Peace for the World

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

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Cecilia Kotalawala arrested

Cecilia Kotalawala arrested

Feb 04, 2016
Former chairman of the Ceylinco Group of Companies Lalith Kothalawala’s wife Cecilia Kothalawala was arrested today 4th.
Police media spokesperson and Assistant Superintendent of Police Ruwan Gunasekara said she was arrested by the immigration officers at the Katunanayake International Aorport.

Police media spokesperson further said a court order was issued to the Sri Lanka immigration to take Cecilia Kothalawala in to custody due to some pending court cases against her in the Colombo and Mountlavania magistrate courts.
 
Cecilia Kothalawala was arrested on her arrival to the Katunayake airport by the immigration officers and handed her over to the criminal investigation department.
 
Police media spokesperson said she would be produced to the relevant magistrate court tomorrow. 

Palestinian youths slain in deadly attack on Israeli police

Israeli police inspect the bodies of three Palestinians killed after allegedly attacking a group of Border Police, killing one and seriously injuring another, at Damascus Gate, the eastern entrance to Jerusalem’s Old City, on 3 February.Mahfouz Abu TurkAPA images
Israeli forces detain a youth during confrontations in Qabatiya on 4 February.
 Nedal EshtayahAPA images
Maureen Clare Murphy-4 February 2016

Three young Palestinians allegedly attacked a group of Israeli Border Police outside Jerusalem’s Old City on Wednesday, killing one and seriously wounding another before they were shot dead.

The group were armed with guns, knives and improvised explosives, according to Israeli reports.

Police told the Reuters news agency that at least one of the attackers opened fire with an automatic rifle.
The slain Israeli officer was identified as Hadar Cohen, 19, who, like the other officer injured on Wednesday,had not completed basic training. The two women were on their first operational deployment when they were attacked, according to the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaret

Police told the paper that the patrol noticed two of three young Palestinians “sitting on a bench near Damascus Gate and asked them to identify themselves.”

One of the officers told Haaretz that the two appeared frightened.

“One terrorist handed over his ID card, while the other drew his gun and fired at the policewomen,” Haaretzreported.

“The Border Police shot and killed the two assailants. At this point the third gunman approached and opened fire at the detail, which shot and killed him as well,” the paper added.

A deputy police commander told the paper that “The assumption is that the Border Police combatants weren’t the assailants’ target,” and a much larger-scale attack was planned.

Palestinian attackers came from one village

Two Israeli teens sentenced for burning Palestinian boy to death 



The killing of Mohammed Abu Khdeir is widely seen as a spark for a cycle of violence that led to the 2014 Gaza war 

Thursday 4 February 2016

A court sentenced two young Israelis to life and 21 years in prison respectively on Thursday for burning a Palestinian teen alive, part of a cycle of violence that led up to the 2014 Gaza war.

The two Israelis were minors at the time of the chilling attack, in which they and a third man snatched Mohammed Abu Khdeir, 16, from an East Jerusalem street and subsequently killed him.

Life sentences were the maximum available to the three-judge panel at the Jerusalem District Court.

The defendant sentenced to 21 years - the youngest of the three who is said to have psychiatric problems - was found to have remained in the car while Abu Khdeir was killed.

Israeli settler Yosef Haim Ben-David, 31, is said to have led the attack on Abu Khdeir, but his lawyers say he suffers from a mental illness and was not responsible for his actions at the time.

The court has found that he committed the crime, but is yet to rule as to whether he is mentally competent.

The two others were 16 when they killed Abu Khdeir in 2014 but are now 18.

The court, which has not identified them because they were minors at the time, noted that they were from ultra-Orthodox Jewish families.

Abu Khdeir's mother, Suha, screamed and cried when the sentences were announced in the small, packed courtroom.

Both she and her husband Hussein criticised the decision to sentence one of the defendants to 21 years.
Hussein Abu Khdeir again called for their homes to be demolished, as Israel regularly does for Palestinian attackers.

"This is the life of Mohammed we are talking about," Suha Abu Khdeir said later outside the court.
"He did not deserve this. We can't sleep at night. How is this going to help us sleep at night?"

Both defendants were ordered to pay the Abu Khdeir family almost $8,000 each, but the family said they would refuse to take the money.

The court's actions have been closely watched at a time of renewed Israeli-Palestinian tensions.

A wave of Palestinian knife, gun and car-ramming attacks targeting Israelis began in October, with over 160 Palestinians and 26 Israelis, as well as a US citizen and an Eritrean, killed.

Abu Khdeir's killing was part of a spiral of violence that led to a 50-day war in the Gaza Strip between Israel and Palestinian militants in summer 2014.

Abu Khdeir was kidnapped from Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem on 2 July 2014 and beaten - his burned body was found hours later in a forest in the western part of the city.

A forensic report showed smoke in his lungs, indicating he was alive when set alight.

It was seen as revenge for the killing of Israelis Naftali Frenkel, Gilad Shaer and Eyal Yifrach, who were abducted from a hitchhiking stop near the flashpoint West Bank city of Hebron.

Israeli authorities said the suspects had decided to kill an Arab in revenge and equipped themselves with cable ties, petrol and other materials before randomly choosing Abu Khdeir.

Ben-David and the defendant sentenced to life had allegedly tried to kidnap a child in East Jerusalem the day before, but were thwarted by the youth's mother.

Russian bombs triggering mass Aleppo exodus, Syria conference told

Turkish prime minister says tens of thousands being pushed towards border as world gathers to raise billions for refugees
Syrians make their way to the Esselame border gate, in the Turkish province of Kilis, as they flee airstrikes in and around Aleppo. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Syrians make their way to the Esselame border gate




 and -Thursday 4 February 2016
Increasingly intensive Russian airstrikes are pushing tens of thousands of Syrians from the city of Aleppo towards the Turkish border, Turkey’s prime minister, Ahmet Davutoğlu has said, predicting a fresh exodus even as Europe struggles to respond to the existing refugee crisis.
After a week of the most intensive bombardment of the five-year war, opposition forces in northern Syria say they are losing their grip on Aleppo, with forces loyal to the Syrian leader, Bashar al-Assad, in control of most of the countryside immediately to the north. Davutoğlu said the city was threatened with a “siege of starvation”.
Speaking at a conference in London on Thursday that raised more than $10bn in aid pledges, the US secretary of state, John Kerry, called on the regime and its supporters to halt their bombardment of opposition-held areas, saying they “clearly signalled the intention to seek a military solution rather than enable a political one”.
Amid the criticism, Moscow hit back, accusing Turkey of preparing for a military incursion into Syria. “The Russian defence ministry registers a growing number of signs of hidden preparation of the Turkish armed forces for active actions on the territory of Syria,” said spokesman Igor Konashenkov, sparking a robust denial from Ankara.

Interest in New Noam Chomsky Documentary Has Grown So Large That Even the NY Times Ran a Review—and Praised It! (VIDEO)

In 'Requiem for the American Dream,' Chomsky addresses the vast gulf of inequality in America.
HomeBy Alexandra Rosenmann-February 4, 2016

In the new documentary Requiem for the American Dream, produced and directed by Peter Hutchison, Kelly Nyks and Jared P. Scott, Noam Chomsky argues that the collapse of American democratic ideals and the rise of the 1% means that the American dream is harder than ever to achieve. And unlike during the Great Depression, there seems to be no end in sight to this class struggle. 

“The effect of the concentration of wealth is to yield concentration of power. [Therefore] the very fact of inequality has a corrosive, harmful effect on democracy," Chomsky states.

Chomsky was raised in an American middle-class immigrant family in the 1930s. Filmmakers use interviews with Chomsky and archival video from the 1950s onward to illustrate the golden age of American history, as Chomsky calls it. The average worker was able to buy a home, a car and live a life of relative comfort. Upward class mobility was not only aspirational, but achievable.

The widening wage gap, he claims, is "a result of over 30 years of a shift in social and economic policy, completely against the will of the population.” Today, young families are slightly wealthier than their parents were three decades ago, according to a recent BMO Economics Report. However, millennials need to pay more to get their foot in the door and are accumulating debt loads about 260% higher than their parents did at their age. 

"It goes back to the founding of the country. If you read the debates at the Constitutional Convention, James Madison, the main framer, said the major concern of society has to be to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority," Chomsky says. 

The New York Times, which historically tends to ignore Chomsky, ran a prominent review in its Arts section, going so far as to praise the film and callingRequiem a "well-paced and cogent seminar." 

Reviewer Daniel Gold writes, "citing Aristotle, Adam Smith and James Madison, among others, he melds history, philosophy and ideology into a sobering vision of a society in an accelerating decline. He never raises his voice in this easy-listening jeremiad. 'There’s nothing surprising about this,' he repeats gently in describing what he sees as a 40-year trend of government bent to the will of the superrich at the expense of everyone else. 'That’s what happens when you put power in the hands of a narrow sector.'"

Requiem for the American Dream is now playing in select cities.



Alexandra Rosenmann is an AlterNet associate editor. Follow her @alexpreditor

India may decide on GM food as China makes big leap with Syngenta buy

An Indian scientist holds a genetically modified (GM) rapeseed crop under trial in New Delhi, India, in this February 13, 2015 file photo. REUTERS/Anindito MukherjeeReuters
BY KRISHNA N. DAS AND MAYANK BHARDWAJ-Thu Feb 4, 2016

Officials may decide on Friday whether to allow what could be India's first genetically modified (GM) food crop, mustard, spurred by food security concerns and as China makes a big bet on the technology with a $43 billion bid for seed firm Syngenta.

Permitting GM food crops is a big call for a country that spends tens of billions of dollars importing edible oils and other food items every year.

Farmers are stuck with old technology, yields are at a fraction of global levels, cultivable land is shrinking and weather patterns have become less predictable.

Two straight droughts for the first time in three decades have made India a net importer of some food products for the first time in years.

If a commercial launch of GM mustard is allowed, it could pave the way for other food crops such as corn varieties developed by Monsanto (MON.N) (MNSN.NS), in one of the world's biggest farm markets.

"I see this as a test case and I am hopeful," said Deepak Pental, the lead scientist who used government grants to conduct tests on the oilseed crop over the past decade.

"How can we keep on running so scared when there is so much need for improving agricultural production?"

But even winning the panel's approval is no guarantee that the GM crop would be introduced.

Political and public opposition to lab-altered food remains strong amid fears they could compromise food safety and biodiversity. There is also suspicion among farmers that their introduction would give foreign seed suppliers too much control.

"Why is the government imposing its decision on farmers on an unsafe and unproven technology, despite the availability of good varieties of mustard in our country?" Manish Sisodia, Delhi's deputy chief minister, told Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a letter this week.

"We pray to you not to compromise our agriculture, citizens' health and the environment under pressure from a handful of foreign companies."

PRESSURE BUILDING?

Friday's meeting, the third held to evaluate field trial data on GM mustard, is an indication of how serious Modi's government is about pushing technology to lift food production after an impasse under the previous government halted research on transgenic crops.

A member of the GM approval committee comprising government and independent experts said they had already discussed the mustard in the past two meetings this year, and the next gathering would be crucial to deciding its future.

He declined to be named and did not give more details.

Ashok Gulati, a farm economist who advised the last government, said that China's takeover of Swiss GM seed developer Syngenta (SYNN.VX) should push the government into taking quick action.

"It should come as ... a wakeup call for India, which has to feed more than a billion mouths," said Gulati. "India now doesn't have the luxury to sit on the issue of GM. It just needs to take this bold and decisive step."

India placed a moratorium on GM aubergine in 2010, fearing the effect on food safety and biodiversity. 

Field trials of other GM crops were not formally halted, but the regulatory system was brought to a deadlock after that.

However, Modi, who was instrumental in making Gujarat state the leading user of GM cotton in India when he was chief minister, cleared several field trials soon after taking office in New Delhi in 2014.

Some grassroots groups associated with Modi's nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party have opposed GM crops because of the reliance on seeds patented by multinationals like Monsanto, DuPont (DD.N), Dow Chemical (DOW.N) and Syngenta.

But New Delhi-based Pental said the mustard variety was developed by Indian scientists, and local firms could easily supply farmers with cheap seeds.

TESTS REVEAL NO PROBLEMS

The government's chief scientific adviser, R. Chidambaram, has also asked Modi for a quick decision on the issue.

A senior environment ministry official, who is a member of the GM approval committee, had said earlier that studies found no ill effects from GM foods.

Pental's mustard makes use of three genes already incorporated in rapeseed hybrids in Canada, the United States and Australia and extensive biosafety tests have revealed no cause for concern, according to a copy of the field trial report submitted to the government and seen by Reuters.

Additionally, oil derived from its seeds does not contain proteins linked to the three genes used, Pental said.

The mustard's yield is up to 38 percent higher than normal varieties, which would help Modi slash an annual bill for vegetable oil imports of more than $10 billion.

A farm ministry official said they were keen to roll out any innovation that can help farmers produce more, as long as concerns of human and soil health are addressed.
(Editing by Mike Collett-White)

A bridge too far: Thai police arrest elderly expats for playing cards



4th February 2016
Pic: YouTube





WHEN you’re in Thailand, make sure you don’t have too many playing cards or it may cost you. Thirty-two elderly foreigners had the shock of their lives when they were detained by local police while playing bridge.

The mostly British foreigners had gathered to play the game in a rented room above a restaurant off Thappraya Road in South Pattaya when over 50 officers stormed the premises, reportedPattaya One.
Here’s a video of the raid:


The foreigners were members of the Jomtien & Pattaya Bridge Club, which meets three times a week. Formed in 1994, this is the first time the club faced the strong arm of the law.

The raid was ostensibly directed at gambling activities. “There were 32 people, all of them foreigners arrested for gambling on Wednesday night,” Pattaya police superintendent Colonel Suthat Pumphanmuang, told AFP.

Gambling is strictly prohibited in Thailand, aside from the lottery and some animal fighting bets.

However, after failing to establish that monetary exchanges took place, the police then turned to different offenses. They cited Section 8 of the Playing Cards Act of 1935, which criminalizes the possession of more than 120 playing cards at one time. And since this was a bridge gathering, there were obviously more than 120 playing cards on the premises.
Reads like a spoof but I think isn't- police raid bridge game and arrest players for having too many cards http://bit.ly/1PTqZDZ 
Police also noted that the boxes of playing cards did not have official government seals.

Suthat said that all but one of those arrested have since been released after enduring 12 hours in custody and putting up 5,000 baht (US$140) in bail money, reported the Bangkok Post. A German woman was still behind bars at time of writing, refusing to sign a document admitting to gambling
The official website of the bridge club appeared to have been suspended Thursday.



'Jihadi Jack' has mental health condition, say parents

Jack Letts, nicknamed "Jihadi Jack" by some newspapers, suffers from a serious mental disorder, according to his parents, Channel 4 News can reveal.


Channel 4 NewsTHURSDAY 04 FEBRUARY 2016

Speaking exclusively to Channel 4 News, Jack's parents John and Sally also said they were arrested when they sent their son money for glasses.

Mr and Mrs Letts talked about Jack's condition, obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), and said his conversion to Islam had helped him cope. The 20-year-old is now thought to be living in Isis-controlled territory in Syria, where his parents say he is carrying out humanitarian work.

John Letts wiped away tears of frustration as he tried to explain what he and his wife had been going through. I sat with John and Sally in their terraced home in Oxford, despite their initial reluctance to meet me at all.

'Nightmare'

"We've just been stung so many times now by journalists. So many papers have made up so many things about us, it's been a nightmare," Sally told me.

Over the last week, their son's picture has been splashed all over the papers. In one, he is pictured in Syria, his finger pointing up to the sky in a Shahada gesture.

Some have taken this as evidence he has joined Isis. It has been alleged that he is the first white boy to fight for the terrorist group. Yet he has always denied it and has never been filmed with a gun.

His parents are aware they make good copy, a good story for the tabloids. John is an organic farmer whose work has been endorsed by the Prince of Wales. Sally is an administrator. They are a pillar of middle class respectability.

Conflict zone

So why would their son suddenly go to the most dangerous conflict zone in the world? Some in the media have suggested it is because he is a violent extremist.

In private messages we have seen, he has denied this. In fact his story is far more complicated.

For the first time, Jack's parents have said he suffered a serious mental health disorder. Like his parents, Jack was interested in politics and the world and OCD drove his study of the Koran.

He went to Syria, where he has been for two years. There is no evidence he is a fighter or that he is with a charity.

He has been described as naive, and his parents have tried to convince him to come home, as phone messages show.

Arrested

They have been seriously concerned about him and yet when they tried to send him money so he could buy new glasses, they were arrested.

Whatever he is doing, he has been able to operate for two years without attracting attention. The fear is he will have attracted the attention of the so-called Islamic State.

South East Counter Terrorism Command said in a statement that it was aware of "recent reports in the media regarding a 20-year-old man from Oxford travelling to Syria and can confirm we are investigating".

It added: "We can confirm a 55-year-old man and a 53-year-old woman, from Oxford, were arrested on suspicion of sending money to Syria which could be used for terrorism purposes... and were bailed until 17 February."