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

Saturday, March 5, 2016


[ சனிக்கிழமை, 05 மார்ச் 2016, 01:52.34 PM GMT ]
குளியாப்பிட்டியில் எயிட்ஸ் நோய் குற்றச்சாட்டில் பாடசாலையை விட்டு நீக்கப்பட்ட சிறுவனை பிரதியமைச்சர் ரஞ்சன் ராமநாயக்க நேரில் சென்று பார்வையிட்டுள்ளார்.
பிரதேச வாசிகளுக்கு எயிட்ஸ் தொடர்பான தெளிவினை வழங்க பிரதிமைச்சர் ரஞ்சன் ராமநாயக்க அங்கு விஜயம் ஒன்றை மேற்கொண்டதுடன், பலரின் விமர்சனத்திற்கு மத்தியில் விரக்தியில் வாழும் அக்குடும்பத்திற்கு ஆறுதலையும் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
அதுமட்டுமின்றி, தேவையற்ற பயம் காரணமாக அப்பாவி மாணவன் ஒருவரின் கல்வியை தடுக்க வேண்டாம் என பிரதிமைச்சர் அப்பிரதேச மக்களை வேண்டிக் கொண்டார்.
அத்துடன் எயிட்ஸ் இருப்பதாக குற்றம் சாட்டப்பட்ட சிறுவனுக்கு எதுவும் இல்லை.. அவருடன் எல்லோரும் வழமை போல் பழகும்படி கூறி, பிரதிமைச்சர் ரஞ்சன் அச்சிறுவனை தன்னுடன் அணைத்துக் கொண்டது பலருக்கும் நெகிழ்ச்சியை வரவழைத்தது.
இலங்கை அநேகான பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் மற்றும் அமைச்சர்கள் உள்ள நிலையில், குறிப்பாக சிங்கள பிரதேசத்தில் ரஞ்சன் ராமநாயக்கா போன்றவர்களின் செயற்பாடுகளே நிம்மதியைத் தருவதாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள் கருத்துத் தெரிவித்திருந்தமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

Eat to live , not live to eat ! 95 % of Parliamentary staff are cholesteral patients !!

LEN logo
(Lanka-e-News -05.March.2016, 11.45PM)  Over 95 % of the parliamentary staff are cholesterol patients , it has come to light. Even a 29 years old parliament employee is having a chlolesterol level as high as 295, it was  revealed.
These revelations were made following a free clinic conducted for the staff of the parliament on the 2 nd. An opportunity was provided to every parliamentary staff member to do a Rs. 17000.00 worth  medical examination free.  
Medical specialists led by  Health education bureau Director and medical specalist Amal Harsha De Silva conducted this clinic , and this alarming situation was revealed by  their reports. 
It is being suspected that this alarming cholesterol percentage of over 95 % is due to  the food served in the Parliamentary canteen. Because the canteen food is of super luxury hotel level equivalent to a five star hotel , and are  served free , every employee has his meals there. It was evident though the food was super luxury , it had no nutrimental value. 
With the participation of speaker and deputy speaker Karu Jayasuriya and Thilanga Sumathipala respectively , this clinic was conducted. 
A political analyst commenting on this clinic said , if a psychiatric clinic was also conducted side by side with this for the people’s representatives , undoubtedly it would have come to light 60 % of them are  suffering from chronic or serious  mental ailments going by their conduct and greed. 
Eat to live and not live to eat must be the policy. While the average citizen of the country is thinking every day what meal he should skip to eke out a living , our selfish self fattening  gluttonous politicos have only  one thought  , what super luxury five star hotel they should visit to gourmandize all the time. This is what is making them sick mentally , physically  and neglect their duties . 
---------------------------
by     (2016-03-06 01:16:37)

Champika’s ‘Mega’ Hit-and-Run


 BY Cassendra Doole and Premalal WiJeyratne - 2016-03-06
Senior Western Province DIG Pujith Jayasundara has commenced investigations into last Saturday's accident in which Megapolis and Western Province Development Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka was allegedly involved.

The investigations commenced yesterday under orders of the acting Inspector General of Police S.M. Wickremesinghe when two eyewitnesses who gave chase to Minister Ranawaka filed an affidavit at the Sri Lanka Police Headquarters on Friday evening. The investigation will be directed by DIG Kapila Jayasekara and Nugegoda Senior Superintendent of Police Mahesh Gunasekara.
DIG Jayasundara said statements will be taken from the Police Officers of the Weilkada Police Division who were present when the two witnesses lodged complaints and from Minister Ranawaka as well.

Underworld Going Under; Minister Of Law & Order In Slumber


Colombo TelegraphMarch 5, 2016
A spate of shootings over the past few days has killed and injured several persons including underworld bigwigs.
Sagala Ratnayaka - Minister of Law & Order
Sagala Ratnayaka – Minister of Law & Order
The latest in a series of shootings occurred Friday morning where 41-year-old Nilantha Champika alias Boralu Nilantha was shot dead by unidentified gunmen when he was riding a motorcycle in Kochchikade.
On Thursday, another individual was killed in a shooting that took place in Obeysekarapura where again two unidentified gunmen had come and opened fire on 32-year old Harsha Yasasri, who succumbed to his injuries after been rushed to the National Hospital.
Yasasri was a resident of Matara and involved in a number of crimes including the murder of ex-Provincial Councilor Danny Hittetiya.
On Wednesday, notorious underworld figure Chaminda Ravi Jayanath alias ‘Dematagoda Chaminda’, a suspect in the murder of Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra sustained injuries after gunmen shot at himwhen he was travelling in the prison bus in Dematogoda.
Following this incident, authorities are looking at the possibility of using vehicles with tinted windows to ensure the safety of the prisoners, among several other precautionary measures.

Pregnant woman injured in shooting outside Welikada Prison

Pregnant woman injured in shooting outside Welikada Prison
logoMarch 5, 2016
A pregnant woman was wounded and rushed to the Colombo National Hospital following a shooting incident near the Welikada Prison in Borella. 
The incident had occurred at around 3.50pm today opposite the Welikada Prisons. A woman who had come to visit a prison inmate was injured in the shooting, the police spokesman’s office said.
She is currently receiving treatment in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the National Hospital. 
Welikada Police have commenced an investigation into the incident. 
Just two days ago, a similar shooting took place in Obesekarapura, Welikada.
A person was injured and admitted to the hospital after two persons who arrived in a motorcycle opened fire at him. 

Police nab a person who issued fake sand transport licenses

Police nab a person who issued fake sand transport licenses

- Mar 05, 2016
The Hungama police yesterday 4th have nabbed a 52 year old person from the Kottawa Bangalawatta area who have printed fake sand transport licenses and sold each for Rs. 4000 to illegal sand racketeers. The person has been caught with 44 fake sand transport licenses, 106 official stamps, a computer, printing machine with special printing papers.

On the 3rd of this month when a when a police constable 4448 attached to the Hungama police during his duty has inspected a tipper transporting sand, had a doubt of its license and while questioning got revealed about a person from Kottawa who print fake license and sell.
 
Under the instruction of the Tangalle ASP Sudathmasinghe with the OIC of the Hungama police P. Chadrasena and his police team has deployed a police constable as fake sand racketeer and sent to this illegal printer and made him agree to print 20 transport licenses.
 
Later on the 4th morning while collecting the fake licenses the police has arrested him along with the fake licenses at the Kottawa area.
When questioning the suspect he has said he is operating this racket for the last so many years and he has forgotten how many fake licenses he has issued. The suspect has said according to the buyer’s demand he has printed these licenses and sold them to buyers from the Kottawa and Embilipitiya area. The suspect would be produced to the Angunukolapelessa courts.
 
Meantime official licenses for sand transport are issued by the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau by paying Rs. 50,000 monthly for the government but this suspect has sold a monthly sand license for Rs. 4000. He has sold these licenses to Rathnapura,
 
Hambanthota, Ambalanthota, Puttalam, Angunukolapelessa, Badulla, Batticaloa, Tricomalee and Monaragala areas. Due to this illegal racket the government has incurred a large loss and due to this, unqualified people also have bought this and indulged in this illegal racket. When inquired from ASP Tangalle Sudathmasinghe, he said the police would question the suspect and nab all the sand racketeers who bought this fake license and produce them before the law.
 
The investigations and the raid was conducted by the instructions of DIG Hambanthota Sumith Edirisinghe, under the supervision of SSP Tangalle Dhanapala, planned by the ASP Tangalle Sudath Masinghe and conducted by the OIC of the Hungama police and his team.

The Month in Pictures: February 2016

A Palestinian child stands in a home raided by the Israeli army during a search-and-arrest operation in the West Bank city of Hebron on 29 February.Wisam HashlamounAPA images
Muhammad Al-Qiq, a Palestinian prisoner on hunger strike, is seen in a hospital the town of Afula in northern Israel on 8 February. Al-Qiq launched his strike in late November after he was arrested from his West Bank home; Israel held him without charge or trial until Israel’s high court froze his detention order on 4 February after al-Qiq’s health deteriorated. Despite this, the court did not allow him to go free and Al-Qiq continued his hunger strike for three more weeks, demanding transfer to a Palestinian hospital, before reaching a deal with the Israeli authorities.Oren ZivActiveStills

4 March 2016
At least 17 Palestinians were killed, including seven children, during the month of February and three Israelis were slain as an unprecedented phase of violence in the occupied West Bank that began last October showed no signs of ebbing.

Most Palestinians were slain during what Israel alleges were attacks or attempted attacks, mainly targeting occupation forces. But in several cases, no Israelis were injured during the alleged attacks in which Palestinians — including children Qusay Abu al-RubNihad Waqed, Fuad WaqedNaim Ahmad Yousif Safi and Mahmoud Shaalan — were shot dead.

Six Palestinians were slain at the Damascus Gate to Jerusalem’s Old City during February, five of them during two separate armed attacks on Israeli Border Police, during which one officer wasfatally wounded. Another man was killed by Border Police in a third incident; his apparent execution after an alleged stabbing was caught on video by an Al Jazeera camera crew who were filming in the area.

An off-duty Israeli soldier was killed by friendly fire during an alleged stabbing at the entrance to the Gush Etzion settlement bloc – the site of several other attacks in recent months. Another off-duty Israeli soldier who held US citizenship was fatally stabbed in a supermarket in a West Bank settlement; the alleged attackers, both 14, were shot and seriously wounded. They are the youngest Palestinians to have killed an Israeli since October.

Two Palestinians, including a 16-year-old boy, were shot dead when Israeli soldiers opened fire on demonstrators during February.

Read More

Iraq is broke. Add that to its list of worries.



March 5

 Some Iraqi officials refer to it as “the gap,” and it is becoming as pressing a concern as the fight against the Islamic State.

Each month, Iraq’s government pays out nearly $4 billion in salaries and pensions to the military and a bloated array of public sector workers. But with more than 90 percent of government revenue coming from oil, it is bringing in only about half that as crude prices plunge.

The United States is stepping in to try to make sure the country can continue military spending while it seeks international loans and embarks on an austerity plan. Still, some Iraqi officials and analysts say the government might struggle later this year to pay the 7 million people on the public payroll, which could trigger mass unrest.

With oil prices hovering around $30 a barrel, the entire region is being forced to cut budgets, reduce state handouts and make other painful adjustments. But for Iraq, the decline comes in the midst of an already destabilizing war. There are bills for reconstructing flattened cities and assistance for 3.3 million Iraqis who have been internally displaced over the past two years, with more expected to come.

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Ferry sinks between Indonesian islands; over 50 rescued

Residents watch as rescuers search for survivors at the site where a ferry sank off Banyuwangi, East Java, Indonesia. The ferry capsized in the straits between the Indonesian islands of Bali and Java. Pic: AP.Residents watch as rescuers search for survivors at the site where a ferry sank off Banyuwangi, East Java, Indonesia. The ferry capsized in the straits between the Indonesian islands of Bali and Java. Pic: AP.

5th March 2016
MORE than 50 people were rescued from the sea after the passenger ferry they were on sank in waters between the Indonesian islands of Bali and Java.

Muhammad Arifin, head of the East Java’s search and rescue agency, said on Friday that more than 50 people have been rescued, adding that he didn’t know if all on board are accounted for.

MetroTV showed the ferry on its side in calm waters in Bali Strait.

The ship, named Rafelia II, was enroute from Gilimanuk port in Bali to Banyawangi on Java.

AsiaOne reported that the ship’s manifest listed 51 people on board, including 14 crewmen.

The Head of Bali’s Search and Rescue Agency, Didi Hamzar, said that the ship had been carrying many vehicles.

He added that it had been due to leaks that the ferry had capsized.

This amateur footage shows the moment the ferry capsized:
Turkish journalists 'prisoners in our own 

newsroom' after raid 

Zaman journalist says only a matter of time before staff are fired, after police raid offices of newspaper suspected of aiding 'terror group'
Turkish riot police clash with supporters at Zaman daily newspaper headquarters in Istanbul (AFP)
Turkish police forcefully disperse crowd outside headquarters of Zaman newspaper ow.ly/Z5Osf
Turkish police raid  opposition newspaper using tear gas, water cannon 

Alex MacDonald-Saturday 5 March 2016
Journalists at the Turkish Zaman newspaper have reported turning up to work on Saturday to find their office swarming with police, after officers launched a late-night raid to take the building and business over.
“We're now prisoners in our newsrooms under heavy police presence inside Zaman building,” said journalist Abdullah Bozkurt on Twitter.
The paper was raided on Friday under the suspicion that it was acting on orders from the “Fethullahist terror organisation,” a group headed by the US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, an ally-turned-enemy of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

On Friday, trustees were appointed by the government to take over Feza Media Group, which includes the Zaman newspaper, the English-language Today’s Zaman and the Cihan News Agency.
Bozkurt, who works for Today's Zaman, told Middle East Eye that his company accounts, including email, had already been closed down without explanation.
About 500 supporters of the newspaper demonstrated outside the offices on Saturday and were met with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannons from the police, while employees chanted “the free press cannot be silenced”.
Speaking to Middle East Eye from the Zaman offices, Mustafa Edib Yilmaz, the paper’s foreign news editor, said police had set up barriers and were checking everyone entering or leaving.
“People are only allowed in after they give their IDs, their names are noted down,” he said.
“I don’t know what is awaiting us in the next few hours, if there will be a newspaper at all for tomorrow, or what it will look like if there will be any. That is pretty much uncertain.”

How China Won the War Against Western Media

The one-two punch of censorship plus propaganda has discredited Western journalism in the eyes of many Chinese.
How China Won the War Against Western Media

BY BETHANY ALLEN-EBRAHIMIAN-MARCH 4, 2016
Just how biased do Chinese think Western media is against China? Wang Qiu, a member of China’s legislature and head of state-owned broadcaster China National Radio, claimed he had an answer: Sixty percent of all mainstream Western media reports smear China. Wang did not say where he found the absurd statistic, but he did use it to argue that criticism harmed China. “During economic development, it’s normal for a few problems to appear,” he remarked in March 2015 during China’s annual legislative meeting. “If these problems are magnified, China will no longer be able to move forward.”

Many Chinese share the idea that Western media outlets don’t cover China fairly. Chinese state media outlets and Chinese government spokespeopleregularly claim that Western media plays up China’s weaknesses, exaggerates its potential as a regional threat, and ignores its successes. “Why is Western media biased against China?” was a question posed to me dozens of times during the four years I resided there — from street vendors in Beijing to students in Nanjing to taxi drivers in the ancient capital of Xi’an.

Yet it’s odd that, in a country which ranks a dismal 176 out of 180 for media freedoms, comes in last in an 88-country ranking for Internet freedom, and which operates the largest state propaganda apparatus in the world, the conversation regularly centers around perceived media bias elsewhere. The ubiquity of this idea is the result of what has been one of Chinese state media’s most successful propaganda campaigns — so effective that the term “Western media” in Chinese often has a negative connotation. 

Even foreign media commentators themselves sometimes echo it. Consider, for example, this 2010 podcast from Sinica, a popular series run by Beijing expats; the arguments presented in this widely read 2015 post by Kaiser Kuo, the director for international communications at Chinese search giant Baidu; and the questions posed in this January question-and-answer with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Barboza.

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Chinese Government Prepares to Sack Millions of Workers

chinese_workers
by John Ward and Peter Symonds

( March 4, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) In the lead-up to the National People’s Congress (NPC) starting on Saturday, the Chinese government has announced massive layoffs in state-owned enterprises in coal and steel. Further sackings in other basic industries are being foreshadowed in moves that will result in millions of workers losing their jobs and heightened political and social tensions.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leadership has delayed taking steps to deal with huge overcapacities in heavy industry and so-called zombie companies—state-owned enterprises (SOEs) kept on life support via low-interest bank loans—for fear of triggering widespread social unrest. However, amid a slowing economy and concerns about mounting debt, the regime has signalled a swathe of sackings.

Premier Li Keqiang told top economic advisers in December: “We must summon our determination and set to work. For those ‘zombie enterprises’ with absolute overcapacity, we must ruthlessly bring down the knife.” Li will present his yearly work report to the NPC which will also deliberate on the 13th Five-Year Plan that sets the economic guidelines for the government.

On Monday, the employment and welfare minister Yin Weimin announced that capacity in the coal and steel industries would be drastically reduced with 1.8 million workers losing their jobs—1.3 million coal miners and 500,000 steel workers. The figure was a sharp increase from just a few days before when industry minister Miao Wei declared that one million jobs would go in coal and steel.

A Reuters report on Tuesday based on unnamed government sources indicated that the government is planning to slash capacity in as many as seven sectors, including cement, glassmaking and ship building leading to around six million jobs being destroyed in the next three years.

The emergence of huge overcapacities in China’s basic industries is intimately bound up with the continuing worldwide economic slump that has followed the 2008-09 global financial crisis. The CCP leadership reacted to the collapse of exports and the loss of 20 million jobs with massive stimulus packages and a flood of cheap credit that fuelled a speculative property bubble.

Like governments around the world, Beijing calculated that the crisis was temporary and export growth would resume once the major capitalist economies recovered. Basic industry expanded, spurred on by infrastructure projects, construction and a continuous supply of cheap credit. However, export markets have stagnated, property and infrastructure investment is slowing and the much vaunted “transition” to a service economy has failed to prop up growth rates.

The slowing Chinese economy, now the world’s second largest, is already reverberating internationally. Falling Chinese demand for basic industrial inputs has contributed to the collapse in world commodity prices which is now severely impacting on commodity exporting countries such as Brazil, Russia, South Africa, Australia and Canada.

The excess capacities in China are enormous. Estimated steel overcapacity jumped from 132 million tonnes per year in 2008 to 327 million tonnes in 2014—a figure that is more than three times greater than the total output of Japan, the world’s second largest producer. Over the same period, overcapacity for cement nearly doubled from 450 to 850 million tonnes, for oil refining leapt from 77 to 230 million tonnes and for flat glass jumped from 76 million to 215 million weight cases.

According to the Financial Times, 42 percent of all SOEs lost money in 2013. Total profits for such groups fell in absolute terms last year for the first time since 2001. The gap in return on assets between SOEs and private firms is now the largest in two decades. Government intervention to slash overcapacity could place further stresses on the financial and banking system as SOEs account for an estimated 50 percent of all commercial debt.

Already there are deep concerns about mounting bad loans. A report last month by the European Chamber of Commerce in China stated that non-performing loans (NPLs) had risen by $US76 billion during the first ten months of 2015 to about $291 billion, a 35 percent increase.

The Chinese government’s plans to slash overcapacities and jobs will hit some areas of the country much harder than others, exacerbating regional tensions. Provincial and local governments have often kept “zombie” SOEs afloat through the provision of loans so as to avoid mass layoffs and rising social unrest. 

The so-called rust-bucket region in the northeast of the country where unemployment is already high will be particularly badly affected.

The CCP is seeking to forestall widespread resistance in the working class by providing funds for retraining and job seeking. Industry minister Miao Wei announced last week that 100 billion yuan ($US15.3 billion) would be provided to support displaced steel and coal workers. However, steel worker Gao Jianqiang told the China Daily last week: “There are just too many factories that are not doing well. One-hundred billion yuan sounds like a huge sum, but I do not think it will solve problems for everyone.”

Many of those who lose their jobs will simply not find work elsewhere. In January, China International Capital Corp (CIIC), the country’s largest merchant bank, predicted that 30 percent of the 10 million people employed in the coal, steel, electrolytic aluminium, cement and glass industries would lose their jobs in the next two years.

The CIIC report concluded that a million of these workers would not find a new job. That estimation was based on the results of the last round of mass job losses in SOEs in the late 1990s when 21 million workers were sacked. Only two thirds found work or were transferred to other jobs.

China’s growth rate in the 2000s, however, averaged 10 percent and peaked at over 14 percent in 2007. Now, however, it is officially 6.9 percent and slowing. Jobs are being destroyed not only in heavy industry but also in the manufacturing export sectors. The official unemployment rate is 4 percent but some estimates, such as research by the National Bureau of Economic Research, put the real figure at close to 10 percent.

The Business Insider last week reported that millions of migrant workers were returning after the New Year break to an uncertain future, “as smaller factories in particular struggle to cope with anemic orders and rising inventories.” Exports from Guangdong province, one of China’s major manufacturing hubs, are predicted to grow by just 1 percent this year.

There are already signs of growing opposition among workers to plans for mass retrenchments. Figures produced by the Hong Kong-based China Labour Bulletin have shown a sharp rise in the number of strikes for 2015 to 2,774, twice as many as for 2014. In January, 504 strikes were recorded. The statistics are only a partial record as they rely on media and social media reports as well as local contacts.

Significantly on Tuesday, the day after the announcement that 1.3 million mining jobs would be destroyed, hundreds of coal miners in Anyuan in southeastern China marched through the city of Pingxiang. The local state-owned mining company has cut back production, laid off workers and told others to stay home on drastically reduced pay. As reported by the Washington Post, up to 1,000 workers from three mines carried banners declaring: “Workers want to survive, workers need to eat.”

The original source of this article is World Socialist Web Site
Copyright © John Ward and Peter Symonds, World Socialist Web Site, 2016

India says will ensure that banks are well-capitalised

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley (L) gestures as Junior Finance Minister Jayant Sinha watches during a news conference in New Delhi, India, August 14, 2015. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/Files

ReutersFri Mar 4, 2016
India has "good control" over stressed loans at state-owned banks and will ensure lenders are well-capitalised, junior finance minister Jayant Sinha said on Friday.

Speaking as senior officials from the banks, the Reserve Bank of India and the finance ministry held an annual meeting, Sinha said the government would allocate capital based on the banks' capital-adequacy ratios, performance and credit growth.

"We will provide more as necessary to ensure that our banks are well-capitalised," he told reporters.
"As far as the set of stressed assets is concerned, as far as the NPA (non-performing assets) situation is concerned, that we think we now have very good control over and of course (we are) working very closely with the RBI."

Some critics accused the government of skimping on a bailout for the ailing state banks after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley did not announce additional funding in his Feb. 29 budget.

He stuck to plans to provide state banks with 250 billion rupees ($3.7 billion) of new capital in the next financial year towards a sector-wide bailout that the government estimates will cost $26 billion over four years.

Stressed loans -- those that have already turned bad and those seen at risk of doing so -- amount to 8 trillion Indian rupees ($119 billion), or 11.25 percent of total loans, Sinha said on Friday.

A recent surge in bad loans at state-run lenders after their regulator ordered a clean-up has led rating agencies to suggest banks will need more capital support from the government to cover losses and meet Basel III global banking rules.

More than two-dozen state-run lenders account for over two-thirds of India's banking assets and some 85 percent of troubled loans in the financial sector.

($1 = 67.0630 rupees)

(Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy; Editing by Catherine Evans)

AHRC TV: JUST ASIA, Episode 112


AHRC LogoMarch 4, 2016
This week’s episode of Just Asia begins with the re-arrest of Indian activist Irom Sharmila, two days after being acquitted of attempted suicide charges. On hunger strike for the repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act causing widespread abuses in Manipur, Sharmila has been arrested and released several times over the past 15 years.

Moving to Indonesia, Just Asia reports that the Turn Left Cultural Festival was forcibly dispersed by Jakarta police due to pressure from intolerant groups. Meant to stimulate thought about Indonesia’s leftist history and revisit the violence of 1965, the police’s dispersal of the festival reveals their lack of independence.

In Thailand, a Conservation Group called on public officials to allow people’s participation in renewing a mining permit in a protected forest area of Loei province. Due to a sit-in by community activists, the permit renewal meeting was finally postponed until May.

Next, Just Asia covers the story of four Pakistani women who have been internationally recognized for their outstanding work. In one of the most conservative and patriarchal societies of the world, four women have challenged the status quo: Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy has made history as the only Pakistani to win two Oscars; Nergis Mavalvala is a member of the team that recently announced the scientific milestone of detecting Albert Einstein’s hypothesised gravitational waves; Malala Yousafzai received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 at the age of 18; and Shad Begum, an activist from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, received the International Women of Courage Award by the US in 2012.

Finally, in its Urgent Appeals Weekly, Just Asia reports two stories from Indonesia. In one, the Asian Human Rights Commission called upon the Indonesian Government to continue investigations into the brutal attack of two land rights activists. The second story documents the inadequate punishment given to four police officers of Sungailiat Police Resort for torturing and killing a suspect.

The bulletin can be watched online at AHRC TV YouTube. We welcome both human rights feeds to be considered for weekly news bulletin, and your suggestions to improve our news channel. Please write to news@ahrc.asia. You can also watch our Weekly Roundup on Facebook.

Starbucks signs up to campaign to support breastfeeding mothers

Mothers and babies in a Starbucks coffee shop in Enfield, north London. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

-Thursday 3 March 2016

Baristas have been given training in needs of parents with young children and in how to support them ‘without judgment’

Starbucks has promised to support breastfeeding mothers using its 800 UK outlets, making it the first high street chain to back a more parent-friendly approach.

The company has signed up to a campaign by the National Childbirth Trust (NCT)to encourage businesses to do more to help those feeding children, whether by breast, bottle or high chair.

Baristas have been given training in understanding the needs of parents with young children or babies and in how to support them “without judgment”.

Sarah McMullen, NCT head of research and quality, said: “We know from our members that many struggle with unwanted attention and comments on their feeding method whether it’s by breast, bottle or in a high chair, when out and about with their baby or child.

“It’s important that parents feel reassured they have the support of staff and won’t be judged. We also know that it can be a challenge for establishments to understand and assist with the needs of parents with very young children.”

Rhys Iley, vice-president of operations for Starbucks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, said: “We recognise that parents out on their own with very young children, sometimes for the first time, appreciate some support.

“Our collaboration with NCT and its members builds on our existing customer service principles and through working with NCT we have already refreshed our training and improved our facilities,” Iley said. “We hope parents of young children visiting our stores will let us know, there and then, if there is anything we can do to improve their experience.”

Last month, NCT was one of six organisations that wrote to the Guardian appealing for UK governments to play a more active part in promoting breastfeeding, saying the UK’s breastfeeding rates at 12 months were the lowest in the world.

Sex education failing women as survey finds consent and pleasure unspoken of in schools

Lyndsay Bassett, now a first-year student living on campus at the ANU, said sex education was letting down young women and men, including gay or lesbian students. Photo: Jeffrey Chan

The Border MailBy Matthew Raggatt-March 5, 2016
Three-quarters of young women believe sex education in schools left them unprepared for sex and dealing with relationships, a national survey has found.

Education gaps revealed in the survey included key issues such as consent, which nearly two-thirds of the women and girls aged 16 to 21 said they had not been taught, while only 40 per cent had learnt about relationships in formal school classes.

Erin Gillen from the Equality Rights Alliance's Young Women's Advisory Group, which co-ordinated the survey, said the missing knowledge could lead to deep consequences emotionally and risks to sexual health.

"Young people are not going to know what a healthy relationship is and they might mistreat someone or be mistreated themselves," she said.

"If you don't have an understanding of consent, you might consent to one act and not another, or you might do something that makes your partner uncomfortable."

Ms Gillen, from Canberra, said it was disappointing to find fewer than 9 per cent of the more than 1000 respondents received education on LGBTI and queer identities and only 7 per cent on pleasure.

"If you are not teaching all young people about pleasure, they can get the understanding that the only one who can get pleasure out of a sexual relationship is a man," she said.

"We think that has some ramifications for gender equality."

Lyndsay Bassett, 19, graduated from Narrabundah College last year and said she had no meaningful education on consent across her six years at secondary school, despite some discussions on respectful relationships. Sex being pleasurable for women was never mentioned.

She said this led to teenagers having to work out how to communicate themselves, causing complications within their relationships. "I learnt, but I don't know if it's enough to just say everyone will learn on their own," she said.

"I think a lot of young girls just assume the guy definitely wants sex and it's about his pleasure, and even if a girl doesn't want it for herself she'll say 'yes'," she said.

"If I could write the curriculum, I think I'd displace the emphasis from anatomy and put it on emotion and consent and respectful relationships."

More than 80 per cent of respondents said they had been taught about contraception and sexually transmitted infections and diseases. The survey was answered by a nearly even number of public and private school graduates, with 13 per cent of respondents from the ACT, but results were not broken down into school sector or state and territory.

Ms Gillen said there was "quite a good" national curriculum on offer on sex education, but this was not always being used by schools. Sometimes there was resistance from an ideological view, and in other cases teachers simply did not have the training to confidently cover some topics, she said.
Education Minister Shane Rattenbury was sent the survey results this week.

A spokeswoman for the ACT Education and Training Directorate did not comment on questions on the findings on pleasure nor directly refer to consent, but said the health and physical education section of the Australian curriculum provided a number of outcomes, supported by school-level programs, in relation to developing young people's understanding of interpersonal relationships and the health aspects of sex education.

The spokeswoman said there were "some gaps" on LGBTI issues in policies guiding schools, but these would be addressed by the creation of the safe and supportive schools policy and the respectful relationships respectful schools publication, both now in draft form.