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

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Donald Trump: Another Terrorist from the 1 Percent

Donald Trump Holds Campaign Rally In Columbus, Ohio
John Stanton | Friday, December 18, 2015
“What most concerns the [New York] Times is that the crude politics of Trump shatters the lying rhetoric used by Democrats and Republicans alike to justify the policies of the ruling class, at home and abroad. Thus, it worries that Trump is doing “serious damage” to the country’s “reputation overseas” by “twisting its message of tolerance and welcome.”
What is the “tolerance and welcome” of which the Times speaks? Is it perhaps the Obama administration’s deportation of more immigrants to Mexico and Central America than any other president?
Or the construction of brutal detention facilities in the southern US to hold men, women and children seeking refuge in the US. The Times writes that Trump “has not [yet] deported anyone, nor locked up or otherwise brutalized any Muslims, immigrants or others.” The newspaper fails to add, “Obama, however, has.”
Or is the “tolerance” expressed in the bombing attack in Syria earlier this week that killed 32 civilians, including 20 children? Or the deliberate targeting of the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan in October, massacring 22 people in a blatant war crime?
Is it torture and NSA spying, defended and covered up by the Obama administration and its CIA director, John Brennan? Is it wars in the Middle East that have killed more than a million people and destroyed entire societies?” World Socialists Website
The New York Times and East Coast Chicken Littles would have you believe that U.S. Presidential candidate Donald Trump is some sort of fascist from the swamp. He anything but.
According to Forbes Magazine his worth is estimated to be approximately $4.5 billion–the fruit of his efforts in the New York real estate industry and the U.S. mainstream media.
Some have characterized him as Heath Ledger’s character The Joker in the film The Dark Knight. He is not. In fact, the U.S. could use the services of the Joker these days. As The Joker put it:
“The mob has plans, the cops have plans, and [commissioner] Gordon’s got plans. You know, they’re schemers. Schemers trying to control their little worlds. I’m not a schemer. I try to show the schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are…Nobody panics when things go according to plan. Even if the plan is horrifying! If, tomorrow, I tell the press that, like, a gang banger will get shot, or a truckload of soldiers will be blown up, nobody panics, because it’s all part of the plan…Introduce a little anarchy. Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos.”
Didn’t Thomas Jefferson hold that a bit of revolution now and then was appropriate?
Legalized Gangs: Republicans and Democrats
At any rate, the U.S. two party system is the front operation for the elite, ruling class that Trump is part of. He is in the top 5 percent of approximately 30 percent in the U.S. public and private sectors who view with some disdain the remaining 70 percent of Americans who are, comparatively, low wage earners.
There is no middle class to speak of in America. The Democrats and Republicans are little more than playthings for Trump and his fellow 30 percenters. And we must include the many foreign lobbyists and countries that own Republicans and Democrats in the U.S. Congress and the White House.
The U.S. is ruled in the political machine style of the late 19th and early to mid-20th Century. Names associated with such forms of governing include William “Boss” Tweed of New York City, Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago and Mayor James Michael Curly of Boston. What is a political machine?
According to Wikipedia political machines “…sometimes have a political boss, often rely on patronage, the spoils system, behind-the-scenes control, and longstanding political ties within the structure of a representative democracy. Machines typically are organized on a permanent basis instead of for a single election or event.”
The website U.S. History says this about political machines: “…political machines broke their own laws to suit their purposes. As contracts were awarded to legal business entities, they were likewise awarded to illegal gambling and prostitution rings. Often profits from these unlawful enterprises lined the pockets of city officials. Public tax money and bribes from the business sector increased the bank accounts of these corrupt leaders.”
War of the Worlds
Peter Temin has written an extraordinary indictment of what the 30 percenters and crew have done to the social fabric of the U.S. His work The American Dual Economy: Race, Globalization, and the Politics of Exclusion, is an absolute must read. He posits two U.S. economies: One is the Finance, Technology and Engineering (FTE) economy containing the 30 percenters like Trump. The other is the dystopian Low Wage economy of the 70 percenters.
According to Temin: “…repression falls most heavily on blacks, but it affects whites and other ethnic groups in the low-wage sector as well. After all, the majority of prison inmates are white. But while poor whites are numerous, they are less visible than blacks in public discussions of programs to help the poor. Reagan’s famous invocation of Welfare Queens in his campaign to restrict government funding for the poor was a clear racial reference. The War on Drugs appears to be a law-and-order program, but its administration focuses on blacks. And the resulting conditions of blacks are used as examples to discourage other government funding. The growing problems of white members of the low-wage sector are equally serious…White flight to the suburbs was by class as well as by race; it stranded poor whites in the inner cities, where they are subject to the same kind of economic and social pressures as poor blacks.
Temin goes on: “As noted above, there are many more whites than blacks in the low-wage sector. The inability to earn an income sufficient to support a family increased among whites in poor urban neighborhoods. The urban white marriage rate dropped; the rate of urban white single-family households rose. The imprisonment rate among whites in poor urban neighborhoods rose along with the rising rate for blacks. And the decay of trust social capital among these whites was as severe as among blacks. The American dual economy would exist if there were no American blacks; only the political discussion would be different.”
Lastly, according to Temin: “The Affordable Care Act (ACA), known also as Obamacare, offered states a free ride for five years and generous support thereafter for expanding Medicaid. This offer was refused by almost half of the United States. It was rejected in states governed by Republicans in the former Confederacy, with an extension up the western bank of the Mississippi River; most of the affected people live in the area of the former Confederacy. A clearer illustration of the link between the legacy of slavery and current government policies could not be found.”
Terrorized by the 30 Percent
Studies have shown that the 70 percenters vote has little effect on changing government policies. Naked Capitalism does a breakdown of a recent Pew research effort indicating that the U.S. middle class, if there ever was such a thing, has largely vanished. Naked Capitalism (NC) also does a takedown of the Pew effort as it paints a rosy picture of progress when, in fact, continued socioeconomic decay seems more likely.
According to NC: “…there is a great deal of research that shows that highly stratified societies score worse on social indicators like crime rates, average educational attainment, suicides, and teen pregnancies. The US hews to this pattern…Stratified societies have people at every level having low community engagement, thin social network, and for those who are well or very well off, pressure to maintain their economic status, since if they lose that, they lose their social network. They can no longer afford to engage in many of the same activities, they might even have to move into cheaper housing, and the result is that they lose most if not all of their current “friends”. And it’s hard to see how Pew can claim there has been “more progress” when labor force participation is low by historical standards.”
So while the 30 percent represented by Trump and the owners of the New York Times might be stupid rich, the 70 percent is stupid dumb for thinking that Trump actually represents some radical right wing, conservative philosophy. Trump is making money for corporations that own media outlets (ratings). And he serves as an easy target for progressives who focus on Trump and not the fraying social fabric around them or the warmongering language of Hillary Clinton.
The Joker is right. The 30 percenters are all schemers. The problem with the 70 percenters is that they have become accustomed to the pathetic world created for them by the schemers. The 30 percenters have designed a machine that allows the Low Wage class to vent on the World Wide Web’s social media outlets, or maybe cast an ineffective vote, or make a video and stick it on You Tube, or even write a letter to an editor.
It’s all part of the plan.
John Stanton can be reached at captainkong22@gmail.com

IS leanings put 16-year-old from Pune under ATS radar

THE TIMES OF INDIA

Dec 18, 2015,
Pune: A 16-year-old college girl from Pune, who was allegedly in touch with arrested Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) executive Mohammed Sirajuddin, has been put under surveillance for her suspected links with the Islamic State (IS), assistant commissioner of police Bhanupratap Barge of the anti-terrorism squad, Pune unit, said on Thursday.

Sirajuddin had formed closed groups of IS sympathizers, including boys and girls from Maharashtra, on Facebook and WhatsApp. He was allegedly spreading IS activities online and trying to recruit Indian youths for the terrorist group. He was arrested in Jaipur last week.

The girl, from an elite, city-based Muslim family, was deeply influenced by IS activities and radicalized online. She was in regular touch with many sympathizers of the dreaded terrorist group, Barge said.

"We have kept the girl under surveillance," Barge said. "Efforts are on to de-radicalize her. Her parents, religious scholars and Muslim community leaders have been asked to help." Religious scholars have been told to sensitise the girl about Islam and how the IS is wrong, he said.

Officials said the girl was in touch with Sirajuddin and was about to visit Iran or Syria because IS members were ready to bear her medical education and other expenses. They had told her that she should be in a position to do anything in her country for Islam, they said.

Technical investigations and contacts helped the ATS identify the girl, a Class XI science student in a city-based college. During investigations, the ATS discovered that the girl has around 200 friends on Facebook. She was regularly interacting with IS sympathizers on WhatsApp and Twitter and exchanging mails with people in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Jammu & Kashmir and Karnataka, and countries such as the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Kenya and some in Europe.

ATS additional director general of police Vivek Phansalkar and special inspector general of police Niket Kaushik had received reliable information that some young boys and girls from Pune were in regular touch with IS through social-networking sites.

Investigations showed that the girl was attracted to the IS ideology while watching a television channel four months ago. She began searching for more information on IS on internet portals and established contact with an IS agent in Sri Lanka.
ATS officials said the girl began believing that the world should follow an Islamic ideology and Muslims in India should "do anything for the sake of Islam". Her parents noticed a sudden change in her behaviour. She gave up wearing T-shirts, jeans and dresses to college and began to sport a burqa.


"We have not registered a complaint against the girl because she is a minor and she did not radicalize others," Barge told TOI. "As part of our national programme, we have undertaken an exercise for the past eight days to de-radicalize her with support from her parents."
Barge said they had prevented the girl from joining IS. "The girl has shown remarkable signs of improvement because she has realized that she has done something wrong," he said.


Teams have been sent to collect more details of Sirajuddin and other ATS units have been alerted. They have information about IS sympathizers who were constantly in touch with the Pune girl.


The ATS Pune unit has told parents with children in the 14-20 age group to contact them if they notice a change in their behaviour to prevent them from following the IS. Parents should monitor the activities of their children and keep a watch on their social-media interactions, the unit said.

Can Corrupt Politicians Ever Be Punished In India?

corruption
The politicians  in India facing corruption charges  make a lot of noises and indulge in mud slinging and use the media to mislead the people. Unfortunately, the Indian visual and print media want the only sensation and give prominence to mutual accusations without caring to conduct  quality discussions  to expose the corrupt people, keeping the interest of the country in view.
by N.S.Venkataraman
( December 18, 2015, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian)  Hundreds of politicians at various levels are suspected to be corrupt and dishonest in India. As a matter of fact, the distinction between politicians and criminals have  become thin, as  many criminals enter politics, contest elections and win and then become ministers and rule the country. Long back, Bernard Shaw  said that politics  is the last resort for the scoundrels and  many people in India now think that Bernard Shaw is correct. The politicians remain as the most suspected and perhaps hated  tribe in India.
Unfortunately, in spite of strong anti-corruption laws in the country, the corrupt politicians  always find  way to escape from the clutches of law, by circumventing the law, prolonging the judicial process by cleverly exploiting the loopholes  and   they remain in public life with all their ill-gotten wealth intact Rarely, a  corrupt politician has been effectively punished  and if this has been done in some cases, it is an exception and not a rule.
As a large number of electorate in the country belong to lower income group and are often only semi-literate and are susceptible to monetary temptations, the politicians who amass huge wealth by adopting corrupt means, hoodwink the gullible  people by money power, muscle power and  by cleverly  posturing to  win elections.
Politics  has made inroads into every aspect of life today in India and, therefore, every aspect of life appears to be getting corrupt. The Election Commission of India and Judiciary have  failed  to check corruption in spite of huge powers  that they have.
While there is corruption in India  not only amongst politicians but also amongst bureaucrats and professionals belonging to every walk of life, there is no doubt that politicians  are the fountainhead of corruption. Without catching hold of the corrupt politicians, punishing them and ensuring that they would not enter parliament and assemblies, rooting out corruption in India is not possible.
Modi’s promise:
Certainly, there is widespread frustration and anger amongst a large section  of   citizens that dishonest politicians continue to hold sway over national politics and the government but the people  seem to be helpless.
Indian electorate was highly impressed when Narendra Modi promised before 2014  parliamentary election that he would  root out corruption and cleanse the parliament and legislative assemblies and ensure that corrupt people cannot enter these all-powerful bodies. Such promise and assurance really helped Modi to win the confidence of the people and emerge victorious in the election.
Modi needs to act:
Now, having been in power for 18 months, Indians expect Modi to fulfil  his promise.  But, Modi appears to be finding it difficult.
The present noise  made by  Rahul and his mother, when they are facing  court hearings about dishonest dealings  and the vituperative language used by Kejriwal when his confident and principal secretary was  investigated for corruption charges and the media publicity that they get only clearly highlight how difficult would be Modi’s task of checking corrupt politicians.
 National Herald case convincingly exposes Rahul and his mother that they have indulged in dishonest practices. Kejriwal appointing a corrupt person as his principal secretary  clearly show that  his claim that he is the anti-corruption crusader is hollow and untrue.
When the politicians face corruption charges and realise that they are on weak grounds, they make all sort of drama, use all sorts of language and level  vague and unproven allegations against the government and divert the attention of the people from their misdeeds.
The politicians  in India facing corruption charges  make a lot of noises and indulge in mud slinging and use the media to mislead the people. Unfortunately, the Indian visual and print media want the only sensation and give prominence to mutual accusations without caring to conduct  quality discussions  to expose the corrupt people, keeping the interest of the country in view.
Modi government has come to power promising that it would root out corruption. It has to take full blooded efforts to catch  the corrupt persons  and punish them.  The case of Rahul and Kejriwal is  now a test for Modi’s commitment to fighting the corrupt forces.
Certainly,t he corrupt persons will fight back like a wounded leopard as it is a question of survival for them. The country is  now watching as how determined Modi  is in rooting out corruption and  in facing the onslaught of attack from multiple directions from various corrupt politicians. Modi has to fight and in the process of fighting the corrupt forces if he would go down, let it be so for the  sake of probity in public life.

Sonia, Rahul Gandhi get bail after rare court date over alleged fraud

Congress party president Sonia Gandhi and her son and the party’s vice-president Rahul Gandhi (2nd R) arrive at a court in New Delhi, India, December 19, 2015. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
Reuters Sat Dec 19, 2015
Sonia Gandhi and her son Rahul made a rare court appearance on Saturday and won bail in a case of alleged graft they say Prime Minister Narendra Modi uses in a vendetta against their family.
Hundreds of members of the Congress party were massed outside the court premises in Delhi in a show of support for the torchbearers of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that has ruled India for most of its post-independence era after 1947.
In the case, a prominent member of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has alleged the Gandhis misused party funds to illegally acquire real estate assets worth millions of dollars.
The Gandhis deny any wrongdoing and on Saturday said they would not be deterred by attempts to frame them.
"I appeared in court with a clear conscience as every law abiding citizen should do," Sonia told reporters after the court hearing, where she was flanked by several senior party leaders, including former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
"The current government is intentionally targeting its opponents by using government agencies."
The legal battle has sown further bitterness between the Congress and Modi, who had vowed a "Congress-free India" even before he crushed the Gandhis in an election last year.
The war of words between the arch rivals has also stalled parliament proceedings and dimmed hopes of any compromise on a long-delayed tax reform.
Modi's top aides have denied any involvement in the case. After the hearing, a senior Congress leader said its lawmakers will continue to disrupt the parliament session that runs until next week.
SECURITY, SUPPORT
Party sources had told Reuters the Gandhis would use the court appearance to their advantage by energising their supporters and turn the public mood against Modi.
On Saturday, hundreds of supporters descended to the streets of Mumbai and Delhi in support of the mother-son duo as they walked into the courthouse guarded by 3,000 policemen.
During the brief 10-minute hearing, Sonia and Rahul appeared relaxed and chose to stand in the small, dilapidated courtroom with stained walls, according to a lawyer present inside.
BJP leader Subramanian Swamy has alleged the Gandhis formed a shell company and illegally gained control of properties worth $300 million, which belonged to a firm that published a newspaper founded by Rahul's great grandfather.
On Saturday, the court declined Swamy's request to impose travel restrictions on the Gandhis and set the next day of hearing on Feb. 20.
"The battle is on its right track," Swamy told Reuters
(Additional reporting by Mayank Bharadwaj and Rupam Jain Nair in Delhi and Neha Dasgupta in Mumbai; Writing by Sanjeev Miglani and Aditya Kalra; Editing by Michael Perry and Tom Heneghan)

India Is Building a Top-Secret Nuclear City to Produce Thermonuclear Weapons, Experts Say

India Is Building a Top-Secret Nuclear City to Produce Thermonuclear Weapons, Experts Say
BY ADRIAN LEVY-DECEMBER 16, 2015
CHALLAKERE, India — When laborers began excavating pastureland in India’s southern Karnataka state early in 2012, members of the nomadic Lambani tribe were startled. For centuries, the scarlet-robed herbalists and herders had freely crisscrossed the undulating meadows there, known askavals, and this uprooting of their landscape came without warning or explanation. By autumn, Puttaranga Setty, a wiry groundnut farmer from the village of Kallalli, encountered a barbed-wire fence blocking off a well-used trail. His neighbor, a herder, discovered that the road from this city to a nearby village had been diverted elsewhere. They rang Doddaullarti Karianna, a weaver who sits on one of the village councils that funnel India’s sprawling democracy of 1.25 billion down to the grassroots.

Jack Adcock death: Doctor and nurse get suspended sentences for manslaughter

Jack AdcockJack Adcock, from Glen Parva, died on 18 February 2011 from a cardiac arrest after sepsis was triggered by a bacterial infection

BBC4 December 2015
A doctor and an agency nurse who "seriously neglected" a six-year-old boy who died in hospital have been sentenced for his manslaughter.
Jack Adcock died of a cardiac arrest at Leicester Royal Infirmary after he developed sepsis.
Doctor Hadiza Bawa-Garba, 39, and nurse Isabel Amaro, 47, of Manchester, were both given a two-year term, suspended for two years.
The pair had denied manslaughter by gross negligence.

Careers 'over'

The two defendants "robbed" Jack of his chance of survival by failing to realise how seriously ill he was, prosecutors said.
Jack, who had Down's syndrome, was admitted to hospital with vomiting and diarrhoea in February 2011 but died about 11 hours later.
On the day of his death, Bawa-Garba, of Leicester, stopped performing CPR after wrongly assuming Jack was subject to a do-not-resuscitate order.
Portuguese-born Amaro, from Manchester, failed "woefully" to monitor Jack's treatment or alert colleagues when his condition deteriorated, the court heard during her trial.
Dr Hadiza Bawa-Garba (left) and Isabel Amaro (right)Dr Hadiza Bawa-Garba (left) and agency nurse Isabel Amaro (right) were both found guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence
Both were found guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence at Nottingham Crown Court last month and both have already been suspended from their posts.
The judge told the pair that their medical careers "will come to an end".
Mr Justice Nichol told them: "Jack's life was cut short prematurely. That was a tragedy. No sentence that I pass on you will alter it.
"There was no evidence that either of you neglected Jack because you were lazy or behaved for other selfish reasons.
"You both had other patients to attend to. The problem was that neither of you gave Jack the priority which this very sick boy deserved."
Theresa Taylor, 55, another nurse involved in the boy's care, was cleared of the same charge.

'So angry'

In an impact statement, Jack's mother Nicky said: "Jack was neglected from the moment he entered the Leicester Royal Infirmary Children's Assessment Unit.
"I will never forgive myself for taking him there. I could have cared and looked after him better than they ever did.
"It makes me so angry to think that my son could still be here today if they had done their jobs right."
In a separate statement, Jack's father Vic said: "I wish I could forgive them but at the moment I can't and I don't know if I ever can.
Vic and Nicky AdcockJack's mother Nicky said she "never in a million years" expected her son to die in hospital
"To hear their excuses has been so hard to bear. I had to watch my little man laid to rest."
Bawa-Garba said in her defence she had worked a 12-hour shift with no break and there was a lot of miscommunication in the ward.
Amaro accepted she had breached her duty of care but denied that any of her failings significantly contributed to the youngster's death.
The judge said Bawa-Garba's sentence was affected by the fact she was the sole carer for her five-year-old son, who has autism and behavioural problems.
He also said he recognised Amaro suffers from psychiatric problems that would be made worse in prison.

Friday, December 18, 2015

Body to Coordinate Reconciliation in Sri Lanka

srilanka_bronstein021434152358
Sri Lanka Brief
T. Ramakrishnan.-18/12/2015
The Sri Lankan government has decided to establish a secretariat to coordinate activities of various players engaged in reconciliation.
The proposed secretariat will develop a plan on institutions such as the Office on Missing Persons and the Truth, Reconciliation and Prevention of Conflicts Commission.
It will follow up the progress of implementation of recommendations made by various panels, including the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission and the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights, apart from coordinating with the Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission. It will also observe discourses on reconciliation mechanisms.
One of the government bodies working in the area of reconciliation is the Office for National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR), which is headed by former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga. The ONUR came into being after Maithripala Sirisena was elected as President in January this year.
‘Find solutions’
Meanwhile, a study conducted by the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), a Colombo-based independent organisation, during October-November revealed that a predominant section of Sri Lankans wanted the government to address the root causes of the ethnic conflict. Of about 2,100 persons interviewed in all 25 districts, 80.6 per cent were for this course of action to be taken.
Of the four major ethnic groups, 87.6 per cent of Muslims and 80.1 per cent of Sinhalese shared the opinion, while 79.3 per cent of Upcountry Tamils and 78.4 per cent of Sri Lankan Tamils had this view.
Asked for feedback on the government’s efforts in addressing the root causes of the conflict, nearly 57 per cent of the people expressed satisfaction whereas about 19 per cent did not.
From an ethnic perspective, 48.7 per cent of the Sinhalese; 74 per cent of the Tamils; 84.2 per cent of the Upcountry Tamils and 86.5 per cent of the Muslims were satisfied
The Hindu

Nearly 50 percent want credible war time accountability mechanism: Report

Nearly 50 percent want credible war time accountability mechanism: Report
logo

December 18, 2015
A recent survey conducted by the prestigious Colombo-based Center for Policy Alternatives (CPA) has found that 48.1 percent of Sri Lankans are for a “credible mechanism” to go into the question of accountability in the last stages of the brutal Eelam War IV, the New Indian Express reported. 

Of those rooting for a credible mechanism, 43.8 percent are for a purely domestic mechanism with no foreign participation, and only 17 .1 percent are for a purely foreign one.

Taking the Tamil community alone, 47.6 percent are for an exclusively foreign mechanism. But a substantial section (39.7 percent) are alright with a mixed domestic and international mechanism as mentioned in the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution of October 1, 2015.

At Geneva, Sri Lanka and the US had jointly sponsored a resolution which called upon the Lankan government to establish a Judicial Mechanism which will be a domestic one, but with the participation of foreign and Commonwealth judges, investigators and prosecutors to ensure the independence and credibility of the process and to render justice to all parties to the war.

Lanka is yet to set up such a mechanism. Given the vocal opposition to a hybrid mechanism involving foreigners in responsible capacities, and the findings of the CPA’s survey, it remains to be seen if a mechanism which accords with the commitment made at Geneva will actually be set up. (NIE)

-Agencies

Thajudeen Murder: Dialog Telecom Finally Submits Crucial Data To AG


Colombo TelegraphDecember 18, 2015
Contrary to media reports where it was continuously reported that Dialog Axiata PLC was concealing vital telephone details regarding the ongoing investigation into the Wasim Thajudeen murder, it is now reliably learnt that Dialog Axiata PLC has last week submitted the comprehensive details pertaining to the information that the Attorney General had requested.
Thajudeen
Thajudeen
Colombo Telegraph further learns that the delay in Dialog Axiata PLC furnishing the requested information was due to the technical nature of the requested details.
Unlike providing easier information such as call log details, obtaining critical technical information such as which tower calls originated and terminated between the caller and the receiver takes a considerable period of time to retrieve.
In order to obtain and maintain accuracy with the details that needed to be furnished, it is reliably understood that Dialog Axiata had to deploy several teams over a period of months and also conduct an audit prior to submitting the requested information. Confidante telecom sources revealed that this excercise had even cost the telecom service provider a whopping sum in the range of Rs 50 million.
Meanwhile it is also reliably learnt that the Attorney General had written back to Dialog Axiata PLC and thanked them for their support in furnishing this vital piece of information that could piece together and help speed up the investigations into one of the country’s most publicized and gruesome of murders.

ICTA: Prime Minister asks Muhunthan to continue as MD/CEO

muhunthan

( December 18, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The news of Muhunthan Canagey not being appointed to the board of ICTA hit the IT industry, sparks arose with many calls being made, with disappointment striking the IT sector especially when high hopes of Digital Infrastructure is about to be built and the country moving towards a digital economy.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe was informed of the matter by Minister Harin Fernando; the prime minister immediately intervened into the matter and instructed his secretary to inform relevant parties that Muhunthan will remain and shall not be removed, and he shall continue in the position of Managing Director and CEO, say sources at the PM’s office.
Muhunthan Canagey is a close confidant of Ranil Wickremasinghe and has been working closely with the party at recent elections. He was in charge of the social media communications team for presidential elections and also headed the team which stopped any possible computer fraud on election counting. He was a key player in the victory of president Maithripala Sirisena.
Sources close to Minister Harin Fernando said that the minister met the PM and informed him about this matter a few days ago.
The ICTA is now allocated over Rs. 10 billion from the current budget and many seem to be having the sudden interest of the institution.
Some of the key projects are digital identity and electronic passport which have come under pressure from certain camps, as eNIC projects which have been originally budgeted at Rs. 14.5 Billion, a similar system now seems to be able to be implemented by ICTA for less than Rs. 5 billion. It is also revealed the ICTA system has greater function than that of the eNIC.
Also, some sources indicate that signing and bring Google Balloon Internet has also upset some telecommunications operators who will now lose control in terms of coverage. Recently, a cabinet appointed ministerial committee approved the Google project and asked for the frequency to be released for the test to Google.
Some sources have also indicated that the recent push by Canagey for the adoption of the National Data Sharing Policy and the Social Media Policy for the government has upset key administrators as data will have to be shared and made public, this would mean more transparency.
It seems that as the plans for Digital transformation takes place the only way to stop or take control is to remove the key man holding the high office. Researching the profile of Muhunthan Canagey, he seems to be highly qualified and has all the necessary qualifications and experience to hold such a position, he has also been in the IT industry for over 20 years and proved to be a very successful entrepreneur.
Muhunthan Canagey was not available for comment.
When some members from the industry were contacted they mentioned that for the first time there is a vision ICTA has brought for the country in the Digital era and the plans laid out seem very promising for the digital economy.

WORLD: A South Asian mechanism for human rights

AHRC Logo

By Basil Fernando-December 14, 2015
I propose that the discussion on a South Asian mechanism for human rights should concentrate more on what such a mechanism could positively achieve, rather than on justifying why such a mechanism is needed. In fact, if its useful goal is achieved for the people and States of the South Asian region, the reason why such a mechanism is needed would be self-explanatory.

People’s expectations post 8 Jan: Opportunity must not be wasted? 

dtu
Friday, 18 December 2015
logoMaithripala Sirisena, with the support of Ranil Wickremesinghe’s UNP, the country’s largest political party, won the election on the promise of “Yahapalanaya” or good governance. Ten months have passed since Maithri’s election. During this period, the Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) had increased by 100 basis points (bps), from 53.3% to 54.3% as per end second quarter (2Q) statistics (which is the immediately available data), while the unemployment rate (i.e. those who are 15 years and above and who are seeking work) had also increased, from 4.3% to 4.5% between those two comparative periods, i.e. last year end vis-à-vis 2Q end of the current year. LFPR comprises those who are of working age (15 years and above) who are employed or who are seeking employment, while the unemployment rate is those who are of employable age (15 years and above) who are seeking work, but, ipso facto who have been unsuccessful in this endeavour. One reason for the increase in the LFPR may be due to the rising CoL. State-owned Census and Statistics Department’s (CSD’s) low inflationary data may have to be taken with a pinch of salt. It has excluded alcohol and cigarettes from its inflation measurement basket, among a host of other goods and services. Nevertheless, according to unconfirmed reports, the Government wants to increase its inflation measurement basket by taking in another 100 goods and services, thereby upping the total figure of such items to 400 (over the present 300 number), to have a fairer gauge of inflationary movements in the economy.

Economydrh

If unemployment was one of the reasons for MR’s defeat, it rising from 4.3% at the end of MR’s term to 4.5% in the six months of the Maithri-Ranil duo’s term in office doesn’t augur well for the two politically, nor for the economy at large. Enhanced foreign direct investments (FDI) or public investments, or a mix of both may be the solution. While FDI has been revolving round the pathetic 1% GDP figure despite the war ending more than six years ago, with seemingly not much of a change despite the regime change 10 months ago, public investments, however, have fallen. Latest Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) statistics showed that capital and lending expenditure minus repayments in the first half (1H) of the current year had had declined by 14.38% year on year (YoY) to Rs. 238.2 billion. On the other hand current (consumption) expenditure had zoomed by 19.2% to Rs. 769.3 billion in the comparative period, while revenue has lagged behind, though growing by 11.44% to Rs. 605.8 billion, yet not sufficient to even meet the State’s total current account bill, leave alone its capital account bill. It is said that one reason why Ranil Wickremesinghe lost the April 2004 General Election was because, unlike his uncle, President J. R. Jayewardene, he was unable to launch a massive infrastructure development project like the Accelerated Mahaweli Development scheme which provided employment to thousands.

Support from our international friends

It was possible for Jayewardene to implement the Accelerated Mahaweli because of the grant aid he got from the West and at the very worst, concessional aid (as opposed to foreign commercial loans) from first world countries. J.R., the farsighted man that he was, won the gratitude of Japan with his famous speech at the San Francisco Peace Conference of 1951, where he appealed to universal religious values in the Buddhist idiom, pleading non-hatred and mercy for defeated Japan, in the context that the then Soviet Union together with its satellite Warsaw Pact countries and aggrieved Asian countries were demanding war reparations. Japan never forgot that favour extended to them by J.R. and when J.R. won the 1977 General Election, Japan, by then an economic powerhouse and the second largest economy in the world, poured in aid to Sri Lanka, in the form of infrastructure development assistance. J.R., as a young minister of Sri Lanka’s first Cabinet of 1947 was also an admirer of the USA in particular and the West in general, of their democratic institutions and in the US case, its free market economy which he implemented no sooner he was elected to power. J.R. from the beginning had seemingly played all the right cards, though that phrase may be unkind to describe him, because those were the things he believed in his heart and were not premeditated or executed with any ulterior motives. So, when he became the Head of State, the world that matters, i.e. the developed world, was fully supportive of him. J.R. said that his first priority was jobs, his second priority was jobs and his third priority was also jobs. At the time of his election, Sri Lanka’s unemployment was virtually at the double-digit range.

Policy consistency

He knew that it was only through the opening up of the economy, inviting foreign investments and embarking on massive infrastructure projects like the Mahaweli with foreign aid (as Sri Lanka lacked the capital), could the country’s unemployment rate be reduced and he did just that. Ranil too enjoys that goodwill, particularly stemming from Japan, because of his uncle. He’s also looked upon favourably by the West. It’s up to him to leverage on those advantages in order to kick start the economy. To say that Japan and the West, unlike in 1977, don’t have the money, may be a fallacy. Even during the time J.R. was elected, the West was in recession, made worse by the Iranian crisis after the Shah was toppled, followed by the Iran-Iraqi war which sent oil prices soaring. But those mishaps didn’t stop the West and Japan from providing economic aid to J.R.’s Sri Lanka. It may be argued that as Sri Lanka has now graduated to a lower middle income country, it doesn’t qualify itself for any bilateral or multilateral assistance. But then look at a country like Greece, classified as a high income country by the World Bank (as opposed to Sri Lanka being classified as a low middle income country), it’s still getting billions of dollars worth of aid from the IMF, the European Union and the European Central Bank to bail out its economy. Why cannot Sri Lanka also receive at least a fraction of that aid? The new Government has, according to political observers, distanced itself from China, a country with which the Sri Lanka of the Rajapaksas cosied up to, to the chagrin of the West, Japan and India. The new regime, post Rajapaksa, has all but severed such ties, whilst also building up on the premise of reconciliation, but what has it got in return from its friends, the West and Japan? International jurists to sit in judgement over Colombo on alleged war crimes committed by it in its war against LTTE terrorism? No restitution of GSP+ at least up to now, no infrastructure development program and no balance of payments support and the continuation in the ban of fish exports to the EU, harbingers of political and economic crises to come. One of the first things that the new regime did, after it was elected to power, was suspend the Chinese funded $ 1 billion plus Colombo Port City Project. The renegotiation with China over the Port City was necessary. Sovereign rights to perpetual ownership, sea rights and airspace had been bartered away on a platter. This was unacceptable. But there was no need for all the hullabaloo. China has been a friend and stood by us in our time of need. So has Japan, the West and India. Colombo ought to get more in return than the $ 1.5 billion swap arrangement with the Reserve Bank of India, moneys which, sooner or later will have to be returned.

Way forward

No real tangible benefits have yet been forthcoming to the real economy. This is the time for our friends to stand up and be counted. There are also things that Ranil and Maithri will have to put right. Be Charming and forceful like J.R. when dealing with one’s friends, to ensure that the economy gets what it needs. Go beyond J.R. to the realm of moral power (“just and righteous society”) to “Yahapalanaya” (good governance) which became the winning factor at the 2015 January election. Be strong like Lee Kuan Yew against corruption, conflict of interest and nepotism, which even J.R. failed to subdue, if not now, later, but sooner rather than never. Have a good team in place, another “Ronnie de Mel, Ranasinghe Premadasa, Lalith Athulathmudali, Gamini Dissanayake” combination, not infighting and disunity. A house divided is bound to fall. Build the house on a firm foundation of good governance in deed as much as in word. Finally, the real social and political change is yet to come to give real meaning to the word revolution in political parlance.

(Source The Great November Revolution by Dinesh Weerakkody)

UNP MP threatens self-immolation!

By Skandha Gunasekara-2015-12-19
Badulla District UNP MP Vadivel Suresh yesterday threatened to self-immolate in the chamber of Parliament if the government did not increase the salaries of plantation and estate sector workers by today (19) evening.

Taking part in the committee stage debate on the expenditures of the Ministry of Plantation Industries, the MP criticized the government for its failure to understand the extent of the hard work performed by plantation workers and their plight.
MP Suresh said he would torch himself and also embrace those who are responsible for not increasing the salaries of estate workers.

The MP pointed out that salaries of the doctors and public sector employees had been increased in the budget proposals and demanded to know why the government had not increased the emoluments of plantation workers.
He said there are 274,411 plantation workers in the country and the government had so far failed to take any action through the budgetary proposals to enhance the quality of their lives.