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

Friday, April 1, 2016

Ranawaka Hit And Run: Police Blame House Owners For Deleting CCTV Footage


Colombo Telegraph
April 1, 2016
In a strange twist of events where vital CCTV footage were reportedly erased which may have proved if Megapolis and Western Development Minister Champika Ranawaka was involved in the Rajagiriya accident, Police Spokesman blamed the house owners for deleting the CCTV footage, claiming that the police was ‘helpless’ as there were no CCTV cameras operated by the police in that particular area, and hence they had to rely only on residential CCTV cameras.
Champika Ranawaka
Champika Ranawaka
“Usually house owners delete CCTV visuals after about 3 to 4 days, and the probe for the CCTV footage began only about six days after, so by the time the Welikada police tried to obtain the CCTV visuals, the house owners had already deleted it,” Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekera told the Colombo Telegraph.
When asked if steps would be taken to install CCTV cameras in other parts of the city other than within Colombo city limits to ensure a similar incident will not occur, ASP Gunasekera said no such decision has been taken and for the moment this seemed unlikely.
He however added that investigation was currently underway to obtain the phone records of two other telephone numbers which reportedly belonged to the Minister.
11 foreigners arrested with over 100kg of heroin on boat

11 foreigners arrested with over 100kg of heroin on boat

logoApril 1, 2016
Sri Lankan security personnel today arrested 11 foreign nationals with 101 kilograms of heroin being transported to Sri Lanka by boat in the southern coast. 

The suspects, including 10 Iranians and a Pakistani national, were arrested following a joint operation carried out by the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) and Police Narcotics Bureau. 

The consignment of heroin was being smuggled into Sri Lanka when the boat was intercepted off the southern coast.  



Five years after his disappearance, Jeyakumar Shanmuganathan has been recaptured while attempting to return to Canada


The Iron Grill restaurant went up in flames after an explosion on Aug. 12, 2009. (File photo)The Iron Grill restaurant went up in flames after an explosion on Aug. 12, 2009. (File photo)
By Heather Rivers, Woodstock Sentinel-Review-Monday, March 28, 2016
WOODSTOCK - A suspect wanted in the 2009 Iron Grill arson — who has been on the run for five years — has been arrested and is being held at Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre.
A spokesperson for the Woodstock police said Jeyakumar Shanmuganathan was arrested at Pearson Airport on March 2 while attempting to return to Canada after his passport had expired. A warrant was issued for him after he failed to show up in court in 2011.
The country from which he was departing is unknown.
Shanmuganathan, 43, was originally charged with conspiring to commit arson by setting the Iron Grill Restaurant on Dundas on fire in 2011, two years after the restaurant was razed by fire following an explosion.
While conditions of his bail at that time included a non-communication order with other suspects and a weapons ban, according to court documents Shanmuganathan was allowed to keep his passport.
The tragic fire at Iron Grill Restaurant resulted in the death of one suspect, a second, Usama Akhter, had burns to 75 per cent of his body.
Akhter admitted in court in November 2014 that he set the fire in 2009 with his best friend Sarfraz Ahmed, who sustained burns to 98 per cent of his body and later died from his injuries.
The Iron Grill had been listed on the real estate market in July 2009 for $1.4 million and later that month a flood caused $46,000 in damages, closing the popular eatery.
Akhter was sentenced in 2014 to two years less once day of house arrest with a list of conditions and two years of probation.
A third person, Arun Rajendiran, who plotted the fire with the two other men but was not on the scene at the time of the blaze, took his own life in November of 2014 while serving a prison sentence of two-years-less-a-day.
Rajendiran, Akhter and Ahmed and two others, all of who resided in Toronto and had been friends for several years, were allegedly approached by Shanmuganathan, who was acquainted with the owner of the Iron Grill.
During Akhter’s court appearance, he alleged they were offered $5,000 and any liquor they could retrieve from the building to set it on fire.
At the scene the duo fled the building following a massive explosion.
Both Akhter and Ahmed were taken to burn units and put into medically-induced comas.
Akhter lives with major medical issues and requires a full-time caregiver.
Shanmuganathan, who requires the services of a Tamil interpreter, will undergo a bail hearing on March 30.

SLBC employees disturbed by political promotions!

SLBC employees disturbed by political promotions!
01 April 2016
Employees of the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation are disturbed by the sudden promotions given to 15 activists of the SLFP-affiliate Nidahas Sevaka Sangamaya, according to reports reaching Sri Lanka Mirror.
When contacted, a top SLBC official said none of them had been given promotions, but that their designations changed from controller to assistant director.
Employees question as to why only 15 controllers who are activists of the SLFP TU have had their designation name changed.
They note the SLFP TU has gone to court over the promotions given to 72 JSS activists a day before the end of the 100-day government, adding the management has given the latest promotions to make things even.
Meanwhile, a discussion has reportedly taken place at the SLFP headquarters at Darley Road, Colombo to grant promotions to 20 more party activists at the SLBC.

More assets including underground chamber belonging to Yoshitha found

FRIDAY, 01 APRIL 2016
It has been revealed that assets worth billions belonging to Yoshitha Rajapaksa, who has been charged of money laundering, have been found.
A four storied house and a two storied house at 173/2 on Mihindu Mawatha at Dehiwela belonging to him have been found. These assets have been found on investigations carried out on a search-warrant no. 828/16 issued by Mt. Lavinia Magistrates Court. It has been revealed that Rs. 49020000 was spent to buy the land to construct the buildings. When buying the land a 5 perch land belonging to Mt. Lavinia Multi Purpose Cooperative Society too had been bought spending Rs.4.5 million.
The two houses have been constructed with all super  luxury items. It is said that an underground chamber had been built at the four storied house. Despite a final valuation of the assets has not been made, it is assumed that the value of the assets could be over Rs.1000 million.
The whole area of the land is 65 perches and 37 perches of the land is in Yoshitha Rajapaksa's name. 28 perches is said to be owned by an old lady residing at 260/12, Torrington Avenue, Colombo 5 but there is no such woman living at the address. However, it has been revealed that this land had been bought by an unmarried aunt of Shiranthi Rajapaksa in 2013 and later handed over to Yoshitha Rajapaksa.

FCID starts another investigation against Namal

FCID starts another investigation against Namal

Apr 01, 2016
The police obtained permission from the Colombo magistrate’s court yesterday 31st to investigate bank accounts of two companies supposedly belong to parliament MP Namal Rajapaksa.

The Financial Crime Investigation Department (FCID) told the courts that its starting investigation against Namal Rajapaksa under the anti money laundering act.
 
The police inform the courts that it needs to probe the bank accounts of Gower’s Corporate Pvt Limited and N.R. Consultations supposedly belong to MP. Namal Rajapaksa.
 
The Colombo magistrate accepted the request ordered the managers of the two banks to allow the FCID to probe the relevant bank accounts.

Indians Had Their Kidneys Removed, Sri Lanka Police Tells Colombo Court
The police has expanded the investigation to the ongoing kidney transplant racket. (Representational Image)

NDTVApril 01, 2016
COLOMBO:  Six of the eight Indians arrested in Colombo last month were found to have had their kidneys removed in an alleged organ transplant racket in Sri Lanka, a court was told today.

They had been arrested on March 3 at Pennyquick Road in the south Colombo ward of Wellawatta for alleged visa overstays.

"Six of the eight Indians arrested were found to have had their kidneys removed," the Colombo Crimes Division told the magistrates court in Colombo. The police has expanded the investigation to the ongoing kidney transplant racket.

Sri Lanka Health Ministry had initiated an investigation on the conduct of the local doctors following complaints by Indian police.

In January, it was reported that the Indian police had charged six Sri Lankan doctors for carrying out 60 kidney transplants.
 
Case for a kidney bank

Saturday, 2 April 2016
logo
Untitled-3The kidneys are vital organs of the human body which need to be protected and looked after for good health and long life. Kidneys are beneficial and essential vital organs for the future and the health of a nation infested with poisonous/junk food, polluted water and a polluted environment.

lead-pic

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is on the rise at an alarmingly high rate in Sri Lanka and worldwide. The kidneys are among the main precious organs in the human body making urine, removing excess water, controlling body chemicals, toxics and blood pressure, keeping bones healthy, helping maintain red blood corporals and controlling mineral and potassium on blood acidity and many other factors for a healthy life. The kidneys are as important as the heart.

Due to the rapidity of the increase of kidney diseases, governments and non-governmental organisations have set up foundations and institutions. 10% of the world population is suffering from kidney-related diseases and 6% of the Asian population is diabetic with 1.5 million of the world population dying of diabetic-related diseases.

Sri Lanka has four million diabetic patients out of a 22 million population when the world has 382 million diabetic patents, increasing at a rapid rate. NCP has 17.5 diabetic patients in the population and 300 deaths have occurred with 22,000 treated for CKD in one year.

It is understood that there are over 100,000 kidney related patients in Sri Lanka currently adding 5,000 yearly on a very rough estimate. Diabetic related patients are on the rise in Sri Lanka and worldwide due to carelessness and absence of regulatory preventive procedures.

CKD is a threat to India and worldwide due to a number of factors such as poisonous junk food, contaminated water, incorrect food/living patters and mis/over use of drugs being factors closer to the dangerous trend facing mankind on threats of diabetic related diseases leading to CKD.

Kidney transplant is expensive and it is near impossible to find donors due to legal complications and factors beyond the control of the patients, donors and the administration. Few can afford the excessive and enormous expenditure and also meeting the stringent requirements. This has become a world epidemic which has led to corruption and reached the highest levels local and worldwide.

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Arrest of soldier filmed executing Palestinian was just public relation

Israelis rally outside an Israeli military court in Kiryat Malakhi in support of an Israeli soldier shown on video shooting an incapacitated Palestinian in the head, 29 March.-Oren ZivActiveStills
Settlers look on as Israeli forces evacuate the body of Abd al-Fattah al-Sharif in the West Bank city of Hebron on 24 March.Wisam HashlamounAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy-1 April 2016

An Israeli soldier shown on video executing an incapacitated Palestinian last week was arrested only “to avoid embarrassment in front of the world,” according to the human rights group Al-Haq.

The group’s investigation sheds new light on the incident in which two Palestinian youths were slain, and comes as the arrested soldier, Elor Azarya, faces manslaughter charges, rather than the murder charges previously announced by military prosecutors. He may be released within days.

Al-Haq, based in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, asserts that both the slaying of Abd al-Fattah al-Sharif, shown on video, and that of Ramzi al-Qasrawi, which was not recorded, constitute deliberate killings and are thus war crimes.

The group adds that statements made by Israeli leaders – including former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman, who endorsed the videotaped killing and asserted that “the soldier carried out orders” – indicate that soldiers have been given orders to kill rather than neutralize Palestinians who pose a threat.
“The occupation authorities’ detention of the accused soldier is a cover-up of the crime, to show the occupier state as law abiding and holds violators accountable,” Al-Haq’s Arabic-language report states.

“The arrest of one soldier and not the other suggests that what the other soldier had done was not a crime because it was not captured on camera,” the group adds.

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Editor accused of espionage after publishing photos of covert Turkish arm shipments to Syria spoke to MEE in his last interview before his trial 



YvoFitzherbert-Friday1 April 2016

ISTANBUL, Turkey -
 The trial against Can Dundar, the editor-in-chief of Cumhuriyet newspaper, began on Friday, in one of the most controversial cases to rock Turkey’s press industry in years.
Dundar stands accused of espionage for publishing photos of covert Turkish arms shipments to Syria. The court case against him is being conducted by a secret court with no media allowed in the courtroom.
“I knew the story was big at the time, and was fully prepared for its repercussions, but I never imagined I’d be accused of espionage,” Dundar told Middle East Eye in his last ever interview before he was due to stand trial.
If convicted Dundar faces two consecutive life sentences.
“They [the authorities] were caught trafficking arms into Syria without the knowledge of the Turkish parliament and public. This is an international war crime,” he said.
The authorities reject his account and insists that Dundar foiled key national intelligence work.
“This is spying because intelligence organisations in every country have almost infinite legal power,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said late last month of Dundar's alleged crime. “I cannot feel at ease when someone interferes in the aid our National Intelligence Organisation provides to the Turkmens of Bayırbucak.”
The case has brought international attention and has been front and centre of a wider uproar about media freedom in the country with the authorities accused of trying to stifle dissent and cracking down on journalists.
In recent months, the government has taken over the opposition Feza media network and arrested journalists, sparking condemnation from the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) which has accused authorities of putting press freedom “under siege”.
The authorities have hit back. Earlier this week, Erdogan told CNN that he was not “at war with the press” and was not doing “anything to stop freedom of expression or freedom of press".
"On the contrary, the press in Turkey had been very critical of me and my government, attacking me very seriously. And regardless of those attacks, we have been very patient in the way we have responded to those attacks,” he said.
But battle lines appear to have been drawn with many anti-government journalists claiming that they are being directly targeted.
Dundar’s case highlights the ongoing tug-of-war. 

Security or censorship?

In January 2014, trucks belonging to the National Intelligence Agency (MIT) were stopped near the Syrian border.
The MIT officials, who were in charge of delivering the shipment of arms to groups inside Syria, reportedly pulled out guns on the gendarmerie. After a standoff, the border guards searched the trucks and found weapons and ammunition hidden under the guise of humanitarian aid. Eventually, after state officials were called to intervene, the truck was granted safe passage into Syria.
But the damage was done. The state secret, which most of the government had not been aware of, was out in the open: Turkey was arming certain rebel groups in northern Syria. At first, the government denied the charges, but later admitted that they had “helped” certain Turkmen groups fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad.
In May 2015, Dundar held a meeting in his office about a news story that was going to change his life and called in the lawyers in hopes of publishing that week.
“We sat in this very same room with our lawyers who warned us of the consequences of publishing a story the government clearly wanted to keep secret,” Dundar said.
“We were afraid they would raid our offices and seize the papers over this, so I flew to London the night before we published the story.”
For Dundar, the news piece had to be published despite the obvious dangers.
“As a journalist, I care about two things: Firstly, whether the story is true or not; secondly, is it in the public interest? We had photographic evidence, so the story was clearly true. And it was certainly in the public’s interest – the fact that I’m being prosecuted is proof of this.”

Secret exposed

For years, there had been speculation that Turkey had been directly arming certain groups inside Syria as part of an attempt to topple Assad, although Ankara vehemently denied the allegations. Dundar’s revelations, however, proved such accusations were true, and left Erdogan’s Syria policy exposed.
Erdogan was furious and, in November, authorities arrested Dundar, along with his Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gul. Three months later, the Constitutional Court ordered their release and stated that their “rights to personal liberty and their freedom of expression had been violated” but the authorities pushed back.
Erdogan announced that he wouldn’t obey or respect the Constitutional Court’s ruling, saying that the case “had nothing to do with freedom of expression” as it “was a case of espionage”. 
Dundar, however, said that Erdogan has made the affair personal and believes Dundar’s revelations were not a state secret, but more of a secret of the Presidential palace. Both the president and the head of the National Intelligence Organisation, Hakan Fidan - the President’s highly powerful but little-seen ally - are plaintiffs in the trial.
“It is a personal crusade against me. This is why I believe I didn’t expose a state secret, but more Erdogan’s secret - the transfer of weapons was something between the President and MIT,” Dundar said.
The government did not reply to MEE’s request for interview in time for publication, but scores of public statements have recently been made on press freedom helping to highlight the ongoing rift.
Since taking over as president in 2014, over 1,800 cases of “insulting the President” have been opened in Turkey, a vast number of them against journalists.
At the same time, Erdogan has expanded his reach and now directly controls many of the outlets, with Dundar claiming he is now the biggest media mogul in Turkey due to his heavy-handed approach to media.
Of the 30-odd papers on the newsstands, only four or five are critical of the government. Dundar’s paper, Cumhuriyet, is the largest of them with a daily circulation of 60,000.

'A kind of McCarthyism'

Some journalists have vowed to fight back and Dundar said that he is willing to become a champion for the cause – no matter the consequences.
“Everyone who criticises Erdogan is branded as a terrorist. We’re experiencing a kind of McCarthyism in this country.”
While awaiting his trial, Dundar headed to the Kurdish majority city of Diyarbakir to visit Kurdish reporter Beritan Canozer who had spent months behind bars before being released this week. She had been accused of “propaganda for a terrorist accusation”, but had her charges dropped earlier this week.
“Whilst I was in prison, I made a decision to support all journalists in jail. To have one journalist behind bars is like imprisoning all of us,” Dundar said. “My visit to Diyarbakir was a solidarity action as we have both been victims of the lack of press freedom. Beritan’s only offence was taking notes during a demonstration. How can this be a crime?”
“We, as critical journalists, have a higher duty as we become fewer in numbers… as we defend our rights and the last hope of democracy in Turkey” Dundar explained. “It is as if we are some kind of freedom-fighters, and our fight has only just begun.”
Last week, various European consuls attended the trial of Dundar and Gul, angering Erdogan.
“Who are you? What business do you have there? This is not your country. This is Turkey,” Erdogan said. “You can move inside the consulate building and within the boundaries of the consulate. Elsewhere is subject to permission.”
As the interview drew to a close, Dundar contemplated the prospect of facing another stint behind bars.
“Solitary confinement can be difficult to take, but in jail you feel much stronger,” Dundar said, who spent much of his three month prison sentence in solitary confinement. “As a journalist, I can take my profession with me inside. All I need is a pen and paper and I’m happy.”

U.S.-Russia Tensions Jeopardize Effort to Lock Down Loose Nukes

Obama’s sparring with Putin is hampering the push to prevent nuclear terrorism — and even raising the risk of an accidental nuclear confrontation.
U.S.-Russia Tensions Jeopardize Effort to Lock Down Loose Nukes

BY DAN DE LUCEREID STANDISH-MARCH 31, 2016
When President Barack Obama hosts leaders from dozens of countries at a summit in Washington on Thursday to discuss nuclear security, the nation with the world’s biggest atomic arsenal — Russia — will not be at the table.

Russia’s boycott of the Nuclear Security Summit reflects a widening rift between Moscow and Washington that has undermined the U.S.-led effort to lock down radiological material, effectively destroyed prospects for arms control between the two powers, and even raised the risk of a potential nuclear confrontation not seen since the Cold War.

Russia has an indispensable role to play in any effort to prevent nuclear terrorism because it has a vast amount of nuclear material on its territory — by far the most of any country in the world. And U.S.-Russian collaboration has formed the cornerstone of groundbreaking efforts over the past two decades to secure weapons stockpiles across the former Soviet Union and prevent the theft of material that could be used to make atomic bombs or more crude “dirty bombs.”

That cooperation has come to an end, much to the alarm of many U.S. officials. The Defense Department is concerned by the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction and trafficking of radiological material, “particularly as we are no longer able to ensure that nuclear material is being controlled at the source in Russia,” Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. Michelle Baldanza said in an email.

Moscow’s absence at the summit illustrates how the discord caused by its incursion into Ukraine has spilled over into the arena of nuclear arms and security. Russia’s willingness to work with the West started to decline in recent years as Moscow’s disagreements with Washington escalated over issues like U.S. plans for a missile defense shield. In 2013, Russia pulled out of a 1990s-era U.S. program called the Nunn-Lugar Act that helped track and secure tons of weapons-grade uranium and plutonium.

Under the former program, the United States had provided detection devices, security equipment, and training to help the Russians keep tabs on its radiological material. And the effort helped sustain a useful communication channel for American and Russian scientists. Now that cooperation has been abandoned, even as the threat of terrorists getting their hands on weapons of mass destruction has grown.

The Islamic State extremists who launched the deadly March 22 attacks in Brussels that killed 32 people are suspected of planning to target the country’s nuclear reactors as well as employees there, and Belgian authorities have come under criticism over reports of lax security at the sites.

Given the threat posed by the Islamic State, the nuclear summit hosted by Washington — the fourth since Obama took office — will focus on how countries can work “to prevent the world’s most dangerous networks from obtaining the world’s most dangerous weapons,” the U.S. president wrote in an op-ed published Wednesday in the Washington Post. But Obama’s commentary made no mention of Russia’s decision to skip the summit or cancel its cooperation on security efforts.

The Russian withdrawal from the U.S. effort to counter nuclear terrorism is “a disappointment,” William Courtney told Foreign Policy, the former U.S. ambassador to Georgia and Kazakhstan. “The Russians not participating doesn’t derail it, but it hinders it.”

Moscow has halted all U.S. access to so-called “closed cities” that house a significant amount of Russia’s weapons-grade material, preventing American experts from certifying whether security measures are sufficient.

“The concern is not that Russia doesn’t take its nuclear materials seriously,” Kingston Reif, the director of disarmament and threat reduction policy at the Washington-based Arms Control Association, told FP. “The concern is that it raises questions about Russia’s willingness to strengthen nuclear security and improve the architecture in place.”

Russia has insisted it does not need American assistance to keep its nuclear material safe. But the country’s growing economic woes, including plans for a 5 percent cut in the defense budget, have raised fears that funding for security and monitoring at nuclear sites could suffer, experts said.
William Tobey, a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, said that “Russia’s nuclear security is not what it should be.”

“The Russians try to preserve personnel amid budget constraints, and while they have kept nuclear inspectors, the inspectors are very limited in their travel budget now,” Tobey told FP. “So they can’t go out and inspect the facilities they are in charge of regulating like before.”

Apart from the standstill on nuclear security initiatives, Russia and the United States have hit a dead end on arms control talks, marking the first time in decades that the two sides have no agenda and no negotiations underway on a new deal to reduce their vast nuclear stockpiles.

In combative rhetoric that harked back to the Soviet era, Moscow also has made frequent references to Russia’s nuclear arsenal. In March 2015, Russia’s ambassador in Copenhagen said Danish warships would be “targets for Russian nuclear missiles” if they installed advanced radar equipment. Russia has said the Iskander missiles it has placed in its territory of Kaliningrad are dual-use, meaning they could carry nuclear warheads.

NATO and U.S. officials say Russia is blurring the line between conventional and nuclear war. In a speech to the Munich Security Conference in February, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Russia’s threats and exercises of its nuclear forces were “aimed at intimidating its neighbors,” while U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said at a November 2015 forum that “Moscow’s nuclear saber-rattling raises questions about Russian leaders’ commitments to strategic stability.”

Against the backdrop of an escalating war of words, the prospects for communication designed to reduce the risk of a conflict between Moscow and Washington have steadily dimmed. In the wake of Russia’s armed intervention in Ukraine in 2014, Washington suspended military-to-military relations with Moscow and imposed travel bans on some officials. Moscow has responded with its own travel bans.

Some arms control advocates and former senior U.S. officials and lawmakers, including former Sen. Sam Nunn, have questioned the Obama administration’s decision to introduce travel bans on some Russian officials, saying any step that reduces the chance for dialogue is a mistake.

“Common sense would seem to tell us that it is counterproductive for both the U.S. and Russia to have sanctions on individuals and policymakers who need to talk to each other to protect the security of the citizens they represent,” Nunn said in a speech in Moscow in February.

Despite the suspension in military relations, communication between the two armed forces on essential missions related to nuclear weapons continues, Pentagon officials told FP. But the accumulative effect of the acrimony has created the worst climate between the two countries since the Cold War.

Encroachments by Russian nuclear-capable bombers near NATO countries in the Baltics and sorties into Swedish and Finnish airspace, along with Russian military exercises that simulate the use of tactical nuclear weapons, have sent alarm bells ringing in Europe. In response, Russian officials have accused NATO and the United States of behaving recklessly, citing thedeployment of more U.S. tanks and personnel to NATO states bordering Russia and the use of B-2 bombers in drills close to the Russian border.

“There is no goodwill on either side,” Alexey Arbatov, the chair of the Carnegie Moscow Center’s nonproliferation program and a former member of the Russian State Duma, told FP.

“Our militaries have stopped communicating, and they are losing understanding of each other,” said Arbatov. “There is growing mistrust and exaggeration of the other’s capabilities and intentions on both sides.”

Nunn, the former Georgia senator, was one of the architects of the Cooperative Threat Reduction program, also known as the Nunn-Lugar Act, which was launched amid warming ties between Moscow and Washington after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Designed to address fears over nuclear weapons or material falling into the hands of terrorists or rogue governments, the joint U.S.-Russian program provided improved security and detection at Russian facilities. The program also helped secure nuclear weapons from former Soviet territories such as Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine by bringing the armaments back to Russia and dismantling them. Both countries also agreed to drastically cut their weapons stockpiles and took steps to reduce the risk of losing control over nuclear arms or accidental launches.

By the early 2000s, cooperation had started to slow down. In 2002, the United States withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, a hallmark of Cold War nuclear arms control. There was a rare burst of optimism in 2010 when Washington and Moscow signed the New START Treaty, which further reduced U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals.Still, the countries retain enormous numbers of the world’s most dangerous weapons: As of January 2015,
Russia and the United States had more than 7,000 nuclear warheads each, about 90 percent of world stocks, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. And those numbers may not go down anytime soon. Russia has made it clear that removing U.S. missile defense weaponry from Europe is a precondition for any talks on a new arms control treaty. The Obama administration has said that is out of the question.
Photo credit: AFP/Getty Images

Aung San Suu Kyi set to get PM-type role in Myanmar government

Bill to appoint Nobel laureate as powerful state counsellor, bypassing ban on her becoming president, passes upper house

Aung San Suu Kyi is blocked from becoming president as she has children with foreign nationality. Photograph: Hein Htet/EPA

Friday 1 April 2016

Aung San Suu Kyi plans to create a role for herself that will give her similar powers to that of a prime minister in the new Myanmar government, further circumventing a constitutional ban on her serving as president.
The bill to form a state counsellor role, with specific reference to the 70-year-old Nobel laureate in the text, was the first piece of legislation put to parliament on the first day of office for the democratically-elected National League for Democracy (NLD) government.

It passed the upper house on Friday but needs lower house approval and a presidential sign-off before becoming law, conditions that are likely to be met with an NLD majority in both chambers and an NLD-appointed president.

Blocked from the presidency under a junta-drafted 2008 constitution, Aung San Suu Kyi is to head four cabinet posts including foreign affairs, president’s office, education, and energy ministries.

As state counsellor, the longtime democracy campaigner would also work with political parties and organisations, effectively giving her influence in the executive and the legislative arms of government.
Importantly, the role allows her to keep a foot in parliament as her cabinet appointments had forced her to step down from the legislature. Observers have likened the position to a prime minister-type role.

“The object of the proposal from the bill committee in the upper house parliament is to fulfil the wishes and interests of people who voted on 8 November 2015,” NLD lawmaker Aung Kyi Nyun told parliament.
Before Aung San Suu Kyi won a victory in the November elections, she promised to be “above the president” – Htin Kyaw is a trusted school friend who is expected to act as a proxy.

The bill led to the first political battle Aung San Suu Kyi has fought with the military in parliament since thepresident was sworn in on Wednesday.

The army-aligned Union Solidarity and Development party (USDP) opposed it, saying it was unconstitutional. Members of the military, who are automatically given 25% of parliamentary seats, also argued against the bill, saying it should be referred to a constitutional tribunal.

Army politician Col Hla Win Aung warned that the bill could “destroy” the balance of power between the legislature, executive and judiciary.

Aung San Suu Kyi is blocked from becoming president as she has children with foreign nationality, a clause the military leaders made sure to write into the constitution. Her late husband was British.

Her government is smaller by about a third than the outgoing military-aligned administration. It includes a ministry of ethnic affairs, which will likely address issues from Myanmar’s 40% minority ethnic populations.

The seat is held by Naing Thet Lwin, an ethnic Mon born in 1940 who led an anti-government movement in 1988, according to the Myanmar Times.

The daughter of the country’s assassinated revolutionary hero, Aung San Suu Kyi is the only woman in the cabinet.

There has also been controversy in Myanmar over the appointment of Kyaw Win as planning and finance minister. The longtime civil servant told the Myanmar Times that the doctorate listed on his official party profile was fake.

The 68-year-old said he was a shocked to discover that his credentials were bogus after netizens alerted him that he had been scammed by company in Pakistan. His CV, issued by the NLD, showed he held a PhD from Brooklyn Park University, an online organisation that sold fraudulent degrees.

“I am not going to call myself Dr any more, as I know now that it is a fake university,” he said.

Thura U Aung Ko, a senior member of the outgoing USDP, is minister of religious and cultural affairs. The retired military officer was seen as close to Suu Kyi during the past five years as democratic reforms were gradually implemented.

Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

South Africa court orders Zuma to repay house costs

Court rules President Zuma "failed to uphold" constitution when he did not pay back some state funds for home upgrade.



31 Mar 2016 21
South African President Jacob Zuma failed to "uphold, defend and respect" the constitution when he ignored the order of an anti-corruption watchdog to repay some of the $16m spent to upgrade his private home, the Constitutional Court has ruled.

After delivering a stinging rebuke to the scandal-plagued leader on Thursday, the court gave Zuma 105 days to repay the "reasonable cost" of non-security-related upgrades to his sprawling rural residence at Nkandla in KwaZulu-Natal.

The unanimous ruling by the 11-judge court is the latest twist in a six-year saga over Nkandla that now adds financial damage to the political wounds it has already inflicted on Zuma.
After the ruling, the top six leaders of Zuma's ruling African National Congress said they would meet to discuss the outcome of the case, a party spokeswoman said.

The decision was a vindication of Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, a constitutionally mandated watchdog who was described by chief justice Mogoeng Mogoeng as a "Biblical David" fighting against the Goliath of corruption.

On Thursday, Madonsela said early estimates indicated Zuma might have to repay the government at least $680,000. 

The uncompromising nature of the verdict - Mogoeng described it as a "profound lesson" for South Africa's young democracy - piles more pressure on Zuma, already feeling the heat from a string of scandals.

Standing outside the court in downtown Johannesburg, opposition leader Mmusi Maimane told reporters Zuma should be removed from office and said he would table a parliamentary motion to have him impeached.

Zuma, a 73-year-old Zulu traditionalist, has been under fire since December, when his abrupt sacking of finance minister Nhlanhla Nene sent the rand into a tailspin.

Judicial independence

The rand firmed to a near-four month high against the dollar as Mogoeng delivered his ruling.

The African National Congress' majority in parliament is likely to give political cover against any attempt to impeach Zuma, but the ruling may embolden opponents within the ruling party to challenge him.

In an interview with Al Jazeera, Ayesha Kajee, a political analyst, said the ruling signalled "the beginning of the end" for the president "but not quite his deathbed yet".


Kajee also said the opposition did not have "sufficient numbers in parliament to impeach" Zuma, who she said still enjoyed support from rural voters. 

But for many South Africans, Kajee said the court's decision was a "sigh of relief that the judiciary is still independent in this country". 

The 2014 report on the upgrades to Zuma's residence made clear that he should pay for anything not security-related, in particular the cattle enclosure, amphitheatre, visitor centre, chicken run and swimming pool.

Zuma refused to comply, ordering parallel investigations by the public works and police ministries that largely exonerated him, based on declarations that included calling the swimming pool a fire-fighting reservoir.

In her report, Madonsela said the Treasury and police should work out the "reasonable cost" of the final cost of the five items she deemed non-essential.

Report: Najib spent US$15m on holidays, shopping and jewellery

  Malaysiakini
More startling allegations regarding Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak's multi-million ringgit spending on luxury goods have emerged.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Najib spent a total of US$15 million on holidays, shopping and jewellery. The spending was done at stores in the United States, Malaysia, Italy and elsewhere.

Malaysian investigation documents, it claimed, showed that Najib's credit card was charged US$130,625 at exclusive fashion store Chanel in Honolulu, two days before he teed off with US President Barack Obama on Christmas Eve of 2014.

That trip became a controversy as parts of Malaysia's east coast were then hit by devastating floods and Najib had to fly back to visit the affected areas.

WSJ reported that a worker at a Chanel store in the upscale Ala Moana Center recalled that Najib's wife, Rosmah Mansor, shopped there just before Christmas.

"The transaction in the Chanel store was paid for with a Visa card in Najib's name, according to the Malaysian investigation documents. At first, the transaction didn't go through and Najib, who was present, had to call his bank to approve the charge, said one of the people aware of the shopping trip," the report alleged.

The documents, it claimed, revealed that the credit card was paid for with an account in Najib's name, and that account had been credited with US$9 million a few months earlier.

According to the documents,WSJ alleged that the money came from SRC International, the former unit of 1MDB that is now under the Finance Ministry, which is headed by Najib.

"On the day Najib played golf with Obama, SRC International transferred a further US$9 million to the account via 1MDB's corporate social responsibility arm. The money arrived the day after Christmas," stated the WSJ report.

According to WSJ, the documents also showed Jakel Trading Bhd, a Malaysian luxury clothing retailer, as one of the most regular recipients of funds from Najib's accounts.

"Between 2011 and 2014, Najib transferred over US$14 million (RM55 million) to Jakel, according to the documents. The company specialises in traditional Malay formal wear, suits, wedding attire and home furnishings," it said.

'Money spent at Swiss-owned jewellery store'

WSJ claimed that there was also a recorded expenditure on June 28, 2011, at Signature Exotic Cars, a car dealership in Kuala Lumpur, for US$56,000.

"Najib's credit card also incurred charges of €750,000 in August 2014 at an Italian branch of De Grisogono, a Swiss-owned jewellery store, again being financed from the same account as the expenses in Hawaii, according to bank-transfer information that forms part of the Malaysian government probe.

"A person who works for De Grisogono confirmed Rosmah, the prime minister's wife, was a client of a branch of the jewellers in Porto Cervo, a tiny Sardinian resort. De Grisogono declined to comment," it added.

The business publication said that a lawyer who had acted for Rosmah, declined to comment when contacted and 1MDB has denied any transfer of funds to the PM's accounts but refused to address questions specific to the matter at hand.

WSJ had also contacted the other companies allegedly involved in the transactions, but all did not respond to its request for comment.

Malaysiakini has also contacted the Prime Minister's Office, Najib's aides and his lawyers for their response to this report.

Najib has repeatedly denied abusing public funds for personal gain and blamed such allegations on those attempting to topple him.

Attorney-general Mohamed Apandi Ali has also cleared him of any wrongdoing with regard to the funds in his accounts, including the RM2.6 billion which is said to be a donation from a Saudi royalty.

Government leaders have also accused WSJ of being part of the campaign against the prime minister while 1MDB has criticised the publication of recycling unverified allegations.

On Tuesday, Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) published a letter from a Saudi prince who pledged US$375 million for Najib.