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 29, 2015

School peon who sexually abused 6 school boys arrested – whither SL?


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -29.Oct.2015, 1.00PM)  A peon who sexually abused boys six  below the age  of ten years in a school , Uduthurai Hindu College, Jaffna was arrested by the Palay , Kilinochchi police lastday evening (26) .It is following a complaint lodged with the police that a boy was molested , this arrest was made  , according to the police.
During investigations it has come to light that the suspect had sexually abused 6 boys below the age of ten years after deceiving them .
The suspect is 26 years old , and a resident of Thalaiyadi, Waththiriyaya , Jaffna, and was  to be produced before the Kilinochchi magistrate court on the 27 th. 
A police team led by OIC of Palay police station under the supervision of ASP Roshan Rajapakse , Palay police division , and monitored by Kilinochchi police SSP Palitha Siriwardena are conducting further investigations


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by     (2015-10-29 07:35:32)

17 arrested over water pollution

2015-10-29
Police Naval Division officials have arrested 17 individuals for alleged pollution of Kelani River and Hamilton canal yesterday (28).
The suspects – 12 women and five men- were dumping garbage into Kelani River and Hamilton canal, Police Media Unit told Ceylon Today Online.
The suspects were released on police bail. They were ordered to appear before Hultsdorf and Mahara Magistrates on 5 November, Police Media Unit added.
Police Naval Division is conducting further investigations.
Video: Police fire tear gas at protesting students


2015-10-29
Police fired tear gas and aimed water cannons at the students of the Higher Diploma in Accountancy while they were on a protest march to the University Grant Commission (UGC) in Colombo 7.






Maithree: UNP gets short end of the stick

Calls probe commission ‘media circus’ 


article_image
By Shamindra Ferdinando-October 28, 2015


Former UNP Provincial Councillor and Chairman of Lanka Coal Co. (LCC) Limited Maithri Gunaratne yesterday alleged that the government was playing politics with the on-going investigations into alleged waste, corruption and irregularities during the previous administration. Gunaratne succeeded Menaka Liyanage at LCC.



Over two dozen Palestinian bodies withheld by Israel in October 



Israeli officials cover the body of an alleged Palestinian attacker in Jerusalem on 17 October 2015 (AA) -
Thursday 29 October 2015
Israel is withholding the bodies of at least 28 Palestinians who have been killed since the beginning of October.
The 28 bodies are held at the Abu Kabir Forensic institute in Tel Aviv, infamously known as the place where an Israeli doctor harvested organs and body parts from Palestinian bodies without seeking permission from their families.
Israel’s executions of Palestinian teens must end, Amnesty says



Palestinian medics carry an injured protester during confrontations with occupation forces outside the Israeli settlement of Beit El, near the West Bank city of Ramallah, 27 October.
 Shadi HatemAPA images

Ali Abunimah-28 October 2015

Israel is carrying out summary executions of Palestinians, Amnesty International has confirmed.

Sometimes it lets injured Palestinians bleed to death.

The human rights group says it has “documented in depth at least four incidents in which Palestinians were deliberately shot dead by Israeli forces when they posed no imminent threat to life, in what appear to have been extrajudicial executions.”

Israel’s Executions of Palestinian Teens Must End, Amnesty Says by Thavam Ratna

U.S. Navy scrambled jets after Russian planes approached carrier: official

A U.S. Navy  F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter lands onto the deck of the USS Ronald Reagan, a Nimitz-class nuclear-powered super carrier, in the West Sea, South Korea, October 29, 2015.  REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
A U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter lands onto the deck of the USS Ronald Reagan, a Nimitz-class nuclear-powered super carrier, in the West Sea, South Korea, October 29, 2015.
ReutersThu Oct 29, 2015 
A U.S. Navy aircraft carrier scrambled four F-18 jets on Tuesday after two Russian anti-submarine aircraft flew within a nautical mile of the warship, a Navy official said on Thursday.
News media reports said the incident occurred in international waters east of the Korean peninsula.
A U.S. Navy official said two Russian TU-142 "Bear" aircraft flew within a nautical mile of the Reagan, prompting it to launch four F-18 fighter jets to escort the planes away from the ship.
The TU-145 Bear is a long-range anti-submarine warfare plane and a variant of the Tu-95 Bear strategic bomber.
The Navy official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the pilots from both sides behaved professionally and the Tu-145s moved away from the U.S. carrier.
Media accounts quoted Navy officials as saying the incident was not unprecedented.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Writing by David Alexander; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

The Great British Leap Forward: A new era dawns in UK-China relations

Chinese President Xi Jinping and British Prime Minister David Cameron. Pic: AP.Chinese President Xi Jinping and British Prime Minister David Cameron. Pic: AP.
Graham LandBy  Oct 28, 2015
Last week’s official UK state visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping has been interpreted in a variety of ways. The BBC referred to the lavish welcome afforded the Chinese head of state as a “redder than red carpet welcome”, while in the Guardian, comedian Stewart Lee satirized it as one big Royal ass-kissing.
British Prime Minister David Cameron touted the four-day stopover as the start of a “golden era” in relations between the two countries, desperately trying to sell the burgeoning alliance as a “win-win”.
Others saw much more serious consequences to this apparent sea-shift in British international relations.
Regarding the new stage in Sino-British relations, two thoughts spring to mind:
  1. Britain is not showing the kind of trepidation of its long-standing ally in embracing the country that is now, by some measures, already the world’s biggest economy. It is rather signaling a slight, but clear turning away from the United States — which some believe to be a fading super power — and beginning to ensconce itself the lap of an emerging one.
  2. Both the UK and China are finally putting aside the uncomfortable history of theOpium Wars, which ended with latter devastated, humiliated and driven towards isolationism. Britain, no longer an imperial power, now senses which way the wind is blowing — the East.
Yes, there was pomp and circumstance aplenty. But there are more immediate and concrete aspects to this meeting of an old European colonial power and what some general — be it Napoleon or Yamamoto or only fictive representations of either — may have once referred to as a “sleeping giant”. Apart from Royal overtures and diplomatic genuflections, what were the principal results of Xi Jinping’s London minibreak?
We see no conflict with having that very special relationship [with the US], with wanting to be a strong partner for China as the Chinese economy continues to grow and China emerges as an enormous world power.
—British Prime Minister David Cameron
David Cameron treats China’s Xi to of and fish and chips – video http://bit.ly/1kz9otc 
Some highlights of China’s state visit to the UK
  • A trade deal worth a cool £40 billion ($61 billion) between the two countries, with the UK buying Chinese nuclear technology and receiving investment in a new high-speed rail line, while China moves into 6th place in terms of UK exports.
  • For China, a strong tie with the formerly chief — and still relevant — Western cultural and economic power, solidifying the world’s second largest economy as a major global player.
  • For the UK, a pivotal role in negotiation between the West — especially the US — and the emerging superpower, which is set to become the undisputed world’s largest economy. Besides, with Scotland threatening independence and a fractious relationship with the European Union — compounded by strengthening ties between the US and EU — China may be just the friend that the increasingly lonely island is looking for.
  • The Eden Project, a super-cool and much larger version of the multiple greenhouse complex in Cornwall, UK, to be built in Qingdao on the east coast of China. A Sino-British venture, China Eden will house a collection of plants from all over the world. It is a £100 million ($150 million) project that China hopes will become a major environmental tourist destination.

The World Bank: Denmark is best in Europe for business

The following press release issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Denmark.

Country_Denmark
( October 28, 2015, Copenhagen, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is the fifth year in a row that Denmark is ranked as the easiest place in Europe to do business, only Singapore and New Zealand are ahead of Denmark. Denmark also moves into the top 3 in the World Bank’s ‘Doing Business’ ranking published today.
The Danish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Kristian Jensen, says:
“Creating a good and efficient business environment for both foreign and Danish companies is a key priority of the Danish government, and I am pleased to see that our continuous efforts show results and Denmark is again acknowledged as best in Europe for doing business.”
“It is the second year in a row that Denmark takes a step up in the World Bank’s Doing Business ranking and I hope that more foreign investors will consider growing their business in the world’s third best country for business.”
US pharma giant invests heavily in Denmark
One of the foreign companies that has already invested massively in Denmark is Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), one of the biggest American pharmaceutical companies.
In the past year, BMS has invested in four large deals and partnerships in Denmark: Bavarian Nordic, Novo Nordisk, Galecto Biotech, and Dako. These agreements are valued at over 1.4 Billion USD.
“Denmark is focused on supporting Innovation, which creates a positive context for our investments and we are happy to see Denmark recognized today,” says Emmanuel Blin, Senior Vice President and Head of Commercialization, Policy & Operations at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company.
“At Bristol-Myers Squibb, we recognize that innovation happens everywhere and partnering is an important part of our strategy. In the past year, we have partnered with four Danish life sciences companies, showing that the Danish life sciences’ cluster is among the most innovative in Europe.”
Non-bureaucratic regulation and online tools
The World Bank report presents quantitative indicators on 11 areas of business regulation. Recognizing that sound business regulations are fundamental to a top performing economy, the economies that perform well in the Doing Business rankings are not those with no regulation, but rather those with rules that facilitate interactions in the marketplace in a non-bureaucratic manner.
The report stresses the importance of online procedures for efficient business administration and Denmark is one of the frontrunners where almost all investigated transactions can be conducted online. An example is the online land registry which is highlighted as a good example. “Regulatory efficiency and quality go together and in fact reinforce each other in a virtuous cycle. The country’s state-of-the-art land registry provides both efficient registration of property transfers and valuable property title,” it reads in the report.
About the World Bank’s Doing Business report
Doing Business 2016 is the 13th in a series of annual reports benchmarking the regulations that affect private sector firms, in particular small and medium-size enterprises.
The report presents quantitative indicators on 11 areas of business regulation for 189 economies of which Denmark is ranked the 3rd easiest place to start and run a business.
Doing Business measures aspects of regulation affecting 11 areas of the life of a business. Ten of these areas are included in this year’s ranking on the ease of doing business: starting a business, dealing with construction permits getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving insolvency. Features of labour market regulation are normally also part of the analysis.

Who Are the Real Child Soldiers?

Who Are the Real Child Soldiers?
BY TOM O'BRYAN-OCTOBER 28, 2015
Last week, Netflix released Beasts of No Nation, the “brutal tale” of Agu, a young African boy who joins the ranks of a rebel group after his father and brother are killed. Based on Uzodinma Iweala’s 2005 novel of the same name, the movie has already been tipped for an Oscar by movie critics.
Beasts of No Nation is sure to raise the profile of the harrowing issue of children pressed into combat: in less than two weeks, more than three million people have already tuned in online. For that reason alone it deserves a degree of praise. The film tells a powerful story about physical and psychological harm inflicted upon Agu as he fights under a ruthless officer (known simply as the “Commandant”) in a civil war in a fictional African state.
At the same time, however, the movie reinforces a number of common and unfortunate stereotypes about child soldiers. Such misconceptions have, in the past, led to flawed policies that have failed to address the issue. Suffice it to say that as many as three in ten former child soldiers in conflicts around the world end up returning to the rebel group they once fled — and that even those who don’t rejoin face long-term unemployment and above-average rates of drug addiction and suicide.
The portrayal of Agu in the movie hits every beat of the stereotypical African child soldier trope. He wields an AK-47 with which he kills a number of enemy combatants and civilians. He participates in a magic ritual that, his commanders assure him, will make bullets pass harmlessly through his body. Under intense pressure from his rebel peers, he consumes drugs before combat.
Certainly, there are child soldiers in sub-Saharan Africa. Rebel groups and state militaries alike have depended on underage combatants in deadly wars in the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan.
But, as a result of this focus on Africa, the plight of child soldiers in the Middle East and Asia is neglected. It also reinforces the common perceptionof Africa as a wholly broken, war-torn continent.
In reality, fewer than half of the countries that have engaged underage combatants since 2011 are in Africa. A recent United Nations report points out that the nation now facing the biggest challenge with child soldiers is, in fact, Yemen.
As the country’s civil war continues, it is estimated that approximately one in three fighters in Yemen are children. In less than 30 days earlier this year, Houthi rebels, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and a score of smaller militias recruited 140 underage boys and girls to join their ranks. Human Rights Watch has documented the Houthi rebels’ forced recruitment of children in the conflict, which now stretches back as far as 2009. The group is responsible for almost 90 percent of all recorded cases of child soldier abduction and enrollment in Yemen in 2014.
Beasts of No Nation is also somewhat off the mark regarding gender. Every single combatant depicted in the film is male. This includes Agu and all other child soldiers in the movie. There are few strong women characters: they are largely relegated to secondary roles as victims, prostitutes, and mothers, with little influence over the war itself.
believe that forty percent of the child soldiers around the world are girls." style="box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline;">In fact, analysts believe that forty percent of the child soldiers around the world are girls. Girls have played active combat roles in wars as far afield as Colombia, Liberia, and Uganda. Research on Sierra Leone’s civil war uncovered the story of one teenage girl who achieved successive promotions within the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Having finally attained the senior rank of commander — “deemed to be the pinnacle of success within the RUF” — she led an entire unit of child combatants. This girl’s experiences are not unique. There are many thousands of documented cases of girls serving as soldiers in wars across the globe.
The exclusion of girls from media coverage of child soldiers has distorted policymaking. Many well-intentioned disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration (DDR) programs, which aim to help former child soldiers successfully transition back into civilian life, have prioritized boys over girls.
McGill University Professor Myriam Denov conducted extensive field research on this issue in Sierra Leone and discovered that “most girl [soldiers] experienced systematic exclusion from DDR.” While many boy soldiers received counseling and access to education, female child soldiers received no such support. This exclusion is driven largely by the stereotypes thatBeasts of No Nation reinforces. Broadening our conception of child soldiers to incorporate girls will be key to tackling rampant levels of recidivism for children formerly associated with armed groups.
The movie also overreaches in its depiction of Agu’s role as a fighter. “I will train him to be a warrior!” roars the Commandant upon first discovering Agu roaming the forest alone. His soldiers present Agu with a machete, which he uses, under duress from the Commandant, to hack an enemy soldier to death. His superiors reward him for the deed by giving him a gun of his own.
The ubiquitous image of a child soldier clutching a weapon is misrepresentative. In reality, many children abducted by armed groups never even touch a gun. Instead they play a broad range of other roles: preparing meals for the group, cleaning around the camp, performing forced sexual favors for the other combatants, or being sent on excursions to spy on enemy forces’ movements.
Driven by the stereotypical image of child soldiers as combatants, many DDR programs have required children to turn in weapons in order to benefit from the rehabilitation services offered. Experts believe that, on average, this policy excludes more than eighty percent of the minors associated with armed groups. This helps to explain the high likelihood that these children will fail to successfully reintegrate into their communities and subsequently be forced to return to life with the rebels.
Beasts of No Nation represents a missed opportunity to challenge the stereotypes that exclude thousands of children in conflict zones from rehabilitation programs. Policymakers and filmmakers alike have a responsibility to challenge such simplifications. For as long as our views of these children remain distorted by stereotypes, they will continue to cycle in and out of war.
In the photo, armed Yemeni children sit in the back of a pick up truck with fighters loyal to Yemen’s Saudi-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi in the southern Yemeni city of Aden on May 10, 2015.
Photo credit: SALEH AL-OBEIDI/AFP/Getty Images

World Indigenous Games draw 2,000 athletes amid protests over groups' rights

Competition among people from more than 20 countries comes as tensions climb in Brazil between indigenous cultures and people of European descent

A indigenous woman protests during the first World Games for Indigenous Peoples. The sign says: ‘SOS! No to the proposed constitutional amendment 215 (PEC 215).’ Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters


Pataxo Indians from Brazil pull on the rope during the tug of war competition at the World Indigenous Games, in Palmas, Brazil. Photograph: Eraldo Peres/AP


Thursday 29 October 2015
Few sporting pleasures can rival that of the post-victory brag.
Shortly after the Kuikoro had seen off their Amazonian rivals, the Karajá, in arguably the most hotly anticipated event of the first World Games for Indigenous Peoples, the tug-of-war, one of the athletes could not resist emphasising the ease of their 40-second victory.

China to end one-child policy

A woman, pregnant with her second child, lies on a bed as her daughter places her head on her mother's stomach in Hefei, Anhui province, China, in February 2014
The Communist Party began formally relaxing national rules two years ago


BBC29 October 2015
China has decided to end its decades-long one-child policy, the state-run Xinhua news agency reports.
Couples will now be allowed to have two children, it said, citing a statement from the Communist Party.


Tattoo Ink Poisoning Americans


tattoo-artist
Thursday 29 October 2015
If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance that you have a tattoo. After all, nearly half of the population has decided at some point in their life that it was a good idea to permanently ink an image, or special symbol, onto their skin. Many hold no regrets when it comes to their tattoos; however, others embrace them less so with age.

But now there’s a new reason to rethink getting inked. Have you ever considered exactly what tattoo ink is made of? The ink is really pigment, and most are made of metal salts; however, some are made of plastics or vegetable dyes, and if organic, they’re usually plant-based.

Body-art lovers have complained of scarring, allergic reactions, and phototoxic reactions (adverse reaction to light or sunlight), and depending on the type of pigment, other complications can occur. Brightly colored plastic-based pigments have been particularly problematic for some, and glow-in-the-dark tattoos can be radioactive and toxic.
FDA has not approved any tattoo pigments for injection into the skin

Tattoo parlors are regulated by the state and city, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not require manufacturers to release their ink’s ingredients; doing so could supposedly give away trade secrets.

The lack of regulation is slightly unnerving considering that 36 percent of people ages 18-25 have tattoos, as do 40 percent of those 26-40 years old. That means approximately 45 million Americans have been inked, and one-third of those did so because it makes them feel “sexy.”

Unfortunately, what makes you feel sexy now, could possibly make you feel sick later. The chemicals and heavy metals in tattoo ink can cause various forms of cancer, birth defects, certain mutations, and be destructive to your immune system.

Many pigments used in tattoo inks are industrial-grade colors suitable for printer ink or automobile paint

The FDA’s website warns about tattoo ink possibly causing infections, allergic reactions, keloids (formation of a scar), granulomas (inflammation) and potential complications while receiving MRIs.

Although rare, some people might experience swelling or burning in the tattoo while receiving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), according to the FDA.

A team of researchers is working with an Arkansas-based FDA laboratory to learn more about the chemistry between tattoos and the body. Chemist Paul Howard, Ph.D., with the National Center for Toxicological Research (NCTR), is investigating the “chemical composition of the inks and how they break down (metabolize) in the body.”

They’re also looking at the short-term and long-term safety of tattoo pigments, and how the body responds to the interaction of light with the inks.
“There have been no systematic studies of the safety of tattoo inks,” said Howard, “so we are trying to ask–and answer–some fundamental questions.”

Part of the team’s research is to understand what happens to tattoo ink when it’s exposed to sunlight and fades over time. “Where does the pigment go?” asked Howard.

Some experts theorize that body cells digest and destroy the ink, ridding themselves of bacteria and other foreign matter as a defense mechanism. Yellow 74 pigment is believed to be broken down by enzymes, or metabolized, similar to the way our bodies excrete other substances, according to NCTR research.

Sunlight breaks down the pigment Yellow 74 into colorless compounds that, while invisible, most likely still remain in the skin and could potentially be toxic.

Research has also shown that some pigment migrates from the tattoo site to the body’s lymph nodes, explained Howard.

“Lymph nodes are part of the lymphatic system, a collection of fluid-carrying vessels in the body that filter out disease-causing organisms. Whether the migration of tattoo ink has health consequences or not is still unknown,” states the FDA’s website.

Further research is definitely needed to fully understand the effects of tattoos; however, it’s worth considering next time you think about getting inked.

Additional sources:
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