reading a 4th Century Chinese text titled, “Emergency Prescriptions Kept Up One’s Sleeve”. This led Dr Tu and her team to the discovery that artemisinin, a compound extracted from wormwood was highly effective in treating malaria.
Artemisinin remains the most effective treatment for malaria, and artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) are recommended by the World Health Organization as the first-line treatment for malaria. Dr Tu’s discovery has helped save millions of lives in Asia and Africa and many believe that recognition of her contribution to global healthcare is long overdue. Although artemisinin was discovered in the 1970s it only became widely used in the battle against malaria at the turn of the century, as growing resistance to chloroquine led governments and health authorities to adopt artemisinin-based combination therapies.
With no Dr. degree,no studying abroad, no CAS membership, Nobel-winner Tu triggers reflection http://en.people.cn/n/2015/1006/c90000-8958353.html …
Since it was announced that a Chinese national had won the 2015 Nobel Prize for medicine, Chinese media has been busy celebrating the achievement. For decades, China has yearned for the international recognition that a Nobel Prize confers. Across China this achievement is being portrayed as an endorsement of China’s academic standards, valuable scientific contributions and long-awaited international recognition for traditional medicine.
The fact that Dr. Tu’s Nobel Prize breakthrough came from a project initiated by Chairman Mao and the cure stems from traditional Chinese medicine, has enabled Chinese media outlets to fully promote the award as a national achievement. China’s official news agency, Xinhua, called the award a “landmark success” and acknowledged that Dr Tu had brought about “an intense sense of national pride”.
Speaking to the state news agency, Liu Qingquan, the president of the Beijing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, praised the value of local wisdom and traditional medicine. “This is a proud moment for the Chinese people, and even more so for traditional Chinese medical practitioners. The development of traditional Chinese medicine must be mutually integrated with science,” he said.
Chinese premier congratulates  on winning  for medicine
 
The publicity this award has brought Dr Tu comes as a great change for the modest researcher who had previously been denied membership to the prestigious scientific institution, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), and received only limited acclaim in China for her achievement. China’s prestigious academic institutions are known to be extremely hierarchical and success in these organizations is more commonly a result of relationships, seniority and political connections than scientific achievements.
Despite her newly found fame, Dr Tu continues to be modest and was keen to link her achievements with the value of traditional Chinese medicine. In a statement earlier this week, Dr Tu called artemisinin “a gift for the world’s people from traditional Chinese medicine” and concluded the Nobel award “indicates that the research science of the Chinese traditional medicine have won high attention from the internal science community.”
Interestingly, the sudden championing of Dr Tu’s long forgotten achievements has been documented in some Chinese media. The Communist Party’s media outlet, People’s Daily, openly criticized China’s leading academic institutions for previously ignoring Dr Tu, stating, she “is frank about her disapprovals and disinclined towards bootlicking. If such characteristics cannot fully account for her being rejected by CAS, they can at least say something about her integrity as a scientist”.
The People’s Daily also noted the irony that “a scientist who is not institutionally admitted wins the highest international acknowledgement” and suggested it was “high time we reconsider our standards and procedure of granting membership of CAS”.
Professor Wang Yuanfeng a professor at Beijing Jiaotong University, also called for CAS to reconsider its policies, “Tu Youyou’s winning of the Nobel Prize can provide impetus for further reform of China’s science and technology system,” adding that, “despite the quite vigorous reforms over the past two years to national science and technology planning and management, and to the system of academicians, there are still many problems in the system and institutions of China’s scientific endeavors.”
Having earned China’s first ever Nobel Prize in science it is hope that Dr Tu will finally receive the recognition and respect that she deserves for this medical breakthrough which has helped save the lives of millions.
 

Fifa suspends Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini

Channel 4 NewsTHURSDAY 08 OCTOBER 2015
The outgoing Fifa president and head of Uefa are provisionally banned from football-related activity for 90 days, along with Fifa secretary-general Jerome Valcke.
Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini (Reuters)
Fifa presidential candidate Chung Mong-joon has also been banned for six years and fined 100,000 Swiss francs (£67,000), FIFA's ethic committee announced.
Blatter and Platini - who had been favourite to replace 79-year-old Blatter as president of world football's governing body - will not be involved in the game on a national or international level for three months while investigations continue.
The 90-day ban, which comes into force immediately, can be extended by another 45 days.
The pair can appeal against the suspension to FIFA's appeals committee within two days of being notified of the decision but they will remain suspended at least until the appeal is held.
The grounds for these decisions are the investigations that are being carried out by the investigatory chamber of the ethics committee.Fifa statement
The ethics committee said in a statement: "The grounds for these decisions are the investigations that are being carried out by the investigatory chamber of the ethics committee. The chairman of the chamber is Dr Cornel Borbely.
"The investigation into Joseph S Blatter is being carried out by Robert Torres, the investigation into Michel Platini by Vanessa Allard."
Jerome Valcke (Reuters)
It went on: "The proceedings against the South Korean football official Chung Mong-joon were opened in January 2015 based on findings in the report on the investigation into the bidding process for the 2018/2022 Fifa World Cups.
"He has been found guilty of infringing article 13 (general rules of conduct), article 16 (confidentiality), article 18 (duty of disclosure, cooperation and reporting), article 41 (obligation of the parties to collaborate) and article 42 (general obligation to collaborate) of the Fifa code of ethics.
"The ethics committee is unable to comment on the details of the decisions until they become final, due to the provisions of article 36 (confidentiality) of the Fifa code of ethics."
Last month the Swiss authorities opened a criminal investigation into Blatter over a deal he signed the TV rights to the Caribbean World Cup, and a 2011 payment of 2 million francs to Platini.