Peace for the World

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

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Pillayan To Face Double Murder Charges

Untitled
Sri Lanka Brief18/10/2015  
Former Chief Minister of the Eastern Province Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pillayan is likely to be charged for alleged involvement in the murder of two parliamentarians. Pillayan had been questioned by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) over the murder of Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian Nadaraja Raviraj in 2006.
Pillayan was arrested recently by the CID for his alleged involvement in the murder of TNA MP Joseph Pararajasingham in Batticaloa in 2005 and has been detained till November 4.
The CID, it is learnt, uncovered during investigations that the weapon used to assassinate Raviraj in Colombo in 2006 was issued to Pillayan by Colonel Shammi Kumararatne attached to the Military Intelligence Unit. Col. Kumararatne is currently in the custody of the CID over his alleged involvement in the disappearance of Lanka e-news journalist Prageeth Eknaligoda.
The weapon that was handed over to Pillayan had been given to a former LTTE member called Charan. Finally the weapon was handed over to Navy Petty Officer Senevi who is accused as Raviraj’s assassin.
The Sunday Leader learns that Pillayan would therefore face inquiries into the assassinations of both Pararajasingham as well as Raviraj.
Pararajasingham was allegedly murdered by the Pillayan faction to ensure a change in the TNA’s Eastern parliamentary seats. Raviraj was allegedly murdered for his role as a Tamil political leader.
The Sunday Leader further learns that the CID has found that the Pillayan faction had carried out many assassinations and abductions with the assistance of the military during the former regime.
SL

SLRC Hit By Rajapaksa Legacy

MR’s suba anagathayak  gives bleak future for Rupavahini
by Nirmala Kannangara-Sunday, October 18, 2015
The Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation (SLRC) is the latest state owned institution that is reported to have fallen into the category of cash strapped establishments under the Rajapaksa regime. Similar to other state media organizations, the SLRC has also incurred huge losses during the last presidential election campaign thanks to the suba anagathayak policy of the former President, present Kurunegala District MP, Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Regime Change? Yes, That’s What We Wanted & Still Haven’t Got!


Colombo Telegraph
By Emil van der Poorten –October 18, 2015
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
The term “regime change” has been consistently applied to mean some kind of skulduggery by the developed democracies of the west in order to change governments that they figure are not to their liking in the so-called “less-“ or “under-” and “undeveloped” nations of the world. In the case of Sri Lanka, everyone from the faux-hunger striker Weerawansa to one of the leaders of what Dr. Kumar David so accurately describes as belonging to the “Dead Left,” Tissa Vitarane, are given an inordinate amount of publicity by our media who must, indeed, be starved of news to feature these two, one a patently fraudulent politician and the other whose place in our political firmament cannot but be adduced to his connections with what is left of a one-time left-leaning intelligentsia, still retaining some influence in the media.
I believe that, pejorative applications aside, what we sought and thought we’d achieved with the removal of the Rajapaksa Gang as veritable monarchical rulers of this country, both in January and then, again, in August was in fact what we desperately needed and had fought, at considerable risk, to achieve: a change of ruling regime.
Now it seems that what we have seen since have been delays and obfuscations which, in total, can only be explained by the fact that those with the authority to even begin cleaning the Augean Stables have chosen not to do so, advancing a variety of excuses for the lack of any tangible proof of even prosecutions being launched against those that have gutted this country, stealing its resources and creating an administrative mess without equal in our recent (or any) history.
The only reason for this state of affairs is that there are those now in the seats of power who owe all kinds of political and other debts to those whom the people of this country chose to be rid of. What the current lot is doing is in deliberate contravention of the mandate that the people of this country handed them and it is time that we proceeded beyond simply holding their feet to the fire: we need to chuck them in the inferno if they don’t act to bring the thieves and murderers to justice and follow through on the mandate handed them and which they knowingly accepted.Read More

Recovery of Rajapaksa loot can reduce 

budget deficit!


article_image
 
The revelation by a Sunday newspaper (not the Sunday Island) last week that the Sri Lankan government had moved courts in ‘a Middle Eastern country’ to freeze the account of the ‘son of a VVIP of the former regime’ set the cat among the canaries. The courts were to freeze the account last Sunday (since Islamic countries work on Sundays) but we have not heard anything about it thereafter. Be that as it may the government officially confirmed last week that not one but three secret accounts had been discovered in the Middle East, one containing 1,086 million USD, another holding 1,800 million USD and yet another with 500 million USD. The account that was to be frozen last Sunday was said to be the one containing 500 million USD. It was also said that a sum of 650 million USD had been transferred from this particular account to ‘an Eastern European country’ some time ago.
Part 6: Social Market Economy – Education should be reformed to create creative capital and not mere human capital 


Soratha-Rev-Weliwitiye
logoMonday, 19 October 2015
Should the objective of universities be just producing graduates?
Untitled-2Sujata Gamage, columnist, writer and campaigner for education, had responded to Part 4 of the article under this series titled ‘Universities and research institutions as catalysts of an innovation economy’ (available at: http://www.ft.lk/article/478857/Part-4--Social-Market-Economy--Universities--research-institutions-as-catalysts-of-an-innovation-economy) in a communication titled ‘The role of universities and research institutes in an innovation economy
(available at: http://www.ft.lk/article/482639/The-role-of-universities-and-research-institutes-in-an-innovation-economy ).

Sri Lanka says would consider visit by China navy ships

Reuters
Sun Oct 18, 2015 
Sri Lanka would consider allowing Chinese naval ships to visit again but no request has been forthcoming yet, the country's defense secretary said on Sunday.
Sri Lanka's previous government had caused concern in India with its close ties to Beijing, including allowing Chinese submarines to dock.
New Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has unnerved China though with his re-examination of relations, including a $1.5-billion Chinese-invested "port city" project in the capital Colombo.
Visiting Beijing in February, Sri Lanka's foreign minister said future visits by Chinese submarines were unlikely.
But Sri Lankan Defense Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi, who only took up his post last month, told Reuters in Beijing that he would give serious thought to new requests from China for naval ships to call, even if there are no plans currently.
"It has not come to my table yet. If it comes I'll give it due consideration. If it comes in the right track we'll consider it seriously," he said on the sidelines of a military forum.
"If it is really interesting and worthwhile, sometimes we do combined operations and exercises with military vessels from around the world, no discrimination."
China has built a seaport and airport in Sri Lanka's south, raising fears it is seeking influence in a country with which India has traditionally had deep ties.
China's defense minister told the head of the Sri Lankan navy in June he wanted to ensure a "continuous and stable" development of military ties.
Hettiarachchi said his government was just trying to make sure it was being transparent in its relations with China, and that military ties should remain strong.
"There was a complaint about the previous regime about transparency but I think we are more transparent and our relations are going to be stronger in times to come."
(This story corrects title to defence secretary not minister)

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Michael Perry)

Army soldiers in novel robbery : police ambush them on A 9 road

LEN logo(Lanka-e-New- 19.Oct.2015, 3.20AM) 8 army soldiers who were removing the advertisement hoardings along both sides of Jaffna A 9 road to be sold as scrap iron were arrested by the Chavakachcheri police on the 17 th  , and produced before the Chavakachcheri district  judge.
Following a complaint received by the Chavakachcheri police that the hoardings are going missing , the police officers have been lying in ambush in the night to apprehend the culprits . When the 8 army soldiers arrived in a vehicle and were removing the hoardings to use them as scrap iron , they were arrested, police media spokesman ‘s office revealed.
The suspects are soldiers belonging  to the sixth signal regiment , Jaffna . After they were produced before the Chavakachcheri district judge , they were enlarged on personal bails in sums of Rs. 50,000.00 each. They were ordered to be present in court on the 29 th of November – the next date of trial.

By Dinasena Rathugamage from Vavuniya
Translated  by Jeff
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by     (2015-10-18 21:52:13)

Report On Yoshitha SWEPT UNDER THE Carpet

Report On Yoshitha SWEPT UNDER THE Carpet

Lankanewsweb.netOct 18, 2015
“Navy Media Spokesperson Commander Indika de Silva confirmed that a report had been compiled and it has been handed over to the Defence Ministry”

A report compiled by the Navy on Yoshitha Rajapaksa, the second son of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, has reportedly been swept under the carpet by the Ministry of Defence, sources said.
 
Compiled by a committee headed by Rear Admiral D.W.B Wettawa, the report notes that Yoshitha Rajapaksa had allegedly violated Navy regulations when he was in the Navy.
 
The report also notes that Yoshitha Rajapaksa had served as a security officer of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa when he was the President.
 
When contacted, Navy Media Spokesperson Commander Indika de Silva confirmed that a report had been compiled and it has been handed over to the Ministry of Defence.
 
Meanwhile, when contacted by The Sunday Leader, Defence Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi said that he was about to go overseas and will comment on his return.
 
 - The Sunday Leader

Ex-LTTE political wing leader Thamilini dies of cancer

Ex-LTTE political wing leader Thamilini dies of cancer
logoOctober 18, 2015
Former senior LTTE official Subramaniam Sivakamy, better known as Colonel Thamilini, has died at the age of 43, due to cancer, a source from the Maharagama cancer hospital says. Thamilini was reportedly hospitalised a few days ago and passed away this morning.

Col Thamilini, from Paranthan in Kilinochchi, was the head of the LTTE women’s wing political division and one of the most senior members of the movement to be detained by the Sri Lankan military in 2009. She was held in Welikada prison for 3 years, before being moved to Poonthottam rehabilitation camp. She was released to her family in June 2013.

AG Advices IGP To Pursue Probes On Avant Garde For Money Laundering


Colombo TelegraphOctober 18, 2015
A team of Criminal Investigation Department (CID) officers conducting investigations on the latest vessel carrying a consignment of arms for Avant Garde Maritime Services have sealed several containers with weapons.
Former secretary to the MOD - Gotabaya
Former secretary to the MOD – Gotabaya
According to Police sources, officers have found a stock of weapons with foreign serial numbers inside the ship which are not compatible with the documents issued by the defence authorities.
The CID officers began their examination of the ship which is currently docked at the Galle harbour on Saturday night. They had carried out the examination of the ships cargo and questioning of the crew through out today as well.
After examining the ship the CID officers have taken steps to seal three containers with weapons
Meanwhile, the Attorney General has advised the Inspector General of Police to pursue probes on the Avant Garde under the Money Laundering act while discarding possible charges under the firearms ordinance and prevention of terrorism act citing lack of evidence.
The AG’s stand has come under severe criticism from a number of quarters. According to sources some highly placed officials from the AG’s department itself have pointed out that there is enough evidence to charge the Avant Garde under the firearms ordinance.
However, the AG for the time being has strictly ruled out any charges being filed under the firearms ordinance or the PTA.
But according to highly placed sources in the defence establishment, the AG will be forced to change his stand as CID officers probing the latest case have found out serious discrepancies in the documents approved by the Defence Ministry and the weapons cache contained in the floating armoury.
Two days ago Avant Garde Maritime Services (Pvt) Ltd issued the statement below;
Avant Garde Maritime Services (Pvt) Ltd Media Release With Regard To Merchant Vessel Avant Garde
Proliferation of sea piracy in the Western Indian Ocean resulted in International Maritime Organization (IMO) establishing a High Risk Area in which piracy threat was greater. Many Western Private Maritime Security Companies (PMSCs) started providing security to ships in this HRA, and since Sri Lanka was at one end of the HRA based their operations off Sri Lanka. They also obtained the required weapons belonging to Government of Sri Lanka (GOSL) from Rakna Arakshaka Lanka Ltd (RALL) for convenience.
Whilst providing these weapons to those maritime security companies, 197 weapons belonging to GOSL were misplaced, as once issued from Colombo, there was no way of monitoring them.
Avant Garde then conceptualised and proposed to GOSL a system to eliminate any possibility of misplacing, but instead properly account for weapons once issued by RALL, through the establishment of many operational centres in the periphery of the Indian Ocean in a ‘Closed Circuit Network’ (CCN) where any RALL weapon issued from one location had to be returned to any other location of this closed circuit network. Floating Armouries were to complement the CCN wherever land operational centres were not possible. Then there was to be a guarantee that any weapon issued would be returned. The proposal also entailed that the entire investment to be borne by Avant Garde without a cent being invested by GOSL.       Read More

Was Arjuna Mahendran aware of the Rajapakse money?

Was Arjuna Mahendran aware of the Rajapakse money?
Lankanewsweb.netOct 18, 2015
For many months now and including this week Cabinet Spokesperson Dr Rajitha Senarathne has been saying the government is going to reveal the oversees account details of the Rajapakse family. It is nearly 10 months so far other than the Foreign Minister saying USD $18 Billion was stacked abroad, which nobody with some business sense believed, not even an account number has been released. It has been alleged in many websites that young MP Namal

Rajapakse had his loot at the Emirates NBD Bank or Mashreq Bank in Dubai together with Gamini Senerath and a few others amounting around 1 Billion US Dollars. A one Billion Dollars deposit cannot go unnoticeable in a hurry in a place like Dubai if an Asian held in a Bank where Asians work.
 
Central Bank Chief Arjuna Mahendren a Sri Lankan Tamil who was recently caught up in one of the biggest financial scandals (stillremains unresolved) in Sri Lanka has served as a Chief Investment Officer-Wealth Management division at Emirates NBD. The question therefore is whether Mahendren was aware of this large U$D deposits, especially given the strong connection with his infamous son-in law Arjun Aloysius had with the Rajapakse administration, or did Arjuna Aloysius even introduce the Rajapakses to NBD Bank at a time when Rajapakses looked to reign forever in Sri Lanka through his Father-in-law Mahendren?
 
Bankerasia group

Not only Rawula even wife brought before the law at last after dodging for so long !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -2015.Oct.17, 6.30PM) Closely on the heels of the report that ‘Medamulana Rawula’ (Medamulana moustache) who was dodging the long arms of the law hitherto has at last been  brought before the law yesterday ,here is another report reaching Lanka e news today that , Rawula’s wife ‘Ran ammandiya’(robbed gold decked mama) was also  hauled up in courts- Retributive justice catching up with the plunderers and looters  of national wealth !
Shiranthi Rajapakse the wife of Medamulana Rawula (moustache) alias Percy Mahendra Rajapakse was  present before the bribery and corruption commission last week to record her statement in connection with the investigation into the spurious Sirilaya account allegedly maintained by her. From 9.00 a.m..  to 2.00 p.m. her statement was recorded. As usual a group of lawyers accompanied her . Namal Rajapakse too  was there .
Ran Ammandiya ,after the statement was recorded has had a cup of tea at the canteen of the Bribery and corruption commission before leaving. The Commission did not make known her arrival to the media.
Meanwhile Percy Mahendra alias Rawula also appeared before the presidential commission today . The objections raised yesterday by him were rejected by  the commission today. Minister  Susil Premajayantha  and Lalith Weeratunge , the ex secretary to Percy Mahendra cited as witnesses in the investigations into the non payment of advertisement fees to the ITN by ex president gave evidence before the commission
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by     (2015-10-17 14:14:23)

Govt. to review ethanol smuggling cases to recover billions of rupees in losses


Culprits got away paying small fines during previous regime


By Saman Indrajith- 

The government has decided to initiate action to recover losses running into billions of rupees by reviewing ethanol smuggling cases, where the culprits had escaped by paying small fines, thanks to the patronage of powerful political figures of the previous regime, a senior Cabinet Minister said.

"I have instructed the authorities to take measures to recover the losses from the relevant parties as the government has suffered enormously due to illegal ethanol imports", Finance Minister, Ravi Karunanayake said.

"It seems that we could recover more than Rs 100 million in the first round itself. We have details of those detected by the Customs, which investigated the illegal import of ethanol to manufacture alcohol during 2013 and 2014," the minister told The Sunday Island.

He said that most ethanol stocks had been brought to Sri Lanka from Thailand via Vietnam. The consignments found by authorities had 96% strength and been imported on the pretext of bringing down Rosin Resin and Turpentine Sulphate.

"The smugglers had imported them as chemicals resulting in a total loss exceeding Rs 100 million during the past two years. Two key illegal importers have been identified and they would be compelled to reimburse the losses suffered by the government," Minister Karunanayake said.

"Customs officials have completed compiling comprehensive reports on the cases of the past two years. They are now collating information on cases of the previous years," he said.

There are only 27 licensed importers of ethanol in the country, he said. "According to details provided to me by the Excise Department, 13,547,481 litres of ethanol have been illegally imported to the country during 2013. They had been brought down to manufacture alcohol. So much for the ‘Mathata Thitha’ campaign hyped by the worthies of the then government, the minister noted.

The Finance Minister said that he had obtained the case reports from the Customs department and there are many instances where some selected importers had been imposed only small fines by the authorities. There is one instance where a person found guilty of smuggling in 28,800 litres of ethanol had been fined only Rs 500,000. There is a pattern of some smugglers getting mitigated forfeitures, he said.

Despite their notorious history of smuggling ethanol, many had defaulted paying the fines, the Minister said adding that he had received reports on smugglers receiving the backing of powerful politicians and the connivance of some Customs officials. "With regard to the officials, who have been abusing the Customs Law to embezzle tax revenue, we would be launching a proper investigation to probe their conduct".

The companies so far been identified by the Customs to recover losses during the past two years are Network Seven (Pvt) Ltd., Isochem Holdings (Pvt) Ltd., Oxychem (Pvt) Ltd., Axis Industries (Pvt) Ltd., Wellcome Chemicals Lanka (Pvt) Ltd., Wayamba Industrial Coating (Pvt) Ltd., Nova Logistics (Pvt) Ltd., and Silvis Industries (Pvt) Ltd, according to Minister Karunanayake. 

‘Machan, India is worried over arecanut thing’, minister’s latest pretense

‘Machan, India is worried over arecanut thing’, minister’s latest pretense

Lankanewsweb.netOct 18, 2015
“Machan, the arecanut thing will have to be stopped at least until December. India has complained to the boss. It’s trouble. Therefore, the boss told me not to give permits for some time. Therefore, I am telling this to all. Tell friends to be patient for about six months,” a newly-appointed minister told three of his minister colleagues.

Arecanut imported from Indonesia is value added and re-exported to India in a big racket. Businessmen racketeers with links to the previous and the present regimes are engaged in this racket with the blessings of politicians of the present government.
 
For this arecanut racket, permission has to be obtained from four ministers. The first is Duminda Dissanayake’s agriculture ministry. Secondly, from internal trade ministry’s in charge Rishard Badurdeen. Thirdly, from finance minister Ravi Karunanayake under whom the customs functions. In addition to these three ministers, internal trade minister, UNP chairman Malik Samarawickrama’s permission is needed now.
 
One of these four made the above remark to the three others. Believing him, the three others have suspended issuing arecanut licenses. However, the racket is going on with the blessings of the minister who made the remark. Muttiah Shashidaran, brother of former Test cricketer Muttiah Muralitharan, and his business friend Jayalath, are carrying out the racket with the blessings of the minister.
 
The minister has deceived the three other ministers in order to make way for his closest friend Shashidaran to carry on with the racket. The three ministers are to complain to the prime minister and the president against the minister who deceived them. As this minister always receives the blessings of the premier, no action can be expected from the PM, and it remains for the president to take action.

7 Hong Kong police charged over protester’s filmed beating

Image via YouTube.

By  Oct 15, 2015 
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong police have charged seven officers with harming a pro-democracy protester who was beaten in a filmed confrontation that stirred outrage among the city’s residents.
A police spokeswoman said Thursday the seven officers were charged jointly with one count of grievous bodily harm. One was also charged with common assault. They’re due in court Monday.
The spokeswoman provided information on condition of anonymity following office practice.
The activist, Ken Tsang, said police informed him he should also expect to be arrested.
The charges are being laid exactly one year after the incident, which occurred at the height of pro-democracy protests that gripped the city for months.
During a confrontation between protesters and authorities outside government headquarters, the officers were filmed kicking a handcuffed Tsang in a dark corner.

Ukraine’s Turmoil Is a Gift for the Last Dictator of Europe

Ukraine’s Turmoil Is a Gift for the Last Dictator of Europe
BY AMY MACKINNON-OCTOBER 16, 2015
Even before polling had opened in last Sunday’s presidential elections in Belarus, there was little doubt about who would win. Incumbent President Alexander Lukashenko was duly reelected to his fifth term with over 83 percent of the vote in a country often referred to as “Europe’s last dictatorship.”
There was a new element in play this year as the crisis in neighboring Ukraine cast its long shadow over Belarusian politics. But in the end, the chaos next door has served only to solidify Lukashenko’s rule. Ukraine’s 2014 revolution, the subsequent political turmoil, and the resulting conflict with Russia has enabled him to justify his authoritarian grip on Belarus as a means of maintaining stability. He has also taken advantage of the conflict’s geopolitical implications to position himself in the international arena as a neutral interlocutor, breaking his regime’s isolation from Europe. Outside the presidential office, too, a rare consensus appears to be forming among the opposition and the population that what Belarus needs most is neutrality and stability.While post-revolutionary Ukraine has had a tumultuous year, Belarusian politics looks set to hold its course.
A former pig farm manager, Lukashenko has preservedBelarus as a living museum to Soviet practices, where collective farms, state dominance of the economy, and pro-regime propaganda persist. Even the security services still operate under their infamous Soviet name, the KGB. But the country’s mustachioed strongman is no dusty Soviet relic. He has proved himself to be a shrewd political operator, toeing a careful line between Russia and the West and frequently playing them off against each other to his own advantage.
The deterioration in Russia-EU relations over Ukraine has once again enabled Lukashenko to demonstrate his cunning. In fact, he may be the only political leader whose international image has benefited from his response to the Ukrainian conflict. In the unlikely role of peacemaker, he has managed to achieve and to maintain a rapprochement in relations with the European Union without turning his back on the Kremlin.
Having methodically repressed dissent in his own country for many years, Lukashenko naturally did not welcome the Maidan protests in Kiev which overthrew the pro-Russian government of President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014. In February of that year, he stated unequivocally:“In Belarus, there will be no Maidan.”
But the Maidan was a gift to Lukashenko. By tying Ukraine’s pro-EU protests to Russia’s subsequent annexation of Crimea and the conflict in the country’s east, Lukashenko has been able to justify his repression of dissent in Belarus as a means of maintaining stability.
But the longtime president’s aversion to Ukrainian protests did not mean he welcomed Russia’s opportunistic aggression. Early in 2014, Lukashenko saidthat Ukraine must be a “united, whole state” and emphasized that he would brook no such interference at home:
“No matter who comes to Belarusian land, I will fight,” he said. “Even if it is Putin.”“No matter who comes to Belarusian land, I will fight,” he said. “Even if it is Putin.”
Beyond such sound bites, Lukashenko has maintained a shrewd neutrality on the Ukraine conflict, even hosting high-level peace talks in Minsk. His willingness to play a constructive role began a thaw in relations between Belarus and the EU earlier this year. Since 2004, Europe has imposed sanctions, including visa bans and asset freezes, against 200 Belarusian officials believed to have been involved in electoral fraud and human rights abuses. But after Lukashenko released the country’s six remaining political prisoners last month, including former presidential candidate Mikhail Statkevich, the EU announced last Friday that it would lift most of its sanctions on Belarus, provided elections took place peacefully.
The timing of this cautious rapprochement with the European Union is no accident. It comes as Russia — Belarus’s largest trade partner — slides into recession. Cheap energy and Russian subsidies have long buoyed the Belarusian economy, contributing to the consistent economic growth which has been a cornerstone of Lukashenko’s neo-Soviet social contract. But with the Russian economy contracting, Lukashenko looks once again to berecalibrating his relationships with his Western neighbors. As a bloc, the European Union is the country’s second-largest trade partner after Russia, and improved relations could potentially serve to shield Belarus from Russian recession.
Lukashenko has managed to use the Ukraine conflict to thread the needle between Russia and the West. It’s telling that Lukashenko’s first electoral promise was for a “free and independent Belarus” — that is, not entirely in the pocket of Moscow — while his second was for “peace and order” — in other words, not so independent as to prompt a Ukrainian scenario.
Lukashenko’s promise of stability appears to have resonated among the population. The spiral of chaos unleashed by the Ukraine’s Maidan protests have left many in Belarus wary about the consequences of radical change. Research published in September by the Independent Institute of Socioeconomic and Political Studies found that, at 47 percent, peace and stability was the top priority for the Belarusian electorate. This comes well ahead of more typical electoral concerns such as quality of life and rising prices. The institute notes that until the conflict broke out in Ukraine, matters of peace and stability were largely irrelevant to Belarusian voters.
The fallout of the Ukraine crisis has also affected the opposition, who cautiously echoed Lukashenko’s calls for neutrality and stability in their campaigns. Presidential candidate Tatiyana Karatkevitch — considered to be the only genuine opposition choice for president — spoke carefully during her campaign about working with both the EU and Russia. The first woman to run for the post of president, she distinguished herself from previous opposition candidates in not calling for mass demonstrations the night after the vote. Pro-government presidential candidate Sergei Gaidukevich alsostated that he felt it “vitally necessary to keep parity between the West and the East, to be a kind of East Slavic Switzerland.”
Large-scale demonstrations are a rarity in Minsk, but earlier this month an estimated 1,000 people took to the streets to protest Russian proposals to build an air base in the country. Opposition leader Alexei Yanukevich stated that he feared a Russian base would harm Belarus’s neutrality. In a rare moment of harmony, there seems to be a degree of consensus between the President, the opposition and the population, that neutrality is the best way to retain cordial relations on all fronts and avoid prompting a Ukrainian scenario.
Belarus is not a country that often makes headlines. But this past weekend, the country of 9.6 million was thrust into the international limelight — not due to Lukashenko’s predictable reelection, but because Belarusian writer Svetlana Alexievich won the Nobel Prize in literature.
The laureate was blunt about her country’s elections. Speaking at a press  conference in Berlin, she said,“As Stalin once said, it’s unimportant who votes or for whom, what matters is who counts the vote.” Lukashenko’s resounding reelection seems to confirm her suspicions. But between a resurgent Russia and a disinterested Europe, an authoritarian leader and a neutered opposition, the choices on offer to the people of Belarus are all far from appealing.
In the photo, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko gestures next to Russia’s President Vladimir Putin (L) and Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko (R) as they meet in the Minsk on Aug. 26, 2014.
Photo credit: KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/Getty Images

Sudan sends ground troops to Yemen to boost Saudi-led coalition

BY MOHAMMED MUKHASHAF
A battalion of Sudanese troops arrived in Yemen's southern port city of Aden on Saturday, military officials said, bolstering Saudi-led Arab forces trying to keep out the Iran-backed Houthis and curb the growing presence of Islamist militants.
Aden, a strategic port and shipping hub, became the seat of the Yemeni government earlier this year after the Houthis, a clan from northern Yemen, seized the capital Sanaa and forced President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to flee to the south.
A military source in Aden said that 300 Sudanese soldiers and officers arrived by sea on Saturday. Their purpose was to "help maintain security for the city against the Houthis and Saleh," the source said, referring to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, whose supporters have sided with the Houthis.
Hadi escaped to Saudi Arabia as the Houthis, who follow the Zaydi branch of Shi'ite Islam, advanced towards Aden in March. Prime Minister Khaled Bahah returned from exile after anti-Houthi fighters, backed by the Arab coalition, drove the Houthis and their allies out of the city in July.
However, they have not managed to restore security there. Islamist militant suicide bombers killed 15 people in attacks on the Yemeni government's headquarters and Arab coalition outposts in Aden on Oct. 6.
"Our troops in Yemen are ready to do their military task under the command of the alliance military leadership," Sudanese army spokesman Brigadier General Ahmed Khalifa Alshami said. "Sudan is committed to restore legitimacy in Yemen."
The security situation in Aden has remained a concern as residents report that armed men, including Islamist militants linked to al Qaeda, roam the streets. On Saturday, unidentified gunmen shot dead a UAE national at a shop in Aden, according to a local security source. The UAE state news agency WAM reported that a coalition soldier had died but gave no further details.
The Arab coalition says its aim is to restore Hadi's government to power in Yemen. At least 5,400 people have died since it began an air offensive in March.
The Arab coalition spokesman confirmed the arrival of the Sudanese troops to Arab television channels. They will join contingents from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain on the ground.
Hadi supporters, backed by Arab forces, recently made some gains in the strategic Bab al-Mandab strait and in Marib, a province east of Sanaa and home to much of Yemen's oil wealth. But the Houthis remain in control of much of the country, despite almost daily air strikes.
At least 18 Houthi fighters and Saleh loyalists were killed in air strikes overnight on Taiz province, south of Sanaa, medics said. The ancient port of al-Mokha and the provincial capital were among the targets, they said.
On Saturday, local officials in Taiz province said coalition jets killed 30 fighters loyal to Hadi when they mistakenly bombed a military camp in the province of Taiz. [IDn:L8N12H0MP]
A Yemeni government spokesman on Sunday said the report had not been confirmed.
(Reporting by Mohammed Mukhashef in Aden and Khaled Abdelaziz in Khartoum, Writing by Sami Aboudi; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

UAE paid PR firm millions to brief UK journalists on Qatar, Brotherhood attacks 

Leaked emails reveal how UAE tried to keep UK lobbying secret 
UK Prime Minister David Cameron with UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan (AFP) - 

Rori Donaghy-Sunday 18 October 2015
The UAE paid a London-based public relations firm millions of pounds to lead attacks in the UK against Qatar, the Muslim Brotherhood, and other opponents of the Gulf state, according to a Mail on Sunday investigation.
The report reveals that Abu Dhabi paid Quiller Consultants £60,000 ($93,000) per month for six years to, among other things, brief leading British journalists who launched an extraordinary campaign accusing Qatar of funding terrorism.
The PR firm also lobbied the British government to hold a review into the activities of the Muslim Brotherhood and, separately, briefed an influential journalist to target the author of this article, who at the time had raised allegations of human rights abuse in the UAE.
Quiller Consultants was co-founded in 1998 by Lord Hill, a close associate of Prime Minister David Cameron, and the firm’s staff include former British officials and ex-national newspaper journalists.
The UAE contract, seen by the Mail on Sunday, stated that Quiller would work in the UK “to promote and achieve the foreign policy objectives of the UAE”, adding “all the activities as part of this engagement will be carried out in strict confidence".
Investigative reporter David Rose said he has seen emails that prove Quiller “successfully targeted top British newspapers” and “kept the UAE’s involvement secret”.
Emails between senior UAE officials and Quiller reveal how Abu Dhabi insisted their lobbying must remain secret out of fear they would be shown to be “meddling in UK domestic affairs".
The key Quiller consultant who worked on the UAE contract was ex-senior Foreign Office official Gerard Russell, who was picked by former prime minister Tony Blair to head up the UK’s Arab media unit after 9/11.
Russell no longer works for Quiller but according to the Mail has remained active in the political sphere. The report stated that he attended meetings this year between Blair and Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal.
On the UAE side, the key conduit for Quiller was Simon Pearce, a British expat who is in charge of Abu Dhabi’s overseas image. He is also a director at the UAE-owned Manchester City Football Club.
Pearce sent emails to Khaled bin Mohammed bin Zayed - son of Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed - who was in charge of shutting down UAE political opposition group Islah, a Muslim Brotherhood-linked organisation.
Also copied in on the messages were UAE Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash and Abu Dhabi investment fund head Khaldoon al-Mubarak, who is also chairman of Manchester City.
In one email Quiller consultant Russell wrote to his bosses in London and Abu Dhabi telling them that he had passed information to the Sunday Telegraph’s Andrew Gilligan.
Russell wrote to Gargash immediately after meeting Gilligan and said: “We explained we were not acting for the UAE in seeing him, and that indeed the UAE had no knowledge of the meeting.”
After Gilligan published an article accusing Qatar of funding terrorism, Pearce sent an email to Khaled bin Mohammed and Gargash.
The subject line read “Boom!” and said: “Your highness, Dr Anwar, I thought you should see this – latest product of our efforts – should be a game-changer for UK understanding – more to come.”
In Russell’s email to Gargash after meeting Gilligan he had written: “We propose we continue to develop the relationship with Gilligan and pass him material on a regular basis.”
The Telegraph then embarked on a two-month campaign against Qatar in which they published 34 articles, including eight front-page headline stories, that accused Doha of financing terrorism. At the same time the Telegraph’s billionaire owners, the Barclay brothers, were engaged in a fierce dispute with Qatar over the ownership of three five-star London hotels.
Gilligan was the author of many of the anti-Qatar articles, as was the Telegraph’s Robert Mendick. At the time of the campaign Mendick, who the Mail said was also targeted by Quiller, told Middle East Eye he had not met with any PR people in relation to his coverage of Qatar.
Gilligan was singled out by Quiller as a journalist who would not write anything negative about the UAE because of his role as a paid advisor to London Mayor Boris Johnson.
Johnson visited the UAE in 2013 and joked that in London he felt he was the mayor of the UAE’s eighth emirate.
Briefings against Qatar were only a part of Quiller’s work for the UAE. Russell said in emails that he wanted to lobby journalists viewed as sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood, which is considered a terrorist organisation by the UAE.
Russell wanted to meet Roger Boyes from The Times, who he said appeared “sympathetic to the Brotherhood”.
Russell said he would convince Boyes that the Brotherhood were not “moderates” but “extremists who in the long term caused radicalisation”.
Pearce, however, was cautious in how far Russell should go in his work, worried that the UAE’s lobbying activities may be found out.
“The elements are there to create an impression that we are meddling in UK domestic affairs,” he wrote, according to the Mail.
Diplomatic sources have previously said that pressure from the UAE and Saudi Arabia led to the UK announcing a review into the Muslim Brotherhood last year, despite London having previously viewed the group “as an organisation we can do business with”.
The overdue Brotherhood review is rumoured to have been buried by the British government because its head - Sir John Jenkins - did not propose to ban the group, which is likely to anger Abu Dhabi.
The UAE has vigorously pursued the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliates across the Middle East and North Africa. Abu Dhabi backed the 2013 military coup in Egypt that removed elected Brotherhood leader Mohammed Morsi from power and replaced him with army chief Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi.
Domestically Abu Dhabi has also locked up scores of Brotherhood affiliated activists, who were linked with calls for the Gulf state to implement far-reaching democratic reforms. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have reported that these Emirati political prisoners have been tortured – an allegation UAE authorities have fiercely denied.
The Mail on Sunday reported that part of Quiller’s work in London was to combat the author of this article, who in 2013 headed up a human rights group that focused on the UAE.
Russell claimed in an email that he had passed information to Gilligan that suggested the author of this article had links to terrorists – an accusation the author denies.
After Gilligan published an article accusing the author of terrorist links, Russell wrote to his UAE bosses and said: “I plan to send you a proposal that explains how we can do more of this kind of work, and build on the relationship with trusted journalists in future. I think Simon Pearce may be interested in the fact we have had this meeting: should I let him know?”
Pearce, the Mail reported, was very interested.
The UAE’s lobbying activities in the UK may have broken the rules of the PR industry’s self-regulatory body the Association of Professional Political Consultants (APPC).
The Mail reported that APPC rules state lobbyists must “always be clear and precise about your identity and any organisation you represent, either directly or on an advisory basis”.
When asked if he had broken these rules by not telling Gilligan he was working for the UAE, Russell told the Mail he had not acted “deceptively”.
“I was strictly honest,” he said, claiming that he had not sought permission from the UAE to speak to Gilligan prior to their meeting.
The UAE’s contract with Quiller expired on 1 August this year. Current Quiller director Alasdair Murray responded to allegations his firm may have broken APPC rules by telling the Mail: “We expect members of staff to abide by the APPC code at all times, and to say it doesn't apply to meetings with journalists is a narrower interpretation than we would apply here.”
None of the UAE officials featured in the report responded to the Mail’s request for comment.
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