Peace for the World

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

Friday, January 8, 2016

Honour mandate of the people!

FRIDAY, 08 JANUARY 2016
Today (8th) marks one year since the defeat of villainous rule of Mahinda Rajapaksa regime but the aspirations of the people who made sacrifices to bring the victory have not been fulfilled. The rally organized by the JVP to demand the government to honour the mandate of the people was held at Nugegoda today (8th).
The protest march commenced from Kohuwela Junction and proceeded to Ananda Samarakone Open Air theatre in Nugegoda town where the rally was held.
The rally commenced with the speech by the President of the National Trade Union Center (NTUC) and Member of the political Bureau of the JVP Lal Kantha.
University teachers, artistes, environmentalists, leaders of trade unions and members of civil organizations also participated with the JVP.

Pra-doctor finds Portuguese Ferdi is behind ‘Sinha Ley’!

Pra-doctor finds Portuguese Ferdi is behind ‘Sinha Ley’!

Lankanewsweb.netJan 08, 2016
Responding to a question by Reuters at yesterday’s (07) cabinet news briefing, health minister Rajitha Senaratne said, “Sinha Ley is a project to make Gotabhaya Rajapaksa the prime minister. Foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera’s former media secretary Ruwan Ferdinandis is behind it. We have all the information. Intelligence quarters have found everything. Yesterday I raised this at the cabinet meeting. Minister Mangala said he was very sorry.”

A web editor found that Ferdi is Portuguese. Most are not aware that Ruwan Prasanna Guruge Pradinandis was made Ruwan Ferdinandis by the then ‘The Sunday Leader’ newspaper’s Fredericka Jansz. According that, the Pundit Cumaratunga Munidasa too, should have been a Portuguese. So does foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera.
We stress that nothing was discussed about ‘Sinha Ley’ at the cabinet meeting.
But, after it ended, Rajitha had run after Mangala and asked him, “Mr. minster, do you know that your former media secretary Ruwan is behind that organization called Sinha Ley? Answering him, Mangala said, “I know Ruwan well. We have been close friends for more than 30 years. I say one thing for sure. Ruwan is never a racist.” Rajitha left him without saying a word.
Rajitha then remembered Ruwan only after the Reuters journalist posed the question to him. Previously, Rajitha responded to a question by the media by saying that the CID has received CCTV footage showing Thajudeen’s murder. That is a total falsehood. His claim has caused a big setback for the investigation.
Lankan people thought that Keheliya Rambukwella is the most stupid cabinet spokesman in history. Proving that to be incorrect, Rajitha is winning that title. Or else, Rajitha should prove that Ferdi is behind ‘Sinha Ley’.

Inherent Weakness Of Capitalism


By Hema Senanayake –January 8, 2016
Hema Senanayake
Hema Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
China’s economy is slowing down. Is China on the verge of economic collapse? This is the talk of many financial capitals around the world with the dawn of the year 2016. About eight years ago two largest economies of the world namely the EU and the United States collapsed in 2008. By 2008 the third largest economy by that time namely Japan has already been experiencing an economic crisis which triggered in early 1990s, even after launching a few rounds of Quantitative Easing.
By 2008 none suspected that Chinese economy would face severe problems some eight years later. The common element of all these crises was and is “debt” no matter countries carry trade surpluses or deficits. Capitalism globally is in a true crisis. This is a fair conclusion when all four largest capitalist economies of the world collapsed or faced with severe problems within a time span of two decades. What is the problem in capitalism?
There is one significant inherent weakness in modern Capitalism. If any socialist system or any other economic model if available, accepts the use of money as a unit of measure of the value of economic produce, then that system too would inherent the same weakness. There is virtually no political revolution which can remove this inherent systemic weakness.
That weakness cannot be removed by narrowing the gap between the rich and poor. However, narrowing the gap between the rich and poor is a necessity but is a different story. Also it cannot be removed by having a global balance in international trade. Yet, it can be theoretically removed by two methods.
One method is to create debt-free money by a designated government authority while stopping the operation of Fractional Reserve Banking System which system we use today. In this method stopping of fractional reserve system is a must. In an economic system in which Fractional Reserve Banking system is used as its core banking practice, most of the money is created as a monetary substitute known as “credit money” during the process of lending by commercial banks.
Under the first method we will stop the creation of “credit money” instead debt-free money would be created by the government. In other words under this method the government does not need to borrow money instead any possible budget deficit is financed by the new money created by the government. The founder of monetarist school of economics Milton Friedman in the latter part of his life has been said to have supported the idea of the creation of new money by around 3% per annum while having done away with fractional reserve system.
                                                                               Read More 

A Continent of Trust – Gopalkrishna Gandhi

IMG_0086 (2)Son killed bec of father


Son killed bec of father
Sri Lanka Brief08/01/2016
There is a saying in Tamil about the tiny cylindrical rice measure, the aazhaakku.It smiles at theaazhaakkuimagining that its little roundness has an ‘east’ and a ‘west’ : aazhaakkilkizhakku-merkku. Well, whether the littleaazhaakku has directions or not, islands do. Sri Lanka does. Directions are about places and about paths. We can say today, Sri Lanka knows its directions, its paths and is walking with steadiness on the path its people have charted for it. And so I offer my felicitations on the first anniversary of the government of national unity to Sri Lanka in its multi-directioned roundness. I offer felicitations to its north and its south, its east and its west and to its Central Highlands where, under the shade of the Sri Dalada Maligawa, I spent four deeply formative years.
A Continent of Trust – Gopalkrishna Gandhi by Thavam Ratna
Ekneligoda case; Solicitor General says Rajitha is lying 



2016-01-08
Solicitor General of the Attorney General’s Department Mr. Suhada Gamalath yesterday denied an allegation made by Minister Rajitha Senaratne relating to the criminal investigation and court proceedings relating to the disappearance of journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda.

 “This is complete and diabolical lie and I deny this totally,” Mr. Gamalath told the Daily Mirror.

 There were several media reports that Solicitor General Gamalath had allegedly negotiated a meeting with the investigators of the case relating to Journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda disappearance and had inquired from CID officers whether a negotiation on the ongoing investigation was possible.

Explaining the background to Minister Senaratne’s allegation, the Solicitor General said that Attorney General Yuwanjan Wijethilake had wanted him to inquire about the ongoing inquiry from the Prosecuting Counsel of the Attorney General's Department. “This was because Defence Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi has complained to the AG that prosecution counsel was allegedly harsh in his comment against the Army at the inquiry into the journalist’s disappearance case and the army had been disturbed by the certain comments that the prosecution counsel was making,” the SG explained. Subsequently the SG had summoned a meeting with the Prosecution Counsel Dileepa Peiris and CID investigating officer Shani Abeyratne with regard to the inquiry and the problems they encounter in conducting the investigation in the proper way. 

SG Gamalath said subsequently he has suggested to the Defence Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi to find out through the army what causes them to adopt a lackadaisical attitude towards the inquiry into the disappearance of the journalist and to make it possible for the army’s cooperation to be obtained to conduct a proper inquiry.

 Mr. Gamalath also requested the President to call for a full report into the case. 

The attack on the SG Gamalath has come in the wake of the retirement of the present Attorney General Yuwanjan Wijethilake today. According to seniority Mr. Gamalath is next in line for the post of Attorney General. 

“Apart from that there had never being any attempt to scuttle this inquiry and bring a mediator between any party involved in this matter,” Mr. Gamalath said. He stated that it is extremely unfortunate independent profession of the government servants who had no any recourse to depend themselves are vilified and treated so shoddily over the media by any person with or without authority and the people holding the reign of government should take serious note of this and adopt measures effectively to protect the government servants and its officials and otherwise government servants discharging their duties honestly and diligently will find it extremely difficult to function for the purpose of progressing the concept of Yahapalanaya. 

During his 33-years in the public service Mr. Gamalath, who began his career as a State Counsel reached the second senior most position in the Department and had also served as the Justice Ministry Secretary.(Susitha R. Fernando) 

What happens when pesticide Ajinamoto is consumed?

What happens when pesticide Ajinamoto is consumed?
Lankanewsweb.netJan 08, 2016
As you all are aware that Monosodium Glutonomate alias Ajinomoto which is used in many restaurants and domestic households as a flavor for cooking is used at paddy fields for pesticides.

Following the recent ban of Glycophosphate the farmers in Sri Lanka have started to use Ajinomoto. Farmers in the Mathale Naula area are reported using this.
 
“We spray five chemical tanks for one acre. For each tank we mix 100g of Ajinomoto. Pests die on the spot unable to locate. We get results within a week” said a farmer commenting his results.
 
Therefore we can realize if by the use of Ajinomoto if the pests are controlled what happens if we use that for human consumption.
 
Many developed countries have banned using Ajinomoto as a flavor but export large quantities to Asian and African countries.
 
However in Latin American countries such as Brasil use Ajinomoto as a pesticide. A Sri Lankan environmentalist who toured Brasil said Brasil never use Ajinomoto as a flavor for foods but use for fruits and vegetable cultivation 

I was a Co-ordinating Officer When Rajitha’s PRA abducted JVP members – Gota

Gota_file
( January 8, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) When organizations such as PRA headed by Rajitha Senaratana, a Cabinet Minister and the Government Spokesman, abducted members of the JVP he was attached to the Army and he was the coordinating officer for Matale says former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
He said this to the media when he came out of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry to investigate and inquire into Serious Acts of Fraud, Corruption and Abuse of Power, State Resources and Privileges (PRECIFAC) after being questioned yesterday (7th).
On 26th November 2012 workers clearing the land at Matale Hospital compound found remains of humans and further investigations revealed it was a mass grave.
More than 155 skeletal remains were found in excavations carried out later. Archeologists and forensic medical officers determined that certain skeleton remains found were that of persons who had been tortured and killed by severing the head during the 88-99 period.

Pardoned assassin at President’s event


2016-01-09
President Maithripala Sirisena yesterday granted a special presidential pardon to ex-LTTE member Sivarasa Jeginadan, who attempted to kill him in Polonnaruwa.
Jeginadan's attendance at the BMICH event commemorating Sirisena's Presidential Election victory was the backdrop against which the President shook hands with the youngster and granted him a pardon in person too.

Counsel U.R. de Silva who appeared Thursday for Sivarasa Jeginadan who was earlier sentenced to 10 years Rigorous Imprisonment by the Colombo High Court for an attempt to assassinate President Sirisena, submitted to the Court of Appeal that he had come to know that President Sirisena had decided to extend a Presidential pardon to his client. Counsel stated this before the Bench comprising Court of Appeal President Vijith Malalgoda and Justice Devika de Livera Tennakoon. He added his client was found guilty in the Colombo High Court of attempting to assassinate the President on 1 May 2006 and on 23 April 2006.

He appealed against the sentence and fine because the President had decided to extend to his client a special presidential pardon. Counsel said he was hence withdrawing his appeal to the Court of Appeal.
Deputy Solicitor General A.H.M. Navavi told Court that he had no objection to the withdrawal of the appeal.

The Indian police able to detect a kidney racket initiated from India

The Indian police able to detect a kidney racket initiated from India

Lankanewsweb.netJan 08, 2016
The “Hindu” newspaper and the “India Today” website have reported that the Indian police is investigating about a kidney racket which is initiated from India.

According to the reports a youngster from the Godawarigudam village from the Nalgonda district is behind the racket and he is believed to be addicted to liquor. This person named Kasapraj Suresh is 22 years old.
 
News reaching us confirms this person who has sold his kidney for Rs. five laks in 2014 has become a whole sale kidney racket agent. He has joined the kidney donating campaign which transplanted 15 kidneys.
 
The preliminary investigations have revealed this kidney transplant has been conducted in leading three private hospitals in Sri Lanka.
 
During the media communiqué it was revealed that each kidney has transferred to Indian Rs. 50,000 to 100,000 commissions and the kidney donor has received Indian Rs. 500,000. Meantime the kidney has been sold to the beneficiary for Rs. 2.7 million

The Next Front in the Saudi-Iran War

The Next Front in the Saudi-Iran War
BY IYAD EL-BAGHDADI-JANUARY 7, 2016
It looks like 2016 was born in violence. Saudi Arabia’s execution of popular Saudi Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr has led to an escalation with its regional nemesis, Iran. After Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Tehran was sacked by an angry Iranian mob, Riyadh severed diplomatic ties with the country and organized a regional coalition of countries to isolate it further — Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Djibouti, and Sudan have all cut or downgraded diplomatic ties with the Islamic Republic in the incident’s aftermath. Iran accused Saudi Arabia of going even further Thursday,claiming that Saudi warplanes had launched airstrikes against its embassy in war-torn Yemen.
Far from being an angry string of irrational actions, the Saudi escalation in recent days seems like a cold and premeditated act of international gamesmanship. Meanwhile, there is reason to believe that Iran’s moves following Nimr’s execution were a strategic blunder. Sheikh Nimr was, after all, a Saudi citizen; by going beyond condemnation to issuing threats, Iran’s reaction served to confirm, rather than challenge, the Saudi narrative about the cleric as a terrorist mastermind in the employ of an Iranian agenda.
But the fallout from the recent war of words won’t only be felt on the battlefields of Syria and Yemen. While the military struggles in the region get the most attention, the most important area in which the conflict will play out could be the economic arena.
Militarily speaking, we’re likely to see more of the same. Both Iran and Saudi Arabia prefer to employ proxies or native allies to fight their battles outside their territories, rather than send in their own armies. With two regional civil wars raging, it looks like Riyadh and Tehran will increase support for their allies, as a negotiated peace looks further away than ever. Unfortunately, Syrian and Yemeni civilians will bear the brunt of the violence.
The markets have also weighed in, and they do not appear to expect any direct military confrontation between the two countries. The oil market is particularly sensitive to disruptions in oil supply routes or facilities, as would occur during a conflict between the two Gulf powers. But while there was a spike in oil prices immediately following the recent escalation, it was short-lived, and prices continue to slide, hitting an 11-year low Wednesday.
The fact is, Saudi Arabia is at a disadvantage when it comes to a military showdown with Iran. Its grip over the Sunni world is more contested than Iran’s championing of the Shiite world — numerous Sunni groups, including the so-called Islamic State, openly oppose Saudi Arabia and challenge its leadership of the Sunni faith. Iran, on the other hand, does not have to deal with anything similar; it also has the direct support of Russia, especially in Syria, while U.S.-Saudi relations seem to have cooled.
It seems more likely that Saudi Arabia will prefer to fight a war in which it has an enormous advantage — one in the oil market. 
Saudi Arabia’s plan to weaken Iran’s economy
Even as oil prices sit near an 11-year low, Saudi Arabia has continued to pump massive amounts of crude oil. It has repeatedly refused to cut production, rendering OPEC’s price-setting mechanisms useless — and the kingdom has enough excess capacity to drive the price even further down. Analysts have speculated that Riyadh might be trying to drive U.S. shale oil producers out of the market, but the more important aim is to wreak havoc on the budgets of Iran and Russia, both of which are dependent on oil revenues for income.
But aren’t low oil prices even more painful for Saudi Arabia? After all, the country recently reported arecord budget deficit of $98 billion; the International Monetary Fund has even warned that the country will deplete its financial assets within five years if oil prices do not recover and it doesn’t rein in its budget. This has prompted some analysts to speculate about the “looming bankruptcy of Saudi Arabia” or even its “inevitable collapse.”
Reports of Saudi Arabia’s demise, however, have been greatly exaggerated. Despite its high reliance on oil, the kingdom still has a relatively cozy financial cushion and several options that it can employ to get its budget in order. And, more relevant to the conflict in question, Saudi Arabia has far more wiggle room here than Iran.
While the Saudi economy is more heavily reliant on oil than Iran’s, its foreign exchange reserves are far higher and its sovereign wealth fund owns far more assets. It also still has the untapped option of issuing bonds — it has the world’s lowest GDP-to-debt ratio (under 2 percent) and a high credit rating. Most importantly, Riyadh is already taking steps to inject more funds into government coffers: The development to watch out for is the planned economic reforms package, which wouldinstitute a value-added tax, cut subsidies, and privatize certain sectors. According to Saudi calculations, should this be successful, the country will see a balanced budget before 2020.
Iran, on the other hand, does not have as many options. It’s already in the midst of a subsidy reform plan and, unlike Saudi Arabia, already taxes its citizens. Raising taxes is difficult when inflation is high (16.2 percent) and unemployment is in the double digits (10.4 percent). The oil price necessary to balance Iran’s budget is much higher than the price needed to balance the Saudi budget; the Iranian oil sector is in need of development after more than a decade of sanctions.
In short, Iran can try to outgun Saudi Arabia, and its proxies can try to outnumber its allies on the various battlefields — but it cannot outspend Saudi Arabia and cannot outlast it in an environment where oil is cheap. Saudi Arabia doesn’t need to collapse Iran’s economy — it only needs to make the proxy war too expensive for it to maintain, prompting it to withdraw into its own borders, allowing a Saudi-friendly reconfiguration of the region.
Once things are lined up in the right direction, Saudi Arabia could quietly open the taps further and allow a couple more million barrels a day on the market, driving prices down even further. The longer it can hold the prices down, the more it will be compounding Iran and Russia’s economic pain.
The end of Saudi Arabia?
For these reasons, Iran’s aggressive reaction to Nimr’s death represents a strategic blunder. Rather than simply issuing a condemnation, Iranian leaders issued what could only be construed as a direct threat. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, talked of “divine vengeance”; a spokesman at its Foreign Ministry said that Saudi Arabia will “pay a high price.” Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah gave a televised speech in which he went so far as to describe Saudi Arabia as an illegitimate state and said that Nimr’s execution “will not pass.”
This belligerent rhetoric only plays into the hands of the Saudi monarchy, whose recent tough stance toward Iran seems to have become very popular at home. When a hostile “other” issues existential threats against a country, it can engender among its citizens a moment of nationalistic solidarity with the government — exactly what it needs to pass a reform package that would include short-term pain. 
Clearly, Saudi Arabia and Iran are locked in a high-stakes competition for regional primacy. Although both claim religious legitimacy and cite Islamic scripture, their actions betray a cold amorality and blindness to the dangers lurking ahead. Who will handle the fallout as Sunni-Shiite tensions continue to tear apart the region and as the seeds of hatred and vengeance are sown for future generations?
Playing with fear and hatred, especially through the exploitation of religious identity, is like playing with fire. With the executions, Saudi Arabia has further tied its national identity to its rulers’ Sunni worldview — amounting to a “national identity suicide.” A young Shiite man from the kingdom’s Eastern Province is now less likely to feel Saudi or adopt a Saudi identity — something that does not bode well for the future. After the executions, young protestors in Nimr’s hometown marched to chants of “the people demand the downfall of the Sauds.”
Saudi Arabia and Iran could have solved their long-standing issues without destabilizing the region, but they instead chose to cynically exploit existing sectarian tensions. The final chapter in this saga has not yet been written — but the region will not see peace until both sides recognize and respect each other’s boundaries.
ATTA KENARE/AFP/Getty Images
REVEALED: Juvenile prisoners and mentally 

ill killed in Saudi executions 

One prisoner arrested at 13 and others apparently suffering mental illness were among 47 executed in Saudi Arabia 

Mishaal al-Farraj (R), Mustafa Abkar (C) and Abdulaziz al-Toaili’e (R) were executed by Saudi Arabia (MEE) 

Rori Donaghy's pictureRori Donaghy-Friday 8 January 2016
Prisoners arrested when they were children and others suffering from mental illness were among dozens of inmates recently executed in Saudi Arabia, exclusive sources in the kingdom have told Middle East Eye.

K-pop, handbags and democracy: South Korean payback for North's nuclear test

A South Korean soldier stands guard next to loudspeakers, just south of the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, in Yeoncheon, South Korea, January 8, 2016. REUTERS/Korea Pool/YonhapA South Korean soldier stands guard next to loudspeakers, just south of the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, in Yeoncheon, South Korea, January 8, 2016.REUTERS/KOREA POOL/YONHAP
ReutersBY DAGYUM JI- Fri Jan 8, 2016
South Korea's initial retaliation to the North's latest nuclear test was a mix of K-pop, scathing commentary on its nuclear programme and derision of the ruling family's penchant for costly clothes and luxury handbags.
Over the hills by Gimpo city bordering the North, broadcasts from one of 11 banks of high-power speakers set up along the border spared no criticism of leader Kim Jong Un, who was believed to have turned 33 on Friday.
"Clothes for Kim Jong Un and Ri Sol Ju cost tens of thousands dollars each and her purse is worth thousands of dollars too," a male announcer said. Ri is Kim's wife.
The broadcast can travel 24 km (15 miles) at night and 10 km in daylight, far enough to reach beyond soldiers at the border to civilians to the north.
To the outside world, the idea that broadcasts that also showcase freedom and democracy, and how people are allowed to enjoy love and life, can anger a country enough to risk going to war might seem preposterous.
But North Korea sees them as an attack on the dignity of its leader and political system, and was provoked enough the last time the South used a tactic the North calls "an open act of war", in August, to launch an artillery strike across the border.
South Korean officials said stopping the broadcasts was the main reason the North agreed at that time to end an armed standoff and express regret over a landmine explosion that injured South Korean soldiers.
PSY OPS
The South Korean military's psychological department produces content for the FM radio station Voice of Freedom, which from noon (0300 GMT) on Friday was channelled to the speakers randomly for up to six hours a day.
Early in the broadcast, the South criticised the North's claim on Wednesday to have conducted its first hydrogen bomb test. The U.S. government and other experts doubt that the North has achieved such a technological advance since its last nuclear test in 2013.
"The nuclear test is making North Korea more isolated and turning it into the land of death," an announcer said. Another said Kim's signature policy of jointly boosting the economy and nuclear capability "has no realistic value".
North Korean defectors have said the broadcasts had left a lasting impression that there were songs without an ideological message, that spoke only of love.
Commentary, news and weather from around the world are mixed in with such K-pop hits as "Let us love each other" and South Korean boy band BIGBANG's megahit "Bang Bang Bang".
(Additional reporting and writing by Ju-min Park; Editing by Jack Kim, Robert Birsel)

This ad promoting a skin-whitening pill has received a considerable amount of backlash form viewers. It includes lines from a Thai model who claims her white skin has led to her success. (Monica Akhtar/The Washington Post)

By Ishaan Tharoor-January 8

A televised commercial in Thailand for a skin-whitening product stirred controversy and was eventually withdrawn after a backlash against its perceived racism.
The commercial for Thai cosmetics firm Seoul Secret featured a popular model and singer talking about the merits of having light-colored skin.
"Before I got to this point, the competition was very high," says Cris Horwang, who is also an Instagram celebrity with some 2 million followers. "If I stop taking care of myself, everything I have worked for, the whiteness I have invested in, may be lost," she says, according to a translationpublished by the Guardian.
"The new kids will replace me, will make me a faded star," says the actress, standing alongside another light-skinned woman. Her own skin then steadily turns darker.
"White makes you win," intones the video's narrator, adding that the product, "Snowz," has special compounds that will help "you not return to black."
The commercial precipitated a heated response on Thai social media and online forums. The BBCcites one commenter on the Thai-language forum Pantip.com: "I'm perfectly fine being dark-skinned, and now you're saying I've lost? Hello? What?"

"Suggesting people with dark skin are losers is definitely racist," concludes another.
What's particularly striking about the commercial is the starkness of its message: "White makes you win."


Across Asia, from India to Japan, skin-whitening products are huge business. In spite of the diversity of the continent -- where a majority of the world's population lives -- anachronistic attitudes surrounding the virtues of fair skin still prevail. Myriad Asian celebrities, including some who otherwise cast themselves as sometimes progressive figures, appear in ads for these skin-whitening products.
A few years back, Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan attracted opprobriumin India for continuing to be the face of a product known as "Fair and Lovely."
"Such irresponsible advertising propagates discrimination among men, women— and even children," read an online petition at the time.
In a Facebook post that followed the outrage, Seoul Secret offered this somewhat bewildering apology for its crass white vs. black advertisement: "Our company did not have any intention to convey discriminatory or racist messages. What we intended to convey was that self-improvement in terms of personality, appearance, skills and professionality is crucial."

Ishaan Tharoor writes about foreign affairs for The Washington Post. He previously was a senior editor at TIME, based first in Hong Kong and later in New York.

Ethiopia: Operation Jubba River

Jubba_River

AMISOM and Ethiopia to spearhead “Operation Jubba River” —aimed at displacing people in Jubba regions

by Fatuma Lamungu Nur*
( January 7, 2016, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Ethiopian forces are pouring en masse into the port town of Kismayo in southern Somalia.
Ahmed Madobe, the clan leader of Kismayo backed by Kenya and Ethiopia has recently announced a military operation named “Jubba River’’, which he said was aimed at flushing out Al Shabab from Jubba Valley.
This is far from the reality, since the truth behind this operation is to displace the indigenous people in Jubba River and to pave the way for the resettlement of Ogadeni people from Ethiopia and Kenya.
About then thousand families of the Ogaden clan are ready to be resettled in Jubba River, and this will allow the Ethiopian government to breathe and create some sort of stability in Ethiopia’s Zone Five region, where Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) is fighting with the Addis Ababa regime.
Ethiopia has so far succeeded to divide the ONLF, by signing a peace agreements with some of them, and harbouring others to Jubba ,where they were handed the top leadership of the region. Ahmed Madobe, the leader of the Interim Jubba Administration, is among the former ONLF members, who were born in Ethiopia’s Zone Five region.
The concern of the indigenous people over the settlement of the new comers of the Ogaden clan members was featured in the UN Monitoring Group Report of Somalia and Eritrea (2015). The report suggested about the clandestine plan of Ethiopia to uproot the people of Jubba and reward the land to Ogadeni people from Ethiopia and Kenya.
By doing this, Ethiopia is not only expecting stability and a good relationship with the Ogadenis, but it has an agenda of creating an everlasting conflict between the Ogaden and the rest of the Somali clans. The relationship between the Ogaden clan and other Somali clans was never been easy, and the forceful plans to settle them in Somaliland, Hiiraan and other regions were violently opposed.
This plan is jeopardizing Somalia’s future stability, since Kenya another regional force is also trying to solidify its influence in Kismayo, and it’s openly opposing the role of Ethiopian forces in Kismayo.
The Ethiopian forces are boasting that they are in Kismayo to finish the job the Kenyans could not finish for the last five years, and the success of Addis Ababa in Jubba will raise many questions about the capability of Kenyan forces and the political role of the Nairobi regime in the Horn of Africa region.
When the ill-advised journey of Kenyan forces and Somali clan militants to invade Jubba Valley in southern Somalia began in 2011, no one expected a lasting positive result.
The cheap argument of the Kenyans was to stop Al Shabab from undermining the security of Kenya’s territory and borders, while the genuine agenda backed by clan driven Somali-Kenyan politicians was to create a clan enclave in southern Somalia for their own interests.
The sophisticated arms and funds used in this operation made everyone to believe that it will not take more than two weeks or a maximum of a month to flush out AlShabaab from the entire Jubba Valley.
But the story turned out differently, since the Kenyan forces (first timers on such battle-grounds since their formation five decades ago) were lacking the experience and the capacity to finish the job. It took more than one year for the Kenyan forces and the Somali clan militants to capture Kismayo, which became their last destination of the Jubba Valley dream, leaving the vast land in the region in the hands of Al Shabab.
The people in Jubba region are known for their peace loving attitude, but the bitter scars left on them by Al Shabab and clan warlords made them to be in a mood of self-defence, while the local communities became concerned about the activities of the foreign forces in collaboration with the Ogaden clan.
When the local people began the uprising against the Ogadeni militants in Kismayo in 2013, the Kenyan forces used all sorts of artilleries to silence them. Now and during this ow planned “Operation Jubba River”, it’s obvious that the Ethiopians and the Ogadeni militants will brand everyone in the area as Al Shabab member or as a pro Al Shabab person, so that the agenda of removing the indigenous people will be easy and justified.
The Somali government, AMISOM, UNSOM and the rest of the international community are all aware of these atrocities and the hidden agenda of this operation, but they will never comment since every one of them has his own interest in this project.
However, we are no longer in the 1960ties and – Praise to God – everyone in Somali today understands his or her basic rights and how to obtain them. Rights have never been obtained by peace, but shedding sacred blood to achieve the blessed goal.
My advice to the people of Gosha and entire Jubba is to support any genuine and inclusive peace process, but to stand firm and resist against invasion and take up arms to defend their lands.
(*) The author Drs Fatuma Lamungu Nur is a PHD holder in international politics and based in New York, USA

Lawyer warns that 231 boys at German choir school could be abuse victims

Ulrich Weber was tasked with investigating decades-old allegations at Regensburger Domspatzen after the scandal went public
 Laywer Urlich Weber, asked by the diocese and choir to determine the incidents of sexual abuse at the Regensburg Domspatzen. Photograph: Armin Weigel/AP

Agence France-Presse in Berlin-Friday 8 January 2016

At least 231 children at a famous boys’ choir school in Germany were victims of physical abuse, according to a lawyer tasked by the Catholic institution with investigating allegations, giving a far higher figure than thought for the scandal, which dates back decades.
The Regensburger Domspatzen, a 1,000-year-old choir in Regensburg, Bavaria, was dragged into the massive sexual abuse scandal plaguing the Catholic church in 2010 when allegations of assaults that took place several decades ago went public.
The choir was run by Pope Benedict’s elder brother, Georg Ratzinger, from 1964 to 1994 when most of the claimed abuses took place.
Ratzinger has said that the alleged sexual abuse was “never discussed” in the time that he ran the choir attached to the boarding school.
Lawyer Ulrich Weber, who had been commissioned by the diocese to look into the cases, said at a press conference on Friday that his research, which included 70 interviews with victims, uncovered abuse that took place from 1945 to the early 1990s.
“I have here 231 reports of physical abuse,” he said.
These ranged from sexual assault to rape, severe beatings and food deprivation, said Weber.
“The reported cases of sexual abuse in Regensburg were mostly concentrated in the period of the mid to late 1970s,” he said, adding that 50 victims spoke of 10 perpetrators.
The director and composer Franz Wittenbrink, a former pupil of the boarding school, had told Spiegel magazine in 2010 that there was a “system of sadistic punishments connected to sexual pleasure”.
The German scandal is one of several to have rocked the Catholic church in recent years, notably in Ireland where one priest admitted sexually abusing more than 100 children.
Several German institutions have also been engulfed by the scandal, including an elite Jesuit school in Berlin, which admitted to systematic sexual abuse of pupils by two priests in the 1970s and 1980s.
Most of the priests concerned are not expected to face criminal charges however, because the alleged crimes took place too long ago.
But there have been calls for a change in the law and for the church to pay compensation to victims.
In February last year, the Regensburg diocese said there were 72 victims of abuse, and offered compensation of €2,500 each.