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

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Thajudeen murder probe hits snag

2016-01-06
It said the footage had been recorded at night and strong lights of passing vehicles had distorted the images.
The report, compiled by Attanayake, adds that it would be prudent to seek the assistance of the FBI, Scotland Yard and another institute in Canada to make an irrefutable identification of the licence number of the vehicle and identify individuals in the CCTV footage.
Police produced four DVDs and a CD tape recording of the CCTV footage to the Department of Computer Science of the University of Colombo on the killing of Sri Lanka rugby star Wasim Thajudeeen, following a Court Order.

Thajudeen was found dead on 17 May 2012 inside his car, which had apparently crashed into a wall in Kirulapone.
The case will be next heard on 7 January.

Wilfrid Laurier University graduate lands United Nations internship in Sri Lanka

UN
The Record
By
 Kurt Watkins-January 5, 2016

A Wilfrid Laurier University grad is helping to shape public policy as an intern at the United Nations.
Manomi De Silva, a graduate of Laurier Brantford's human rights and human diversity program, started an internship position at the United Nations Office for Project Services in late October.
"It was very surreal," said De Silva. "To find out that I had been selected for an internship to work with the UN was such amazing news."
Like many other students, De Silva wasn't exactly sure what she wanted to do with her degree, but the Mississauga resident knew she wanted to be involved in shaping public policy. De Silva had originally enrolled at a different university, but switched to Laurier for its "small class sizes."
"The class sizes are small enough that you really get to meet people with the same interests as you," she said.
De Silva had always wanted to connect with her heritage so after completing her education, she decided to move to Sri Lanka. Upon her arrival, she started applying for jobs and eventually received a phone call from the UN, requesting an interview.
"Five people together interviewed me," said De Silva. "After the interview, I was shortlisted as a potential candidate and was asked to do a written test."
Shortly after, De Silva received a call that would change her life forever. She was offered the position of partnerships development and communications intern at the UN Office for Project Services office located in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
"Working with the UN has been one of my life goals. It is something my father and I had always talked about doing after I finished school," said De Silva.
De Silva is thankful for Laurier and it's faculty for their help during her education. Professors in the human rights and human diversity program continued to help her with her career after she had graduated, she said.
Catherine Stewart, an associate professor of human rights and human diversity, is hopeful students like De Silva will walk away from the program with a well-rounded education.
"What were trying to do is give students a strong knowledge and theoretical basis of human rights," said Stewart. "We want them to be inspired by the program and be more engaged with the world around them."
De Silva's internship originally was slated to last three months, but it has been extended until the end of April. She is planning to pursue a master's degree in either public policy or education.
The UN Office for Project Services is a branch of the UN that supports the development of countries' infrastructure by providing project management and procurement services. The office in Colombo, Sri Lanka, provides support for five countries, including Sri Lanka, Maldives, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Nepal.
kwatkins@therecord.com , Twitter @WatkinsRecord

Anti minority elements trying to rise its head 

Anti minority elements trying to rise its head

Lankanewsweb.netJan 05, 2016
The following are some photograph’s which can be commonly seen these days in facebook and in other social sites. Apart these there are some other photographs in the facebook with the following notes. We would like to publish them without any editing.

These two photographs below is quite similar

 
The photograph on the left side is taken during the Second World War gluing posters by the German’s in the walls and gates of the Jew’s by force. The right side picture depicts how walls and gates of houses belong to the minorities are sprayed.
 
The left side picture resulted of more than six million innocent people in Germany was murdered. The outcome of the right side picture depends on how you and me respond to this.
Each second passed is writing the history

It’s Cobra-le – Not Sinha-le!


Colombo Telegraph

By Harishchandra Lokumanna –January 5, 2016
Harishchandra Lokumanna
Harishchandra Lokumanna
I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world because they’d never expect it” – Jack Handey
It appeared that people for Sri Lanka spoke twice in 2015 ,in words and actions loud and clear that Cobras belong to the Jungle and they have to be dealt with accordingly. BJP (the political wing of BBS) was given a decisive verdict by the electorate in August 2015, by throwing them into dustbins of history and not even one of them were able to retain their deposits. Not even foul mouthed Gnanasara, the Sri Lankan version of Trump and Virathu in one, got more than 650 votes.
Sinha LeBut then, evil as he is and his movement, he and his garbage outfit BBS continue to arouse ethnic hatred among the peace loving people of Sri Lanka, specially the Muslims shamelessly even after his utter defeat. He keeps on throwing conjectures all around- suicide jackets and an imminent of an ISIS attack?. It is high-time that the intelligence keep a close eye on these reactionary forces who are likely to create such scenarios and blame them on Muslims.
The recent of such hate campaigns is this ‘Sinhala’Ley movement , which started on social media platforms, such as Facebook, by an extremist group purportedly supportive of the BBS and even former President Mahinda Rajapaksa who along with his brother Gota were their patron saints. Seemingly this movement says that they want to show that Sri Lankans do not bow down to any one or any country and that the blood in their veins are like the lions blood and they do walk with heads held high like brave lions’. But the intentions behind those sticker ,poster and FB campaigns were clearly indicative of their hate leanings and more-so anti-Muslim hate. Recently , many houses in Nugegoda areas were spray painted with ‘Sinha-ley’ and MR’s son Rohitha has apparently commented that “it was sad” to see the “Sinha le” movement becoming like the BBS and offered some advice for it to move in a “Sri Lankan” movement without condemning their actions. There are however clear signs that this campaign is far from patriotic and has all the hall marks of the vicious plans of BBS and their sister hate organizations, which has this time selected a more brainier way of spreading hatred specially towards Muslims, through these nationalist slogans . Thus, Sinhaley is nothing less than venomous Cobra-ley (BBS Origin) . We can see how their political sponsors like Wimal and the Gang (Gammampila, Dinesh etc) are also subtly raising sensitive issues such as ‘the proposed constitution such as prime place in the Constitution for Buddhism may be dispensed with’ stuff even before the national discourse in that area has started. Sinhaley campaign has even spread overseas with many vehicles in the Gulf being seen with Sinhaley stickers. One FB Video/ poster says that ‘ A fervent message to the BBS and the nationalist organizations from Sinhaley –The Island nation of Sinhale ‘page . We ‘Sinhaley opened the eyes of the sleeping Sinhala People. It is upto You to guide them . Guidance from BBS? What nonsense other than pure hatred.? It is alright if the purpose is making Sinhala people aware of their rights, But this campaign shows features of showing aggression towards the ‘other’ by appealing to hate groups like BBS and also trying to devour the identities of others into a ‘Sinhaley identity albeit forcefully. Thus, it is important that this campaign is nipped in the bud and the intelligence keeps an eye on trouble makers and their sponsors and financiers. We know that we Sinhalese are much wiser now but then we have short memories too, don’t we?
                                                                    Read More
The song and dance about Enrique Iglesias
BUP_DFT_DFT-13_02-6



3logoWednesday, 6 January 2016
“Music is a moral law. It gives soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and charm and gaiety to life and to everything” – Plato

Recalling the dark days of repression has become the routine response of the administration to its critics. True. The internet is freely accessible. Public protest is permissible. The deep state is dismantled. We write and speak with no fear of physical harm. It happened when the people refused a third term to the ‘redeemer’ and elected a ‘reformer’ who promised to change the system.

American Trojan Horses penetrating Sri Lanka Now?

george_soros
by Michael Roberts
( January 5, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) George Soros, founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, takes part in a panel discussion at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank annual fall meeting in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011. The IMF said it is ready to “strongly support” European nations in their efforts to resolve the region’s sovereign-debt crisis.
George Soros and Prof. Joseph Stiglitz will be visiting Sri Lanka in the next few days for discussions on economic and political paths at the highest levels. Their visits are a consolidation of American ‘patronage’ of the Yahapalanaya government marked by preceding visits from John Kerry and Samantha Power, heavyweights in the USA government. Both Soros and Stiglitz are controversial figures, subject to searing criticism from right-wing currents in USA as well as (2) left-wing intellectuals with grounded insights into the operations of the US government and (3) nationalists in the old colonized countries who are wary of the machinations of those so-called ’international’ agencies’ who espouse R2P interventions in support of human rights in ways that seem to complement USA’s agendas.
It is preceded by Item A, a short MEMO on the run (Blackberry) from the Canadian lawyer-intellectual Christopher Black in response to my query

ITEM A
Dear Chris, …. Are these warnings re Soros [Patriot’s article} justified? Can you please clarify the indication [Black’s previous exchanges with Roberts — way back in 2015] that Soros has CIA funds and the seeming contradiction between that claim because the Soros enterprises are OSTENSIBLY left-wing? ….. Michael
Michael, ….. There is a lot of material on Soros on the net. He is not left [ Left wing radical] – [rather] he is just a swindler with great wealth who destroys any country he chooses to make money in. He supports NGOs who take apart socialist economies to replace them with economies dominated by big capital … and he is closely connected to United States’ Government and all its services. …………….. Chris

Ranil brings Soros who destroyed economies in Eastern Asian countries

SUNDAY, 03 JANUARY 2016
Prime Minister, while making a special statement in Parliament on 5th November, said that billionaire businessman George Soros would be invited to Sri Lanka. Soros arrived in Sri Lanka yesterday (2nd).
Born in Hungary and considered as the second biggest investor in the world Soros is a US businessman who has been accused regarding the economic and financial crisis that occurred in Eastern Asia during mid nineties.
Malaysia’s former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad accused him of destroying the economy of Eastern Asian countries by instantly withdrawing funds that had been invested in those countries.
Also, two foundations launched by George Soros have been officially banned by the Russian government. Russia charged that the groups pose a threat to Russian national security and public order.
He arrived in Sri Lanka last night with his wife and children. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, who was holidaying in the UK, arrived in the island today (3rd) morning. He is expected to make a special statement tomorrow.

Saudi Arabia wages a phony war on terror

Behind its strategic manipulations and sham alliance to tackle the likes of IS, a purported ally of the West’s official ideology forms the heart of the terrorist creed, writes Brahma Chellaney
Saudi security forces take part in a military parade in preparation for the annual Hajj pilgrimage. Picture: Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP
Brahma Chellaney-Thursday, December 31, 2015
CONTAINING the scourge of Islamist terror will be impossible without containing the ideology that drives it: Wahhabism, a messianic, jihad- extolling form of Sunni fundamentalism whose international expansion has been bankrolled by oil-rich sheikhdoms, especially Saudi Arabia.
That is why the newly announced Saudi-led anti-terror coalition, the Islamic Military Alliance to Fight Terrorism, should be viewed with profound skepticism.
Wahhabism promotes, among other things, the subjugation of women and the death of “infidels”. It is — to quote US President Barack Obama’s description of what motivated a married couple of Pakistani origin to carry out the recent mass shooting in San Bernardino, California — a “perverted interpretation of Islam”, and the ideological mother of jihadist terrorism. Its offspring include Al Qaeda, the Taliban, Boko Haram, al-Shabaab, and the Islamic State, all of which blend hostility toward non-Sunnis and anti-modern romanticism into nihilistic rage.
Saudi Arabia has been bankrolling Islamist terrorism since the oil-price boom of the 1970s dramatically boosted the country’s wealth. According to a 2013 European Parliament report, some of the €9bn invested by Saudi Arabia for “its Wahhabi agenda” in South and Southeast Asia was “diverted” to terrorist groups, including Lashkar-e-Taiba, which carried out the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
Western leaders have recognised the Saudi role for many years. In a 2009 diplomatic cable, then-US secretary of state Hillary Clinton identified Saudi Arabia as “the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide”. Thanks largely to the West’s interest in Saudi oil, however, the kingdom has faced no international sanctions.
Now, with the growth of terrorist movements like the Islamic State, priorities are changing. As German vice chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said in a recent interview: “We must make it clear to the Saudis that the time of looking the other way is over.”
This shift has spurred the kingdom to announce a crackdown on individuals and groups that fund terror. However, according to a recent US state department report, some Saudi-based charities and individual donors continue to fund Sunni militants.
From this perspective, Saudi Arabia’s surprise announcement of a 34-country anti-terror alliance, with a joint operations centre based in Riyadh, is a logical step, aimed at blunting growing Western criticism, while boosting Sunni influence in the Middle East.
But, of course, the alliance is a sham — as a closer look at its membership makes clear.
Tellingly, the alliance includes all of the world’s main sponsors of extremist and terrorist groups, from Qatar to Pakistan. It is as if a drug cartel claimed to be spearheading a counter-narcotics campaign.
Listed as members of the alliance are also all of the jihadist citadels other than Afghanistan, including war-torn Libya and Yemen, both of which are not currently governed by a single authority.
Moreover, despite being touted as an Islamic alliance, with members coming from all over the Islamic world, the group includes predominantly Christian Uganda and Gabon, but not Oman (a fellow Gulf sheikdom), Algeria (Africa’s largest country), and Indonesia (the world’s most populous Muslim country).
The failure to include Indonesia, which has almost twice as many Muslims as the entire Middle East, is striking not only because of its size: Whereas most countries in the alliance are ruled by despots or autocrats, Indonesia is a robust democracy.
Autocratic rule in Islamic countries tends to strengthen jihadist forces. But when democracy takes root, as in tolerant and secular Indonesia, the clash between moderates and extremists can be better managed.
Saudi Arabia’s dysfunctional approach is reflected in the fact that some alliance members — including Pakistan, Malaysia, Lebanon, and the Palestinian Authority — immediately declared that they had never actually joined. The kingdom seemed to think that it could make that decision on behalf of the major recipients of its aid.
Add to that the unsurprising exclusion of Shia-governed Iran and Iraq, along with Alawite-ruled Syria, and it is clear that Saudi Arabia has merely crafted another predominantly Sunni grouping to advance its sectarian and strategic objectives.
This aligns with the more hardline policy approach that has taken root since King Salman ascended the throne in January 2015.
At home, Salman’s reign so far has meant a marked increase in the number of sentences of death by decapitation, often carried out in public — a method emulated by the Islamic State. Abroad, it has meant a clear preference for violent solutions in Bahrain, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.
A smaller Saudi-led Arab coalition has been bombing Yemen since March, with the goal of pushing back the Shia Houthi rebels who captured Sana’a, the capital, after driving the Saudi-backed government from power.
Saudi warplanes have bombed homes, markets, hospitals, and refugee camps in Yemen, leading critics to accuse the kingdom of deliberately terrorising civilians to turn public opinion against the Houthis.
Saudi Arabia’s solutions have often contravened the objectives of its American allies.
For example, the Saudi kingdom and its Arab partners have quietly slipped out of the US-led air war in Syria, leaving the campaign largely in American hands.
But beyond Saudi Arabia’s strategic manipulations lies the fundamental problem with which we started: The kingdom’s official ideology forms the heart of the terrorist creed.
A devoted foe of Islamist terrorism does not promote violent jihadism.
Nor does it arrest and charge with “terrorism” domestic critics of its medieval interpretation of Islam. Saudi Arabia does both.
This speaks to the main shortcoming of today’s militarized approach to fighting terrorism.
Unless the expansion of dangerous ideologies like Wahhabism is stopped, the global war on terror, now almost a generation old, will never be won. No matter how many bombs the US and its allies drop, the Saudi-financed madrassas will continue to indoctrinate tomorrow’s jihadists.
Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at the New Delhi-based Centre for Policy Research, and fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, is the author of nine books, including Asian Juggernaut; Water: Asia’s New Battleground; and Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis.

Indian defence minister - six militants killed in air base operation

An Indian security personnel stands guard next to a barricade outside the Indian Air Force (IAF) base at Pathankot in Punjab, India, January 2, 2016.  REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta
An Indian security personnel stands guard next to a barricade outside the Indian Air Force (IAF) base at Pathankot in Punjab, India, January 2, 2016.-REUTERS/MUKESH GUPTA

ReutersBY RUPAM JAIN NAIR AND KRISTA MAHR-Tue Jan 5, 2016
Indian security forces have killed six militants who launched an assault on a military air base in northern India that killed seven security personnel and injured 22, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said on Tuesday.
Speaking at the air base, Parrikar declined to say definitively that no more militants were at large until the four-day-old operation to clear the facility was over. He said those efforts could end as soon as Wednesday.
While praising Indian security forces for eliminating the attackers, Parrikar also alluded to "some gaps" in security that allowed the attackers to reach the base in the northwestern state of Punjab.
It has emerged that the militants hijacked a police officer's car but that his call to a colleague, after he was dumped by the roadside, was not taken seriously. The National Investigation Agency, a central body set up to probe such cross-border attacks, is investigating.
The apparently well-planned assault on a strategic military target just 25 km (16 miles) from the border has put pressure on an attempt by prime ministers Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif to improve historically fraught relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.
The Indian leader paid a surprise birthday visit to his Pakistani counterpart in late December. In a sign that both want the incipient dialogue to continue, Sharif called Modi on Tuesday to convey his "sorrow and grief" at the losses from the air base attack.
Pakistan will investigate leads and information provided by the government of India, Sharif's office said in a readout of the call. Both premiers are resolved to fight terrorism together, an aide also said.
According to a statement issued by the Indian government, Modi called for "firm and immediate action against those responsible for the air base attack", based on specific and actionable information provided to Pakistan.
A round of talks between the two countries' foreign secretaries has been tentatively scheduled for Jan. 15.
ENGULFING INDIA
The United Jihad Council (UJC), an alliance of pro-Pakistan militant groups based in the Pakistani-administered part of the divided Kashmir region, has claimed responsibility for the assault.
The group's leader warned that their attacks "can engulf all of India" if the issue of Kashmir's divided rule is not resolved.
"Whenever they want, wherever they want, they can target the enemy," UJC leader Syed Salahuddin said in a voice recording released by a group spokesman on Tuesday. Salahuddin's voice was recognised by a Reuters reporter from previous messages and public appearances.
The claim of responsibility has, however, met a sceptical response among India's security establishment, which blames another group called Jaish-e-Mohammed (Army of Mohammed).
That group was founded by Masood Azhar after he was released by India in 1999 in exchange for passengers on an Indian airliner that was hijacked.
The head of India's National Investigation Agency, Sharad Kumar, told reporters in New Delhi that the attackers came from Pakistan but did not elaborate.
"I REALISED THAT THEY WERE TERRORISTS"
The day before the assault, a police officer returning from a temple was abducted by a group of heavily armed men speaking Urdu, among other languages, he said on Tuesday.
"The minute I saw them I realised that they were terrorists," Police Superintendent Salwinder Singh told media.
"One of the gunmen snatched my phone and made calls to Pakistan," Singh said. Urdu, widely spoken in Pakistan, can be mostly understood by Hindi speakers.
Phone records indicate the perpetrators used Singh's phone inside the air base by mid-afternoon on Jan. 1, according to the Indian Express, 12 hours before they were detected through aerial surveillance.
It remains unclear exactly how the attackers infiltrated the fortified base, which has a 24-km (15-mile) perimeter surrounded by a 3-metre (10-foot) wall topped with concertina wire.
(Additional reporting by Asad Hashim in Islamabad and Mukesh Gupta in Pathankot, India; Editing by Douglas Busvine, Robert Birsel)
While formally announcing executive orders on gun control, President Obama said on Jan. 5 that "second amendment rights are important, but so are other rights" such as freedom of religion and freedom of assembly. (Claritza Jimenez/The Washington Post)

By Juliet Eilperin and David Nakamura-January 5

Summoning the memory of nearly two dozen children killed three years ago in their Connecticut classrooms, President Obama said Tuesday he was pressing ahead with new firearms restrictions unilaterally because the level of gun violence in the United States has robbed so many Americans of their basic right to gather safely.
“First-graders, in Newtown,” he said, pausing as he contemplated the 20 children who died along with six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School. “First-graders.”
“And from every family who never imagined that their loved one would be taken from our lives by a bullet,” the president said, pausing again as he flicked away a few tears. “Every time I think about those kids, it makes me mad. And by the way, it happens on the streets of Chicago every day.”
Although the gun measures Obama outlined during his remarks in the East Room of the White House are modest, he may have succeeded in what he said he wanted to do in the wake of a mass shooting in Roseburg, Ore., three months ago: politicize the issue of guns so that it becomes a prominent issue ahead of the 2016 election.
In a speech that veered from weepy to outraged and even comic, the president said his decision to exercise his executive authority — a move that has infuriated many Republicans — was an effort to prevent further violence and bring the country together on a divisive issue.
“I’m not on the ballot again; I’m not looking to score some points,” he said, adding later that it was possible to reconcile the Constitution with additional restrictions on firearms. “We understand there are some constraints on our freedom in order to protect innocent people.”
The package includes 10 provisions, White House officials said. One key provision would require more gun sellers — especially those who do business on the Internet and at gun shows — to be licensed and would force them to conduct background checks on potential buyers. Obama would devote $500 million more in federal funding to treating mental illness — a move that could need congressional approval — and require that firearms lost in transit between a manufacturer and a seller be reported to federal authorities.
At the president’s direction, the FBI will begin hiring more than 230 additional examiners and other personnel to help process background checks 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Also, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has established a new center to investigate illegal gun trafficking online and will devote $4 million and additional personnel to enhance the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network.
“The gun lobby may be holding Congress hostage, but they can’t hold America hostage. We can’t accept this carnage in our communities,” Obama said in a Twitter message Monday evening, referring to the National Rifle Association.
Limiting the scope of the background checks measure — the administration is clarifying what it means to be “engaged in the business” of selling firearms — may have bolstered the measure’s legal defensibility at the expense of having a far-reaching impact. This does not constitute new regulation, which would be subject to public comment and congressional review, but its application depends entirely on how aggressively federal authorities press the matter.
And though most of the actions the president outlined can take place unilaterally, lawmakers could raise the prospect of blocking the implementation of some of his plans through the funding process.
Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said in an interview Monday that though he considers the executive actions significant and thinks they will have “an immediate impact,” he is worried that GOP lawmakers could block funding for either the FBI and the ATF to carry out the expanded background checks.
“Certainly we are concerned enough not to rest on our laurels,” he said.
However, even some of the lawmakers most opposed to new policy, such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), said it would be difficult to halt its implementation since lawmakers agreed on a budget deal last month that will keep the government running through September 2016.



“Once you give up the ability to let spending expire, you need 60 votes to defund something — and now, there aren’t 60 votes to defund anything,” Paul said. “Let’s say we approached that omnibus differently, and just extended it for two months. If we had courage and guts, which most of the time we do have, we could vote on a new spending bill which blocks funding for new gun control orders. That was why so many of us thought the omnibus was a bad idea.”
The National Rifle Association and other gun rights advocates have pledged to fight the measures, even as they described the administration’s push as minimal in scope.
Jennifer Baker, a spokeswoman for the NRA’s legislative arm, said that in terms of redefining who needs to obtain a federal license to sell guns, “the administration is simply restating the current law with the intent to chill lawful behavior by scaring law-abiding citizens who are hobbyists and collectors.”
“This is political theater to distract from the president’s failed record,” she said.
David Weigel contributed to this report.
Residents of besieged Syrian town beg for help as death toll mounts 

Dozens of people in Madaya have reportedly died due to the siege with no food reaching the town's 40,000 residents in months 

A photo of a baby reportedly suffering from malnutrition in Madaya (Facebook / Madaya page) 
Simona Sikimic's pictureSimona Sikimic-Tuesday 5 January 2016


The situation in the besieged Syrian town of Madaya has continued to deteriorate with residents left to starve to death or brave land mines and snipers in a bid to desperately scavenge what little food remains. 

"We've forgotten what bread tastes like," 27-year-old Mohamed told AFP from the town near the Lebanese border.
"The situation has become very tragic," he said.



Boiled tree leaves is what people are eating in , besieged village by forces in rural Damascus.
"Everything is gone they have noting left at all," Raed Bourhan, a fixer for The Times who helps foreign journalists to cover the conflict, told Middle East Eye. "There is no food, no medicine, no fuel to keep them alive anymore." 
"The trees have largely been cut down for firewood and there is no fuel," Bourhan, who is originally from Zabadani, said. 
Winter weather has exasperated the situation further with heavy snowfall late last week covering much of the mountainous border region. 
"People at least used to pick grass and herbs and eat or boil them but when the snow fell they could no longer even do this," Bourhan added. 
Some 40,000 people, mostly civilians, are believed to be in the town in Damascus province near the Lebanese border, many of them displaced from the neighbouring rebel stronghold of Zabadani.
According to Bourhan, there are still hundreds of fighters mainly from Ahrar al-Sham in Zabadani although reports vary. 
The area is seen as strategically key as it is the last rebel-held part of the Lebanon-Syria border which Hezbollah now largely controls. 
The two towns were encircled by government forces and Hezbollah fighters in 2014 but a six-month deal was struck last summer to allow aid in and civilians and the wounded out. In exchange, the rebels agreed to ease their hold on two government-held towns of Fuaa and Kafraya in the Idlib province. 
While the first aid delivery did happen, and some fighters and civilians evacuated there has been no subsequent aid deliveries. There are also now reportedly grave food and aid shortages in Fuaa and Kafraya which also remain under siege and where the government has not been able to air drop supplies in recent weeks. 
But Bourhan says that the Madaya siege has been exasperated by Hezbollah's tight grip on the town. 
"Hezbollah were ordered to enact the siege and that is exactly what they are doing. While one might be able to bride regime soldiers to let in some supplies, Hezbollah are extremely strict," Bourhan told MEE. 
According to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, at least 10 people have died from lack of food and medicine in the town. 
Another 13 have been killed by government mines or snipers while trying to leave in search of food, the monitoring group said. 
It said that Hezbollah fighters, who are fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, had also placed additional mines and barbed wire around Madaya since the September deal, adding that some 1,200 people inside had chronic illnesses, and more than 300 children there were suffering from malnutrition and other ailments.
But the death toll may be even higher, with Vice News reporting that 31 residents have died - either as a result of the siege or in an attempting to flee. 
Sources inside the town handling the negotiations said that talk are underway to get aid in within the next few days, but it remains unclear if and when the siege will be lifted. 
Momina a 32-year-old resident told AFP by phone that she did not know if she would be able to endure much longer. 
"There's nothing to eat anymore. Nothing but water has entered my mouth for two days," she said. 
Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said in a statement that "many of the town's residents have been forced to survive on weeds and others pay huge sums of money at government checkpoints to obtain food." 
"One resident who was really suffering put his car on sale for the price of 10 kilos of rice. He is one of many who did that. He didn't manage to sell it, and a relative of his died as a result of the food shortages," he added.
Various sources inside the town have said that a bag of milk can go for $100, a kilo of rice for $150 and of flour for $100. Fuel is even more expensive, fetching several hundred dollars for a few liters. The average Syrian meanwhile is expected to take home no more than $200 each month.
Pawel Krzysiek, a spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross who entered Madaya during the last aid delivery, said that things were so bad even then that mothers could not lactate because they were so malnourished.
"There is no way to feed newborns and the young babies," he said in a statement. 


« Les enfants mangent les feuilles des arbres »: Le cauchemar du siège de Madaya, en Syrie. http://bit.ly/1Z39wOz 
Krzysiek said the ICRC and Syria's Red Crescent were hoping to be able to bring aid into Madaya "as soon as possible".
"It's not a solution to do one-off, one-shot food deliveries," he said.
"In places like that, that have been left without aid for months, even years, you really need to deliver regularly to makes sure that people have enough food to feed themselves and their families."
Bourhan said the only lasting solution "to the Madaya catastrophe" was to put pressure on governments and the UN Security Council to unite and act immediately. 


Two-person meal Water, salt, a bit of crusty mint and lemon powder
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/madaya-residents-beg-help-starvation-death-toll-mounts-1447610888#sthash.2cup68vc.dpuf