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

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

The Ugly Side of Ethiopia’s Economic Boom

The East African country is facing its biggest protest movement in decades. Its uncompromising approach to development is to blame.

The Ugly Side of Ethiopia’s Economic Boom BY JACEY FORTIN-MARCH 23, 2016

ADAMA, Ethiopia — For those who would speak frankly about politics in this landlocked East African country, the first challenge is to find a safe space.

But on a recent evening in Adama, a city in the heart of a region reeling from the largest protest movement Ethiopia has faced in decades, most people seemed at ease. University students poured out of the city’s main campus, spilling into claustrophobic bars and pool halls. Others crowded around a cluster of aging taxis, jostling for a quick ride home.

Though it is one of the largest cities in Oromia — where members of Ethiopia’s Oromo ethnic group have taken to the streets in recent months in unprecedented numbers to protest their political and economic marginalization — Adama has remained mostly quiet. Hidden beneath the casual veneer of daily life, however, lurks a deep-seated suspicion of the government, which has built a massive surveillance apparatus and cracked down violently on its opponents.

Citizens feel they have to watch what they say, and where they say it. At the hangouts where crowds have gathered, a political statement might be overheard. Out on the sidewalks, government spies could be on patrol. Inside the university campus, security officials are on the lookout for suspicious behavior.

In a way, the recent unrest is rooted in Ethiopia’s rapid economic rise. The federal government claims to have notched double-digit GDP growth rates over the past decade, but its rigid, top-down approach to developing industry, and attracting foreign investment, has resulted in mass displacement and disrupted millions of lives. This, in turn, has heightened ethnic tensions that today threaten Ethiopia’s reputation for stability.

All across Oromia, government security forces have been struggling to control the spate of violent protests that erupted in November, partly in response to the government’s so-called master plan to coordinate development in Addis Ababa with nearby towns in Oromia, a sprawling central region that surrounds the capital on all sides.Like much of the country, the vast majority of Oromia is rural, home to small-scale farmers who feel left behind by the dazzling growth of Addis.

When this latest round of protests began last year, demonstrators seized on the master plan as symbolic of broader encroachments on Oromo autonomy. They also accused the government of taking land from Oromo farmers for little or no compensation, suppressing the Oromo language in schools, and unfairly redistributing the region’s natural resources.

In Adama, a 23-year-old engineering student, whose full name has been withheld for his safety, was initially reluctant to speak with this reporter for fear of reprisal. He relaxed only after he and some close friends sat down in a deserted cafe near campus, where a quiet woman brewing coffee over hot coals was the only person listening in.

“There are so many problems facing the Oromo people,” he said. “But those who speak about it are getting arrested. Educated people, farmers, teachers, doctors — the government accuses them all of being part of the protests.”

His caution was warranted. Less than two weeks later, a confrontation erupted at the university, reportedly in response to a small demonstration by students — though the details, as always, are hazy.

One witness who asked not be named said he heard gunshots as security forces descended on the campus. Amid the confusion, at least two fires were sparked — one in the school’s backup generator.
“On campus, students already feared the armed forces,” said the witness, who is a student at the university. “Now, no one feels like they have any right to speak at all.”

Government security forces have been accused of exacerbating the crisis in Oromia by violently suppressing the protests. In a recent report, Human Rights Watch said it had “documented security forces firing into crowds of protesters with little or no warning, the arrests of students as young as 8, and the torture of protesters in detention.” The rights group said military and police forces have killed “several hundred peaceful protesters” since November.

Members of the Ethiopian diaspora have been equally vocal, taking to social media to call attention to alleged atrocities. Jawar Mohammed, who is based in Minnesota, is perhaps the most prominent online activist, manning a number of social media feeds featuring bloody photos of dead demonstrators and grainy videos of police brutality that have become hubs for Oromo diaspora members around the world. His Facebook page has amassed nearly a half million followers.

“We have freelancers embedded in pretty much every district across the country,” said Mohammed, who was born in Ethiopia but works abroad as the executive director of the Oromia Media Network, a news broadcaster whose satellite feed here has been repeatedly jammed by the Ethiopian government. “They infiltrate the system from top to bottom,” he said in a Skype interview.

How much of an impact social media activism has had on the actual protest movement is a matter of debate. In a country with limited Internet penetration, and where the sole government-owned telecommunications provider has the power to shut down signals and block opposition websites, online activists like Mohammed are necessarily limited in what they can do. According to the engineering student in Adama, people on the ground are driving the protests, and social media matters “only a little bit.”

Where online activists have succeeded is in channeling video and photographic evidence of abuses to the outside word. But even this evidence is difficult to verify; several journalists, including this correspondent, have been detained by officials for attempting to report in some of the worst-affected areas.

There are also questions about the direction social media activists have steered the debate surrounding the protests. Comments by Mohammed’s passionate social media followers sometimes advocate violence against members of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), a political party from the northern region of Tigray that dominates the government’s security and intelligence agencies. And because he and other online activists are far from the front lines, some argue that their social media posts are ultimately a distraction. The student who witnessed the altercation at the university in Adama, for instance, said he agrees with Mohammed’s political analysis, but is concerned that the Facebook page has become a magnet for a dizzying array of viewpoints — about religion, regional politics, and ethnic strife — that make the movement more controversial than it needs to be.

Still, Mohammed has a clear strategy in mind. When it comes to human life, he advocates nonviolence. But he encourages demonstrators to block trade routes, destroy the property of companies that are seen as operating against Oromo interests, and avoid bringing crops to market in order to raise food prices.
Might such tactics be unethical during the worst drought Ethiopia has witnessed in decades, which has left 10.2 million people in need of emergency food aid? “Morally, yes,” Mohammed said. “Strategically, no.”

Officials have no time for these “activists on the other side of the Atlantic,” said government spokesman Getachew Reda. He claimed that agitators, some of whom have backing from Eritrea, Ethiopia’s archrival, have infiltrated the ranks of the protesters and are responsible for the current violence. The government security forces, by contrast, have generally handled the situation professionally, he said.
“We may have some bad apples,” Reda said. “Otherwise, the security apparatus that we have in this country is very much oriented towards serving the interests of the public.”

Amid this war of words, normal citizens are caught in the middle. In the quiet café in Adama, the engineering student spelled out a set of remarkably prosaic demands: He would like to see more Oromo professors at the university, for instance, and a fairer allocation of resources for the region. But, he said, he stays quiet for fear of Ethiopia’s pervasive security and intelligence apparatus.
“People don’t feel free,” he said. “We are all psychologically impacted.”

After two months of violent demonstrations, the government announced that it was scrapping the master plan. It wasn’t enough. Some protesters said they didn’t believe it had really been canceled. Others were motivated by grievances that run much deeper than any development scheme, citing marginalization stretching all the way back to the late 1800s, when the Ethiopian emperor Menelik II swept in from the north to expand Ethiopia’s borders and establish the capital city in Oromo lands.

On paper, today’s federal system is meant to ensure some measure of autonomy for all of the country’s ethnic groups, including the Oromos. The ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), is made up of four regional parties, including the TPLF and the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO). But the government lost some credibility in May, when the EPRDF and allied parties won every parliamentary seat in a national election. Though the OPDO holds more parliamentary seats than any other party, protesters say the party either cannot or will not challenge the dominance of the TPLF — and Oromos remain marginalized as a result.

Officials say they are trying to promote meaningful dialogue. “It is the government’s responsibility to make sure that people’s legitimate grievances are addressed properly,” Reda said. To that end, OPDO officials have convened meetings with concerned citizens across Oromia, and hundreds of low-level officials have been dismissed for corruption.

But the government has continued to lean on its powerful security apparatus, which has both enabled Ethiopia’s impressive, state-led economic development and imperiled it by bringing ethnic tensions to the fore. The ongoing protests in Oromia point to cracks in the facade, where citizens feel left out as the government pursues its uncompromising vision of modernization.

By continuing to crack down on demonstrators instead of listening to their demands, Ethiopia risks compromising the reputation for political stability that fueled its unprecedented decade of growth and foreign investment. In that way, the government may soon erode the very foundation of its own economic ambitions.
Image credit: ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER/AFP/Getty Images

HRW grills Philippines presidential candidates on human rights policies

Philippines presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte has been accused of a number of human rights violations.
Philippines presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte has been accused of a number of human rights violations.

23rd March 2016
THE five presidential hopefuls in the upcoming election in the Philippines have been asked to share their positions on major human rights issues.

International human rights NGO Human Rights Watch (HRW)said it sent each of the candidates a 10-question survey on Monday and will post their responses on the website by late April.
HRW Asia director Brad Adams said the country’s next president would inherit immense human rights issues that required leadership and commitment.
“Filipino voters should demand to hear from their presidential candidates exactly what they would do to protect and strengthen human rights.”
The questionnaire seeks to get the candidates’ stance on topics such as “death squad” killings; torture; attacks against journalists; accountability of state security forces; rights of indigenous peoples; 
reproductive health rights; displacement caused by conflict; and the country’s HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Among the questions asked are: “What are the biggest human rights challenges facing the country?”; 

“How do you think the government should deal with killings of journalists, many of them in apparent retaliation for reporting on corruption and poor governance?”; and “How will you address the summary killings by so-called death squads, some having links to local authorities, in urban centers across the Philippines?”

The candidates currently vying for the presidential seat are: incumbent Vice President Jejomar Binay, senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, Davao City mayor Rodrigo Duterte, senator Grace Poe and former senator Mar Roxas. The presidential contenders have formed election tickets, each with a vice presidential candidate.


Filipinos are scheduled to cast their votes on May 9. The country’s constitution allows a president a single six-year term. Therefore current President Benigno Aquino III, in office since 2010, is barred from running for re-election.

“The upcoming presidential election is crucial if the Philippines is to end pervasive abuses and impunity and become a genuinely rights-respecting country,” Adams added.

“When Filipinos go to the polls on May 9, they will want to know where the candidates stand on these critical concerns.”

HRW will certainly be awaiting the response from controversial and outspoken candidate Rodrigo Duterte, whom it has previously accused of supporting extrajudicial killings, particularly involving the Davao Death Squad, a ‘shadowy’ vigilante group preying on petty and common criminals.

Duterte, who was branded by TIME magazine as “The Punisher”, has also been reported to have admitted to pulling the trigger in at least three shooting incidents involving criminals, in addition to pushing a drug suspect out of a flying helicopter.

According to independent watchdog organization Freedom House, the Philippines is considered “partly free” in its Freedom in the World 2015 report, its lowest scores being under the purview of rule of law and functioning of government.

Israel’s well-documented crimes met with silence

The mother of Mahmoud Abu Fanounah mourns during her son’s funeral in the West Bank city of Hebron on 19 March. The youth was shot by Israeli forces during an alleged stabbing attack a day earlier; the family said he was killed in cold blood.
Wisam HashlamounAPA images

Crying woman places hand on forehead of body wrapped in black flag and checkered scarfMaureen Clare Murphy

23 March 2016

Six months of violence that have claimed approximately 200 Palestinian and 30 Israeli lives have arisen in a “pre-existing context” of a “decades-long occupation.”

So stated Makarim Wibisono, the United Nation’s special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, at the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday.

In his final address as special rapporteur – Wibisono resigned earlier this year in protest of Israel’s refusal to grant him access to the West Bank and Gaza – the Indonesian diplomat stated:

“Since assuming this position in the summer of 2014, I have been struck by the abundance of information documenting the violation of international human rights and international humanitarian law and a seeming inability of the international community to match what is known of the situation with more effective protection of Palestinians.”

Wibisono particularly decried Israel’s excessive use of force in the context of alleged attacks, which have resulted in scores of Palestinians being shot dead, including dozens of children.

Videos of suspected executions

Videos have come out on a nearly weekly basis showing Israeli soldiers and vigilantes using deadly force against Palestinians – including schoolgirls – when they pose no immediate danger to anyone’s life, or showing Palestinians bleeding to death on the ground while no attempt is made to administer first aid.
And yet there has been little censure of Israel, save for Sweden’s foreign minister calling for investigation of killings that may amount to extrajudicial executions, raising the ire of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israeli forces continue to gun down Palestinians each week, claiming that they had attacked or attempted to attack soldiers or civilians. In many instances, no Israelis were reported injured during attacks in which the alleged Palestinian assailant was shot dead.

The aftermath of one of the latest such killings was documented on video, showing Mahmoud Abu Fanounah, 21, lying on the ground and bleeding, while no attempt is made to save his life:

In the video, a voice can be heard claiming in Hebrew that the youth is a “terrorist” who had tried to attack an Israeli “combatant” with a knife.

Abu Fanounah was shot dead on Friday at the Gush Etzion junction – the entrance to the West Bank settlement bloc of the same name that has been the site of several such deadly incidents in recent months.
An Israeli army spokesperson told the Ma’an News Agency that an “assailant armed with a knife exited his vehicle and charged at soldiers” who then opened fire on and killed the man.

No Israelis were injured during the incident.

A witness told the agency that Abu Fanounah, from the nearby West Bank city of Hebron, was not carrying any weapon when he was shot.

Ma’an added that “Hisham Abu Shaqra, a reporter for the Turkish Anadolu News Agency, was detained by Israeli forces after taking footage of the incident.”

Abu Fanounah was returning home from his work in Bethlehem when he was shot dead in cold blood, his familytold the Quds news site.

Quds noted that the slain youth’s father, Muhammad Ahmad Abu Fanounah, is a leader with the Islamic Jihad faction in the West Bank and is currently being held without charge or trial under an administrative detention order handed down by an Israeli military court.
Another young Palestinian from Hebron, 18-year-old Abdullah Muhammad al-Ajlouni, was killed the following day.

Israeli police claimed that al-Ajlouni pulled a knife on a soldier at a checkpoint who asked him for his ID card, causing light injuries to the soldier’s head before he was shot dead.

Witnesses told the Ma’an News Agency that Israeli forces “showered” al-Ajlouni with gunfire.

Family refuses frozen body

A Jerusalem family rejected the body of one of its members when it was returned to them by Israel completely frozen late Monday.

“We accepted the preconditions set by the [Israeli] occupation so we can bury him in dignity, and our only demand was that the body shouldn’t be frozen,” the uncle of Hasan Khalid Manasra told Ma’an.

Manasra was shot dead in October when he and his 13-year-old cousin, Ahmad Manasra, allegedly carried out a stabbing attack in the Jerusalem-area settlement of Pisgat Zeev in which two Israelis, aged 13 and 21, were seriously injured.

Ahmad Manasra was hit by a car during the incident and video from the scene shows Israelis cursing him and calling for his death as he lies on the ground, his body distorted due to his grave injuries.
Manasra is currently in Israeli detention and has been charged with attempted murder.

On the same night that Hasan Manasra’s family refused the boy’s frozen body, Israel transferred the remains of Omar Iskafi, who was killed by Israeli police in Jerusalem in December.

Iskafi, 21, was shot dead during an alleged car-ramming and stabbing that left two Israelis lightly injured.

The youth’s family denied that he was attempting any attack when he was slain.
“Israeli forces deployed heavily around the cemetery … during Iskafi’s funeral, as soldiers allowed access into the cemetery only to family members whose names were on a list,” Ma’an reported.

Earlier this month the family of Mutaz Uweisat, a Palestinian boy shot dead by Israeli forces at a Jerusalem-area settlement in October, petitioned Israel’s high court to demand an autopsy.

The boy’s body has been withheld by Israel since then, as the authorities have refused to return the remains of several other slain Jerusalemites to their families.

At one point Israel was withholding the bodies of more than 80 Palestinians killed during alleged attacks as part of a series of repressive measures approved by the government in mid-October.
The head of a Palestinian forensic institute has said that Israel’s treatment of the bodies effectively makes it impossible to carry out an autopsy.

The freezing of the bodies at extreme temperatures “prevents autopsy results that document the crime, which means a loss of important information for bringing Israel in front of the International Criminal Court,” Sabir al-Aloul of the Al-Quds University Institute for Forensic Medicine said in December.
UN: Yemen ceasefire to start 10 April and peace talks a week later

While there have been rumours of talks, the UN has only just now confirmed that negotiations will start in Kuwait next month



Wednesday 23 March 2016
A special UN envoy announced on Wednesday a ceasefire across Yemen on 10 April followed a week later by fresh peace talks, raising hopes for a breakthrough in a war that has brought the impoverished Arab country to its knees.
Yemen has been gripped by violence since September 2014, when Houthi rebels stormed the capital Sanaa and forced the internationally recognised government to flee south to the second city of Aden. 
"The parties to the conflict have agreed to a nationwide cessation of hostilities beginning 10 April at midnight in advance of the upcoming round of the peace talks, which will take place on 18 April in Kuwait," Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed told a press conference in New York.
Saudi Arabia launched a coalition of Arab nations in March 2015 to push back Houthi militants who had swept down from their northern stronghold of Saada and seized control of the capital Sanaa, forcing Hadi into exile in Riyadh.
Saudi leaders view the Houthi movement as being backed by their regional rival Iran, and they have said they will not allow Iranian influence to grow in Yemen, a country that shares a long land border with Saudi Arabia.
Over the past 12 months, fierce fighting has killed nearly 9,000 civilians according to the UN, who have reported that more than 80 percent of the country’s 25 million people now require some form of humanitarian assistance.
All sides in Yemen’s war have been accused of committing war crimes, however; the UN said in January that the Saudi-led coalition has engaged in “widespread and systematic” targeting of civilians, adding that civilians have been deliberately starved as a war tactic.
Previous UN-sponsored negotiations between the rebels and government officials failed to reach a breakthrough, while a ceasefire went into force on 15 December but it was repeatedly violated and the Saudi-led coalition announced an end to the truce on 2 January.
Only last month the UN envoy warned that the warring parties were unable to agree on terms for a new round of peace talks, but those divisions appear to have been overcome.
"The aim is to reach an agreement which will end the conflict and allow the resumption of an inclusive political dialogue," Cheikh Ahmed said on Wednesday, telling reporters that he had held intense discussions with the internationally recognised government and the rebels.
The face-to-face negotiations are in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 2216, which states that the rebels must withdraw from seized territories and disarm.
The envoy said he hoped the cessation of hostilities would allow safe and unhindered humanitarian access to millions of suffering Yemenis.
The year-long coalition campaign has faced criticism over civilian casualties.
The UN said earlier this month that Saudi-led raids are responsible for the vast majority of the estimated 3,200 civilian deaths in the Yemen war.
The Saudi origins of Belgium’s Islamist threat
A small memorial outside the Belgian Embassy in Washington on Wednesday, a day after terrorist attacks rocked the Belgian capital. (Jim Lo Scalzo/European Pressphoto Agency)



By Ishaan Tharoor-March 23

The roots of Islamist extremism in Belgium are deep and complex. In the wake of Tuesday’s attacks in Brussels, investigators are puzzling over the scope of the terrorist plot, in which bombs exploded in the capital’s main airport and on its busy metro, killing at least 31 people and injuring at least 270.

There has been criticism of Belgium’s security lapses and the dysfunctions dogging its multilingual police agencies. There is also focus on the country’s particular problem of radicalization: It has had a greater share of its population join radical groups fighting in Syria than any other country in Europe; a Muslim-majority neighborhood in Brussels appears to be at the heart of terrorist plots, including the Islamic State’s November assault on Paris.

A lot of ink has already been spilled on the complexity of the jihadist networks operating in Belgium, as well as the social factors — discrimination and alienation — luring some Belgian youths toward groups such as the Islamic State. It’s also worth considering, though, an older history.

Analysts point to the inroads made in Belgium by the more conservative, orthodox brand of Islam espoused by the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This is the consequence of actual policy. In 1978, the Saudi-backed Great Mosque of Brussels opened its doors; the elegant building and land where it sat had been a gift by Belgium’s then-king to his Saudi counterpart a decade prior.

It became the seat of Islamic activity in Belgium. A 2007 leaked U.S. diplomatic cable, published by the anti-secrecy site WikiLeaks, detailed how the Saudi Embassy in Brussels has continued to provide Korans to myriad mosques in the country and help pay for the upkeep of the structures. Saudi Arabia also invested in training the imams who would preach to a growing Muslim diaspora in European countries, including in Belgium.

Observers say the Salafist dogma of the Saudi-funded clerics active in many mosques in Belgium stood in contrast to the traditional beliefs of the mostly working-class Moroccan and Turkish immigrants who first arrived in the country in the 1960s and 1970s.

“The Moroccan community comes from mountainous regions and rift valleys, not the desert. They come from the Maliki school of Islam, and are a lot more tolerant and open than the Muslims from other regions like Saudi Arabia,” George Dallemagne, a Belgian politician, told the Independent last year. 

“However, many of them were re-Islamified by the Salafist clerics and teachers from the Great Mosque. Some Moroccans were even given scholarships to study in Medina, in Saudi Arabia.”
The majority of the Belgian nationals who have gone to fight in Syria and Iraq are thought to be of Moroccan descent.

A separate WikiLeaks disclosure — this time of classified Saudi documents —found that in April 2012 the Belgian government quietly forced Saudi authorities to remove the main director of the Great Mosque, Khalid Alabri, a Saudi Embassy employee suspected of propagating the intolerant Sunni radicalism that is shared by the extremists of the Islamic State.

“Today, in Brussels, 95 percent of the courses offered on Islam for Muslims are operated by young preachers trained in Saudi Arabia,” Michael Privot, director of the Brussels-based European Network Against Racism, said in an interview with an Italian journalist. “There is a huge demand within Muslim communities to know about their religion, but most of the offer is filled by a very conservative Salafi type of Islam sponsored by Saudi Arabia. Other Muslim countries have been unable to offer grants to students on such a scale.”

Saudi Arabia is an avowed enemy of the Islamic State and has sought to rebuff criticism of its role in fomenting Sunni fundamentalist movements around the world. The current leadership of the Great Mosque in Brussels has rejected any link whatsoever to radical groups.

“Nobody like this [an Islamic State recruiter] can come here. I wouldn’t allow them to come to this place, and they understand my way,” Jamal Saleh Momenah, the director of the mosque, told EUObserver last year.

As WorldViews noted earlier, the recent wave of Belgian jihadists is specifically less ideological than previous generations of militants and more animated by social alienation and local criminal networks.
But the wider legacy of Saudi policies has been increasingly noticed and criticized, particularly in Europe.
“Wahhabi mosques are financed all over the world by Saudi Arabia. In Germany, many dangerous Islamists come from these communities,” Sigmar Gabriel, a leading German
politician, said in December. An unusually blunt memo, circulated around the same time, from Germany’s chief intelligence agency attacked the Saudis for the supposedly destabilizing role they play in the Middle East and elsewhere.

Earlier this month, the Dutch government voted to ban arms sales to Saudi Arabia, an act symbolic both of European frustration with the Saudis and anger at the kingdom’s continued, heavy-handed war effort in neighboring Yemen.

After the Brussels attacks this week, Saudi Arabia issued a strong condemnation of the violence.
“We learned with grief about the terrorist attacks that took place in Brussels which resulted in casualties and injuries,” King Salman said in a cable to his Belgian counterpart, King Philippe, adding that “we strongly condemn these criminal acts.” He continued: “We stress the importance of international efforts to confront and eliminate this dangerous scourge which is condemned by all divine religions and international norms and conventions.”
Read more
Has terrorism become the new normal in Europe?
At NATO headquarters, alert status raised just miles from attacks
Five stories you should read to understand the Brussels attacks
 
Ishaan Tharoor writes about foreign affairs for The Washington Post. He previously was a senior editor at TIME, based first in Hong Kong and later in New Yor

Fascism: Can It Happen Here?


Amy_goodman

THU MAR 17, 2016

By Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan-THU MAR 17, 2016

"When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross," goes a saying that is widely attributed to the first American to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, Sinclair Lewis. In 1935, Lewis wrote a novel called "It Can’t Happen Here," positing fascism’s rise in the United States. We were taught that fascism was defeated in 1945, with the surrender of Germany and Japan in World War II. Yet the long shadows of that dark era are falling on the presidential campaign trail this year, with eruptions of violence, oaths of loyalty complete with Nazi salutes and, presiding over it all, Republican front-runner Donald Trump.

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," the 20th-century philosopher George Santayana wrote. He lived in Europe through both world wars, and witnessed Italian fascism firsthand. 
Fascism was the violent political movement founded by Benito Mussolini, who took control of Italy in 1922. Mussolini had his political opponents beaten, jailed, tortured and killed, and ruled with an iron fist until he was deposed as Italy surrendered to the Allies in 1943. He was known as "Il Duce," or "The Leader," and provided early support to the nascent Nazi movement in Germany as Adolf Hitler rose to power in the 1930s.

Why is this relevant today? It was Donald Trump who recently retweeted one of Mussolini’s quotes: "It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep." When NBCconfronted Trump for retweeting the fascist’s words, he replied, "Sure, it’s OK to know it’s Mussolini. Look, Mussolini was Mussolini. ... It’s a very good quote, it’s a very interesting quote."

If only the fascist comparisons were limited to his tweets. His rallies have become hotbeds of violent confrontations, consistently fanned by Trump’s heated rhetoric from the podium. After a Black Lives Matter protester was kicked and punched at one of his rallies, Trump said, approvingly, "Maybe he should have been roughed up." At a rally in Las Vegas in February, after an anti-Trump protester disrupted the event and was escorted out, Trump bellowed: "You know what they used to do to guys like that when they were in a place like this? They’d be carried out on a stretcher, folks." He went on, "I’d like to punch him in the face, I’ll tell you that."

Weeks later, a protester was punched in the face at a Trump rally. Rakeem Jones, a 26-year-old African-American man, was being led out of a stadium event by security guards in Fayetteville, North Carolina, when John McGraw, a white Trump supporter, sucker-punched Jones in the face. The local sheriff’s deputies then wrestled the man to the ground—not McGraw, who threw the punch, but Jones, the victim. The TV program "Inside Edition" interviewed McGraw immediately after the assault.

"The next time we see him, we might have to kill him," McGraw said. He was arrested the next day. Trump has personally pledged to pay the legal defense bills for any rally supporter charged with violence against protesters, including those of McGraw’s. Trump also waffled when asked to disavow the support of the Ku Klux Klan and its onetime Grand Wizard, David Duke.

"Donald Trump shows a rather alarming willingness to use fascist themes and fascist styles. The response this gets, the positive response, is alarming," said Robert Paxton on the "Democracy Now!" news hour. Considered the father of fascism studies, he is professor emeritus of social science at Columbia University.

Paxton gave a short history of the rise of fascism in Germany: "In the election of 1924, [Hitler] did very poorly, for a marginal party. Then you have the Depression in 1929 and 1930. ... There’s this huge economic crisis with tens of millions unemployed, and there’s also a governmental deadlock. You cannot get any legislation passed." Paxton continued, "The German Weimar Republic really ceased to function as a republic in 1930, because nothing could be passed. ... So, between 1930 and 1933, President von Hindenburg ruled by decree. And the political elites are desperate to get out of that situation. And here’s Hitler, who has more votes by this time than anybody else. He’s up to 37 percent. He never gets a majority, but he’s up to 37 percent. And they want to bring that into their tent and get a solid mass backing. And so ... they bring him in."

The partnership that the German elites forged with Hitler and his Nazi Party didn’t work out quite the way they hoped. He took power by subterfuge and by force, arrested and killed his opponents, and plunged Europe into the deadliest war in human history.

Donald Trump is fanning the flames of bigotry and racism. He is exploiting the fears of masses of white, working-class voters who have seen their economic prospects disappear. Should the Republican nominating process end in a contested convention this summer in Cleveland, Trump told CNN Wednesday morning, "I think you’d have riots. I’m representing ... many, many millions of people."

A world war has begun : Break the silence

Obama-with-Chinese-Army
The propaganda laying the ground for a war against Russia and/or China is no different in principle. To my knowledge, no journalist in the Western “mainstream” — a Dan Rather equivalent, say –asks why China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
This is an edited version of an address by John Pilger at the University of Sydney, entitled A World War Has Begun.

by John Pilger

( March 23, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) I have been filming in the Marshall Islands, which lie north of Australia, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Whenever I tell people where I have been, they ask, “Where is that?” If I offer a clue by referring to “Bikini”, they say, “You mean the swimsuit.”

Few seem aware that the bikini swimsuit was named to celebrate the nuclear explosions that destroyed Bikini island. Sixty-six nuclear devices were exploded by the United States in the Marshall Islands between 1946 and 1958 — the equivalent of 1.6 Hiroshima bombs every day for twelve years.

Bikini is silent today, mutated and contaminated. Palm trees grow in a strange grid formation. Nothing moves. There are no birds. The headstones in the old cemetery are alive with radiation. My shoes registered “unsafe” on a Geiger counter.

Standing on the beach, I watched the emerald green of the Pacific fall away into a vast black hole. This was the crater left by the hydrogen bomb they called “Bravo”. The explosion poisoned people and their environment for hundreds of miles, perhaps forever.

On my return journey, I stopped at Honolulu airport and noticed an American magazine called Women’s Health. On the cover was a smiling woman in a bikini swimsuit, and the headline: “You, too, can have a bikini body.” A few days earlier, in the Marshall Islands, I had interviewed women who had very different “bikini bodies”; each had suffered thyroid cancer and other life-threatening cancers.

Unlike the smiling woman in the magazine, all of them were impoverished: the victims and guinea pigs of a rapacious superpower that is today more dangerous than ever.

I relate this experience as a warning and to interrupt a distraction that has consumed so many of us. The founder of modern propaganda, Edward Bernays, described this phenomenon as “the conscious and intelligent manipulation of the habits and opinions” of democratic societies. He called it an “invisible government”.


China Shandong illegal vaccine scandal sparks anger

File photo dated 05/10/09 of a nurse preparing a syringe
The vaccines were not adequately refrigerated nor transported in approved conditions

BBCChina-21 March 2016

Chinese citizens have reacted with anger and alarm at news of a massive illegal vaccine operation uncovered in Shandong province.

The illegal vaccine ring involved hundreds of people, and affected 24 provinces and cities, local media said.

On Monday, news that a boy had died after a vaccination sparked more anger, though officials said there was no link to the Shandong scandal.

China has seen several health and safety scandals in recent years.

'Isn't this genocide?'

The illegal vaccine ring was said to have been in operation since 2011.

The ringleaders, who have been arrested, were allegedly a mother and a daughter who purchased the vaccines from licensed and unlicensed sources, and then sold them on to illegal agents or local disease control and prevention centres for high prices, reported Xinhua state news agency.

The $88m (£61m) worth of vaccines were not adequately refrigerated nor transported in approved conditions.

The potentially compromised vaccines could cause disability and death, Xinhua said.
Though authorities had known about the ring since April last year, they only made the news public late on Friday when they issued a call demanding that suppliers come forward to help them trace potential victims.

It sparked fury over the weekend as thousands of users on microblogging network Sina Weibo questioned the delay.
A Chinese nurse inoculates a man with the swine flu vaccine at a hospital in Hefei, east China's Anhui province on 10 November 2009Authorities on Monday released more details on the affected vaccines


"This is such a huge case and not a single regulatory official has come out to apologise, not a single one has resigned... this system which doesn't care whether ordinary citizens live or die makes one's soul tired," said one user.

"24 provinces, 5 years already, and how many children!... It's been nearly a year and then they reveal this! Isn't this genocide? Words cannot express how angry I am!" said another.

Authorities appeared to respond to the public anger and calls for more information by promising on Monday to punish those responsible.

They also released details on the affected vaccines, which included those for polio, rabies, mumps, encephalitis, hepatitis B and meningococcal diseases.

Poor public confidence

Also on Monday, authorities in Guangdong province confirmed that they were investigating the death of a four-year-old boy who had died in early March, days after he was given meningococcal and polio vaccines.

Though they stressed that it appeared to have nothing to do with the Shandong vaccine scandal, it did not stop sceptical netizens from making the link.

"If the exact cause is still being probed, how can you already say that it has nothing to do with the problematic vaccines? You're tying yourself up in knots," said one user.

Public confidence in China's health system and food safety regime has been shaken by a number of scandals in recent years, most notably in 2008 when melamine was found to have been added to milk powder, resulting in six babies dying and 300,000 falling ill.

TID issued with summons over Lasantha murder probe!


TID issued with summons over Lasantha murder probe!

- Mar 22, 2016
The then officials of the TID are to be dealt with as per clause 109(6) of the criminal procedure code for not having cooperated with the CID in investigations into the murder of ‘The Sunday Leader’ editor Lasantha Wickramatunga in January 2009, reports say. As per this clause, when investigating officers inform courts, first notice is issued to the persons who do not cooperate with investigations and if there is no response, even warrants could be issued.

At that time, the TID was in charge of the Lasantha murder probe, and its ASP Prasanna Alwis, who was in charge of investigations, is to be dealt with accordingly.
As per a CID summon, Alwis went to the CID and gave a statement only once, and then refused to cooperate without citing any reason. Also, the then TID chief, retired senor DIG C.N. Wagista, cites various reasons and refuses to go to the CID to give statements.
There is adequate proof against both of them to be tried at courts that they had concealed evidence in the Lasantha murder, say sources at the attorney general’s department.
UN wants ‘credible investigation’ into Sri Lankan atrocities


 22 March 2016
The United Nations said that it wants “to make sure there is a credible investigation” into Sri Lanka’s violations of international humanitarian law in response to the Sri Lankan president rejecting foreign judges participating in an accountability mechanism.

The Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General told journalists on Monday that “the Human Rights Council can evaluate for themselves how it's going, but we want to make sure there is a credible investigation into this”. 

Responding to a question from Inner City Press, Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesman for the Secretary-General said “we have made clear what our guidelines are for what a credible investigation will entail and so we will continue to be in dialog to make sure it happens”. 

See more from Inner City Press hereInner City Press

The spokesperson however did not respond to questions from Inner City Press regarding his reported ejection from a UN meeting and the revoking of his press pass, earlier this month.

The incident prompted a protest in Jaffna just days later in support of journalist Matthew Lee.

See our earlier post: Tamils in Jaffna rally in support of Inner City Press (05 Mar 2016)

Daily Press Briefing by the Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General

Even as Maithri draws the sword Ruwan hides the crook !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -22.March.2016, 7.00AM) While president Maithripala Sirisena as the defense secretary is investigating the  corrupt and  criminal activities of  those of the  Gotabaya Rajapakse ‘nefarious decade’ through the special Presidential commission ,  the deputy minister of defense has deemed it right  to appoint   another wheeler dealer cum stalwart of the Rajapakses who was  implicated  in those monumental corruption activities aforementioned as his co ordinating secretary ,, based on reports reaching Lanka e news. 

This crooked individual is none other than the notorious wheeler dealer Chaminda Perera,   the co ordinating secretary to the deputy minister of defense.
During the period when Gotabaya Rajapakse  was the defense secretary ,Chaminda  got down 100 tons of dynamite despite  being fully aware that the commodity was nearing its expiry date . As a result of this racket  aimed at making a fast buck for himself and driven by the desire for  most selfish and sordid gains , the government of Sri Lanka (SL) lost over Rs. 21.2 million ! The one who gave approval for this unlawful  anti national corrupt deal was Ms.  Damayanthi Jayaratne who was the additional defense secretary at that time , and who has now fled to Australia.
In addition , Chaminda Perera has collected a bribe of Rs. 500, 000.00 from each applicant when issuing permits for firearms   during that period, it is reported. 
The secretary  to the special  Presidential commission , H.W Gunadasa while commencing investigations into this criminal corruption  has already  sent a letter to the former additional secretary on the 2nd of March  ( letter is herein).
In the circumstances , the deputy minister of defense Ruwan Wijewardena has committed a most heinous offence  in addition to   the crime of keeping Gotabaya Rajapakse’s wheeler dealer scoundrel Chaminda Perera as his coordinating secretary . That is , without adhering to the  procedure followed by state Institutions of interdicting such a culprit  as soon as   investigations are commenced  , Ruwan has continued to have him as his co ordinating secretary instead of  serving interdiction orders on him.
According to the business community of Colombo, this wheeler dealer who engendered colossal loss in millions to the government has somehow crept back into the defense ministry through Ruwan Wijewardena based on a conspiracy hatched by a popular businessman. Since Ruwan’s sex starvation has directed his erection towards    the mistress of that businessman , this notorious wheeler dealer was appointed by  Ruwan  as his secretary, the business community point out.
No matter what , may  Ruwan Wijewardena be warned that if he is nursing hopes of taking over the leadership  of the UNP , he must  steer of clear  of this type of stupid  mis-directions and erections. It can only land him in the worst hellhole.
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by     (2016-03-22 01:35:06)