Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Nepotism; Father Defence Minister, Son-In-Law PRO, Daughter Chief Guest


Colombo TelegraphDecember 27, 2015
Public anger on social media has skyrocketed towards President Maithripala Sirisena – Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe led yahapalanaya government as the Head of State’s daughter Chathurika Sirisena isscheduled to be the chief guest at a Ministry of Defence led Civil Security Departmental function to be held on the 28th of December 2015 at the BMICH.
ChathurikaA disgruntled voter of yahapalanaya said that this nepotism phenomenon is getting more sick and ugly by the day. “The Minister of Defence is the President Sirisena himself. He then appoints his son-in-law Wewelpanawa Gamage Thilina Suranjith as the Public Relations Officer of the Defence Ministry and now brings his daughter to even be the chief guest in such a distinguished Ministry, where far more respected individuals could have been bestowed the honor instead” she posted on her Facebook page.
It is worthy to note that President Sirisena’s daughter Chathurika Sirisena who was an absolute non-entity till her father’s appointment in January 2015, started off as being the chief guest at lesser prominent functions such as the National Kite Festival, at school functions at Rathnavali Girls School Gampaha and Royal College Pollannaruwa and gradually moving on to be the chief guest at the recently held annual concert of the Naval Pre-schools of SLNS Gamunu, SLNS Tissa and SLNS Dakshina at the Navy Headquarters in Colombo on 06th December 2015.
Meanwhile another commentator said on his Facebook page “Chathu is now known as the nepotism ‘chief guest queen’ and that is how the ugly head of nepotism lifts its head. Even Mahinda Rajapaksa waited a couple of years prior to introducing his own sons gradually into the public eye before nepotism in the last decade virtually blew itself out of proportion”.
However President Sirisena who shocked all by appointing his brother Pallewatta Gamaralalage Kumarasinghe Sirisena as the Chairman on Sri Lanka Telecom barely 18 days after seizing power, has recently also hinted that he may continue to remain in power even though he promised to retire from politics at the end of his first term as President.                                                                    Read More 

Mahinda provoke the army !

Lankanewsweb.net- Dec 27, 2015
Mahinda provoke the army !Reports reaching us confirm that in a view to provoke the security forces, a chaotic and a turbulent environment is synthetically created within the country against the current government based on the allegations leveled against the security forces for political murders and abductions.

The army and navy officers has been alleged for the murder of Ekneligoda, Raviraj, Pararajasingham, Thajudeen and acquiring extortions for the release of the abducted students and legal proceedings are enforced against those members of the security forces.
Pro Mahinda factions are trying to start a protest and plan to destruct the legal proceedings when the court cases against the army is due to start the future.
Recently a protest was started in parallel to the court case of Ekneligoda. 
Campign against lawyer Dilip Pieris
Meantime a stealthy and sly effort is unleashed against lawyer Dilip Pieris in the Attorney General department who efficiently leads the Ekneligoda and Thajudeen case. A protest is planned to conduct against this lawyer trying to label him as an LTTE and remove him from appearing on behalf of the case.
Mahinda Rajapaksa following the visit to see the chairman os Security & Exchange Control (SEC) Nalaka Godahewa who was in remand prison custody told the media that he met the army soldiers who are in the remand custody. Although it was not true the latter made such a statement he made this remark to achieve his stealthy political agendas.
Therefore the pro Mahinda faction is aiming is to start a racial violence by mobilizing and joining racial groups such as Bodu Bala Sena and Lion blood (Sinha Le) and recapture the power.
Recently these groups were campaigning instigating racial discrimination in few areas of the country
One drowns, another missing in mid sea trawler mishap 

2015-12-27
One person drowned and another went missing when a trawler boat carrying five fishermen from Devundara toppled in seas off Kirinda this afternoon, where the rest of the fishermen were rescued by another trawler. 

The trawler boat that left shores on the Christmas Day from Devundara carrying five fishermen had met with the accident around 3.30pm yesterday about 10 nautical miles off the Pothuwila shore in Kirinda. 

Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekara said another trawler boat that launched from the Benthara shores had come across the ill-fated boat with its occupants were hanging on to it in the sea. 

The second boat had saved three fishermen who were struggling for their lives whilst the body of a drowned victim was also recovered. Another fisherman was missing in the water.

 The fishermen of the second boat had radio messaged the coastal authorities saying that they had salvaged three fishermen and one body.

 They were bound towards Devundara fisheries harbour when this edition went to press last night. 

The ASP said the prevailing rough weather condition would have caused the boat to topple.

 Gandara Police conducting investigations have identified the fishermen to be residents of Devundara. 

The drowned victim who’s recovered body had been identified as Ajith Supun (45) and the 40-year-old Pradeep Chandana had gone missing. (Kurulu Koojana Kariyakarawana)

Japan says armed Chinese ship infiltrated its waters near disputed islands

AP JAPAN CHINA DISPUTED ISLANDS I XSEAn armed Chinese coast guard ship sails in the water near islands, known as the Senkaku in Japanese and the Diaoyu in Chinese, on Dec. 22, 2015.(Photo: Japan Coast Guard via AP)
 According to the Japanese Coast Guard, a Chinese coast guard ship, that appeared to be armed, entered disputed waters off islands claimed by both Japan and China. USA TODAY

Erin Kelly-December 26, 2015

A Chinese coast guard ship that appeared to be armed with cannons entered disputed waters Saturday off islands claimed by both Japan and China, the Japan Coast Guard reported.
It was the first time that an armed Chinese vessel has entered the disputed territory in the East China Sea, although unarmed Chinese ships often sail there, the Associated Press reported.
The ship stayed in the area for about an hour Saturday morning before leaving what Japan considers to be its territorial waters. The ship was accompanied by two other Chinese coast guard vessels that did not appear to be armed, AP reported.
Chinese authorities said their vessel was carrying standard coast guard equipment, was in Chinese waters and was doing nothing wrong.
The ship was spotted by the Japan Coast Guard on Saturday off the coast of the uninhabited islands, which the Japanese call Senkaku and the Chinese call Diaoyus.
Japanese officials said it was armed with four pieces of equipment — two in the front and two in the rear — that looked like cannons. The vessel had been seen operating farther from the islands earlier in the week.
The dispute over the islands has been a major point of contention between the two nations. Japan strengthened its official control of the small islands in 2012 by nationalizing some of them, angering Chinese leaders who claim the islets for China.
Last month, Japanese officials reported seeing a Chinese naval intelligence ship near the islands for the first time.
The Damscus Gate in Jerusalem, where Israel’s draconian punitive measures are aimed at breaking the back of any organized resistance in the occupied city.
 Mahfouz Abu TurkAPA images

Budour Youssef
Hassan
26 December 2015
Whenever Palestinians stand up for their rights in Jerusalem, it is a safe bet that Samer Abu Eisheh will be there. It is hard to imagine a protest near the Damascus Gate — an entrance to the Old City — without his bellowing voice.
It is the 28-year-old’s relentless activism that could sunder him from his home, however. After nearly three months under house arrest, the TV producer and community leader was handed a five-month expulsion order from Jerusalem this week. It was issued by an Israeli district commander.

Hezbollah leader tells Israel to brace for retaliation over Qantar's death

Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah addresses his supporters via a screen during a commemoration service marking one week since the killing of Hezbollah militant leader Samir Qantar, in Beirut's southern suburbs, December 27, 2015. Samir Qantar was killed in an Israeli air strike in Damascus. REUTERS/Aziz TaherLebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah addresses his supporters via a screen during a commemoration service marking one week since the killing of Hezbollah militant leader Samir Qantar, in Beirut's southern suburbs, December 27, 2015. Samir Qantar was killed in...REUTERS/AZIZ TAHER
ReutersBY LAILA BASSAM- Sun Dec 27, 2015
The leader of Lebanon's Hezbollah group said on Sunday that Israel miscalculated by killing prominent militant Samir Qantar in Syria last week, saying that retaliation for his death was inevitable, whatever the consequences.
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, speaking in a ceremony to mark a week since Qantar's death in a strike in a residential quarter of Damascus, said Israelis should brace themselves for a response either inside or outside Israel.
"The Israelis should be justifiably worried... They should be worried along the border, inside (Israel) and outside," he said.
"The response is coming no matter what ... We cannot forgive the shedding of our mujahideen blood by the Zionists ... anywhere in the world," he said. Israel has welcomed Qantar's death, but has not confirmed it carried out the air strike that killed him.
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon said on Saturday Israel took seriously a possible retaliation for Qantar's killing and accused Iran, Hezbollah's backer, of trying to open "a terrorist front on the Golan Heights".
Yaalon said Hezbollah should be mindful of the 2006 Lebanon war, when Israel responded to a spate of cross-border attacks by the militant group with a large-scale ground, air and sea offensive.
Qantar was jailed in Israel for his part in a 1979 raid in Israel that killed four people when he was a member of a Palestinian militant group. Qantar was repatriated to Lebanon in 2008 in a prisoner swap with Hezbollah, which he then joined.
Nasrallah who described Qantar as a "leader" in Hezbollah for the first time acknowledged that Qantar had played a key role in creating a "popular resistance" in Syria against what he said were Israeli designs on the Syrian Golan Heights.
Hezbollah is fighting on the side of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria's civil war. Syrian state media said Qantar was involved in a major offensive earlier this year in Quneitra, near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Qantar's growing military role in the strategic area had unnerved Israel, Nasrallah said.
Israel seized part of the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and annexed it later.
(Additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; Writing by Suleiman al-Khalidi; Editing by Ros Russell)

Future of the United States interactions in the South Asian Region

Picture courtesy SriLankaBrief
At the turn of the new millennium, South Asia emerged as a region of tremendous international concern. And the South Asian region’s strategic geographical location was important in terms of defining the nature of policies that were to be implemented by the South Asian states as well as those adopted by the external states towards the former.
When preparing the foreign policy of the United States, special consideration is given to the State Department’s construction of the geo-strategic worlds into regional bureaus as they mark the significance of regions. It is formulated as per regions, taking in to consideration the regional dynamics and their interests there. Though initially the South Asian region was hardly given any consideration when the U.S. foreign policy was formulated, this sentiment has been changing over the past forty years or so, as several incidents in the region have featured prominently in the State Department. It is understood that South Asia is obviously an area of special significance due to the growing encounter between the West and Asia. It is ascertained that the South Asian region has become an extremely important component of the United States foreign policy, due to the importance the Indian Ocean has come to play in world politics.
South Asia is also deemed important due to the high-level of terrorist activities in the region and more so because both India and Pakistan possess nuclear weapons and the U.S. perceives this as a threat to their national security. As a result, the U.S. has been heavily involved in the region, especially in Afghanistan and Pakistan to reduce the threat this region poses on her domestic security concerns. It is evident that one of the key reasons as to why the United States is involved in this region is due to their national interests.
However moving forward, the U.S. needs to focus on strengthening ties with the ‘other’ South Asian states, especially Nepal and Bangladesh. For example, the U.S. can now play a large role in the rebuilding efforts taking place in Nepal after the massive earthquakes. With U.S.’ track record in the energy industry, it can get involved and invest in Nepal’s energy sector, thus enabling its expansion (Hoagland, 2015). The United States can further work closely with Sri Lanka to ensure and expand on maritime security ensuring the safety and security of the Sea Lines of Communication (SLOC). This has been a very pronounced need for the United States and a better rapport with the latter could assist the former secure its interests in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR). Implementing the 1971 Declaration of the Indian Ocean as a Zone of Peace will further assist in the ensuring global trade and oil shipments are secure and the IOR is devoid of terrorist and pirate attacks.
“For the United States, the South Asian region is not only of political interest, but also of economic interest due to the wealth of mineral and natural wealth which these countries control along with its strategic importance” (Senaratne, 2015). And in this context, the U.S. relations with India can further expand its economic and security partnerships. An expansion of this partnership works well as “President Obama and Prime Minister Modi have announced their intention to increase U.S.-India trade five-fold, to $500 billion” (Hoagland, 2015). With regard to expanding relations with Bangladesh, the U.S. can concentrate on the former’s economic growth rate which averages at an annual six per cent.
The new U.S. foreign policy towards the region titled the ‘New Silk Road’ was crafted specifically to reap economic benefits from the region. This vision is a four-pronged strategy to bolster regional connectivity as part of the New Silk Road. These four are creating regional energy markets that link Central Asia with South Asia; boosting transportation routes and investing in critical infrastructure; improving customs and borders; and linking businesses and people (Senaratne, 2015).
Furthermore, the United States can play a decisive role in the South Asian Association for Regional Corporation (SAARC) by taking advantage of its observer status. It can drive economic cooperation within the region whilst advocating transparency and legal certainty.
As an external power in the region, the United States can play a significant and crucial role in the future not merely in terms of regional security and economic growth. It can assist in pacifying and promoting regional cooperation and integration as well. It can continue to strive to achieve its interests in the region whilst ensuring the region too grows with the economic giant from the West.
Bibliography
Embassy of the United States in Sri Lanka and Maldives. (2015, February 02).Statement by Assistant
Secretary for South and Central Asia Nisha Biswal at Sri Lanka Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved from http://srilanka.usembassy.gov/tr-2feb15.html
Evans, A. (2012, December). United States and South Asia after Afghanistan. Asia Society: New York.
Hoagland, R. E. (2015, June 2). Developments in South and Central Asia.Department of State. Retrieved fromhttp://www.state.gov/p/sca/rls/rmks/2015/243087.htm
Kugelman, M. (2014, January 15). Five Resolutions for U.S. South Asia Policy in 2014. Foreign Policy. Retrieved fromhttp://foreignpolicy.com/2014/01/15/five-resolutions-for-u-s-south-asia-policy-in-2014/
Senaratne, B. (2015, February 08). Biswal’s visit and its geopolitical importance. Ceylon Today. Colombo, p. 02.

“The Time of the End is the Time of No Room”

Paramilitary police officers investigate the scene before carrying the lifeless body of Aylan Kurdi. (AP)

by
Friday, December 25, 2015



Daffy Donald proposes to ban Muslims from entering the U.S., while journalist Glenn Greenwald recently reported on the frightening upsurge in attacks on Muslims. As I write these words, I am listening to John Williams’ score for the movie “Schindler’s List.” The music never fails to move me deeply. Whatever historical flaws or misrepresentations the film might have, the undeniable suffering of the Jewish people, along with millions of political dissidents and other “undesirable” human beings—the Untermenschen in Nazi parlance—is an escapable part of our history. And now the fascists and neo-Nazis among us aim to reawaken the very same mentality that led to the unimaginable cruelty and barbarity of their predecessors during World War II.

“The Time of the End is the Time of No Room” by Thavam Ratna
Egypt journalist stabbed four times in 'assassination attempt' 

Brother says Ahmed Gamal Zyada was warned his criticism of the government would leave him in a 'bad position' 
Zyada during a demonstration at the Syndicate of Journalists in central Cairo (MEE/Belal Darder) 

Sunday 27 December 2015
A prominent Egyptian journalist known for being openly critical of the country’s security practices has been stabbed four times in what relatives say was an assassination attempt.
Ahmed Gamal Zyada was walking at a metro station in Giza late on Friday night when he was attacked by two men, one of whom stabbed him four times, according to an account published by his brother Mohammed on Facebook.
Zyada was stabbed in the back, chest, hand and leg, and has undergone surgery at a local hospital.
Relatives and friends say they consider the attack an assassination attempt rather than a robbery, as his money and mobile phone were not taken.
Zyada spent more than 500 days in prison after he was arrested in December 2013 while taking photographs of clashes at Cairo’s famed al-Azhar University.
Interviewed by Middle East Eye after his release, Zyada said he had been regularly tortured during his imprisonment and was disciplined harshly for smuggling out letters describing conditions in the prison where he was held.
He described the difficulties of life after his release, and said that despite feelings of fear he would continue to write.
“I’m not going to lie, pretend that I’m a hero and say I don’t feel fear. I am afraid, but I’m not going to be silent.
“I am not going to stop exposing what is going on here in Egypt … a country ruled by the army and by fear.”
Zyada’s brother Mohammed wrote on Facebook on Sunday that his brother had been sent a letter from the security forces while in prison warning that his writing would lead him to a “bad position”.
In recent articles, Zyada had detailed allegations of torture in Egyptian prisons and criticised the country’s powerful Interior Ministry.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/egypt-journalist-critical-government-stabbed-four-times-assassination-attempt-2055619703#sthash.u5py4n1g.dpuf
How a breakaway region of Somalia hopes to build a new country
Port manager Ali Omer speaks on the phone at Berbera port in the Somaliland autonomous region of Somalia. (Paul Schemm/For The Washington Post)
Port manager Ali Omer speaks on the phone at Berbera port in the Somaliland autonomous region of Somalia. (Paul Schemm/For The Washington Post)

By Paul Schemm-Sunday December 26, 2015

By the afternoon, more goats than cars are to be found on the unpaved, sunblasted streets of Berbera, a sleepy port town on the Horn of Africa.
Yet this port is on the brink of a major expansion that not only could transform it into a regional transportation hub but also could fund the ambitions of a peaceful, orderly swath of Somalia to build its own state.
While Somalia descended into chaos after its government collapsed in 1991 and was racked by famine, clan warfare, piracy and later the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab insurgency, the northern half split off and formed its own country.
Although no nation officially recognizes it, Somaliland has its own police, army, flag and currency, and for the past 24 years has held regular elections for parliament and a president.
Somaliland has survived on money sent from its diaspora and livestock sales to Arab countries. It has a relatively weak government with a tiny budget that rules in consensus with the local clans.
Many in the country, however, feel that model has run its course. With high unemployment and a great deal of outward migration, Somaliland needs more income to survive and develop, they say — and the answer is to link its future to the far stronger economy next door, Ethi­o­pia.
The position of the international community, including the United States, is to help Somalia get back on its feet and reassert control over Somaliland. The people here, however, say that will never happen — many remember thebombing campaign carried out by Mogadishu in 1988 that flattenedSomaliland’s capital of Hargeisa when the region tried to secede.
“I’ll never forgive them for the bombing,” said Hassan Mohammed, a gray-bearded retired civil servant, as he stood in the center of town before a monument of a downed MiG-17 fighter that took part in the bombing.
For the 70 percent of Somaliland’s population of 3.5 million born since 1991, the idea of being ruled by a country rife with piracy and Islamist insurgency is a nonstarter.
For them, Mogadishu is something that happens on the news. It is a long way from the vibrant cafes of Hargeisa, where WiFi is plentiful and money changers sit behind stacks of currency in the main market with no guards in sight.
“Somaliland has achieved what it has achieved with limited assistance from the international community, in stark contrast with the billions poured into Mogadishu,” said Mahmoud Jama, the Somaliland ambassador to Ethiopia. “We think the international community has been flogging a dead horse for a long time, as far as Mogadishu is concerned.”
Landlocked Ethiopia has been looking to diversify its access to the sea for a while. About 90 percent of its trade goes through Djibouti, a tiny country with a huge port that rakes in around $1.5 billion in port fees from Ethiopia every year. Somaliland’s plan is to divert 30 percent of that trade through Berbera.
“They need access to a port, that’s something we know, and we are trying to leverage it,” said Sharmarke Jama, the trade and economic adviser to Somaliland’s foreign ministry. “It’s not just the road to the port, it’s the whole relationship.”
A memorandum of understanding on customs and transit was signed by Somaliland and Ethiopia a year ago, and its implementation is expected soon — even as negotiations have bogged down over which international company will provide the money and expertise to expand the port.
French ports company Bolloré has been in talks to expand and run the port for years, but different factions in the Somaliland government are now pushing other candidates, including the Dubai-based DP World.
The man responsible for running Berbera Port for the past 20 years, Ali Omer, said that it is too early to bring on a foreign partner — better to wait and negotiate from a position of strength.
Trade through the port has been increasing by 20 percent to 30 percent annually for the past few years.
“The idea is to start handling cargo with Ethiopia now, put the cargo through the road for the next year or so, and everything will be fine and then negotiate,” he said in his expansive office at the port.
Expensive renovations
But a lot has to happen to Berbera Port, which now handles less than 5 percent of Ethiopia’s trade, before the ships arrive. And the road to the border through Somaliland’s desert scrublands is a pitted stretch of asphalt cut in several places by sandy river beds. It looks ill-prepared for major truck traffic.
This kind of infrastructure is expensive, with estimates to refurbish the 300-kilometer (180-mile) road running about $300 million — Somaliland’s current annual budget — while the port expansion would be at least another $200 million.
Somaliland doesn’t have the kind of money for such projects and, unlike other developing countries, doesn’t have access to international financial institutions to borrow. Its largest foreign donor is Britain, its former colonial power, whose aid agency, the Department for International Development, is advising it on how to develop Berbera Port and the Berbera corridor for truck traffic to and from Ethi­o­pia.
The European Union was set to hold a fundraising conference for the road last month, but that was postponed after the Somali government demanded a voice in a project in what it maintained was still its territory.
“Sometimes the Mogadishu government tries to create problems when it comes to aid and development for Somaliland, even though in the last meeting in Djibouti they agreed to keep development out of politics,” Somaliland’s foreign minister, Saad Ali Shire, said in an interview.
The projected increase in trade at the port would give the government the means to develop the self-declared country and make it more difficult for the international community to continue to withhold recognition, officials think.
The port remains a sensitive issue — after all, it provides 75 percent of the government’s budget — and local Berbera clans fear they will lose power and influence if a foreign company comes in.
Decisions ahead
But Jama, the trade adviser, said a short list of potential port operators would be finalized by the end of this month with a final decision by April.
Mohammed Farah, of Somaliland’s Association for Peace and Development think tank, said the only way the port and corridor project will succeed is if the central government starts acting more like a true state.
“Without challenging the clan system, you cannot have economic development,” he said.
Until that happens, Somaliland’s economy will likely limp along, with its unrecognized status keeping away most international investors.
Abidrazak Mohammed, a Somalilander who grew up in London, sold his IT company and together with Malaysian partners is building a meat-processing plant to export this region’s renowned livestock around the world.
It took him a long time to convince his partners that there were two Somalias, with Somaliland very different from its southern cousin.
“The world has to realize that Somaliland is peaceful, it’s functioning, it’s a state you can do business with,” he said.

Refugee crisis creates 'stateless generation' of children in limbo

Babies born to migrants may be ineligible for citizenship in any country because of biased laws and inadequate EU controls
Volunteers try to comfort a pregnant Syrian refugee on the Greek island of Lesbos. Photograph: Yannis Behrakis/Reuters
 Sanaa and Siba in BerlinRefugees heading for Germany queue in an Autrian field.Syrian refugees during their wedding ceremony at a tented settlement in Jordan this year. Refugees heading for Germany queue in an Austrian field. Photograph: Armin Weigel/EPA

 and Ruby Russell in Berlin and Antakya-Sunday 27 December 2015
Europe’s refugee crisis is threatening to compound a hidden problem of statelessness, with experts warning that growing numbers of children are part of an emerging “stateless generation”.
Gender-biased nationality laws in Syria combined with ineffective legal safeguards in the EU states mean that many children born to Syrian refugees inEurope are at high risk of becoming stateless – a wretched condition of marginalisation that affects 10 million people worldwide.

Gonorrhoea 'could become untreatable'

Gonorrhoea


BBCBy James Gallagher-27 December 2015
Gonorrhoea could become an untreatable disease, England's chief medical officer has warned.
Dame Sally Davies has written to all GPs and pharmacies to ensure they are prescribing the correct drugs after the rise of "super-gonorrhoea" in Leeds.
Her warning comes after concerns were raised that some patients were not getting both of the antibiotics needed to clear the infection.
Sexual health doctors said gonorrhoea was "rapidly" developing resistance.
A highly drug-resistant strain of gonorrhoea was detected in the north of England in March.
That strain is able to shrug off the antibiotic azithromycin, which is normally used alongside another drug, ceftriaxone.
In her letter, the chief medical officer said: "Gonorrhoea is at risk of becoming an untreatable disease due to the continuing emergence of antimicrobial resistance."

Soaring cases

But while an injection of ceftriaxone and an azithromycin pill are supposed to be used in combination, this may not always be the case for all patients.
Earlier this year, the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH) warned that some online pharmacies were offering only oral medication.
Using just one of the two drugs makes it easier for the bacterium to develop resistance.
The letter, which is also signed by chief pharmaceutical officer Dr Keith Ridge, stated: "Gonorrhoea has rapidly acquired resistance to new antibiotics, leaving few alternatives to the current recommendations.
"It is therefore extremely important that suboptimal treatment does not occur."

What is gonorrhoea?

Gonorrhoea

The disease is caused by the bacterium called Neisseria gonorrhoea.
The infection is spread by unprotected vaginal, oral and anal sex.
Symptoms can include a thick green or yellow discharge from sexual organs, pain when urinating and bleeding between periods. Often the person has no symptoms, however, but can still easily spread the disease to others.
Untreated infection can lead to infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease and can be passed on to a child during pregnancy.
Gonorrhoea is the second most common sexually transmitted infection in England and cases are soaring.
The number of infections increased by 19% from 29,419 in 2013 to 34,958 the following year.
Dr Jan Clarke, the president of BASHH, told the BBC News website: "We're really pleased that the chief medical officer has stressed that gonorrhoea needs this approach to treatment due to the rapid development of resistance.
"We need to protect what we've got and we need to encourage pharmacists and general practitioners to follow first-line treatment."
Dr Andrew Lee, from Public Health England, added: "Investigations are ongoing into a number of cases of anti-microbial resistant gonorrhoea.
"Public Health England will continue to monitor, and act on, the spread of antimicrobial resistance and potential gonorrhoea treatment failures, to make sure they are identified and managed promptly."