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

Friday, November 27, 2015

Myanmar elections marked a significant milestone in world politics

2015-11-27
The recent elections in Myanmar marked a significant milestone in the world political landscape with the return of a fully-fledged democracy to a country that had been governed by successive military regimes for over five decades. The National League for Democracy (NLD) led by the most globally popular democratic icon Aung San Suu Kyi had a landslide victory against her political rival, though she cannot assume the highest position of presidency due to a constitutional barrier. The foreign matrimonial links of ‘The Lady’ - as she is popularly known in Myanmar - does not allow her to take up the position. Many believe that this is a technical point that had been brought forward by the designers of reforms – mainly the military junta – to block her in assuming the highest post in the country.


  Apart from The Lady winning Myanmar’s the most awaited democratic polls, there was another significant feature in Myanmar’s politics – the role played by the extremist Buddhist clergy, who were openly campaigning against The Lady and her political party NLD. 

 The stand of the Buddhist ultra-nationalist group was clear. “If you vote for NLD, that will be the end of Buddhism”. They supported the military backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), and sometimes openly requested the people to vote for USDP “to protect Buddhism in Myanmar”. 

Many accused the Patriotic Association of Myanmar (Ma Ba Tha in Myanmar language) as the sole perpetrator behind the religious violence that was taking place in the country for the past few years. The movement received extensive state support – both indirect and otherwise, as is widely believed. 
The significant results of the polls were clear responses to the claims of the Ma Ba Tha movement. More than 85 per cent voted against their request and brought The Lady’s party into power. We are talking of a country where the total Buddhist population is over 80 per cent, yet the support of the ultra-religious nationalistic movements failed even to get 15 per cent of the total votes for USDP.

 Myanmar through its 2008 Constitution has banned mixing religion and politics. According to its section 364, “The abuse of religion for political purposes is forbidden.” The same military juntas who were enjoying the support of extremist Buddhist clergy during the recent polls totally banned them in getting into politics through tough laws that were designed some six years ago. The monks are not supposed to vote or form political parties, according to the Constitution. This decision was mainly influenced by the popular monks’ uprising called “Saffron Revolution” in 1988.
 But the recent elections in Myanmar saw a sudden rise of communal violence mainly between Buddhists and Muslims. According to popular belief, Ma Ba Tha movement instigated these violence with the blessings of the state. The government used them as a tool for their own existence – and show cased themselves as the sole saviours of Buddhism mainly by accommodating requests of Ma Ba Tha. A few months before the polls, the government enacted four controversial laws undermining the rights of minorities, mainly to satisfy Ma Ba Tha, but the polls indicated that the people were against such moves.  

The world has begun to realize the fact that religion and politics – mixed together – would become a deadly combination. I think mainly the people at large have understood this fact but the politicians and their ‘goons’ are yet to realize it.  The issue of mixing politics with religion and creating a deadly “ideological nuclear bomb” was commenced – at least in Asia in the recent history, by Pakistan’s military dictator Zia Ul Haq, who even went to a stage of changing school text books to infiltrate religious extremist ideologies into the minds of people for his own political survival. Today not only Pakistan, but the entire world is suffering from this deadly ideological bomb, which has converted into a mass killing machine in many parts of the world.  

The clash between Muslims and other religions extended to the predominantly Buddhist countries like Myanmar, Thailand and Sri Lanka. But when analysed, there exists an extensive political interest rather a religious one. Both Myanmar and Sri Lanka became classic case studies on this aspects, mainly during their recent elections. 

 In fact both Ma Ba Tha and Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) had a common understanding “in protecting Buddhism” according to their own interpretation in safe guarding the religion. They went onto signing of a memorandum of understanding and adopting a common action plan to fight the ‘cause’. Though Myanmar had constitutional provisions to ban monks engaging in politics, the Burmese government provided the nod to conduct ‘voter education seminars’ country-wide and perhaps ‘educate’ the masses on whom to vote for. Thus, Ma Ba Tha movement travelled all over the country and told voters to take action to ‘protect Buddhism’ at the polls by not voting for The Lady.  In contrast, our BBS formed a political party and contested for the same cause ‘to protect Buddhism.’ Though they had some cracks with the regime at a later stage, state sponsorship or blessings were visible for the past few years. BBS through its political arm with the Cobra symbol accused Maithree-Ranil camp as conspirators against Buddhism.  

In a nutshell, both Ma Ba Tha and BBS became extensively significant political forces with ultra-nationalistic ideologies. But when faced the people at polls, both were ruthlessly rejected by the masses at large with clear messages – both to the extremist monks and to the politicians who were entertaining them. But would they learn from this bitter lesson is the million rupee worth question.  

The Black Abaya & Majjhima-Patipada


Colombo Telegraph
By Mass L. Usuf –November 27, 2015
Mass L. Usuf
Mass L. Usuf
All we are is the result of what we have thought, it is founded on our thoughts, it is made up of our thoughts. If a man speaks or acts with a pure thought, happiness follows him like a shadow that never leaves him.” – (Dhammapada).
The article “Cultural harmony and the middle path” (CT, 21.11.2015) referring to mine titled “Cultural invasion – in the wake of the Abaya” (CT, 19.11.2015), does not reflect a correct understanding of the views, I had expressed. Moreover, the Professor has traversed into certain areas which I had not even addressed in my article. So by way of explanation and clarification, I thought of writing this piece hoping it would be of benefit.
In this, there is no one-upmanship but the intellectual pursuit towards better understanding the different perspectives. At the very inception, I entreat all towards right view and right thinking.
What I have explained in my article is that modesty is a universal principle and that such principle is manifest in Buddhistic, Christian and Islamic practices. I have proven my statement giving the example of the dress of the Bikkhuni and the Christian nun. The bikkhuni covers her entire body except her face, wrists, ankles and her head. It does not matter if one wears the black abaya or yellow abaya, the objective is to cover oneself non-attractively.
Professor Abhayawansa states that I am attempting to make out that the black abaya accords with the middle path in Buddhism. Black, is a colour ; Abaya is an outer garment. It does not make sense for these two to accord with the middle path in Buddhism as the Professor has asserted.
It has been mentioned that if the black abaya is to comply with the Middle Path it should be a moderate dress acceptable to all. The Professor must be aware that there is no universal definition for the Middle Path. The midway between the two extremes of anything is blurry, subjective and relative. Moreover, the Professor says about a dress acceptable to all. Who sets the parameters for a dress acceptable to all? Has the Professor forgotten that we are living in a democratic country? Respectfully, it is beyond comprehension as to how the Professor can even make such a statement?
The Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta lays down what the Buddha said about the middle path:

Isn’t there a punishment for police chiefs for assaulting the HNDA students?

Isn’t there a punishment for police chiefs for assaulting the HNDA students?

Lankanewsweb.netNov 28, 2015
During the investigation conducted by the police commission regarding the abusive assault made by the police to the HNDA students last 29th it was confirmed that the police has exceeded its limit and indulged in controlling the protest carried out by the HNDA students who were protesting to get an equal degree standard for their higher national accounting diploma course. However the police commission has recommended taking disciplinary action only against the lower rank officers leaving the higher ranking officials who gave the orders. The police commission has failed or deliberately ignored to recommend disciplinary actions against the senior officers ranging from police inspectors to the DIG position who conducted this operation last 29th.

Junior officers in the police are often used as a watch dog to attack and assault the public for political influence and in many cases the senior officers are left free unpunished. Lower ranking officers are mostly vulnerable for such disciplinary actions leaving the higher officials but sometimes even that would not happen leaving all free. Due to the inability, unwillingness and the idiotic attitude of the decision makers failing to take prompt action this incident would further harm the reputation of our country which is already alleged for many human rights violation by the international community.

Although the human rights commission confirmed in its report that the former government deployed the army to control a similar incident in Rathupaswala water problem where the army exceeded its limits and attacked the public causing three deaths where nobody was arrested so far and nobody confirmed who gave orders to deploy the army.

However the uniformed lower ranking haughty officers who act on behalf of their commanders also should learn a lesson from this
Death sentence for Vass, son and 5 others over murder of businessmen 

logoleadSaturday, 28 November 2015

Six suspects including former DIG Vass Gunawardena and his son Ravindu were yesterday sentenced to death after being found guilty for the abduction and murder of businessman Mohamed Siyam in 2013, by the Colombo High Court Trial-at-Bar. 
The verdict of the high-profile case was delivered by the Trial-at-Bar comprising Colombo High Court Judge Lalith Jayasuriya (President), Colombo High Court Judge KusalaSarojiniWeerawardena and Colombo High Court Judge Amendra Seneviratne.
Former DIG of Police Vass Gunawardena, his son Ravindu Gunawardena and four other Police officers were indicted for murder and also indicted of the conspiracy to murder.
The four Police officers were named as KelumRangana Dissanayake, LakminaIndikaBamunusinghe, GaminiSanathchandra and Priyantha Sanjeewa.
Bambalapitiya-based businessman Mohamed Siyam was abducted and murdered in the Dompe area on 22 May, 2013.
The court found deputy inspector general Vaas Gunawardena guilty of killing Shiyam in return for Rs. 10 million from a business rival, making him the highest ranking officer to be convicted of murder.
The senior officer’s role was only discovered when CCTV footage showed Shiyam being taken away in a vehicle driven by Gunawardena’s son Ravindu.
Following investigations conducted into the incident, the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) on 6 June arrested Sub-Inspector Lakmini Bamunusinghe, attached to the office of the DIG Western Province (North), along with three Police Constables (PCs) serving in the DIG’s special unit.
Upon interrogating the arrested Police officers, the CID uncovered information regarding the former DIG’s alleged involvement in the businessman’s murder and recorded a statement from Vaas Gunawardena on the same day. 
He was arrested by the CID on 10 June and remanded by the Colombo Additional Magistrate. Thereafter he was interdicted by the Police on 18 June. 

The new millionnaire..! - Close friend’s experience on Rienzie Edwards


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -28.Nov.2015, 3.30AM) This is in response to your article on Rienzie Edwards and to comply with your request. (see: ''Identify Edward Rienzie the money launderer for Rajapakses :Sirisena to the fore to rescue this scoundrel'' - http://www.lankaenews.com/news/938/en ) I have known Rienzie Edwards in London in 1990’s, first when he accompanied Mr. Shelton   Perera, who was the Chairman of the Rotten Vander (exact name not clear) shipping company where I was told that Ravi Karunanayake was also a director at the time, and Rienzie being a Chartered Accountant, was the accountant for the shipping company. 

‘Lest We Forget’: A Response


By Charles Sarvan –November 27, 2015
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Colombo Telegraph
Dr Sanjiva Wijesinha’s article appeared in Sri Lanka’s Sunday Times, 22nd November 2015. Those who haven’t read it should be able to access it or infer content from what follows. The main thrust of his reproach is that while there was massive coverage of the terrorist attack on Paris, Sri Lanka was left alone during the years when the Tigers were active: “we grieved alone”; “we grieved and mourned and suffered alone”.
It has been observed that success in a legal case depends on one’s financial resources or the lack of it, the ironic question being: “How much justice can you afford?” O. J. Simpson when charged with murder employed some of the best (highest paid) lawyers in the US, forming what was described in the press as a “dream team”. On similar lines, mutatis mutandis, some countries can garner publicity while others don’t have the necessary power and influence. For example, the attention paid to the atrocities committed by the Japanese during the Second World War pale when compared with the extensive and continuous coverage given to German atrocities. The crimes of the Japanese were against Asians (until recently, a poor and powerless people) while that by Germany was against the Jews, now ranked, because of unqualified US (and Western) support, as one of the most influential of people.
To cite another example, as I have written elsewhere, the African slave trade is the worst blot on human history, taking into consideration its (a) nature, (b) numbers (millions) and (c) duration over centuries. Punishment was appallingly cruel. I cite one case: Thomas Thistlewood came to Jamaica (1750) and kept a diary in which he meticulously, methodically and dispassionately noted his diurnal doings. These include flogging slaves and rubbing pepper, salt and lime into the wounds; “taking” slave women when and where he pleased; burning to death over a slow fire; rubbing in of molasses, followed by exposure to flies during the day and to mosquitoes at night. One of Thistlewood’s punishments was the “Derby’s dose”. The whipped slave had “salt pickle, lime juice & bird pepper” rubbed into the open wounds, and then another slave was made to defecate in his mouth. He was immediately put in a gag whilst his mouth was full, and made to wear the gag for “4 to 5 hours”.
Yet the slave trade gets little attention when compared with what the Shoah receives: the Afro-Americans are not as rich and influential, as organised and powerful, as the Jewish lobby. Government, media and public sympathy depends on non-humane factors. To my knowledge, there is no national day in the US to mark and mourn the slave trade. The end of the slave trade marked the beginning of ‘Jim Crow’: see my article inColombo Telegraph, 14 November 2015, titled ‘Film, fiction and falsity’. This is not to decry remembering the Holocaust, most certainly not, but to draw attention to the comparatively little publicity; the public reminding that slavery receives when compared with what the Shoah is accorded. Germany has repeatedly confessed its guilt, expressed contrition and paid compensation. Chancellor Willy Brandt, in his Warschauer Kniefall, went down on his knees in penance at the Warsaw memorial (7 December 1970). The contrast with Japan vis-à-vis Asians is extreme.

Cracks found in the railway bridges – Chinese sticking the cracks with glue

Cracks found in the railway bridges – Chinese sticking the cracks with glue

Lankanewsweb.netNov 27, 2015
Reports reaching us confirm that the construction started under the agreement between the Transport Ministry and the China Machinery Company (CMC) for the Matara Kataragaman express railway track, many bridges constructed during the first phase of the Matara-Beliatta strip has been severely cracked.   

Bridges constructed between the Matara Bambarenda and Bambarenda Beliatta sub phase and from Dikwella-Wewurukanda and the bridge constructed near the Dikwella north central college has been severely cracked.
 
While the railway track engineers has raised their attention for the imminent danger against these cracks the relevant Chinese company has given a sub contract to another Chinese company and told them to cover these cracks by applying a glue.
 
On the 26th the sub Chinese company has started to apply these gums. During a normal construction if there is a crack found the relevant bridge would be removed and constructed again or if the crack is minor the cracked portion would be removed and constructed again.
 
Te objective of the relevant Chinese company is to apply glue for the cracks encountered and to hand over the project to the government as soon as possible. 

M.I.A.'s latest video, 'Borders.'


Chris JancelewiczBy -November 27, 2015
Music artist M.I.A. isn’t one to shy away from the issues of the day.

Her lyrics are often controversial and raw, as is the case with her latest music video for the song “Borders,” and the actual visuals are equally as stirring. Showing her among huge groups of refugees (obviously not real refugees), she travels with them as they climb up wire fences, pack into small boats traversing the water, and try to wade through the ocean.
A nod to the current worldwide debate over the plight of Syrian refugees, M.I.A. even wears a Paris Saint-Germain soccer shirt, perhaps in reference to the recent terrorist attack in Paris.

Israel using Dutch dogs to terrorize Palestinians


An Israeli army dog attacks a Palestinian protester during a demonstration against the expropriation of Palestinian land in the village of Kufr Qaddoum, near Nablus in the occupied West Bank, 16 March 2012.Wagdi EshtayahAPA images
Adri Nieuwhof-27 November 2015

This video shows Israeli forces using a dog to attack and injure 20-year-old Ahmad Shteiwi as he participated in an anti-occupation protest in the West Bank village of Kufr Qaddoum, near Nablus, in March 2012.
Back-door diplomacy: Israel to open mission 

in UAE

Israel and the UAE's strong relationship confirmed as Tel Aviv says it will open a diplomatic office through an energy agency in Abu Dhabi 
Director of Israel's Foreign Ministry Dore Gold has arranged the Israel-UAE mission (AFP) 

Rori Donaghy's pictureRori Donaghy-Friday 27 November 2015
Middle East EyeIsrael is going to open a diplomatic mission in the United Arab Emirates, in what will be Tel Aviv’s first official presence in Abu Dhabi.
In a Haaretz exclusive Barak Ravid revealed on Friday that Dore Gold, director-general of Israel’s Foreign Ministry, visited Abu Dhabi this week to finalise the details.
The mission will be Israel’s first official presence in an Arab Gulf state since Israeli trade offices were opened in Qatar and Oman in 1996.
Qatar and Oman closed the Israeli trade offices in 2000, shortly after the outbreak of the second Palestinian Intifada, and Israel has not had an official presence in an Arab Gulf state since.
Gold was in the UAE on Tuesday for a three-day visit to attend a meeting of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), which is based in Abu Dhabi. 
The diplomatic mission will be accredited to IRENA and not the UAE itself, meaning it will not function as an embassy.
Nonetheless, Israeli officials have commented on the significance of the announcement.
“We never had a permanent office on the soil of the UAE, but this is not an embassy to the UAE,” an unnamed Israeli official told the Financial Times, confirming news of the new diplomatic mission.
UAE officials are yet to comment.

Diplomacy by other means

IRENA states on its website that it is an "international organisation that serves as a platform for international cooperation" on issues relating to renewable energy.
The energy agency was established in 2009 and Israel supported the UAE to be the site of the organisation’s headquarters, so long as Israeli officials could freely take part in the organisation’s activities.
Since then Israeli ministers have intermittently visited the UAE, where Israelis are officially banned from entering, to take part in IRENA conferences.
However, after a member of the Palestinian movement Hamas was assassinated in Dubai in 2010, Emirati authorities accused Israeli secret service Mossad of carrying out the murder.
This, according to Haaretz, led to "enormous tension" between Israel and the UAE, but by 2014 Israeli ministers were back visiting Abu Dhabi and taking part in IRENA meetings - despite the two countries officially having no diplomatic ties.
A senior Israeli official told Haaretz that diplomat Rami Hatan will move to Abu Dhabi to head the Israeli mission.
Although it is not known when it will open, Haaretz reported that "final preparations" were under way.
And while it is a first for Israel to be so public about their relationship with the UAE, the two countries have become increasingly close over recent years.
In December, Middle East Eye revealed details of a regular secret flight running between Tel Aviv and Abu Dhabi. 
Analysts speculated at the time that the flight may have been facilitating a high-level security relationship between Israel and the UAE.
Then in February Middle East Eye revealed details of a mass surveillance system in Abu Dhabi, which was installed and is maintained by an Israeli-owned company staffed by a number of retired army and intelligence officers.
Senior Israeli and Emirati officials are known to have close relations.
A leaked Wikileaks cable from 2009 showed that UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan had "good personal relations" with former Israeli foreign minister Tzipi Livni.
It is an extremely sensitive issue for the UAE to have close ties with Israel, due to widespread public sympathy among Emiratis for the Palestinian cause.
However, it is unlikely that there will be open opposition because of severe restrictions in the UAE on criticising its rulers.

Shared Arab-Israeli goals

There has been increasing synergy between Israel and Arab Gulf states on foreign policy.
All have concerns about the reintegration of Iran into the international fold, which has now begun after lengthy talks led by the US culminated in a deal earlier this year that will curb Tehran's nuclear activity in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.
Israeli media has long raised the prospect of more open ties between Israel and Arab Gulf states, and in 2013 Tel Aviv opened a “virtual embassy” to the Gulf Cooperation Council states through Twitter, although this account hasn’t been updated since last December.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has recently spoken of trying to “reach understandings with leading Arab countries” and his political ally Gold, who arranged the UAE mission, has this year also reached out to Saudi Arabia.
In a June meeting that raised eyebrows, Gold spoke alongside Anwar Eshki, a former Saudi military general and ambassador to the US, at an event in Washington hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations.
Although the importance of the event was subsequently played down, reports at the time revealed that Israel and Saudi Arabia had held a series of five covert diplomatic meetings to discuss shared concerns about the Iran deal.
It remains unlikely, however, that Saudi Arabia will follow the UAE and open an Israeli diplomatic mission, probably due to more severe concerns about domestic opposition to public engagement.

In the fight against the Islamic State, Iraq’s leader begins to look shaky

Iraq's prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, center, visits the shrine of Imam Ali in Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad in early November. (Anmar Khalil/AP)
By Loveday Morris-November 27
BAGHDAD — In a mansion tiled with salmon-pink marble, Sunni politician Osama al-Nujaifi greets visitors in an expansive meeting room. From a chair flanked by the national flag, he insists he is still vice president of Iraq — even though Iraq’s prime minister says he is not.
Nujaifi’s position and Iraq’s two other vice presidencies were eliminated by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in purported cost-cutting measures announced this summer. But there is little change at Nujaifi’s office. His staff is still paid, he said, and he is working as normal.
His defiance highlights Abadi’s weak hand as he fails to execute anything but superficial changes after pledging wide-ranging reforms in response to street protests. Smelling blood as he flounders, his political rivals have turned on him, while Iran-backed militias leverage what they can from him.
His precarious position appears likely to raise concerns in Washington as it backs him in his fight against the Islamic State — a war that has taken on anew urgency for the United States and Europe as the group has rapidly expanded its operations overseas.
 
“His position is shaking,” said Ali Adeeb, a senior member of Abadi’s Dawa party.
“Everyone is talking about who Haider al-Abadi will be replaced by,” he said. “Perhaps the will of the big people that want this change will succeed.”
Since his first days in office, Abadi has struggled to assert himself in the world of Iraqi politics as he has tried to balance the competing interests of Iraq’s two main security allies — Iran and the United States. His eroded position could shift that balance, allowing Iran to further extend its reach into Iraqi politics and security matters.
It has been a challenge from the outset. Following the ouster of his predecessor, Nouri al-Maliki, Abadi was not initially suggested as a successor, later emerging as a consensus candidate.
Maliki, who vehemently objected to being removed, remains the secretary general of the Dawa party and since his ouster is widely said to have worked to sabotage his rival, splitting loyalties within the party.
“He’s in a hard position,” Sami al-Askari, a veteran Shiite politician, said of Abadi. “The party is not united behind him.”
Adeeb said Abadi is perceived as “illegitimate.”
 
Perhaps in an attempt to prove his mettle, when protesters took to the streets demanding better services and action against corruption, Abadi promised the biggest shake-up in Iraqi politics since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. He appeared emboldened by the support of demonstrators, as well as Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani.
In addition to axing the vice presidential posts — which included that of Maliki — he merged four ministries and closed others.
But his reform attempts have backfired, delivering little while managing to irk powerful political players who stand to lose out. Proposed salary reforms turned street protesters against him.
Some of the few changes he made appear to have been unconstitutional, giving ample fodder to those who opposed change — and there are plenty of such opponents in a country where so many politicians line their pockets through rampant graft.
“He killed the reforms by breaking the law,” said Nujaifi. He has complained to the federal court about his removal and has not been paid since August, he said. “My colleagues and I are still working, our offices are still working, and we all consider ourselves vice presidents.”
In a severe blow to the prime minister earlier this month, Iraq’s parliament voted unanimously to withdraw support for his reform package, accusing him of overstepping his powers. During a recent visit to Iraq’s Shiite holy city of Najaf, he met with Shiite clerics but not Sistani. Although the grand ayatollah often steers clear of politics and politicians, that was widely viewed as a snub by the top cleric who had initially given him political cover for his actions.
“We’d need a prophet to do real reforms in Iraq, not Abadi,”said Hadi al-Amiri, head of the Badr Organization, a Shiite political party with a powerful armed wing. “Basically there are no reforms. All they’ve done is change a few names.”
Amiri added: “How much is he going to save in salaries? Nothing. If this is the reforms, it’s useless.”
But it is Abadi’s weakness that may save him, as Iraqi politicians attempt to leverage what they can out of the situation. There are few alternative options, and the United States and, for the moment, Iran are too concerned about a potential power vacuum to want to see him leave, analysts and politicians said.
“The probability is he will stay, but he’s got a big black eye,”said Kirk Sowell, a political risk analyst and publisher of Inside Iraq Politics. For the moment, Iran will use his weakness to build its “sub-state assets,” he said.
“As long as the Iraqi government is funding Iranian-backed militiamen, they’ll be content,” Sowell said.
The militias, meanwhile, certainly appear to be using the opportunity to get what they can. Last month, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, leader of Iraq’s amalgamation of largely Shiite militias known as the popular mobilization units, wrote a patronizing letter to Abadi demanding more support for his fighters. In an embarrassment to the prime minister, it was leaked publicly.
“I have told you repeatedly that we need headquarters and training camps and weapons and munitions,” the letter said. “Why and why and why?” he wrote, questioning the supposed lack of support.
Amiri, who had just returned from a visit to Iran and is close to the leadership there, said it is not in Iran’s interest to remove Abadi now.
He stressed that Abadi must give more support to militia fighters in next year’s budget. But regardless, he said, the country should “stand by Abadi” because it is facing a real threat. Besides, with huge economic problems, public pressure for reform, ongoing war and a litany of obstacles to change, there are few options.
“Only a crazy man would want to be in his position right now,” Amiri said.
Mustafa Salim contributed to this report.

Read more:
 
Loveday Morris is The Post's Baghdad bureau chief. She joined The Post in 2013 as a Beirut-based correspondent. She has previously covered the Middle East for The National, based in Abu Dhabi, and for the Independent, based in London and Beirut.

Fifty beheadings 'imminent' in Saudi Arabia

Channel 4 NewsFRIDAY 27 NOVEMBER 2015

The newspaper Okaz says 55 people are awaiting execution for "terrorist crimes", while a now-deleted report by al-Riyadh claimed 52 would die soon.


Another Big Step To A Major War

russian_middleeast
Turkey is point-man for the odd coalition of stealthy ISIS backers that includes the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, France and Britain. ISIS is their weapon of choice against Shia Iran and its Syrian and Lebanese allies and, very soon, Taliban in Afghanistan. Problem is, they back ISIS but can’t control its youthful members. The rabid dog they helped breed is now running around biting people.

by Eric S. Margolis
( November 27, 2015, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) Turn to page 214 in the book “War-making for Dummies.” You will find: “plan air operations right on your neighbor’s border, zig in and zag out, make rude gestures at enemy pilots, and shoot them down if you can.”
On Tuesday this week, the inevitable air crash occurred on the Syrian-Turkish border west of Aleppo. From what we know so far, two Russian SU-24 bombers that had been pounding anti-Damascus forces on the border briefly intruded on Turkish airspace for all of 17 seconds.
Turkish F-16 fighters, clearly pre-positioned in the area, pounced on the Russians and downed one Sukhoi with air-to-air missiles. One of the Russian pilots was killed – probably by pro-Turkish Syrian tribesmen while parachuting to earth. A Russian Marine was killed when the helicopter in which he was flying to recuse the downed airman was hit by a US-supplied TOW anti-tank missile.
Turkey claimed it had warned the Russian warplane 10 times’ before shooting. How the Turks could pre-position its F-16’s and issue ten warnings within 17 seconds was not explained. Russia’s president Vladimir Putin furiously accused the Turks of murder and supporting ISIS extremists.
The US-led NATO alliance rushed to backup member Turkey, which moved forces to its long border with Syria. Putin ordered lethal, long-ranged S-400 anti-aircraft missiles to Syria and missile cruiser “Moskva” to station off Syria’s Mediterranean coast. Both systems can cover large parts of western Syria, including areas routinely intruded upon by US, French, British and Israeli aircraft.
In short, a perfect witch’s stew for the beginning of a real war between Russia and the West that has been simmering in Syria and Ukraine. US forces are now operating in both nations within spitting distance of Russian troops.
The location of this Russo-Turkish clash was very interesting, though unnoted by western media. It occurred along the southern end of a small, narrow salient of Turkish territory jutting into Syria.
The Turkish territory in question is Hatay Province: it contains the former Crusader stronghold of Antioch and the important port of Iskenderun. Hatay has been the arena of military crises since the first recorded battle there in 853 BC.
Hatay belonged to historic Syria until detached after World War I by Syria’s French colonial masters and handed to Turkey in an attempt to bribe the Turks to become French allies. Syria has long demanded the return of Hatay.
This week’s clash over Hatay will likely revive Syrian demands for a return of Hatay. Turkey dismisses all Syrian claims. The groundwork has thus been laid for a new Syrian-Turkish conflict.
Who is to blame for the latest crisis on the Turkish-Syrian border? Both sides. Neither should have been flying combat patrols over the border region. There should have been a minimum ten km buffer zone on both sides of the sensitive border.
Turkish trigger-happy hotheads are to blame for authorizing deadly force when a few wing wags would have served to warn off the Russians – if they were, in fact, intruding. Turkey is in no position to claim it’s the injured party when arms, munitions and logistics support for ISIS has been pouring across its border into Syria for almost five years.
Russia, which accidentally shot down a South Korean airliner in 1982, is no angel either. Nor the US, which downed an Iranian airliner in 1988.
Turkey is point-man for the odd coalition of stealthy ISIS backers that includes the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, France and Britain. ISIS is their weapon of choice against Shia Iran and its Syrian and Lebanese allies and, very soon, Taliban in Afghanistan. Problem is, they back ISIS but can’t control its youthful members. The rabid dog they helped breed is now running around biting people.
By picking a fight with Russia, Turkey is shooting itself in the foot. Russia and the predecessor of modern Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, fought innumerable wars from the 1680’s until World War I. Russia has never abandoned its desire to seize the Straits, as Constantinople and the Dardanelles were called.
Turkey exports $4 billion to Russia and imports large quantities of wheat, oil, gas, steel. Four and a half million Russian tourists come annually to Turkey. Shooting down a Russian warplane will make hyper-nationalist Turks beat their chests but the hangover will seriously damage Turkey’s unsteady economy.
Putin and Turkey’s Erdogan should meet asap to resolve their issue before it becomes yet another step on the road to World War III.
copyright Eric S. Margolis 2015