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 19, 2016

FlyDubai plane crashes in Russia, killing all on board

Russian officials say plane carrying 62 passengers and crew crashed on landing in city of Rostov-on-Don.

It is not yet known what caused the plane to crash at the Rostov-on-Don airport [Sergei Pivovarov/Reuters]
FlyDubai began operating in 2009 and mostly uses Boeing 737 aircraft [File: Ali Haidar/EPA]




19 Mar 2016

At least 62 passengers and crew have died after a FlyDubai plane crashed during an attempted landing in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, Russian officials said.

A Russian investigative committee confirmed in a statement that all the people on board the plane, travelling from Dubai, were killed in the crash on Saturday morning.

"The aircraft hit the ground and broke into pieces," the committee said on its website. "According to preliminary data, there were 55 passengers aboard and seven crew members. They all died."

In a statement published on Twitter, the Dubai Media Office said 44 of the passengers were Russian, eight were Ukrainian, two were Indian and one was from Uzbekistan.

The plane was believed to be a Boeing 737 operated by Emirati airline FlyDubai, a budget airline with a new fleet of planes that started flying in mid-2009.


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Suicide bomb kills five, wounds 36 in Istanbul shopping district

A suicide bomber killed himself and four others in a central Istanbul shopping and tourism district on Saturday, wounding at least 36 people in the fourth such attack in Turkey this year.


ReutersBY NICK TATTERSALL AND ORHAN COSKUN-Sat Mar 19, 2016

The blast sent panicked shoppers scurrying into side alleys off Istiklal Street, a long pedestrian avenue lined with international stores and foreign consulates, a few hundred metres from an area where police buses are often stationed.

The attack will raise further questions about NATO member Turkey's ability to protect itself against a spillover of violence from the war in neighbouring Syria.

Turkey faces threats from Kurdish militants, whose insurgency has spread from the largely Kurdish southeast and who Ankara sees as closely linked to a Kurdish militia in Syria, and from Islamic State fighters, who have also recently targeted it.

Germany shut down its diplomatic missions and schools on Thursday, citing a specific threat. Meanwhile, U.S. and other European embassies had warned their citizens to be vigilant ahead of Newroz celebrations this weekend, a spring festival largely marked by Kurds which has turned violent in the past.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing, which two senior officials said could have been carried out by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), fighting for Kurdish autonomy in the southeast, or by an Islamic State militant.

Both groups have targeted Turkey in recent months. A PKK offshoot claimed responsibility for two suicide bombings in the capital Ankara over the past month, which killed a total of 66 people. Islamic State was blamed for a suicide bombing in Istanbul in January which killed at least 12 German tourists.

One of the officials said the bomber had planned to hit a more crowded location but was deterred by the police presence.

"The attacker detonated the bomb before reaching the target point because they were scared of the police," the official said, declining to be named as the investigation is ongoing.

Another official said investigations were focusing on three possible suspects, all of them male and two of them from the southern city of Gaziantep near the Syrian border. There was no further confirmation of this.

Armed police sealed off the shopping street where half a dozen ambulances had gathered. Forensic teams in white suits searched for evidence as police helicopters buzzed overhead.

"I saw a body on the street. No one was treating him but then I saw someone who appeared to be a regular citizen trying to do something to the body. That was enough for me and I turned and went back," one resident told Reuters.

Istiklal Street, usually thronged with shoppers at weekends, was quieter than normal as more people are staying home after a series of deadly bombings.

Health Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu confirmed that 36 people had been wounded, seven of those were in serious condition and at least 12 of them were foreigners.

Three Israeli citizens may be among those killed and 11 were injured, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman said, adding Israel was sending a plane to bring back some wounded.

Turkish officials said one Iranian and one Israeli were among the dead.

Ireland said "a number" of Irish were hurt, while broadcaster NTV said two Icelandic citizens were also injured.

INTERNATIONAL CONDEMNATION

Turkey is still in shock from a suicide car bombing last Sunday at a crowded transport hub in the capital Ankara which killed 37 people and a similar bombing in Ankara last month in which 29 died. A PKK offshoot claimed responsibility for both.

However, the Istanbul suicide bombing, which killed German tourists in January, struck at its historic heart and was blamed by the government on Islamic State.

The latest attack brought widespread condemnation.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, on an official visit to Istanbul, said it showed "the ugly face of terrorism", while France condemned it as "despicable and cowardly".

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg described the attack as "another terrorist outrage against innocent civilians and ally Turkey" on Twitter, while Germany urged tourists in Istanbul to stay in their hotels.

Turkey's Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), a Kurdish-rooted opposition party, condemned the bombing.
"Just as in the Ankara attack, this is a terrorist act that directly targets civilians," the HDP said in an e-mail.

Turkey is a member of the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. It is also battling the PKK in its own southeast, where a 2-1/2-year ceasefire collapsed last July, triggering the worst violence since the 1990s.

In its armed campaign in Turkey, the PKK has historically struck directly at the security forces and says it does not target civilians. However, recent bombings suggest it could be shifting tactics.

One of the Turkish officials said the PKK was looking to carry out attacks during the Newroz holiday.
The PKK's umbrella group said in a statement its movement opposed targeting civilians and condemned attacks on them.

At the height of the PKK insurgency in the 1990s, the Newroz festival often saw clashes between Kurdish protesters and security forces.

(Additional reporting by Ayla Jean Yackley, Asli Kandemir, Humeyra Pamuk and Daren Butler in Istanbul, John Irish in Paris, Paris Hafezi in Ankara, Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem, Hans-Edzard Busemann in Berlin; Padraic Halpin in Dublin; Writing by David Dolan and Nick Tattersall; Editing by Tom Heneghan and Alexander Smith)

Water apartheid in Gaza and Flint

A woman searches for water after Israel bombed her home during its 2014 attack on Gaza. Ezz ZanounAPA images

David Cronin-18 March 2016

At first glance, the nature of the water crises in Gaza and Michigan look very different. Gaza’s water infrastructure has been bombed repeatedly by Israel. Despite their many problems, the people of Flint andDetroit have been spared such overt brutality.

So why did women in Gaza send a message of compassion to women in Flint earlier this month?

The answer is simple: both are striving to hold the powerful to account for how the water on which they and their families depend has been contaminated.

The letter from Gaza to Flint — signed by various activists, including the prominent doctor Mona el-Farra — notes that Israel controls Palestinian water. The Israeli occupation steals from the coastal aquifer that is Gaza’s main source of water, prevents Palestinians from building sewage treatment facilities and forces them to buy water at prices they cannot afford.

Ordinary people in Flint do not enjoy any sovereignty when it comes to water, either.

Over the past few years, Rick Snyder, Michigan’s governor, has appointed a series of “emergency managers” — unelected technocrats, with powers to sell off public assets, invalidate union contracts and to undermine local democracy.

In 2014, Darnell Earley, one of these emergency managers, decided that Flint should begin using water from Flint River. That was despite how the Michigan authorities deemed water from the river to be unsafe for drinking.

Blood poisoning

The decision had rapid effects. Locals complained that the water from their faucets was discolored and unpalatable. A research team at Virginia Tech confirmed that the water in Flint was poisoned.

The level of lead detected, for example, in some samples was 13,000 parts per billion. The Environmental Protection Agency recommends that lead in water should be no higher than 15 parts per billion.

Across Flint, the number of children with above average levels of lead in their blood has almost doubled. In “high risk” areas, it has tripled.

The people of Gaza are grappling with similar problems.

During 2014, it was reported that 90 to 95 percent of Gaza’s water supply was unfit for drinking. The Palestinian Water Authority found that the aquifer on which Gaza depends was highly polluted with pesticides and untreated sewage.

Symptom of racism

Palestinians live under an apartheid system. And the impacts of apartheid are especially pronounced when it comes to water.

While Israeli settlers in the arid West Bank can enjoy the sight of well-irrigated floral displays and dips in swimming pools all year round, Palestinians have access to considerably less drinking water than the levels recommended by the World Health Organization.

Michigan’s water crisis is also a symptom of institutionalized racism.

Snyder and his predecessors have imposed emergency managers mainly on towns and cities with large Black populations, including Detroit and Flint.

In 2013, The Atlantic reported that the five cities in Michigan then under economic management contained just 9 percent of the state’s inhabitants. Yet about half of all Black people in Michigan lived in those cities.

Writing in The Nation last month, Juan Cole argued that just as Flint’s residents “had their access to a basic staple like clean water denied by decisions made by bureaucrats they did not elect, so the Palestinians of Gaza lack the basic rights of citizenship.”

The right to water has been recognized by the United Nations. Yet the dominant ideology treats water as a commodity.

It is only natural that alliances should be formed between defenders of the right to water in different cities and countries.

The government in my native Ireland, under pressure from its masters in Brussels and other EU capitals, has been trying to put control of water in the hands of a private company in recent years. The battle for the abolition of Irish Water, as the firm is called, has received support from activists in Michigan, Bolivia and Spain.

More than a few of Ireland’s right to water campaigners are also part of the Palestine solidarity movement. One such campaigner, Gino Kenny, has been elected to Dáil Eireann, the lower house in the national parliament. When his election was announced in late February, he celebrated by waving a Palestinian flag.

The gesture was appreciated by Palestinians — not surprisingly so. Struggles for justice will always be intertwined.

Additional research by Jimmy Johnson.
On Iraq's faultline: Kirkuk governor calls for vote on Kurdish autonomy 
Kirkuk's ties with Iraq's Kurdish region are building, but its governor says he will not turn his back on Baghdad without securing best deal for city

Najmaldin Karim on the frontline outside Kirkuk (AFP) 
Children at a school in Kirkuk, which has been spared the worst of the war against IS (AFP)

Florian Neuhof-Saturday 19 March 2016

Kirkuk, IRAQ - On the streets of Kirkuk, a heavy security presence is keeping a lid on terrorism attacks tearing apart other areas of Iraq, but a palpable sense of tension remains.
Uniformed men are stationed at almost every junction, traffic slows at checkpoints and flows past blast walls protecting police stations and public buildings. The busy roads contrast with empty pavements lined with run-down houses and shabby convenience stores.
On the city's rim, the Kurdish Peshmerga have established themselves in bases once housing the Iraqi army, feeding men and material into the front lines holding the Islamic State group at arms length.
Cut lose from Baghdad's control, subject to competing claims, and eying autonomy, few cities embody the creeping disintegration and uncertain future of Iraq better than oil-rich but decaying Kirkuk.
The city and wider province is part of the so-called disputed territories that Kurdish troops were able to occupy when the Iraqi army collapsed under the IS onslaught in 2014. 
These territorial gains and the weakness of the government in Baghdad emboldened the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in its quest for an independent state. It is the stated objective of long-time President Massoud Barzani, who has called for a referendum on Kurdish independence to be held this year.
For Kirkuk's governor Najmaldin Karim, this represents a chance to force a decision on city's future. But a referendum on whether Kirkuk should become part of the KRG, outlined in Iraq's constitution, has failed to get off the ground, and the governor believes that the two mooted votes should be merged.
"If there is a referendum for Kurdistan, that should include Kirkuk as well," Karim tells Middle East Eye during an interview in his heavily guarded compound in the city centre.
After the fall of the Saddam Hussein in 2003, the city became part of the territories claimed by both the KRG and the central government in Baghdad, which straddle the autonomous Kurdish region and stretch from the Iranian to the Syrian border.
Sometimes referred to as the "Kurdish Jerusalem", the city is integral to Kurdish nationalism and  a central plank in secessionist aspirations.
 See more>>>

Putin’s Master Plan for Syria

The Kremlin isn't withdrawing from the war-torn country, it's hoping to translate its recent gains into a diplomatic victory.

Putin’s Master Plan for Syria BY RANDA SLIM-MARCH 18, 2016

After first surprising the world by entering the fray in Syria last year, Vladimir Putin again shocked observers by announcing he was partially pulling out. On March 14, the Russian president declared his objectives “generally accomplished” and announced the withdrawal of part of his Russian military forces in Syria.

While it is too early to know the scope of the Russian withdrawal, it is safe to assume that it does not amount to an exit from Syria à la the 2011 U.S. withdrawal from Iraq. Putin will keep enough military assets in Syria to redeploy his forces there when he chooses to do so — he said on Thursday that Russia could scale up its presence again “within a few hours,” and on Friday his Defense Ministry announced that it was carrying out roughly two dozen daily air sorties to support the Syrian regime’s advance on the eastern city of Palmyra. Russia will also maintain a naval base in Tartus and the Hmeymim air base, along with hundreds of troops to protect them. Plus, Putin will keep the Russian S-400 air-defense systems to deter Turkey from shooting down another Russian airplane.

Any talk of this “partial” withdrawal shifting the tide of the Syrian war in favor of the opposition is wishful thinking. Moscow went into Syria to prevent the military defeat of Bashar al-Assad’s regime and to shore him up in the long term. These two objectives are the primary drivers of Russia’s Syria policy. Moscow believes these objectives have been achieved — but if it believes the regime’s survival is threatened again, it will not hesitate to redeploy its forces.

But for now, Putin clearly believes that Assad’s position is secure. Given the military equation on the ground and the geopolitical realities — notably the reluctance of the United States to engage in military action in Syria — Moscow is confident that another threat to regime survival will not materialize anytime soon.

Putin’s withdrawal announcement put the well-honed and time-proven spin machine of the Syrian regime to the test, as Damascus scrambled to make the case it wasn’t being abandoned by Russia. But Moscow is clearly exasperated with Assad’s inflexibility, as it believes the Syrian regime should parlay its recent military gains into a negotiating advantage at the ongoing peace talks in Geneva. The Syrian government, meanwhile, has shown little appetite for negotiating about the country’s political future at all.

The troubled relationship between Moscow and Assad is not a recent development. On Nov. 27, 2012, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said Moscow has “good working relations” with Assad — but not the “privileged relation” that existed with his father, Hafez al-Assad. Over the past five years, Assad ignored numerous requests and recommendations made by Putin to adopt confidence-building measures toward the opposition, including the release of political prisoners.

During the first four years of the Syrian conflict, Moscow did not invite Assad to the Kremlin — despite numerous requests from Damascus. Assad wanted the symbolism of a handshake with the Russian president at a time when he was persona non grata in international and regional capitals except in Tehran. It was only in October of last year that the Kremlin finally granted Assad’s long-held wish of a photo op with Putin. For the Russian president, this was an opportunity to reaffirm to his domestic audience that his military intervention came at the request of the Syrian regime and to press his case to Assad in a face-to-face meeting that the only solution in Syria is a diplomatic settlement with the participation of all political forces and groups, including armed opposition groups.

Over the last two months, Moscow’s growing disenchantment with the regime has been on public display. In a Feb. 18 rebuke to Assad’s professed objective of wanting to regain control over all the Syrian territory, Russian U.N. envoy Vitaly Churkin said Assad’s remarks “do not chime with the diplomatic efforts that Russia is undertaking.”

The gap between Moscow and Damascus only widened after Churkin’s remarks. After Assad issued a Feb. 22 presidential decree that scheduled parliamentary elections for April, Moscow reminded him that presidential and parliamentary elections were to be held after the opposition and the government had drawn up a new constitution. The Syrian foreign minister’s recent talk of a red line ahead of the Geneva negotiations was also not well received in Moscow.

But none of their squabbling should suggest that Putin is preparing to dump Assad. While Moscow does not want to be held hostage by the Syrian regime, it has no option but to continue dealing with Assad’s leadership. Despite his troubled relationship with Damascus, Putin did not hesitate to send in his air force when its military fortunes were failing.

So far,Russian diplomacy on Syria has re-established it as a key regional player. Moscow’s co-sponsorship of the International Syria Support Group (ISSG), a coalition of 20 countries and organizations designed to facilitate a diplomatic solution, cements Russia’s status as an international power to be reckoned with and ensures that future political arrangements in Syria secure its interests.
Moscow and Washington’s collaboration within the framework of the ISSG cease-fire task force produced a cessation of hostilities agreement, which, though not perfect, has led to a significant reduction in violence in Syria. It also facilitated humanitarian access to some besieged areas, even though recent reports indicate that the Syrian government has again stalled on granting permission for aid deliveries to besieged areas.

Mutual concessions made by Russia and the United States paved the way for this collaboration. At the request of Russia and China, no references were made to Assad in U.N. Security Council resolution 2254, which offered a roadmap for a cease-fire and a peace process to end the conflict in Syria. Russia, meanwhile, dropped its insistence on excluding Ahrar al-Sham and Jaish al-Islam from the cessation of hostilities and decided to live with the creative ambiguity that excluded the so-called Islamic State, al-Nusra Front, “or other terrorist organizations designated by the U.N. Security Council.”

This collaboration between the United States and Russia is also based on an understanding that unilateral, but coordinated, actions against the Islamic State are more realistic than joint actions. Despite its claims that it is fighting “terrorists” in Syria, Moscow has used the bulk of its firepower to target non-Islamic-State-affiliated rebel groups, with the aim of consolidating the Syrian regime areas that are crucial to its survival. Moscow believes that the Islamic State is more of a threat to U.S. and Western interests than to Russia, notwithstanding the presence of Chechen and other Russian fighters in Syria.

Going forward, Putin’s ability to play peacemaker in Syria will be tested in two ways during negotiations. First, he must reach an accommodation with the United States. Then, he must convince his allies in Damascus and Tehran to abandon their maximalist positions about the outcome of a political solution to the conflict.

Russia and the United States are still divided over key issues, including the composition and mandate of the transitional authority, Assad’s role in the transition, which rebel groups should be defined as terrorists, and the role of transitional justice in a peace agreement.

Moscow and Washington do seem to have made progress in resolving their disagreements about decentralization in post-Assad Syria. Having abandoned its early concerns that decentralization could result in the dissolution of the country, Russia is now open to the idea that a federal model could apply to a future Syria, if the Syrians agreed to it. On Thursday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that while Moscow wants Syria to remain united, “it is the Syrians themselves who must choose power structure of their country.”

The fate of Assad will be Putin’s key test with Iran. Both Tehran and Moscow will not spare any effort to keep Assad in power in the absence of a political agreement. Where they still differ is whether a power-sharing arrangement that guarantees their respective interests in Syria is possible without Assad playing a role in it — though not necessarily leading it. A power-sharing arrangement that includes regime elements but not Assad might be acceptable to Moscow, but not to Tehran. To date, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which is in charge of Iran’s Syria policy, still sees Assad as a guarantor that Syria will not become a base for carrying out a regional anti-Iranian and anti-Hezbollah agenda.

Russia has an old network of formal and informal relations throughout Syrian regime structures and Syrian society. On the other hand, Iran’s principal interlocutor in Syria has always been Assad. Since his assumption of power in 2000, Assad invested more time and effort in strengthening his relationship with Tehran and Hezbollah than with any other country or party — an investment that, in his opinion, has now been vindicated.

Putin’s decision to withdraw some of his troops from Syria will reinforce Assad’s view that his bet on Tehran and Hezbollah was correct. This will make Putin more dependent on Tehran’s willingness to assist him in reining in Assad in order to reach a political solution. It will also make Tehran, not Moscow, the indispensable signatory to any political agreement in Syria.

SERGEI CHIRIKOV/AFP/Getty Images

Malaysian government to monitor ‘deviant’ Muslim liberals

A Malaysian Muslim man walks towards a mosque for noon prayers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Pic: AP
A Malaysian Muslim man walks towards a mosque for noon prayers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Pic: AP

18th March 2016

THE Malaysian government is cracking down on “liberal Muslims” in the country, stepping up the monitoring of those deemed to have deviated from the Islamic faith.

Datuk Seri Jamil Khir Baharom, a minister in charge of Islamic affairs, said the government was also looking into censoring publications by so-called liberals, whether in print or on the Internet.

Reiterating the government’s stance against liberalism since 2006, Jamil said this was part of the government’s efforts to bring the deviants back to traditional religious teachings.

The decade-old declaration was made by National Fatwa Council, the federal oversight body responsible for issuing religious advice to the Muslim public.

According to The Star, Jamil said the liberal movements’ interpretations of the religion deviated from the faith and its Syariah laws.
“Among these beliefs are holding on to the concept of pluralism, believing that the human mind is a revelation, doubting the authenticity of the Quran, questioning the interpretation of the Quran and Hadith, pushing for new interpretations on the concept of worship, questioning prophetic morals and having their own methods of referring to Fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) punishment,”
Jamil said this in parliament on Thursday.

The minister said the crackdown would be a joint effort between various religious authorities, including the federal-run Islamic Development Department and state Islamic Affairs departments.

Fatwas, Jamil said, would be issued to contain the spread of the deviant teachings. However, Jamil suggested the crackdown would take a softer approach by holding talks and seminars with the groups.

“We will continue monitoring program on groups that have deviant beliefs and censor their publications on print and electronic media.

“Religious and enforcement authorities will also increase their cooperation against those with beliefs that are reported to be deviant,” he said.

'Rights'... soon to become a dirty word in Malaysia, alongside 'Democracy', 'Liberal', and any other word whose...http://fb.me/T9eYcNSm 

Liberal muslims- people who dare to question Jakim and Jamil Khir :)

The announcement appears to run contrary to Prime Minister Najib Razak’s push for the country to be seen as a moderate Muslim nation.

Jamil’s remarks also earned brickbats from a former law minister who defected to the opposition, Zaid Ibrahim, who called for Jamil’s arrest for endangering the country’s democratic principles.

Zaid said Jamil had only encouraged persecution against citizens for merely having different views, and this violated the country’s highest laws.

“As a Cabinet minister, he should know that this is a democratic country which means we have to respect the basic rights of the people. Just because he is not a liberal he can’t arrest me because I am a liberal.

“That is a violation of people’s basic rights,” Zaid was reported saying in The Malay Mail Online.

US Elections: I Have Never Seen Such Lunatics in the Political System – Chomsky

chomsky-inter

by Simone Chun

( March 18, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) Professor Chomsky was interviewed in Boston by the writer and activist Simone Chun for the Hankyoreh newspaper, South Korea. Here is the English translation of the interview, courtesy of Ms. Chun. She was accompanied in her first meeting with Prof. Chomsky in November 2015 (pictured) by Christine Ahn, the founder of Women Cross DMZ, which led a historic march across the North-South Korean border last May (full disclosure, Ms. Chun, Ms. Ahn and myself are all affiliated with the Korea Peace Institute).

Ms. Chun’s interview recently took place, at Professor Chomsky’s office at MIT. Here is the Q&A.
Chun: Do you feel that there will be any significant change in the foreign policy of the United States after President Obama?

Chomsky: If Republicans are elected, there could be major changes that will be awful. I have never seen such lunatics in the political system. For instance, Ted Cruz’s response to terrorism is to carpet-bomb everyone.

Chun: Would you expect that Hillary Clinton’s foreign policy would be different from President Obama’s?

Chomsky: Judging by the record, she is kind of hawkish—much more militant than the centrist democrats, including Obama. Take for instance Libya: she was the one pressing the hardest for bombing, and look at what happened. They not only destroyed the country, but Libya has become the center for jihad all over Africa and the Middle East. It’s a total disaster in every respect, but it does not matter. Look at the so-called global war on terror. It started in 15 years ago with a small cell in a tribal sector in Afghanistan. Now it is all over, and you can understand why. It’s about comparative advantage of force.
Chun: How about Bernie Sanders–what do you think his foreign policy will be?

Chomsky: He is doing a lot better than I expected, but he doesn’t have much to say about foreign policy. He is a kind of New Deal Democrat and focuses primarily on domestic issues.

Congolese activists on hunger strike after court refuses release

 Fred Bauma, left, and Yves Makwambala, who have been imprisoned for more than a year without a trial. Photograph: handout
 
 Lucha activists in Goma. Photograph: Tom Wilson

Tom Wilson in Kinshasa-Saturday 19 March 2016

Fred Bauma and Yves Makwambala among dozens of DRC youth group members in prison for demanding democratic change

Two Democratic Republic of Congo activists are on hunger strike after the supreme court rejected their application for release from jail, where they have been held for more than a year without trial.

Fred Bauma and Yves Makwambala, members of the youth group Struggle for Change (Lucha), were arrested on 15 March last year in a raid by security services on a meeting in Kinshasa. The government said at the time that the group was believed to be planning an attack against “state security”.

“The case [against them] is empty,” said their lawyer, Beaupaul Mutemba. “They have no basis on which to hold them.”

Nearly 30 members of Lucha are now in prison after 18 were arrested on Tuesday in Goma during a peaceful protest calling for Bauma and Makwambala’s release. Last month, six were sentenced to six months in prison for incitement to revolt after police found them making banners that called for political change in a private home.

Lucha, part of a growing youth movement on the continent, hopes to emulate the success of Balai Citoyen in Burkina Faso, which played a key role in mobilising popular opposition to former president Blaise Compaoré, who was overthrown in October 2014 after 27 years in power.

Lucha is smaller but expanding and is the kind of spontaneous, grass-roots organisation that has been rare in Congo’s history, activists say.

“The government is sacred of us because we are calling for change and we are not like the opposition groups it is used to dealing with,” said Lucha activist Luc Nkulula.

The group has no formal leadership, no political affiliation and no official membership roll. Decisions are made collectively and the only internal structures are the cells focused on communications, strategy, ideology and funding. “We have no single leader so the government does not know how to control us,” Nkulula said.

The US, France, Belgium and the United Kingdom have all expressed concern about the increasing repression of political and civil society groups in the DRC and the detention of Lucha activists.

DRC’s justice minister, Alexis Thambwe, defended the case against Bauma and Makwambala, adding that the detention of Lucha activists was justified. “You cannot lead protests on the street without authorisation,” Thambwe said. “It risks destabilising the country.”

The DRC is rebuilding after two civil wars that ended in 2003 after killing more than five million people. President Joseph Kabila, in power since 2001, has overseen a period of relative stability and economic growth but the majority of the 75 million people continue to live in poverty.

Opposition groups say Kabila intends to delay an election scheduled for November in a bid to hold on to power. He won elections in 2006 and 2011, but is constitutionally prevented from running for a third term.

In December, Lucha joined a civil society and opposition party platform called the Front Citoyen to push for elections to be held this year, although members acknowledge that voting will not address all of the DRC’s problems. “The election is not a guarantee for change, it is an opportunity.” Nkulula said.

When Lucha was founded in 2012 the group focused on demanding basic facilities for the crowded neighbourhoods of Goma in which they lived: water, electricity, employment, security, justice.

The DRC has been one of the fastest growing economies in the world for the last five years, driven by rising commodity prices and increased exports of copper, cobalt, gold and other key materials, but growth has rarely trickled down to the population.

In the past 12 months Lucha’s campaigns have become more political but the group remains skeptical of the motivations of the opposition parties it now works alongside. “We don’t want power for power, we want power for change,” Nkulula said. Unlike other civil society organisations Lucha has so far rejected any external funding support. It says it is committed to maintaining its independence.

Tom Perriello, the American special envoy to the Great Lakes, said recently that the US was “deeply disappointed” with the sentences and remained “deeply concerned” about the outstanding charges against Bauma and Makwambala.

At midnight on Monday the pair began a hunger strike in protest against their “illegal and arbitrary detention”, said Lucha spokesperson Tresor Akili. During Tuesday’s protest Lucha activists walked peacefully through Goma city centre with their mouths gagged and hands tied in a powerful visual demonstration of their opposition to the government’s crackdown on political freedoms.

Nkulula says the group’s inspiration is Patrice Lumumba, DRC’s liberation hero who was imprisoned and killed in 1961 by rival political factions only six months after being elected as the country’s first prime minister. Lubumba was 36 when he was assassinated. Most of Lucha’s activists are still under the age of 30, he added.

Detox-retox: are you yo-yoing between health and hedonism?

Toni Jones tries to find the balance between her punishment and reward lifestyle CREDIT: WARREN ALLOTT

Toni Jones
ProseccoHilary Gilbert
Gym? Or prosecco... CREDIT: WARREN ALLOTT--Hilary Gilbert of Boom Cycle is a fan of detox-retox

Telegraph.co.ukIt’s about putting good stuff in, not taking bad stuff out. This is the premise behind a bestselling new book, Retox, by Lauren Imparato. The 35-year-old yoga guru and wellness expert wrote Retox as an antidote to the self-righteous and strict wellbeing scene she encountered when setting up her first studio, iamyou, in New York in 2009. She believes that taking healthy to extremes, by cutting out things we love, actually does more harm than good and instead advocates “enjoying life in every way that works for body, mind and soul – whether that’s a solid sweat, a great meal, a song, or some wine with an old friend”.

In my new travel and fitness blog detox-retox.co.uk, I have defined the same word, “retox”, as the fun times we allow ourselves after dedicating time and effort to being kind to our bodies and brains. Both of these definitions, I think, play into a new trend for blending health and hedonism – “healthonism” as the cool hunters have dubbed it – and my friends and I are serious advocates of the movement.


Essentially, we like working out and we like going out, and we love the fact that the two aren’t mutually exclusive any more. It is now perfectly acceptable, I’ve noticed, to admit to having a hangover in my 6.30am Vinyasa class. A great day for me is being able to squeeze in a mindfulness session between an HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) class and happy hour. I love a “sober rave” – early morning exercise clubbing – to wake me up before work, but I also love late-night, not at all sober dancing on tables at parties or in clubs.

The trips to Ibiza that I’ve been taking for 20 years now include a brain and body detox at Formentera Yoga retreat to offset the wild nights out. The same punishment-reward patterns apply to the digital side of my life, too: although I’m a huge social media fan for both work and play, I try to squeeze in “screen-free Sundays” whenever I can.

I rationalise all this counterbalancing behaviour by telling myself that while I know it’s not particularly healthy to stay out drinking all night, surely my morning-after tonic of choice these days – aHemsley+Hemsley “Pink Liver Cleanse” smoothie – is better for me than the can of full-fat Coke and bacon butty I used to call a hangover cure?

Friday, March 18, 2016

Memorial pillar for journalists proposed in Jaffna

18 March 2016
 

Steps are being taken to construct a memorial pillar in Jaffna, in memory of journalists who have been killed in the line of duty.

Members of the Jaffna Press Club as well as the Working Journalists Association and Operational Group for Press Freedom put forward the proposal, ahead of a meeting between Tamil and Sinhala journalists later this month.

The meeting is part of a ‘Thalpathai – Panhidai’ Project due to take place on the 26th of March.

The Sri Lankan army held a meeting with a team from the Ministry of Parliamentary Reforms and Mass Media to discuss the project earlier this week.

LOCAL GOVT ELECTIONS CAN NOT BE POSTPONED MORE THAN A YEAR; HOLD THEM – JVP

Anura Kumara
Anura Kumara



09-19-2013srilankaelect

Sri Lanka Brief18/03/2016
About one year has passed since the terms of local government councils have expired. However, no election has been announced. Majority of the local government councils ended their terms on 31st December last year. After that day the period of councils with councilors was extended until 15th May. As such, those local government councils should be dissolved now and an election called.


Local government councils are institutions of people’s representatives that are very close to the daily lives of common people. Daily issues such as repairing roads in the area, disposing garbage, replacing street lamps, little children’s’ pre-school education are connected with local government councils. As a result of dissolving local government administration of these institutions is handled by officials who have no connection with the people. they have no responsibility for the people. The councilor, who is the representative of the people, with whatever shortcomings, pays attention to people’s issues. As such, the administration of people’s representatives is important for the people. As a result of officials carrying out administration nearly for a period of one year the ser vice for the people has completely broken down. The issues that affect people have become an utter mix-up. As such, elections for the local government councils should be held soon.

The only reason the government comes out with to postpone elections is the issue of  demarcating electoral boundaries  in the new Draft Local Government amendment Bill of 2011. According to the bill a Delimitations Commission was appointed to propose boundaries for electorates. There are many errors in the proposals. The government states the errors have to be corrected before the elections are held. We too believe that errors regarding proposed boundaries should be corrected. For, the delimitation process  was carried out according to wishes of former  Minister Basil Rajapaksa of the former government. The delimitation of electoral divisions was done to gain more power. An electorate was created by collecting villages sympathetic to the UPFA. In certain areas Muslims and Tamils would be denied the opportunity to elect their representatives due to the wrong delimitation of electoral divisions. Hence, the proposed delimitation process was to strengthen the power  of the then government.

The present government, on the pretext of this wrong  delimitation of electoral process, postpones elections. About 6 months ago Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe making a special statement in the supreme Parliament, as they want to call it, said local government elections would be held before the next April. The same Prime Minister now postpones the election promised to be held in April to December. The real issue is not delimitation process. President Maithripala hopes to postpone the election and to conceal the division that has cropped up in the SLFP.

The whole country knows there is a division in the SLFP. It has come on stage. One faction functions with the party only with certain moves. However, if an election is held this division would occur officially. The President postpones elections to prevent this happening. Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe thinks the present political situation is not healthy for the UNP. The Prime Minister agrees to postpone elections hoping that the end of the year would be advantageous for him. The needs of Maithri and Ranil have become one.
Maithri – Ranil government should pay attention to the mandate it received. How were elections held during Rajapaksa regime? After Thoppigala was captured an election was held. After Mankulam was overrun another election was held. When Killinochchi was captured another election was held. Elections were held when the time was advantageous for the government. Not a single election for a provincial council or a local government council was held at the due time.

This election game became a boomerang against Rajapaksas. Mahinda had to come down of the throne two years ahead as the election was held two years before the due time. Such are the bad experiences of the election game. People defeated the election game played by Rajapaksas. As such, the present rulers too should not be allowed to make elections a betting game.

Former Commissioner of Elections has said there are more than 44 errors in the new electoral act. according to this act a political party needs Rs.25 million to keep security deposits. Only a political party that is involved in rackets and thuggery. Also, there is a wrong counting process to determine the winner. Due to these errors we opposed this act in Parliament. Mr. Athaulla, the Minister then, agreed to amend it. The act had drastic errors regarding delimitation process and counting votes.

Also, there is a dialogue in the country regarding a new constitution. the main topic here is the electoral system. the Parliament ahs been changed to a Constitutional Assembly to commence discussions. there shouldn’t be separate systems for provincial councils, local government councils and the Parliament. Our proposal is that there should be a common system for all bodies. Hence we emphasize that the election for local government councils should be held before 31st March.

Local government elections cannot be put off for more than a year in a situation like today where emergency regulations are not operative. Hence, the government is attempting to postpone elections through a new bill. The government enact laws not for the benefit of the people or to establish democracy. The serious issue here is that Maithri – Ranil regime does not act according to the mandate of the people. We would commence moves to win an election. Also, at the next Parliamentary session we would ask for a two day debate on postponing elections. These rulers have always acted to get power and to maintain it. they have made democracy a football. they kicked it in directions they wanted. Hence, Maithri – Ranil regime should end this political game.

Excerpts from the speech mde by the Leader of the JVP Anura Dissanayaka  at a press conference held at the head office of the JVP at Pelawatta on 17th March 2016.
– Courtesy Lanka T