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, December 24, 2015

Victims should boycott local investigation!

x_mass_2015
by S. V. Kirubaharan
“Merry x’mas & Happy New Year – 2016”
( December 24, 2015, Paris, Sri Lanka Guardian) In another few days, President Maithiripala Sirisena will celebrate his 1st year in office. What does this mean for the people?
With the arrival of President Sirisena, on 9th January, a new government was formed under the Premiership of Ranil Wickremasinge. Looking back over this one year of regime change, what has it brought to the victims, the people, especially to the people in the North and East?


 
article_image
(L to R) British Foreign Secretary William Hague, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, US Secretary of State John Kerry, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif attend a plenary session on early November 24, 2013 in Geneva. (AFP Photo)

The much nervously anticipated US Federal Reserve interest rate rise is now upon the world and it is expected to have an unsettling impact on the economic fortunes of the emerging economies in particular. Sections in Sri Lanka are reassuring themselves that there would be no immediate adverse impact for the local economy from this rate change but time could prove the opposite. Indeed, all foreign commercial borrowings and loans will eventually prove costly and to that extent, almost all the economies of the world would be affected negatively by the US interest rate hike. And Sri Lanka is likely to feel the pinch too because foreign borrowings will remain a mainstay of its economy.

What the above proves is the continuing ‘power’ of the US dollar. That is, developments in the international economy would continue to be shaped in the main in the foreseeable future by the vibrancy or otherwise of the US economy. In fact, even as this is being written, a rebound in the US economy, following some years recession, is affecting the economic well being of all the main economies of the world, including that of China. The fact that is staring us in the face is that a resurgence of the US economy is having a ripple effect all over the world, regardless of how US power is viewed by the latter.

That said, the position cannot be challenged that US hegemonic influence worldwide is on the decline. It has waned in proportion to which the influence and power of other international players have increased over the past twenty years. The US-centred unipolarity of the distribution of international political, economic and military power, which was a strong feature of the world which emerged from the Cold War decades, is giving way to a multipolar international power structure where China, Russia, India and Iran, to name a few states, would have considerable influence.

But we are still some years away from an international order in which the US in particular and the West in general would be eclipsed by the newer predominant powers just mentioned. It is not coming any time soon although US power would be challenged almost every step of the way to a vastly changed world power distribution system. For the foreseeable future, US power will remain an important factor to contend with. If this were not so, the US dollar would not be continuing to prove its decisive weight in the international monetary sustem, for instance.

These considerations reaffirm the advisability of countries such as Sri Lanka conducting cordial relations with the US and the West. As a very small player on the world stage, Sri Lanka has no choice but to be on the best of terms with the powers that currently have a decisive say in the conduct of international relations. Accordingly, it needs to be on amicable terms with the US, China, Russia, India and all the countries that matter, in economic, political and military terms. In other words, Sri Lanka will be serving its vital interests by being truly Non-aligned.

From 2005, until the advent of the Maithripala Sirisena administration early this year, Sri Lanka seemed to conveniently ignore these home truths. The basic consideration that the bulk of our exports continues to go to the US and the West, regardless of other factors, should have convinced the former Mahinda Rajapaksa regime of the advisability of maintaining cordial ties with the West. Apparently, the Mahinda regime lacked the thinking capacity on these matters. May be, his many ‘advisors’ were tongue-tied by apprehension and nervousness over losing their positions as a result of speaking the truth. But the truth must prevail and ‘public servants’ must adhere to this principle or give up their positions.

However, it is abundantly clear that the US cannot expect to go unchallenged in the political, economic and military spheres in this changing international environment. Even with regard to international economics, its growth is second to Asia, growing at some 2.2 percent while Asia has recorded 6.25 percent. The foremost Western financial institutions, such as, the World Bank and the IMF are being challenged by the predominantly Chinese-funded Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the BRICS-founded New Investment Bank, to name just two institutions of this kind. Thus, is US economic hegemony being confronted by emerging economies and combines of such countries.

On the international political and military fronts, the situation is no better for the US and the West. The current Russian military involvement in Syria and its clear show of support for the Bashar Al-assad regime, underscore the fact that Russia aims to be on par with the West in the Syrian military quagmire. Whether anything of a positive nature would emerge for Russia and the embattled Al-assad regime from such military initiatives, may not be quite to the point. The fact is that Russia is not intending to play second fiddle to the West in the Middle East. Earlier, Russia flexed its muscle in the Crimea, in a show of defiance of Western opnion.

But it is all too clear that Western military power is on the wane even outside the Middle East. For example, Iraq and Afghanistan have been virtually left to their own devices. The government of Afghanistan, for instance, seems to be in an uphill and extremely bloody struggle against the Taliban to keep its power. In both theatres of conflict, the West seems to have made mere face-saving withdrawals. It would be interesting to see the UN Security Council’s future course of action with regard to Afghanistan. As matters stand, Afghanistan and Iraq seem to have been ‘left in the lurch’ by the West.

Accordingly, Western military and political predominance is fast becoming a thing of the past, although the West would continue to wield decisive weight in the affairs of the world. However, it is important to point out that world power relations are in a fluid state with anything like a clearly describable international power hierarchy not presenting itself to the political observer. What is certain is that we cannot swear by the ‘old certainties’ in international politics.

New Year greetings from GMOA

Government’s careless attitude over their demands seems to be provoking trade union action by GMOA
2015-12-25
 






NO TREATMENT will be the New Year greetings of medical doctors to their poor patients, as per the announcement by the Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) last week. They will take stern trade union action if the government continues its silence over the demands of the medical practitioners, as per the GMOA claim.  

The Inside Story: Why Ravi K Released Toyota Prado Jeeps

Alleged 1.5 billion revenue fraud condoned by the new DGC: An Insight into the case

Colombo Telegraph
By Nagananda Kodituwakku –December 24, 2015
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Relying on information provided by the Customs Central Investigation Bureau (CIB), Sri Lanka’s print media reported last week, that a large number of Toyota Prado Jeeps (over 189 numbers) had been detained at the Hambantota port by the Customs Central Investigation Directorate and that the respective importers had failed to declare the ‘TRUE TRANSACTION VALUE’ for Customs purposes. It was further reported that the Director General of Customs (DGC), Mr Chulananda Perera, has made an illegal order to release all these vehicles causing a colossal loss of over 1.5 billion rupees of revenue.
The objective of this piece of writing is to alert the readers with the factual information about this case, as it appears that people are being misinformed with falsified stories by the interested parties both in and out of the Customs service.
Agreement on implementation of Article vii of the GATT – 1994
Sri Lanka is a member of GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) and member of the WTO since 1st Jan 1995 and has ratified the Article VII of the GATT concerning valuation of goods for Customs purposes.
Enacting laws in keeping with the GATT Valuation Agreement
The Article 12 of the said agreement requires all member nations to make laws and regulations setting out the content of the agreement. And in 1988, Sri Lanka adopted the said agreement in the Customs Ordinance (Schedule E).
The primary basis for Customs value under these regulations is the “transaction value” as defined in Article 1 of the said regulations, that is the price actually paid or payable for goods when sold for export to country of importation.
Strict penal sanctions against violations                          Read More

An excise department worker nabbed when taking bribe

An excise department worker nabbed when taking bribe

Lankanewsweb.netDec 23, 2015
A sergeant working in the excise department has been taken into custody by the Bribery & Corruption while obtaining a kick back today 23rd. This sergeant was working in the excise office situated at the Sri Jayawardanapura. Investigating director of the Bribery & Corruption senior DIG Priyantha Chandrasiri confirmed the news.

This relevant sergeant has demanded Rs. 9000 in order to prevent an investigation against a person who is selling drugs. The Bribery & Corruption team arrested this sergeant when he was ready to take money from this person.
 
The sergeant who was arrested on suspicious is due to be produced before the Colombo magistrate.

Video: British company that ignited gem war to Ratnapura?

‘Gemstones, a British company engaged in mass scale mining in Mozambique that has lead to deadly conflicts getting approval for mining for gems in Ratnapura  despite President Maithripala Sirisena promising people that he would not allow any foreign companies to intervene in gem industry in the country, has been revealed by the website ‘Radio Gagana’. It is this ‘Gemstones’ that has been the root of the tragedy in Mozambique.

THURSDAY, 24 DECEMBER 2015
The British company - its main aim is to take over the mining for blue sapphire in the country – has begun a partnership in 2014 with a company called East – West Gem Investments reported to have been established in the same year.
According to ‘Gemsfields’ it has 75% shares in 16 exploration licenses in Sri Lanka that covers ‘mining for diverse minerals". The licenses have been issued by the previous government and the National Gem & Jewellery Authority (NGJA). Despite President saying foreigners would not be allowed to engage in gem mining in the country, the British company has formed Ratnapura Lanka Gemstones (Pvt.) Ltd. and BOI has confirmed that the company has been given approval as a gem company.
Responding to an inquiry by ‘Radio Gagana’ BOI has stated that the coordinator for Ratnapura Lanka Gemstones is Ssharm Fernando having an office at the 5th floor in the  western tower of World Trade Center in Colombo.



Editorial- 


Some people have all the luck in this country. They are the politicians who live off the fat of the land at the expense of the public. MPs are paid salaries to attend Parliament. It defies comprehension why they should be given anything extra for being present in the House. As if that were not enough their attendance allowance is to be increased from Rs. 500 to Rs. 20,000 per sitting, we are told. Parliament usually sits eight days a month and the government is planning to have sittings on ten days.

MPs are notorious for skipping parliamentary sittings. There have been instances where even those billed to open debates on crucial issues kept away. They come, they sign and they vanish like municipal labourers. Eight days are more than enough for parliamentarians to discuss anything of national importance, provided they make the best use of proceedings without hurling abuse and resorting to fisticuffs.

Sittings are, more often than not, inquorate. So, the question is what the MPs are going to do on the two additional days. Do they need any more time for wrestling, boxing, self-immolation attempts and other such activities?

The proponents of an enhanced sitting allowance argue that it will incentivise the MPs to attend Parliament. It is like hurling a huge chunk of umbalakada (‘Maldive fish)’ at a thieving cat running away with a piece of meat, as a local saying goes. The solution is not to throw money at the problem; party leaders ought to take disciplinary action against the MPs who shirk their responsibilities.

This newspaper reported a few weeks ago that an MP could obtain a duty free vehicle permit even if he or she resigned within hours of being sworn in. The government has proposed to scrap the non-contributory pension scheme for public employees to be recruited. But, politicians who complete five years as MPs, doing precious little, are entitled to pensions. A veteran trade unionist has urged the government to abolish the pension scheme for MPs before proposing to deprive state employees of their pension rights.

Government politicians go into spiels about their pecuniary difficulties when the educated youth in universities demand an increase in the Mahapola stipend. But, they are never short of funds to feather the nests of parliamentarians most of whom have not even passed the GCE O/L examination.

A parent who lectures to his or her children on the value of education runs the risk of being questioned whether one should study at all in a country where one need not have educational qualifications to become even the head of state. Children ask tough questions! They may also want to know why anyone should ever bother to study hard when the opportunities are available for school dropouts to do anything illegal with impunity, amass enough wealth, spend part of it on election bribes for the poor, get elected, secure a ministerial post and have even highly educated top professionals groveling before them.

The government has also offered to increase MPs’ staff from three to 18 each. Why should public funds be wasted in this manner? There is a pressing need for downsizing both the Cabinet and Parliament. When the number of MPs was increased to 225, there were no Provincial Councils. Today, there are about 400 provincial councillors in addition to 45 ministers in the nine provinces. Therefore, the number of parliamentarians should be drastically reduced.

Perks and privileges enjoyed by MPs continue to attract the scum of the earth to Parliament. The best way to discourage such elements from taking to politics is to bring parliamentarians down a peg or two. Instead, successive governments have made politics attractive to criminals and nitwits.

48 hospitalized due to gas poisoning


A group of employees working at a paint manufacturing establishment were hospitalized due to gas poisoning in Panadura –North yesterday (22). 
2015-12-23
A group of employees working at a paint manufacturing establishment were hospitalized due to gas poisoning in Panadura –North yesterday (22). Forty eight employees are receiving treatments at Panadura Base Hospital.
The incident occurred when they attempted to repair a damaged pipe of a tank containing thinner, Police Media Unit said.
Panadura –North Police is carrying out further investigations into the incident.

State policy is halt to alcohol – in Army, it is always drunk

State policy is halt to alcohol – in Army, it is always drunk
Lankanewsweb.net- Dec 24, 2015
Since the election of Maithripala Sirisena, more attention is being paid to environment, and various programmes are to be implemented with the three armed forces for its development. In addition, being the health minister for a long time and knowing the adverse impacts on the citizens of alcohol consumption and smoking, all possible steps are being taken to prevent them from these vices. For this too, the assistance of the armed forces may be obtained in the future.

The state police may be a halt to alcohol, but, the Colonel Commandant of the Army’s engineering corps  Maj.Gen. Channa Goonathilake whoes father is famously known as late Mr. Peiris a businessman, and ardent supporter of Mr. Ranil Wickamasinghe Maj.Gen. Channa Goonathilake is  also older royalist they are from Armor street near Sugathadasa stadium. He has a apartment in Borella but lives in a govrnment flats by giving that Borella apartment  out on rent. This is clear violation of government rules. No one can declear to stay in government housing when property is own in  Colombo. Army Commando too backs him since from engineers and Royal. When UNP came into power in 2000 he was appointed as the director Youth Crops.
 
Maj.Gen. Channa Goonathilake has launched several programmes to keep his officers intoxicated. Recently, a Christmas carol was held, and despite the wives and children of the officers being present, the occasion was marked by maximum consumption of alcohol. A week later, a farewell dinner is being planned, on December 29, for retiring Maj. Gen. Keerthi Rajapakse, with the participation of officers and their wives made compulsory. There too, all facilities would be made available to get intoxicated. Two days later, on December 31, another party has been planned to mark the beginning New Year. For this too, officers should attend along with their wives, with a free flow of alcohol provided.
 
All these programmes have become quite a headache for the officers. However, they are compelled to take part due to the fear that their future would be adversely influenced by the Colonel Commandant Maj.Gen. Channa Goonathilake, said one senior officer.
 
They are inconvenienced especially due to the 31st night party. On January 01, the officers should be at their offices on time to raise the national flag and the recital of the national anthem and the state policy statement. Therefore, if officers serving at outstations seek leave to attend the party, their seniors would not like it. It is a do or die situation for them.
 
This party will continue until early next morning, with a free flow of alcohol, and the officers suffering from sleeplessness and hangover will have to be at their workplaces on January 01, leading them to face many problems. Most of the engineering corps officers were educated at Buddhist schools and follow the Sinhala traditions, and they will be denied the opportunity to go to temples on the 31st night along with their wives and children and engage in religious activities, and report for work work on January 01st morning with a good frame of mind.
 
Officers with children of school-going age will have to spend on their books, clothing, shoes, bags and school fees at the beginning of the year. But, they will have to bear costs of all these parties, and those having financial difficulties will fall from the frying pan into the fire. The Colonel Commandant Maj.Gen. Channa Goonathilake, who was bred and educated in a catholic and western background and leads a westernized and luxurious lifestyle, is organizing such events as he cannot comprehend the various problems his officers are experiencing. Other senior officers of the engineering corps close to him want to please him as they expect to gain promotions and do not come forward to tell him about such things. They are keeping silent as the opinions of senior officers educated at Ananda, Nalanda and other Buddhist schools, who see things are they are and behave as Sinhalese and selflessly are not being listened to. Hoping to be the Army commander one day, he is certain to make the entire Army westernized and left intoxicated, spelling an end to Sinhala traditions, if he is appointed to that position.
Is Hirunika following her father's footsteps?"

2015-12-25
Nava Sama Samaja Party Leader Vickramabahu Karunaratne yesterday raised doubts whether MP Hirunika Premachandra followed the footsteps of her father who he identified as a hoodlum in Kolonnawa, as she attempted to resolve disputes among mobs.

He mentioned that late Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra was a reputed hoodlum who settled disputes among people in Kolonnawa.

“It looks like the daughter has taken up the same task of solving people’s issues,” he said.

Commenting on the recent incident where a man was allegedly abducted by six supporters of Ms. Premachandra, he said no one could take the law into their own hands.

Prof. Karunaratne, a key activist of President Maithripala Sirisena’s election campaign, pointed out that it was solely the police who had the authority to take action against illegal activities. “We wonder if this government is too practicing the previous government’s habit of abducting people. We have a police department to deal with crimes, and today the department is more independent than what it was in the past,” he told a news conference. - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/100721/is-hirunika-following-her-father-s-footsteps#sthash.WCA0WdEn.dpuf

Israel transfers bodies of slain Palestinians

Mourners carry the body of Sadiq Ziad Gharbiyeh during the boy’s funeral in the West Bank city of Jenin on 23 December.-Nedal EshtayahAPA images


Palestinians carry the body of Maram Hassouna during her funeral in the West Bank city of Nablus on 22 December.-Nedal EshtayahAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy-24 December 2015
This week Israel transferred the bodies of several Palestinians killed by its forces during alleged attacks in recent weeks and which have been withheld from their families.

The Palestinian health ministry stated on Thursday that 135 Palestinians have been killed since the beginning of October. Almost two dozen Israelis were slain during the same period.
Lockdown: Hebron bears brunt of Israeli-

Palestinian upheaval 

Sheren Khalel-Wednesday 23 December 2015
HEBRON, West Bank - The upheaval in the occupied Palestinian territories and Israel that began more than two months ago shows no sign of slowing down as it continues well into December. Clashes are still are a daily occurrence, protesters are shot dead at an all-too-familiar frequency and Palestinian attacks against Israelis are reported multiple times a week.
More than 123 Palestinians have been shot dead by Israeli soldiers and settlers and 19 Israelis have died in individual Palestinian attacks since the start of October.
The region is as tense as ever, but one area in particular seems to be bearing the brunt of the violence.
The southern West Bank district of Hebron is no stranger to conflict. Hebron city is home to the only city-centre in the West Bank in which Israeli settlers and Palestinian residents live side by side, and it has never been a peaceful coexistence.
Thousands of soldiers are deployed in the centre to protect a few hundred settlers, and Palestinian freedom of movement in the city has been severely restricted for years.
Recently, those restrictions on movement have spread throughout the district. With around 30 percent of the Palestinians who have been shot dead during alleged attacks since the start of October having been from Hebron, the district and its residents are on lockdown.

Halhul lockdown

In Halhul, a town that is home to more than 22,000 people, only one road remains open to traffic, but the access is limited.
Residents told Middle East Eye that people who live in Halhul can drive in, but residents are not allowed to drive out. The fine for a resident getting caught leaving the village in a vehicle is reportedly 1,000 shekels ($257), more than many residents’ monthly wages.
Instead, those seeking to leave the town wait outside near an entrance closed off with large concrete blocks for public transport or friends and family to pick them up. Those entering the neighbourhood are dropped off on one side of the blockade, and catch a ride from Halhul vehicles on the other side of the concrete closure.
Mahmoud Tharaja, a resident of Halhul, told MEE that the conditions are making life unbearably complicated.
“Just going to school or work is so hard now,” Tharaja explained, leaning on one of the large slabs of concrete. “All of us need cars, we need to drive. All of us work and study outside of the village, there is no industry inside, just homes.”
Just as Tharaja points out that those with families and the elderly are most affected by the blockade, an elderly woman is dropped off at the entrance and begins climbing up toward the closed off town with large bags of groceries in her hands.
“Look at this lady, try to understand all the aspects of having your home closed off like this,” Tharaja said. “It’s too hard, this is not life.”

'Like a prison'

On 11 December, a Palestinian identified by local media as 55-year-old Omar al-Haroub allegedly attempted to ram his car into a group of Israeli forces in Halhul and was shot dead at the scene. However, residents said the closure happened weeks before the incident.
In Beit Ummar, another large town in Hebron, residential areas have been closed off by checkpoint. However, cars are being allowed in and out after Israeli army inspections.
Ali Alami, a resident of Beit Ummar, said that while his work should be a 10-minute drive from his home, it now takes him close to an hour to get home due to traffic built up at checkpoints. Instead Alami tends to walk to work most days, or catch a ride at one of the shuttered entrances.
Today, Alami is waiting for his wife to get dropped off at one of the blocked off routes. Taxi drivers no longer risk getting stuck in line to enter or exit the residential areas, and will only drive to and from entrances.
“All of Hebron is like this now; it’s all closed off like a prison,” Alami told MEE. “We find ways to live around this humiliation, but it is not easy.”
Residents in Beit Ummar have found ways to get around the Israeli closure, but the risks are high. Alami points at a car carefully making its way through a gap made between two concrete blocks, saying he does not think it’s worth it.
“If they catch him doing that right now [the Israeli forces] will take his car and fine him huge,” Alami said. “It’s happened many times before.”
The Israeli military presence in the Hebron district is highly visible. Nearly every side road off the main route that runs through the district is situated with a checkpoint.
In the village of Saer, where several attackers have reportedly been from, a flying checkpoint on the main road to the village is just a precursor to another more thorough checkpoint closer to the residential boundaries.
Al-Arrub refugee camp, known for being politically charged, has been completely closed off to all cars, with vehicles not allowed in or out.
Thaer Shareef, a young man from the camp, told MEE that because the closure requires a constant Israeli army presence, clashes at the camp sometimes break out multiple times a day.
“They’ve closed off the camp 100 percent,” Shareed said. “And the soldiers are always tense - it’s dangerous that they are tense like this. If anyone even looks at them they raise their guns up to our faces.”
Shareed said he has heard that the blockade of the main road at al-Arrub may be lifted for a few hours a day in the coming few days.
“If they open it just a few hours, it could help. I haven’t seen our roads open here since the second week of October,” he said. ”Look around us, it’s too hard for the people to live like this.”

Taliban defiant as battle for Sangin rages

The Islamist group says Britain has made a "stupid decision" by sending troops back to Helmand province as its fighters battle Afghan forces for control of the strategic town of Sangin.
Afghan National Army soldiers (Reuters)
Channel 4 NewsWEDNESDAY 23 DECEMBER 2015
A team of around 10 British soldiers has been deployed to Camp Shorabak in Helmand as part of a wider Nato mission to help local forces. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) says the UK team is working in an advisory role only.
The move came after insurgents overran Sangin, taking control of most of the district and surrounding Afghan government forces.
Acting defence minister Masoom Stanekzai said fighting was ongoing in Sangin, but reinforcements had arrived to relieve troops.
"The military is in position and the operation is ongoing," he told a press conference in Kabul.
Provincial police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang said the situation had improved since the beginning of the week but heavy fighting was continuing.
Helmand district governor Mohammad Jan Rasoulyar told the BBC the Afghan National Army (ANA) was "now taking the fight to the Taliban".

Fighting

There are reports of fighting across Helmand, a traditional Taliban stronghold and opium-growing district, which British and US forces fought for years to control.
Some 106 British service personnel lost their lives in Sangin district between 2006 and 2010.
Afghan forces have struggled to contain the insurgency since overseas troops stood down combat operations last year. Government soldiers have complained about being left without adequate supplies, reinforcements or air cover.
Taliban militants seized the city of Kunduz for several days in September in a show of strength that came amid reports that its forces were being squeezed by the rival Islamic State group.
And on Wednesday, the Taliban claimed to have captured the district of Gulistan in Farah, a remote western province, but governer Asif Nang said the claim was "baseless".
Taliban statement  The Taliban has issued a statement on Britain's renewed involvement in Helmand, saying:

Taliban statement

The Taliban has issued a statement on Britain's renewed involvement in Helmand, saying: "Our message to the British government and people is before attacking Afghanistan is to read the history of your forefather's (sic), and you should have learnt from their repeated defeat in Afghanistan.
"They suffered great losses and left this place now once again they came here that’s a stupid decision.
"The Afghan people are ready for any kind of sacrifices to defend their country and we will continue our fighting.
"The involvement of the British forces once again showed to the world that with all those modern equipment the Kabul administrator isn't capable in controlling or holding the ground.
"It's proved that without foreign support the Kabul administration cannot protect their selves and it will be hard for them to function."

David Miliband: Britain must play a part

Former foreign secretary David Miliband, who now heads the International Rescue Committee in New York, said the situation was "on the verge of becoming desperate".
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We are paying the price of missed opportunities in the second term of president Karzai from November 2009 for five years.
"I think that for Britain now - given the level of sacrifice but also the importance strategically of Afghanistan of an entry point into central Asia, as a potential expansion ground for Isis and others - I think it is important for Britain to be part of the overall strategy to stabilise the country. Above all that needs to be a political strategy."

Why Can’t Ex-Chinese Leaders Travel Abroad?

Xi Jinping’s secret strategy for dealing with China’s powerful retired elite.
Why Can’t Ex-Chinese Leaders Travel Abroad?
BY ISAAC STONE FISH-DECEMBER 24, 2015
For Chinese President Xi Jinping, all politics is hyperlocal. His electorate consists of the political elite: the hundreds of sitting and retired Chinese leaders, generals, and power brokers clustered in and around the seat of government in Beijing’s Zhongnanhai. Shortly after taking office in 2012, Xi launched a widespread campaign to eradicate corruption at both the bottom and the top of the Chinese Communist Party. This anti-corruption campaign is the signature fight of Xi’s presidency — and for him a priority over “life, death, and reputation,” he reportedly told the Politburo, China’s elite 25-member ruling body, in a June 2014 speech.
Xi seems to be focusing his anti-corruption campaign on retired members of the elite: not in quantity, per se — far more low-level officials have been sacked or arrested — but in intensity. Xi has targeted men like Zhou Yongkang, a retired official who formerly served in the Politburo Standing Committee (PBSC), the group of seven men at the apex of the Communist Party; and Gens. Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, who both served in the Politburo. Zhou is now serving a life sentence in prison; Guo is under investigation for corruption charges; and Xu, detained on charges of corruption in early 2014, died in March of cancer. In 2012, men like Zhouelected Xi as president. If this anti-corruption campaign should fail, members of the elite could depose him.
Xi’s strategy for dealing with this threat, like that of his predecessors, is to keep friends close and potential enemies closer. In doing so, Xi has drawn on a decades-old obscure but powerful party tradition.According to interviews with several people close to the ruling party leadership, ex-Politburo members are not allowed to travel overseas without permission from the current PBSC. “It’s the accepted custom,” said someone with ties to the leadership, who asked to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the issue. This rule applies to dozens of members of China’s political elite, including both living ex-presidents: Jiang Zemin,rumored to be under suspicion for corruption, and Hu Jintao, who is untainted by allegations of graft, said someone with ties to the leadership.
A Chinese expert on China’s leadership, who asked to remain anonymous, said that the rule is so tight that there are likely few cases of ex-Politburo members traveling abroad since the death of Chinese leader Mao Zedong in 1976. “In China, ex-leaders basically don’t leave the country,” said David Lampton, director of China studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
There are rules governing the travel of current Politburo members — they cannot go overseas more than once a year, except for special work-related circumstances, and they must generally keep their trips within 3-5 days,according to a 1989 regulation. It is unclear, however, if there is a specific regulation governing whether or not former Chinese leaders are permitted to travel overseas. Elite politics in China “is a huge black box,” said Lampton. Bo Zhiyue, the director of Victoria University of Wellington’s New Zealand Contemporary China Research Centre and an expert on elite Chinese politics, speculates that former Politburo members don’t possess personal passports: They use official passports, held at the General Office, a party body that handles the administrative affairs of the Politburo and other government organs. “If you don’t have a passport, you can’t travel abroad,” he said.
Apart from that they might be a target of his anti-corruption campaign, there are several other possible reasons why Xi might benefit from restricting former Chinese leaders from traveling overseas. He is, perhaps, paranoid about defection or personal embarrassment. “These people have a lot of secrets,” said Bo. Former Politburo members may have “inside information that is detrimental to the image of the party,” he said. “If there is a way to block that person [from leaving], they will do so.”
Xi, who has consolidated power faster than his two recent predecessors, Jiang and Hu, may also fear that former leaders could distract attention from the current Politburo. “It is apparently a method to make room for the existing leadership, so that the previous leadership does not upstage” the current ones, said Dali Yang, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago. It also limits their ability to engage in unwanted policymaking — not unlike when ex-U.S. President Jimmy Carter visited Pyongyang in 1994. Carter, who had a relationship with longtime North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung, was there on behalf of then-U.S. President Bill Clinton to help solidify a nuclear deal: Carter reportedly negotiated beyond what the administration was willing to give. “In the United States, an ex-president is a valuable asset,” said Bo. “In China, they don’t want these people to come back to politics. They keep them as far away as possible.”
Consider the March funeral of Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, a man who maintained close relations with both the United States and China. Clinton led the U.S. delegation to the funeral. China sent current Politburo member and Vice President Li Yuanchao. “Foreign policy historically has been very carefully managed, and China places a lot of emphasis on making sure that’s still the case,” said Yang. Keeping former Chinese leaders at home prevents them from engaging in maverick policymaking.
And Beijing would likely be displeased were they to travel around the world consulting, like former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, or giving six-figure speeches, like Clinton — especially since Xi launched his anti-corruption campaign. On the one hand, one Chinese professor with high-level ties, who asked to speak anonymously, said that Chinese leaders “don’t need to make money” like Blair and Clinton. Indeed, it’s widely believed that many former Chinese leaders are extremely wealthy, due to deals facilitated for relatives by high-level connections during time in office.
That wealth, however, can be a liability. In an investigation published in April 2014, the New York Times found that three of Zhou’s relatives hold or held stakes “in at least 37 companies scattered across a dozen provinces, from Audi dealerships to property firms.” More than a year before Beijingsentenced Zhou to life in prison in June for accepting bribes, among other crimes, it reportedly seized at least $14.5 billion in assets from his family members and his associates.
* * *
The no-travel rule does seem to allow for a bit of flexibility. The Chinese expert on China’s leadership emphasized that it doesn’t include the special Chinese territories of Hong Kong orMacau, and he speculated that ex-Politburo members may have gone abroad secretly — unknown to the public and also possibly unknown to Beijing. The rule also appears to discount those who travel because they have a new job: Consider, for example, the case of Zeng Peiyan, who served in the Politburo from 2002 to 2007. Now, as chairman of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, an economic research consultancy, Zeng regularly travels overseas. Zeng visited Malaysia in June, and in early November he spoke at a conference in London. Still, it’s extremely rare for an ex-Politburo member to secure a high-profile job that allows him to travel overseas. “Zeng is truly an exception,” said Bo.
So, if they’re not traveling overseas, then what are ex-leaders doing? Their lives out of office are far more similar to ex-President George W. Bush, famous for painting on his Texas ranch, or ex-President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who retired to a farm in Pennsylvania to raise cattle, than they are to the lives of Clinton and Blair. Party propaganda tries to portray their lives as simple and modest, their habits austere. Li Lanqing, who served in the PBSC under Jiang from 1997 to 2002 and is known for his love of classical music, designs Chinese seals and reportedly tried to get a job working at a small restaurant. (Of course, it’s difficult to determine what they’re actually doing: None of the living ex-leaders mentioned in this story were reachable for comment; the party’s Organization Department, which handles personnel, couldn’t be reached for comment; and the Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.) Many former Chinese leaderswrite books or memoirs. And some, like Jiang, stay publicly, though subtly, active in politics.
Part of the reason so few ex-Politburo members have traveled overseas in the 66 years that the party has ruled China is that until roughly two decades ago, not many survived long enough to retire.Mao Zedong died in office in September 1976, as did longtime marshal and PBSC member Zhu De in July of that year and Premier Zhou Enlai in January. Mao’s 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution, an anarchic campaign that upended China’s social and political order, saw other top officials meet less graceful ends: Shortly after Mao’s designated successor, Marshal Lin Biao, broke with the chairman, he died in a mysterious 1971 plane crash. And some died in chains: Liu Shaoqi, China’s president until the late 1960s, died in 1969 after several years of torture.
After Mao died, the Politburo became a much safer place for its members: Mao’s successors didn’t possess the power (or perhaps the stomach) to murder their opponents. When Deng Xiaoping came to power a few years later, many of China’s elite were tired of the devastating infighting that characterized the Mao years. Riding the prevailing political wind, and mindful of his sometimes precarious position as China’s paramount leader in the 1980s and 1990s, Deng arrested his top party opponents, kept them under de facto house arrest, or sidelined them — but didn’t murder them. Consider, for example, the Gang of Four — Politburo members, blamed for the excesses of the Cultural Revolution — all of whom served long terms in prison.
Deng’s successors, Jiang and Hu, both oversaw the arrest and imprisonment of a few of their high-ranking political enemies, but not on the scale of today. More than any leader since Deng, Xi is reviving the Maoist tradition of imprisoning ex-leaders. He has taken down several ex-Politburo members — most spectacularly Zhou, China’s former security czar. Perhaps because of his aggressive anti-corruption campaign, Xi’s position among the political elite may be precarious. In April 2014, ex-President Hu visited Mao’s home province of Hunan, which some analysts interpreted — through the foggy lens of party symbolism — as a critique of Xi’s stern Maoism. But don’t count on Hu taking his message overseas anytime soon. Xi will likely want him close and quiet, perhaps to the detriment of China’s political stability. “The tension is much higher,” said Bo — all these powerful ex-Politburo members, “stuck in one country and unable to leave.”
Image credit by LEO RAMIREZ/AFP/Getty Images