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

Monday, February 15, 2016

The Rot at the Heart of the Brazilian Economy

The Rot at the Heart of the Brazilian Economy

BY CHRISTOPHER SABATINI-FEBRUARY 10, 2016

In late 2014, Brazil seemed on the verge of a meltdown. Its economy had grown a mere 0.1 percent that year, as its currency (the real) dropped like a stone and business confidence plummeted. In response, in November of that year Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff turned to a Chicago-trained technocrat — a common antidote among Latin American leaders. Domestic and international investors welcomed the appointment of Joaquim Levy, a former banker and fiscal hawk, to lead the finance ministry, but they acknowledged he would have his work cut out for him. If Levy hoped to enact the drastic fiscal cuts and structural reforms needed to fix the careening economy, he would have to first overcome the resistance of not only a fractious congress, but also many members of Rousseff’s leftist Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT) and her cabinet.

Success would ultimately elude Levy. In December 2015, he quit, handing the ministry over to Nelson Barbosa, another well-respected economist. But Barbosa lacks Levy’s credibility among investors. And the task before him has only become more unenviable. He will have to push through his predecessor’s stalled reforms, while turning around an economy that suffered a GDP contraction of 3.7 percent in 2015, staving off potential debt crisisstabilizing the real, and avoiding what analysts predict could become Brazil’s worst crisis since 1901.

The first step to fixing Brazil’s crisis will have to involve recognizing that the rot goes much deeper than it might seem. Brazil’s troubles began with the downturn in the global commodity markets, which once bolstered the country. But the roots of the malaise trace much farther, to a historically autarkic economic model, a political system hobbled and corrupted by party factionalism and localism, and a constitutional carnaval of guarantees for social rights and payouts.

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Students protest in thousands as government cracks down on dissent

Police stop demonstrators during a protest against the students of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) outside the university campus in New Delhi, India, February 15, 2016. REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee
Prakash Karat (centre L), a leader of Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI-M), addresses students of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) during a protest inside the university campus in New Delhi, India, February 15, 2016. REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee

ReutersBY SANKALP PHARTIYAL AND RUPAM JAIN-Mon Feb 15, 2016

India's biggest nationwide student protests in a quarter of a century spread across campuses on Monday after the arrest of a student accused of sedition, in the latest battle with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government over freedom of expression.

Outrage over the arrest of the left-wing student leader, who had organised a rally to mark the anniversary of the execution of a Kashmiri separatist, has led to demonstrations in at least 18 universities.

In the largest protest, thousands of students and academics at New Delhi's prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) boycotted classes and erected barricades for a fourth day in an escalating conflict with the authorities.

"The government does not want students to have a say," said Rahila Parween, vice-president of the Delhi unit of the All India Students' Federation, a left-wing student union. "It wants to dictate what students think, understand and say."

The incident marks another flare-up in an ideological confrontation between Modi's nationalist government and left-wing and liberal groups that is prompting critics to compare it with Indira Gandhi's imposition of a state of emergency in the 1970s to crush dissent.

Members of Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) accused the student leader, Kanhaiya Kumar, of "anti-India" sentiment. One BJP lawmaker said the university, which has a tradition of left-wing politics, should be shut down.

"I can assure you that every action we take is to protect our country. Any anti-India activity will not be tolerated," BJP President Amit Shah, one of Modi's closest allies, said at party headquarters.

Protests spread when Kumar was arrested last week for sedition, after giving a speech questioning the hanging in 2013 of Mohammad Afzal Guru over his role in the 2001 attack on parliament.

Activists have long questioned Guru's conviction, and the Supreme Court has described the evidence against him as circumstantial.

Scuffles erupted outside a New Delhi courthouse between lawyers and students where Kumar, 28, was to appear before a judge on Monday.

ANTI-INDIA SENTIMENT

A leader of the student group that is aligned with the BJP said freedom of expression should not be misused to justify acts that could harm the country.

"You cannot be an Indian if you celebrate the death anniversary of a terrorist," said Saurabh Sharma, joint secretary of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (All India Student Council).

Home Minister Rajnath Singh has, meanwhile, faced ridicule for citing a fake tweet to say that the JNU demonstration had been backed by Hafiz Saeed, a Pakistani militant accused by India of being behind the 2008 attack on Mumbai in which 166 people died.

Delhi police circulated the fake tweet at the weekend in a warning to students "not to get carried away by such seditious and anti-national rhetoric". A spokesman did not answer calls to his mobile phone on Monday seeking comment.

"The crackdown signals an utter lack of judgment in the government, where ministers manage to manufacture a national crisis out of what were always, at best, minor affectations in student politics," Pratap Bhanu Mehta, a leading political commentator, wrote in the Indian Express newspaper.

Since Modi rose to power in May 2014, people in India have been attacked by Hindus enraged at reports of cows - sacred in their religion - being slaughtered, smuggled or consumed.

There has been a series of attacks on churches, while writers have returned awards in protest over the government's silence over a series of murders of secular scholars.

At least 18 university campuses witnessed protests on Monday. Students in Kolkata burnt an effigy of Modi and left-wing groups in Odisha planned state-wide demonstrations.

Analysts said the student protests were the most widespread in India since the self-immolation of a young Indian in 1990 after the government ruled in favour of providing affirmative action to the lower castes in higher education.

"We are witnessing liberal India, particularly young people who are usually more idealistic, fighting back," said Satish Misra, a political analyst at the Observer Research Foundation.

(Additonal reporting by Jatindra Das; Writing by Andrew MacAskill and Rupam Jain; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Mike Collett-Wh

Ai Weiwei covers Berlin concert hall with 14,000 life jackets to highlight Europe’s refugee crisis

An art installation by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei with discarded life jackets collected at the Greek island Lesbos is set up at the Konzerthalle Berlin. Pic: AP.
An art installation by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei with discarded life jackets collected at the Greek island Lesbos is set up at the Konzerthalle Berlin. Pic: AP.

 

CHINESE artist and activist Ai Weiwei has been outspoken in his criticism of Europe’s handling of the ongoing refugee crisis.

In his latest art installation, he has covered the pillars of Berlin’s concert hall with 14,000 life vests discarded by refugees who had arrived on the shores of Greek island Lesbos.

The neon orange jackets were used to call attention to the plight of refugees fleeing their war-torn countries and risking their lives to reach Europe by sea from Turkey.

In 2015, over 1 million refugees arrived in Europe via sea routes, and more than 3,700 of them perished during the perilous sea voyage between Turkey and Lesbos, while tens of thousands of life jackets have been left behind on the island’s beaches.

Since the start of the crisis, Ai has repeatedly visited Lesbos and even set up a studio there, where he has been working on several projects focusing on the issue, including the #safepassage campaign on social media, which uses pictures taken on Lesbos and other refugee entry points.


Ai recently closed two exhibitions in Denmark in protest after the country passed a law allowing the state to confiscate valuables from migrants.

He also caused a stir when he recreated the haunting image of drowned Syrian child Alan Kurdi.

Eating breakfast could help obese people get more active

Eating breakfast causes obese people to be more active, according to the latest research published from our health researchers.
Lead researchers Dr James Betts and Dr Enhad Chowdhury who conducted the latest research into the health impacts of eating or skipping breakfast.
University of Bath homepageFEBRUARY 10, 2016
The study, from health scientists based within the Department for Health and published in the leading diet and nutrition journal the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, analysed the links between breakfast and health for individuals classed as ‘obese’, comparing the results from a fasting group with a breakfasting group.
Eating breakfast did not make obese individuals lose weight but did result in more physical activity in the morning and reduced food intake later in the day (meaning both groups ate similar amounts overall). Increasing activity is one of the most important ways to improve health in our increasingly sedentary population, so the researchers suggest this could be a key benefit.
These latest results in this obese group build on previous studies from the researchers at Bath into the effects of eating breakfast for a ‘lean’ population. Both studies form part of the three-year BBSRC-funded ‘Bath Breakfast Project’ and, put together, their insights are being billed as some of the most comprehensive to date into the effects of eating breakfast, winning the lead researcher the prestigious Cuthbertson Medal from the Nutrition Society.

Should we eat breakfast?

The possible links between breakfast, body weight and health was what the researchers wanted to test.
Lead researcher behind the study, Dr James Betts explains: “Despite many people offering opinions about whether or not you should eat breakfast, to date there has been a lack of rigorous scientific evidence showing how, or whether, breakfast might cause changes in our health. Our studies highlight some of these impacts, but 'how important' breakfast is still really depends on the individual and their own personal goals.
“For example, if weight loss is the key there is little to suggest that just having breakfast or skipping it will matter. However, based on other markers of a healthy lifestyle, like being more active or controlling blood sugar levels, then there’s evidence that breakfast may help.”
Like in the previous study for a lean population, to conduct the obese trial the researchers split individuals aged 21 – 60 into two groups ‘fasting’ and ‘breakfasting’, measuring many outcomes during a six week period. Most existing research is limited just to surveys of vast numbers of people. By contrast this research involved intensive testing of a focused group under tightly-controlled conditions – so the relevant effects on the body can be studied without needing the test thousands of people.
The breakfasting group in this study was asked to eat at least 700 kcal by 11am, with the first half of this consumed within at least two hours of waking. The fasting group were only allowed water until noon.

Balancing a continental with a full English

Whilst the researchers’ latest work has revealed the effects of eating breakfast verses fasting, they allowed people to choose what they wanted to eat for breakfast. They now want to conduct further experiments comparing different breakfast types. From this they hope to make recommendations as to the kind of food sources and nutrients that might work best for health.
Lead author on the new study, Dr Enhad Chowdhury, added: “It is important to bear in mind that not everybody responds in the same way to breakfast and that not all breakfasts are equal. The effects of a sugary cereal compared to a high protein breakfast are likely to be quite different. As we progress the Bath Breakfast Project we want to narrow down the effects of different types of breakfast upon health.”

Watch: Does skipping breakfast help weight loss?


Should you eat breakfast? - New article from Enhad Chowdhury and James Betts via The Conversation https://theconversation.com/should-you-eat-breakfast-53129.
According to the latest independently-assessed REF 2014, 93 per cent of our health research was judged to be wither 'world leading' or 'internationally excellent'. For more on our research performance see www.bath.ac.uk/research/performance.

Cancer researchers claim 'extraordinary results' using T-cell therapy

‘This is unprecedented’ says researcher after more than half of terminally ill blood cancer patients experienced complete remission in early clinical trials
A scanning electron micrograph of a human T-cell. ‘T-cells are a living drug, and in particular they have the potential to persist in our body for our whole lives,’ said researcher Chiara Bonini. Photograph: Alamy
-Monday 15 February 2016
Scientists are claiming “extraordinary” success with engineering immune cells to target a specific type of blood cancer in their first clinical trials.
Among several dozen patients who would typically have only had months to live, early experimental trials that used the immune system’s T-cells to target cancers had “extraordinary results”.
In one study, 94% of participants with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) saw symptoms vanish completely. Patients with other blood cancers had response rates greater than 80%, and more than half experienced complete remission.
Speaking at the annual meeting for the American Association for the Advancement for Science (AAAS), researcher Stanley Riddell said: “This is unprecedented in medicine, to be honest, to get response rates in this range in these very advanced patients.”
To administer the T-cell therapy, doctors remove immune cells from patients, tagging them with “receptor” molecules that target a specific cancer, as other T-cells target the flu or infections. They then infuse the cells back in the body.
“There are reasons to be optimistic, there are reasons to be pessimistic,” said Riddell, of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Washington state. He added that the researchers believe that lowering the dose of T-cells can reduce the risk of side-effects.
“These are in patients that have failed everything. Most of the patients in our trial would be projected to have two to five months to live.”
Even more hopeful was researcher Chiara Bonini, who said she has not seen remission rates like those of recent trials in over 15 years. “This is really a revolution,” she said.

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Sunday, February 14, 2016

Where is journalist Subramanium Ramachandran 9 years after he disappeared?

Photo courtesy Sri Lanka Brief
Subramanium Ramachandran, a Jaffna based Tamil journalist disappeared on 15th of February 2007 in Jaffna. Despite eyewitness accounts of being detained at an Army checkpoint and camps, till today his whereabouts are unknown and his elderly parents and family await his arrival every day. His colleagues and family remember him as a courageous journalist who would write without fear on any issue. During the war, he was one of the few journalists based in Jaffna who would continue to report on abuse and violations by the Military and other para militant groups. Nine years after his disappearance Ramachandran’s case like other journalists, activists, civilians who disappeared or were killed remains uninvestigated and under reported.
The Incident
Few weeks before his disappearance, Ramachandran had written an article on illegal sand mining and transportation which was taking place with the involvement of businessmen and military officers. Following this article, a Judge was reported to have made an order to confiscate a vehicle used for this purpose. At the same time the LTTE was reported to have torched another vehicle belonging to the businessmen. His colleagues believe that his abductors were persons angered by this article.
According to an eye witness, on the day of the incident, Ramachandran was coming home after work. It was a routine at that time to have a curfew imposed in Jaffna after 6.00pm. On his way he was stopped at the Army camp at Kalikai junction, not far from his home in Jaffna. The eyewitness had seen some soldiers having surrounded him for questioning. At around 7.00pm when the power was out, neighbors have reported on hearing an Army vehicle (Buffel) coming to the area and that they believe that Ramachandran may have been taken away at this point.

War Crimes and War Heroes: Horns of Sri Lanka’s dilemma


article_image
Final stage of the war- 

by Rajan Philips

Even for those of us who are not (western) classists, it would makes sense to know that the resolution of a dilemma in logic and rhetoric involves either taking the left horn, the right horn, or going in between the two, not to mention (rhetorically) distracting the proverbial bull. Transcending from the ‘precocious’ world of ancient Greece to the pernicious world of contemporary Sri Lankan politics (where good things can still happen from time to time – as Professor Carlo Fonseka realized and reminded us last week), we could identify the vested interests hanging on to one or the other of the two horns of our country’s dilemma, as well as hanging on to both. The Rajapaksa forces have hung on to the horn of war heroes ever since 2009 and won two (2010) and lost two elections (2015). The Wickremasinghe forces were impaled on the heroic horn twice in 2010, and have now caught the horn of war crimes after their double resurrection in 2015. President Sirisena, although it requires some research to see if he commands any (political) forces, is by far the only player of consequence today who has been on the winning side in all the four contests in 2010 and in 2015. Reduced to being less than insignificant in the Rajapaksa universe in 2010, Sirisena emerged as more than a hero for the common opposition in 2015. He is now trying to hang on to the two horns of the nation’s dilemma.

The politics of war heroes

Underlying the antics of political bull fighting are serious political issues that are pregnant with precarious outcomes for the country and its people. The fact of the matter is that the Sinhalese electorate, the electorate that matters in Sri Lankan politics, first overwhelmingly endorsed Rajapaksa’s identification with war heroes, in 2010, but became decisively indifferent to it the second time around in 2015. Even after their two defeats last year, the Rajapaksa forces are still pushing the war-heroes wedge to demarcate their political space and the divisive message that goes with it. It is now the only plank in their platform and it is also becoming their main mode of defence as they try to take their case to the court of public from the courts of law where the Rajapaksa family members and close supporters are increasingly coming under police and prosecutorial squeeze.

UN Rights Chief Finds People In N-E Still Live In Fear

Zeid Ra’ad Zeid al-Hussein

By Easwaran Rutnam
Sunday, February 14, 2016
High on the agenda during the visit by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein last week was to push for international participation in the domestic accountability process.
And following four days of talks in Colombo, Jaffna, Trincomalee and Kandy, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein found that war affected families want an international role.
He also said that the element of fear once seen in Sri Lanka has considerably diminished, at least in Colombo and the South. But he found that in the North and the East, it has mutated but still exists.
Responding to a question posed by The Sunday Leader at a press conference held at the end of his visit to Sri Lanka last week, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein emphasized on the need for a credible process to find out if war crimes took place during the conflict.
He noted that the report on Sri Lanka, made public by his office last year, was based on an investigation conducted over alleged human rights abuses during the war and not a criminal investigation.
But he noted that the patterns of the abuses recorded during the human rights investigation suggested that there was a need for criminal investigations at a level of a court to determine if war crimes were committed.
“In effect only a court can say if crimes against humanity or war crimes were committed,” he said.
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein however said that in the end his office will make recommendations to Sri Lanka but it is for Sri Lanka to decide on the best way forward. He also made clear that his office is not influenced by any country and at times there is a misunderstanding about the work his office does.
On the progress made by Sri Lanka in the accountability process Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said that virtually everyone agrees there has been progress, although opinions differ markedly about the extent of that progress.
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Rather than war crimes probe, HR violations should be investigated – Zeid Al Hussein

Rather than war crimes probe, HR violations should be investigated – Zeid Al Hussein

- Feb 14, 2016
Rather than conducting a war crimes probe into postwar period killings, what should be done is to look into human rights violations, UN human rights chief Zeid Al Hussein has said, during a visit to the island.  He met with president Maithripala Sirisena, prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, opposition leader R. Sampanthan, at which he made his stance known.

Accordingly, no war crimes investigation will take place into postwar incidents, and neither the UNHRC nor any other international organization will pressurize for such probe. Meanwhile, it is reported from the government side that an investigation into HR violations will become a reality soon, as that is possible under the existing laws of the country.

“Yahapalanaya” Vs “Ohey Palayang” Government


Colombo Telegraph
By Emil van der Poorten –February 14, 2016
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
I have to acknowledge my gratitude to a friend who shall remain nameless for coining the second term appearing in the title of this piece. I believe he very accurately described the dismissive attitude that our current government has adopted towards those who put it in power and its attitude towards those it claimed to represent in the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka.
The increasing equivocation of this lot is, at least, something that our recently-deposed would-be Emperor could not be accused of. Even in the vilest acts that were performed under the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime (MR1), there was seldom the dimension of vacillation in the matter of decision-making. This was true even when those decisions were driven solely, it seemed, by the needs of shifting political expediency. In any event, MR1’s over-arching threat, terror and ruthlessness took care of any perception by the general public of anything resembling weakness or vacillation!
Apart from the political flotsam and jetsam that constitute a large part of our multi-party Cabinet, this government chose to appoint to very senior administrative and management positions those who never so much as dissented while the MR1 bunch were acting with absolute impunity. What this amounted to was best expressed by what I was told a senior member of the United National Party had said when taken to task for seemingly-endless silence during the heyday of impunity: “What to do, machang, have to put petrol in the Benz no?” That is the attitude that is in the process of being rewarded by the Maithri/Ranil (MR2) dispensation.
Then there were the senior government functionaries who, without question or apology, carried out the diktats of the MR1 dispensation. Many of these were not only unprincipled but criminal by any definition. By virtue of their “seniority” I am told and “their ability to do a good job” they have been installed or re-installed by the current government where they can do us, the great unwashed, more damage again and proceed to walk off scot-free to display their administrative skills even when, God forbid, there is a return to MR1.
At this point, let me deal with a constant excuse I hear from the apologists for those creatures who wielded considerable power and exercised it with abandon more times than I care to remember. That excuse is, over and over again, “they were only doing their job.”
Those who operated the gas chambers at Auschwitz were also “only doing their job.” Do I have to be more explicit in the matter of my opinion of these functionaries who performed the bidding, without complaint, of those pulling the levers of power during MR1?
I don’t – and I don’t see how anybody pretending to even some basic code of morality or principle – subscribe to a system of forgiveness that not only permits these people’s transgressions being going unpunished but permits and encourages their elevation to positions of influence and power to do more of the same, in what amounts to a gesture of approval.                                  Read More

Defeating The Demons Of Our Past

Zeid Ra’ad Zeid al-Hussein
by Wimalanath Weeraratne
Sunday, February 14, 2016
We will not allow anyone to do whatever they want in collaboration with Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid al-Hussein of Jordan,” said a firebrand parliamentarian Namal Rajapaksa at a meeting held in Lunugamvehera. Addressing a public meeting in Kurunegala, former president and Kurunegala  District MP Mahinda Rajapaksa too expressed  views similar to that of his son, on the arrival of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to Sri Lanka. “Prince Hussein has come here and is looking for evidence,” shouted the one-time President at the top of his lungs, noting that had the war was still raging, his second son, Sri Lanka Navy Lieutenant Yoshitha Rajapaksa would not have been behind bars! “None of us would have any trouble and none of us would be hauled before Commissions,” he stressed.
Unfortunately, Sri Lanka has had to be led with Statesmen of that caliber. Those who would spread any falsehood or fabricated lie for his or her political survival. Of the public, handful who make any financial mileage from supporting such politicos, back them for their own petty gains.
Taking Prince Al-Hussein
MP Namal Rajapaksa has no understanding of diplomatic protocol and is more or less a chip of the old block. Making ludicrous allegations that the present United National Front for Good Governance (UNFGG) is taking the people for a ride and is hell bent on taking political revenge, he too goes around the country just like his father. Just like a drowning man will clutch at a straw, Rajapaksa too has now clung on to the Buddhist monks. In a way both Rajapaksas engaging in bankrupt, short-term politics is beneficial for the country, as they would not have a long term shot in dragging the country into  a darker stage, than what it was during the Rajapaksa regime.