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 25, 2015

Refusal By Dubai Court To Freeze Brat-Pack Account 


Colombo TelegraphBy Chrishmal Warnasuriya –October 24, 2015
Chrishmal Warnasuriya
Chrishmal Warnasuriya
Refusal By Dubai Court To Freeze Brat-Pack Account; Where we may have gone wrong – the “Banker/Customer” Contract 
The Facts – As Reported at the Weekend Press
This was one of the headlines making last weekend’s Press – that a certain Bank in Dubai had refused a request by the Government of Sri Lanka (GOSL) to freeze foreign-held monies of a politician. Since these issues cut across commercial banking law and several aspects of the banker-customer contract (or relationship) I felt there was a public interest in the knowledge of at least the basics; hence these essays, with a prompt disclaimer that I am depending entirely on what was published as regards the facts of the matter and therefore the truth or not of what was reported is beyond my personal knowledge or comprehension.
The summary of what was reported was, inter alia that:
  • Days before the August 17 election news had reached the GOSL of a secret account of a young politician, son of a former VVIP at the Emirates National Bank of Dubai (NBD);
  • That in an attempt to expose this and bolster the joint UNF campaign of the SLFP under H.E. the President Maithripala Sirisena (MS) and UNP under the Hon. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) a process began to track down details of the account holder and pursue further action against him;
  • However although a direct authority was issued by President MS in addition to an appeal to Sheikh Rashid Al Maktoum, the information was not forthcoming;
  • A legal firm was hired to represent the GOSL in Dubai (presumably with knowledge of banking law – can’t differ much when it comes to international transactions) that assured to “recover and return” the monies, had it been obtained illegally;
  • However months thereafter, the Dubai court has turned down the GOSL request to freeze these funds on the principle premise that the holder of the account/s had not been convicted in Sri Lanka, nor a case filed against him in any court.
This invites us to consider whether the Dubai court ruling can be sustained on the Law. To economize word-space only the fundamentals of this area in Commercial Banking Law will be discussed.

Cabraal’s move incurs Rs.4490 million loss to CB

SATURDAY, 24 OCTOBER 2015
It is stated that Rs.4490 million has been made available to the Central Bank by the Treasury to pay compensation to account holders of Golden Key that crashed due to the moves of former Governor of Central Bank Ajith Nivard Cabraal.
This large amount of money has been made available on two occasions and cabinet approval too has been obtained for the move. Approval has been sought to get the sum of money as a loan to Central Bank from the Treasury.
Mr. Sunil Mendis, who was the Governor of the Central Bank before Ajith Nivard Cabraal, had declared that Golden Key was an illegal financial institute. When Mr. Mendis resigned former President Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed Cabraal as the Governor of the Central Bank. Mr. Cabraal, instead of taking action against Golden Key which had been declared an illegal institute, merely ignored taking any action.
In 2009 Golden Key crashed and a large amount of money is spent to pay compensation to account holders.

A sum of Rs. 20.7 million paid for a two hour program to Bathiya

A sum of Rs. 20.7 million paid for a two hour program to Bathiya

Lankanewsweb.netOct 24, 2015
A private company operated by a famous a singer has been paid Rs. 20.7 million for a two hour program for the opening ceremony of the Bellanwila walking lane and food court which was constructed under the guidance of the former defense and urban development ministry secretary and implemented by the Sri Lanka land reclamation and development corporation.

This large amount is paid for a private company named Fortune entertainments (pvt) Limited for a two and a half hour program performed by Bathiya Jayakody on September 9th 2014 from 5.30pm to 7.50pm. When you calculate Rs. 200,000 has been spent per minute for this performance.
No prior permission taken From the investigations conducted this large amount has been spent for a function headed by a state leader without following proper procurement process and by giving a direct payment for the private company without taking a prior approval from the director board.
The Bellanwila phase was opened on that day under the development project named “Weressagaha Project”
A sum of Rs. 10.38 million was paid for the welcome dance, 11 million was paid for another feature, Rs. 3.8 million was paid for another performance and another 800,000 has been paid for miscellaneous expenses totaling the amount for 20.76 million and fourteen thousand
four hundred and forty.

Cultural feature expense exceeds 10 million Another 10.19 million and fifty four thousand has been spent for another cultural part for the same function. According to the reports
on September 17th 2014 a sum of Rs. 10.56 million and six hundred sixty six has been paid.
A senior public servant in the corporation said the state auditor’s office has pointed out following the failure to call competitive quotations for such large functions and offering the business to a private company on personal wish has caused large economic burden to
the corporation.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Benghazi survivors tell of missiles, chaos at protest against UN plan 

Six people were killed as several missiles fired into crowd of 2,000 protesters rejecting UN ‘Unity Government’ plan
We went out today to tell [head of the UN Support Mission in Libya, Bernadino] Leon that he does not have the right to propose that terrorists and leaders of militias should be part of a government for Libya,' said one protester. (MEE/Abdelhamid Amrooni) 

Tom Wescott-Abdelhamid Amrooni-Saturday 24 October 2015

TRIPOLI and BENGHAZI - Six people were killed and nine seriously injured in Benghazi on Friday evening when missiles were fired into thousands of peaceful protestors.  
More than 2,000 Benghazi residents, including women and children, were staging a protest against the UN’s proposed Unity Government, and showing support for the Libyan Army led by General Khalifa Haftar and loyal to the eastern-based parliament in Tobruk.
The city’s Al-Keesh Square was packed when the first missile was fired into the crowd just before 6pm (17:00 GMT).
“One of the shells fell just metres away from me, throwing me to the ground with the force,” said 29-year-old Mohamed. “A young man was hit and his blood was everywhere. It was terrible.”
He described how a second missile landed in the crowd within seconds.
“People were screaming and running, soldiers and ambulance drivers rushed towards the smoke from where the shells landed, while other people tried to find somewhere to hide. It was completely crazy.”
Mohamed said he saw four missiles hit the square and heard a further five fall after he took shelter behind a building.
Benghazi’s Al-Jalaa hospital confirmed that it received six dead and dozens who were wounded.
Local people claim the attack was carried out by an alliance of opposition forces, made up of revolutionary brigades and members of the Islamist group Ansar Al-Sharia, which has been in conflict for over a year with the Libyan Army. Fighting has left widespread destruction in parts of the city.
Two missiles were fired at a similar protest held the previous Friday, and social media websites affiliated to Benghazi opposition forces had warned that anyone daring to protest again would be targeted.
Demonstrators braved the threats to carry banners bearing slogans against the UN’s proposed Unity Government, which has so far been rejected by the two opposing bodies claiming to be the government of Libya, and claiming that it included names of people who supported terrorism in Libya.
One of the protesters, 32-year-old architect Salwa, said: “We went out today to tell [head of the UN Support Mission in Libya, Bernadino] Leon that he does not have the right to propose that terrorists and leaders of militias should be part of a government for Libya, and we protested even though we knew there was a threat from ISIS [Islamic State], who claim that they are revolutionaries.
“But I did not expect their brutality to reach this level,” she said. “They bombed areas where there were innocent people - women and children - who just wanted to try and have a say in the fate of their homeland.”
Even as ambulances carried the dead and injured from the scene, some protesters remained in Al-Keesh square in defiance against the attack. Singing traditional Libyan songs and still holding placards praising the Libyan Army for its stance against terrorism, they said they were prepared to die to make their message heard.
“People carried only flags, banners or pictures of their relatives martyred in Benghazi. It was a peaceful and unarmed protest but still we were targeted,” said 45-year-old blogger and activist Halima. “Today, the whole world saw the real nature of those we are fighting against."
The conflict in Benghazi has proved to be an impediment to UN-led peace talks aimed at brokering a ceasefire and agreeing on a unity government.
While the Libyan Army of the internationally recognised government based in Tobruk claims to be fighting terrorists in Benghazi, the rival government in Tripoli describes opposition forces as “revolutionaries” fighting against Tobruk’s General Haftar, whom it views as a power-hungry murderer and former US agent now backed by Egypt, the UAE and loyalists from the Gaddafi regime.
A Tripoli government official claimed on Saturday that the attack on the Benghazi protest had been planned and carried out by Haftar loyalists.
The UN were quick to condemn the “terrorist attack” in Benghazi and urged Libyans to reject violence as a means of settling political differences.
But protesters insisted that dialogue was not an option. “These people are extremists who don’t believe in democracy or civil society,” said Mohamed. “We can talk with the Tripoli government, but we can’t talk to these people who want to raise the black flag of al-Qaeda and ISIS here in Benghazi.”
After the protest had dispersed, Libyan Army spokesman Mohamed Hijazi appeared on local television to announce that Haftar had ordered a renewed offensive against rebel-held areas. All units operating under the Libyan Army had been instructed to launch heavy attacks on any Benghazi district occupied by “terrorist groups” he said.
A Benghazi resident, 24-year-old Fatima, said heavy clashes could be heard in parts of the city on Friday night.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/benghazi-survivors-tell-missiles-chaos-protest-against-un-plan-523933417#sthash.eKarWrQL.dpuf

‘Have you any Common Sense?’ – Putin Crushes BBC Journalist’s Stupid Questions

putinmain
By Stuart Hooper-22 October 2015

Is common sense severely lacking in mainstream Western journalism?
Russia’s President Putin found himself having to ask BBC journalist John Simpson if he has any common sense at all, as he pushed the establishment line that Russia is an aggressor in the world.
Putin contends that Russia is “standing up for its national interests“, and is visibly frustrated by the frankly ignorant questions that Simpson poses. Putin asks, “Why are you threatening us“, and “what business have they got there“, in reference to U.S. military bases throughout Europe.
He also notes that Russia’s annual military budget is a mere $50-78 billion, while the U.S. equivalent is around $575 billion before asking:
And you’re telling me I’m the aggressor here? Have you any common sense at all?
Despite this fact Russia still manages to trump NATO with the world’s best air defence system that it has now deployed in Syria, so what exactly is the Western military industrial complex doing with all that money?
Russia has massively embarrassed the West with its recent actions in Syria, refusing to hold back in itshighly successful campaign against ISIS, so this move by the BBC joins other recent attempts to paint Russia as an enemy.
The following interview has been viewed, in total, over one million times, which is testament to how powerfully it really is:

Does Ukraine Still Believe in Reform?

As the country votes in local elections, Ukrainians will weigh in on whether they still believe in the promise of a less corrupt tomorrow.
Does Ukraine Still Believe in Reform?
BY COLIN CLEARY-OCTOBER 23, 2015
The reform movement in Ukraine is having a moment. On the eve of Ukraine’s local elections, new polling shows that the most popular politician in the country is Mikhail Saakashvili, the appointed Governor of the Odessa region and former president of Georgia. A public relations dynamo and enemy of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Saakashvili has been at the vanguard of a public and pronounced effort to run out the old strains of corruption that have survived, and often thrived, in post-Maidan Ukraine. More pointedly, he has become the standard-bearer for the promise that reform is not only still possible, but is in fact in the works. And his close ties to President Petro Poroshenko might burnish the president’s sagging reformist credentials and aid the electoral fortunes of his Poroshenko Bloc/Solidarity party.
If Poroshenko’s party does well in the elections on Oct. 25 — the first nationwide round of local elections since Maidan — it will show that there is still some faith that the president will make good on the reforms he has promised. The Odessa region, where Saakashvili is governor, is the test case for what reform might look like across Ukraine. As voters cast ballots for mayors and representatives in city and regional councils, they will also be weighing in on this fight.
More than four months into his tenure as governor, Saakashvili is consolidating an impressive reform team, including the regional heads of the Odessa Customs Office and the Prosecutor General’s Office. With his people in place, Saakashvili is at last poised to take on the pervasive system of institutional corruption that has ruled Odessa. He’s taken aim at reforming customs — a major issue in Odessa — advancing deregulation, and taking down the oligarchs who have profited from the country’s dysfunction. He is also revolutionizing how officials communicate with their constituents, engaging with the public on regional and national media, riding on buses and walking the streets. Saakashvili is doing what the Ukrainian leadership has heretofore failed to do: explain reforms and listen to the citizens. The favorable reception he has received in Odessa demonstrates that citizens want to be heard.
And the nation has been watching.
He has been doing all of this with the support of the president, who has publicly backed the appointments to Saakashvilli’s team and has echoed his message. On Oct. 21, just days before the vote, Poroshenko announced that he would unveil a series of sweeping reforms to tackle corruption. “I have never talked about this and did not want to speak before the election, but I will tell you that immediately after the elections we will have four years without elections, without populism, when finally we will be able to demonstrate decisive steps for the development of our country,” he said.
Ukraine’s people are primed for change. Public opinion shows increasing disaffection with the national government and a sense that it has failed to deliver on reform — sentiments that will influence the elections. According to the recent poll sponsored by the International Republican Institute, 68 percent of Ukrainians believe the country is moving in the wrong direction. The public sees declining living standards but no change to the oligarchic hold over the economy or to the old methods of insider deals and paid-for justice.
Enter Saakashvili. Poroshenko stunned observers with the announcement May 30 that Saakashvili would give up his Georgian citizenship to become governor of the Odessa region. But Saakashvili is not as foreign as it might appear. He graduated from Kiev’s Shevchenko University and has known Poroshenko since those days. He considers the fight for Ukrainian sovereignty a common fight against Russia’s assertion of a sphere of influence over the post-Soviet space. While Saakashvili has fallen out with the current government of Georgia, he and the other Georgian reformers who have decamped to Ukraine have an impressive record to recommend them. They tamed corruption and radically improved the business climate in Georgia during Saakashvili’s tenure from 2004 to 2013. Most Ukrainians want to give him a chance to see if he can pull off such a feat in Ukraine.
As governor, Saakashvili has characteristically shown himself willing to take on the most senior figures of the establishment. He railed against the monopoly that the airline owned by oligarch Igor Kolomoisky enjoyed in Odessa and called for the firing of the head of the State Aviation Administration, a Kolomoisky ally. When that firing was delayed, Saakashvili publicly criticized Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk for defending Kolomoisky’s interests and sabotaging reform. Saakashvili won the fight. The official was fired and the monopoly ended. In the process, Saakashvili withstood the relentless scorn heaped on him by Kolomoisky’s national TV channel.
Thus far, Saakashvili’s platform for reform in Odessa has focused on a few main points.
The first is customs. Odessa is Ukraine’s most important port. The Customs service operating there has long been a racket linked to organized crime. The loss of customs duties has cost the national treasury countless millions of dollars while impeding the flow of legitimate business. In July, Saakashvili estimated the losses at between 500 million and 1 billion euros annually. Saakashvili’s team has promised to impose transparency on the customs process. E-declarations will take matters wherever possible out of the hands of officials to preempt corruption. Same day — even one hour — approvals are set to become the norm. Saakashvili has pledged that his team can double customs receipts in six months and triple them in a year and a half.
The second is deregulation. Saakashvili’s team is setting up a one-stop shop to radically facilitate registration of businesses. Regulations are to be reduced and those approvals still required are to be obtained on the same day in one place. Forms are to be transparent and electronic to close off opportunities for bribe-seeking.
Third is taking on the oligarchs. Saakashvili seeks to challenge the privileges and impunity of regional and national oligarchs. One of his early acts in Odessa was to stage a public teardown of the wall a magnate had put up to illegally appropriate a public beach.
The most recent sign of the changing times came on Oct. 19 when 26-year-old Maidan activist Yuliya Marushevska was appointed as head of the Odessa regional customs service. Marushevska had been a deputy to Saakashvili and an Internet sensation during the Maidan movement. Her “I am a Ukrainian” video went viral, racking up more than 8.6 million views. Poroshenko travelled to Odessa to announce her appointment and underline his support for the reform effort. Saakashvili declared he “thanked God” that Marushevska had no formal training as a customs officer since that spared her the tradecraft in how to extract bribes. Marushevska pledged that she would head an honest and professional team. Her chief deputy will be Giorgi Tskhadaia, head of Georgian tax and customs in 2009-10.
Another key reform-minded Georgian in Odessa is deputy prosecutor general and, concurrently, head of the Odessa region prosecutor’s office, Davit Sakvarelidze. Having butted heads with the prosecutor general in Kiev, Sakvarelidze is now in a position to use Odessa as a laboratory to demonstrate that transparency and rule of law can be upheld in what is universally regarded as a deeply corrupt institution.
Being local elections, Sunday’s vote will be swayed by personalities and regional issues. But it will also be a test as to how the reform message is competing with a cynical populism that has risen from other corners of Ukrainian politics. Former Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko, imprisoned by Yanukovych and distant second place finisher to Poroshenko in the May 2014 presidential election, has leveraged populist proposals like maintaining subsidies for gas prices, which violates a key reform mandated by the IMF, to help her Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) party stage a comeback. Support has more than doubled in the past year and the party is set to do well on Oct. 25. The Opposition Bloc, a spin off of former President Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions that is headed by former senior officials who profited handsomely from the kleptocracy that prevailed under his rule, is also expected to do well in the east and south on an anti-reform message.
One of Saakashvili’s team will be running on Oct. 25. His deputy, Sasha Borovik, is an underdog candidate for mayor of Odessa city. Borovik, a former Microsoft executive, left Yatsenuk’s government over frustration with the slow pace of reform. He faces incumbent Gennadiy Trukhanov, a former Yanukovych stalwart who is reputed to have had links to organized crime. His other opponent is veteran mayor Eduard Hurvitz, who was associated with parties stemming from Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution. It would be a coup if Borovik, who has lived abroad much of his adult life and has limited ties to Odessa, could — as Saakashvili’s endorsed candidate — pull off an upset. However, as elsewhere, reform is not the only factor in the race and Saakashvili’s standing would easily survive a Borovik defeat. (As elsewhere, there will be a runoff of the two top finishers on Nov. 15 if no candidate gets 50 percent of the vote.)
What attracts supporters to Saakashvili is his energy, his challenge to the establishment, his flair for public relations, and his desire to show tangible near-term results. Whatever Saakashvili’s ambitions — in Ukraine or Georgia — his personal interests and the interests of reform in Odessa converge. He needs to succeed. Many other Ukrainian leaders are compromised by their own financial holdings or beholden to oligarchic interests. That is why Saakashvili’s name is mentioned as a possible prime minister of Ukraine. If Saakashvili can jump-start reform in Odessa, he could bring new life to his own political career — and just maybe save Ukraine in the process.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of the U.S. government.
Photo credit: ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP/Getty Images

China central bank sees 'very normal' growth of 6-7 percent in next few years

An advertisement poster promoting China's renminbi (RMB) or yuan , U.S. dollar and Euro exchange services is seen outside at foreign exchange store in Hong Kong, China August 13, 2015. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/Files
An advertisement poster promoting China's renminbi (RMB) or yuan , U.S. dollar and Euro exchange services is seen outside at foreign exchange store in Hong Kong, China August 13, 2015.

ReutersBEIJING Sat Oct 24, 2015
China will be able to keep annual economic growth at around 6-7 percent over the next three to five years, a top People's Bank of China (PBOC) policymaker said on Saturday, a day after the bank cut interest rates for the sixth time in less than a year.
The comments from Yi Gang, vice governor of the People's Bank of China, appeared to be aimed at reassuring investors this level of growth, China's slowest pace in two decades but still faster than other major economies, is the Chinese economy's "new normal".
"China's future economic growth will still be relatively quick. Around seven, six-point-something. These will all be very normal," he told a conference in Beijing.
As well as cutting interest rates on Friday, the PBOC lowered the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves.
Both moves were bids to jumpstart growth in China's slowing economy, a drag on global growth that has been of major concern in emerging markets and other leading economies.
Monetary policy easing in the world's second-largest economy is at its most aggressive since the 2008/09 financial crisis, as growth looks set to slip to a 25-year-low this year of under 7 percent.
Yi said China in the future would lower the reserve requirement ratio for banks, the amount of cash that major lenders need to keep on hand - at a "normal" pace.
"Our reserve requirement ratio is still at a relatively high level so there is still room to lower the RRR. In future, we will proceed to lower the RRR at a normal pace," he said.
Yi said the PBOC planned to keep interest rates at a reasonable level to reduce the corporate debt burden, and noted that interest rate liberalisation does not mean that the central bank would reduce regulation of rates.
China will also continue to set benchmark lending and deposit rates for some time, he said, but these rates would not restrict market pricing.
Data released on Monday showed China's economy in the July-to-September quarter grew 6.9 percent from a year earlier, dipping below 7 percent for the first time since the global financial crisis.
Yi noted that China's stock market, which has fallen sharply since June, had completed most of its adjustments and that the yuan, which was buffeted in the wake of a surprise devaluation in early August, had "basically" stabilised.
"Following Aug. 11, our original intention was to pursue market reforms. But after that, we realised there was a relatively big depreciation pressure (on the yuan), and so we decided to resolutely stabilise the yuan," he said.
The PBOC was looking into leverage levels in the debt market, Yi noted.
He said that China did not have exceptionally high debt levels, and while the bank was not overly anxious about cutting the level of leverage in the economy, the overall strategy is to stabilise leverage levels.
“I want to especially mention this: I am now also focused on the leverage level in China’s debt market,” he said.

(Reporting by Gui Qing Koh and Alexandra Harney; editing by Jeremy Gaunt and Jason Neely)

India: The National Minority Commision’s Report on Dadri killing (text)

dadri-lynching-file_image
( October 23, 2015, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) The lynching of man in Dadri last month strongly appeared to be the result of “pre-meditated planning” under which people were incited using a temple, the National Minorities Commission has said.
In its report, the minority panel also described as “disturbing” the “irreponsible comments” by politicians to make “capital” out of it.
The report is follows;



Download (PDF, Unknown)

Southeast Asia: Persecuted Rohingya refugees from Myanmar suffer horrific abuses at sea


21 October 2015
  • Women, men and children trafficked, held in hellish conditions, beaten or killed for ransom
  • Fears that hundreds, maybe thousands, more refugees and migrants have perished at sea than first estimated
  • New “sailing season” crisis looms in Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea
Rohingya women, men and children attempting to flee persecution in Myanmar by boat earlier this year were killed or severely beaten by human traffickers if their families failed to pay ransoms, and kept in hellish, inhuman conditions, Amnesty International reveals in a new report today.

TalkTalk says most financial details not been compromised

SATURDAY 24 OCTOBER 2015 

Talktalk, who revealed the personal details of up to four million customers may have been exposed to a cyber attack, now claim that the scale of the hack may not be as bad as first feared.

TalkTalk say a cyber-attack revealed on Friday affected their website and not their "core systems."
The communications company is looking into claims by customers that their bank accounts have been targeted by fraudsters - but say there is no evidence to suggest they're linked to this week's data breach.
In a statement on Saturday the company said bank details revealed were partially obscured: "We now expect the amount of financial information that may have been accessed to be materially lower than initially believed and would on its own not enable a criminal to take money from your account ."
News

Business warning

Cyber-attacks on businesses are an "everyday" problem and the TalkTalk attack has made the headlines only because of its "sheer scale" according to the Institute of Directors.
Speaking to Channel 4 News on Saturday, Senior Corporate Governance Adviser Oliver Parry warned that boards of businesses need to understand the risks.
He warned that as the nature of cyber-crime is every-changing, "prevention will take a lot of effort, time and understanding."
Mr Parry said the TalkTalk hack had been handled relatively well by the business, but they needed to reassure customers that it would not happen again - this was the third time this year the company has been successfully targetted by hackers.

Scale and duration of attack 'alarming'

TalkTalk has denied claims that it has "covered up" the attack, saying "we went public within 36 hours."
Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee, said these claims should be investigated.
He told the Telegraph: "Suggestions that TalkTalk has covered up both the scale and duration of this attack are alarming and unacceptable and must be thoroughly investigated When such sensitive data as bank details have been compromised, companies have a duty to warn customers immediately."
TalkTalk CEO Dido Harding told Channel 4 News on Friday that the company was being accused of revealing the attack too early and too late.
Baroness Harding said: "We made the decision yesterday to take what was is a very big brand risk in this communication [but] my judgement was that it was better to warn all my customers early."
Watch the full interview with Baroness Dido Harding below

Hurricane Patricia: Texas feels effects of storm as flooding pummels state

  • Heavy rain continues to fall as freight train derails
  • Parts of Louisiana, southern Oklahoma and Arkansas under flash flood alert
Aftermath of Union Pacific freight train derailment.


 in New York-Saturday 24 October 2015

Dangerous flooding was occurring in Texas in the early hours of Saturday, as gushing waters closed the interstate between Dallas and Houston and caused a freight train to completely derail and overturn.

A creek that broke its banks near Corsicana in the north of the state swept away train tracks in the night, causing a Union Pacific freight train to collapse into the flood waters around 3.30am a spokesman for the rail company said. The two crew members were forced to swim to safety.
One locomotive and several rail cars loaded with gravel went into the water and were partly submerged, the spokesman said. 
More than 16in of rain fell Friday in the Corsicana area as the outer reaches of hurricane Patricia, which made landfall on the Pacific coast of Mexico, were felt across the south-central US. The rain was still heavy and steady as Saturday began.
Later, Galveston County judge Mark Henry issued a voluntary evacuation for Bolivar Peninsula, just northeast of Galveston Island, after forecasters predicted that the area would get 8in to 12in of rain and tides 4ft to 5ft high.
Henry warned that residents who did not leave might find themselves cut off from emergency services as the heaviest winds and rains came ashore. The storm was expected to reach the area by around 6pm on Saturday.
“Elderly residents and people with medical conditions should make plans to leave the area before dark,” Henry said.
A county spokeswoman, Brittany Rainville, said there were buses waiting to evacuate people, but no one had shown up to leave as of early Saturday afternoon. She said about 4,000 people lived on the peninsula.
Flight tracker flightaware.com reported that about 100 flights had been canceled at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.
Parts of Louisiana, southern Oklahoma and Arkansas were under flash flood alert and torrential, relentless rain was expected to persist through Saturday and in some cases into Monday.
One man was missing in the San Antonio area of Texas, after entering a ditch of swift flood water in attempt to rescue his dog.

Self-absorbed millennials? Not the ones who are caregivers for their elders.

Maggie Gonzalez, 25, hugs her grandfather John L. duFief, 85. She helps care for her grandfather and grandmother, who live in a Rockville senior facility. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)

Maggie Gonzalez with her grandparents Susan and John L. duFief. “They ask me who I’m dating and what bars I go to . . . and I really enjoy hearing about their past,” Gonzalez says. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)
By Tara Bahrampour-October 24
Among the benefits of living in an industrialized society is the fact that, as medicine and technology improve, people live longer and the birth rate declines.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Jaffna Press Club holds remembrance service for slain Tamil journalist

 

Photograph: @uthayashalin

 23 October 2015
The Jaffna Press Club held an event to mark the 15th death anniversary of murdered Tamil journalist Mylvaganam Nimalarajan earlier this week.
Mr Nimalarajan, a senior journalist who contributed to the BBC Tamil and Sinhala services, the Tamil daily Virakesari and Sinhala weekly Ravaya, was murdered on October 19th 2000.

The Committee to Protect Journalists stated shortly after his death:
“The assailants shot the journalist through the window of his study, where he was working on an article, and threw a grenade into the home before fleeing the premises. The attack occurred during curfew hours in a high-security zone in central Jaffna town.” 
“Local journalists suspect that Nimalarajan's reporting on vote-rigging and intimidation in Jaffna during the recent parliamentary elections may have led to his murder.”
The government aligned paramilitary group the EPDP are suspected of carrying out the killing.

Six months after the killing Reporters Without Borders (RSF) expressed deep concern regarding "the serious shortcomings of the police investigation and the Sri Lankan government's apparent unwillingness to shed light".

In 2004 RSF wrote an open letter to then Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunge criticising “the failure of the Sri Lankan government to reopen the murder investigation and regretted that the killers have not been tried or punished”. It called on the president to ensure justice in the case, as she herself demanded at the time of the murder,” the statement said.

Speaking ten years after the murder, Mr Nimalarajan’s father told RSF:
“This has been 10 years of suffering for our family. But my son’s memory is still alive. I would like people to remember him as a courageous journalist who served his community. The government could relaunch the investigation into my son’s murder if it wanted to. It is a question of political will. We want justice to be done.”