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, April 2, 2016

CMEV PRESENTS COLLECTION OF CARTOONS TO CHAIRMAN, ELECTION COMMISSION

md01/04/2016
Sri Lanka BriefCentre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) in Sri Lanka has presented  a collection of cartoon portrayals published by all the national newspapers in all three languages during the Presidential and the General Election time period) about Mr. Mahinda Deshapriya. It was awarded by Dr. P. Saravanamuttu, the co-convener of CMEV and the executive director of CPA, to chairman of the Election Commission Mr. Mahinda Deshapriya in appreciation of his unwavering commitment and immense service rendered on behalf of the nation.
This gift was presented at the end of a training programme on delimitation and electoral boundaries held in Diyathalawa by CMEV recently.
Mahinda deshapriya vv
ACMEV press lease says that “as a vital component of supporting the progressive steps taken with this regard by the newly established Elections Commission of Sri Lanka, CMEV facilitated the enrichment of knowledge and skills of the high level election staff officers through a comprehensive action plan that’s aimed at providing a series of important training sessions and action plan prepared by CMEV to be mobilized in collaboration with the election commission of Sri Lanka was presented to the participants of the training programme.
Dr. P. Saravanamuttu was also awarded with a token of appreciation by the chairman of the Election Commission for his constant support to the betterment of the electoral process in the country.
(With the inputs of the CMEV press release)

Here’s the Age of the grinding stone


article_imageApril 1, 2016, 7:17 pm
The Minister of Highways and Higher Education – Lakshman Kiriella – with his obsession with the higher living expenditure of Members of Parliament, is certainly looking more towards the grinding stones of the "Seenigama Devale" or Sugar Village demonic shrine, than the role and duties of MPs.
His statement that an MP’s monthly allowance of Rs, 100,000 is insufficient for living, must have raised subdued and silent hurrahs among MPs, with the moves by government to give a huge hike to their salaries and allowances being suddenly suspended. Let’s ignore the fact that he spoke only of the salary, and nothing of MPs allowances for attendance in Parliament, fuel, phone, free vehicle, subsidized meals, massage parlour, and other perks – and also a pension after only five years in Parliament- whether one has spoken a single word in the House through all that period or not; and better not judging from many MPs today.

With the trend in political activism moving towards coconut dashing and the grinding stone at shrines for demons and supposed deities, we learn that some MPs, not only of the Joint Opposition, but other groups too, are thinking of appealing to the supernatural to get higher salaries and even better allowances and other perks, as well as political gains.

The Sugar Village shrine, crypt or tomb, has gained increased popularity with the rituals performed there by Opposition politicians in recent weeks, and the belief among many that the recent power cuts and continuing drought are the favourable response of the "devol" or maddened spirit there, to the appeals made and the curses on the government and due to political rivalry in "yaahpaalanaya".

More importantly, there is backbench talk today that because of the privileges attached to Parliament, there should be a shrine or place dedicated to the Seenigama spirit in the Parliament premises, where MPs can easily make their appeals, with the dashing of coconuts, produced at public expense, and also grinding chillies, pepper, mustard and garlic (provided by the people) for the sambal offering made on the special grinding and hand stones kept for the purpose. The Speaker may have to appoint a special " devol achariya" skilled in chanting appeals to demons to call for curses on those the MPs want disabled, defeated or destroyed.

Those promoting the Seenigama shrine in Parliament see this as a new development in parliamentary tradition in the democratic world, where MPs can be sure of the curses of demons on their opponents, when political issues get too tough for parliamentary debate. They believe the Inter Parliamentary Union, in Geneva, where some Joint Opp members are having discussions with, will see this as a good entrance of Sri Lankan culture and tradition of demonic worship, to what is left of the Westminster style parliamentary process.

With the number of politicians participating in the Seenigama rituals of cursing and seeking revenge, political analysts see this developing as a new trend in patterns of worship in the country, where "Seenigama Devol" will have an even more important place than the traditional "Hooniyam" and "Gamey Deviyo" or village deity that have a place in rituals of home and family worship.

This has an impact on the economy with an increased demand for "miris gal" the grinding and hand stones, which have largely gone away from urban homes, as more people from all walks of life, including in the towns and cities, take to the rituals at home to curse rivals in married life, business, education, jobs and other aspects of life, There will also be increased job opportunities for the "devol acharyas" who will charge a fee, to come to one’s home and do the chanting while the demon sambal grinding goes on, and before and after dashing of coconuts. This will be a slight dip in unemployment, with spiritual help.

This will also see a considerable rise in the demand for coconuts, which will make it tougher for people to make "pol sambol" to eat with their more costly bread today, or make the "kiri hodi" or coconut milk gravy to have with their rice, which will be good for the coconut dealers, who may also dash coconuts to thank deities or demons for their fortune.

With the increasing crowds going to Seenigama Devale for the most effective curses on rivals in varied aspects of life, and the promotion given to this shrine and its resident demon by MPs and others in the Opposition, including those supportive of the Rajapaksa family, Sri Lanka is fast moving to another aspect in its cultural and spiritual life. We are going at express speed to the Age of the Grinding Stone and a Culture of Curses and Hatred. It will be difficult to see many deities known for goodness and compassion, having any place as they are ground out of the lives of people and politics.
Delay in relocating Meethotamulla garbage 

dump

2016-04-02
The Megapolis and Western Development Ministry that anticipated the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report to relocate the Meethotamulla garbage yard to the proposed site in Aruwakkalu, Puttalam, stated that there was a delay in shifting the garbage dump. 

Secretary to the Ministry N. Rupasinghe said the Ministry was prompted to look for another land in Puttalam for the project as a result of the delay in the EIA report.

 Sources said the relevant authorities have proposed a garbage dump yard be constructed in Puttalam to transfer the waste collected in Meethotamulla. 

“There is a stream near the proposed land which is delaying the report. The report was to be released in a month and the project was scheduled to begin two months later. We hope to commence the construction immediately after seeking the approval,” Rupasinghe said. (Yoshitha Perera)

Government Hunts For Foreign Airline To Lift SriLankan


Colombo TelegraphApril 2, 2016
In an effort to get the country’s national carrier, SriLankan out of it’s current financial catastrophe, the government is looking at the possibility of tying up with a foreign airline in an effort to help better manageSriLankan airlines and convert it into a profit making venture.
State Minister Sujeewa Senasinghe
State Minister Sujeewa Senasinghe
State Minister of International Trade Sujeewa Senasinghe said that drastic measures were necessary to safeguard the future of the country, and to ensure that the airline will not continue to make losses.
“SriLankan is a huge problem for us, so we are looking at collaborating with a foreign carrier, to convert the loss making carrier into a profit making enterprise,” Senasinghe said.
The minister said that the national carrier was a profit making enterprise till 2008 when it was under the Emirates management, until former President Mahinda Rajapaksa for his own reasons worked in a manner which led to Emirates pulling out of the agreement with SriLankan, after which the airline took a nosedive which has led to the current crisis.
Meanwhile, Minister of Special Assignments, Dr. Sarath Amunugama categorized SriLankan airlines as one of the top 10 worst-managed state enterprises in the world. He made this statement at a seminar held on Thursday.
Sri Lanka Navy combats drug smuggling through sea rout



Drug bust at sea exposes heroin route to Sri Lanka


Lankapage LogoSat, Apr 2, 2016

Apr 02, Colombo: Sri Lanka Navy says it is dedicated to combat drugs being smuggled into the island from other countries through international waters.


The Navy and the Police Narcotics Bureau in a joint operation on Wednesday apprehended a consignment of 101 kg of heroin while being transferred through the Southern costal belt of Sri Lanka and arrested 11 foreign nationals.

The consignment was said to be the largest haul ever apprehended out at sea in the recent history.

On receipt of credible intelligence by the Sri Lanka Police Narcotics Bureau along with the Sri Lanka Navy executed this raid on 30th March 2016 in the Southern coastal belt.

SLNS Nandimithra and SLNS Mihikatha along with few other Fast Attack Craft were deployed for the mission. During the raid Navy along with the Police personnel were able to apprehend 10 Iranians and one Pakistani with the craft used for the smuggling of drugs.

Apart from the 100 kg of heroin recovered, the Naval and Police personnel were able to discover another 1kg of heroin concealed in the vessel along with another 1kg of unidentified kind of narcotic drug.

According to the Navy, the drug dealers of Pakistan and Afghanistan have been engaging in this large scale drug trafficking activities in collaboration with the drug dealers in Sri Lanka.

Investigations have revealed that the consignment of drugs is transferred by foreign vessels to the sea areas of Sri Lanka and, brought ashore by Multi-day fishing trawlers in the guise of engaging in fishing. Subsequently the stock is transferring to Colombo via the Southern Expressway. This drug racket has been recognized to be a well-organized business running without detection under the radar of the authorities.

The Navy said although the mission of arresting the illegal drug smugglers were accomplished few days ago suspects are already in police custody, the investigations are still underway to arrest the rest of the dealers in connection to this drug smuggling network.

The Navy said according to the concept of President Maithripala Sirisena, "A Country without Drugs" the paramount responsibility of the Navy is to fence the territorial waters of Sri Lanka without allowing the drug traffickers to enter into the Sri Lankan soil.


The Navy assured that they are dedicated to combat this type of drug smuggling activities whilst spending number of days at sea under demanding conditions.

Italian Cricketer Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah

Roma Capannelle Cricket Club won the Italian championship in 2013. My brother’s son Leandro Mati Jayarajah captained the team. Some of the club members are in the picture with the team.image_J

by Agnes Thambynayagam

( April 3, 2016, Texas, Sri Lanka Guardian) Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah simply followed his passion for life and sports—The Vavuniya, Sri Lanka born Francis Alphonsus Jayaraja was indeed chosen by Italy to lead it’s national team long before England chose the Chennai, India born Nasser Hussain to lead the MCC in 1999.

Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah, an all round athlete from St. Patrick’s College, Jaffna, Sri Lanka, simply followed his passion for life and sports. He left Sri Lanka in 1968 and became a pioneer in his own right: he became the first Sri Lankan, if not, the first man ever from the Indian subcontinent, to captain the national cricket team of a European country. In 1984, Jayarajah was selected to Captain the Italian national cricket team. The Vavuniya, Sri Lanka born Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah was indeed chosen by Italy to lead its national team long before England chose the Chennai, India born Nasser Hussain to lead the MCC in 1999.

Jayarajah, who studied at the University of Rome and then worked for the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, played for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cricket Club against British and Australian Embassies winning the Rome Ashes in 1975. In 1978, Jayarajah founded his own Cricket Club along with his then girl friend Franca Beranger and some of his friends. They named it ‘Commonwealth Wandering Giants Cricket Club’.

In 1980, Jayarajah co-founded the Associazione Italiana Cricket (Italian Cricket Association) with the help of his good friend Simone Gambino and with his cricket club players Massimo Da Costa, Desmond O’Grady, Sam Kahale and others. At this time, they changed the club name to Doria Pamphilj Cricket Club. The Roma Villa lawn of Princess Orietta Doria Pamphilj and her British cricket fan husband Admiral Frank Pogson was used to play Cricket in the sixties and seventies in Rome. The club won the first Championship organized by the Italian Cricket Association.

In 1983, Rome’s Capannelle Hippodrome granted a large ground on lease in the center of the racecourse in Southern Rome. At this time the club changed its name to Roma Capannelle Cricket Club. It is in this new large ground, the Roma Capannelle Cricket Club, under the shepherd ship of Jayarajah and Da Costa rose to prominence in the international stage. Jayarajah and Da Costa who alternated as the Captain of their team, Roma Capannelle Cricket Club, had nurtured many home grown Italian players. In 1988, Jayarajah’s wife Franca Maria Beranger became the President of Roma Capannelle Cricket Club.

Roma Capannelle Club is the Italy’s oldest cricket club that competes in the premier league (Series A) and fields 3 adult men teams, 4 juniors and a women’s team that started in 2009, which won back-to-back Series A titles in 2009 and 2010. They have over 100 playing members and have several programs aimed to introduce cricket in the Italian schools as they had been doing for the past 30 years.  During the past four decades, Roma Capannelle Club has given many talented cricketers to the National team.

In 1984, Jayarajah captained the first Italian National Team that toured UK. He captained the National team every year thereafter until 1992. Italy kept pushing and knocking on ICC’s (International Cricket Council) door and soon Italy became the first ever Affiliate Member. In 1997 Italy finally became an Associate Member of the ICC after changing its name from Italian Cricket Association to Italian Cricket Federation. Considering the fact when Jayarajah left Sri Lanka in 1968, the formidable Ceylon team was only an Associate Member; this achievement of Italy under his stewardship was a momentous and poignant moment in Jayarajah’s life.

Today, Italy is one of the leading non-commonwealth cricketing nations, and has been ranked as high as number 17 in the world out of 105 playing countries. In 2011, Italy hosted the Division 4 Championship and finished second, and consequently, earned its place in Division 3. The finest hour, however, in international cricket came for Italy and Jayarajah in the 2012 World Twenty20 Qualifier in the UAE. A stellar performance by the Italian team at this tournament included wins over Oman (9 wickets) and the United States of America (8 runs).  Italy has won the European Championship in 2013 and now competes in the World Cricket League Division 4.

Jayarajah had been a committee member for the Italian Cricket Association from 1984 to 1987 and Vice President of the Technical Committee for the Italian Cricket Association from 1988 to 1991. Jayarajah retired from the Italian National Team after receiving the ICC Trophy in Malaysia in 1997, in which Italy competed for the first time. He was the Vice President for the Italian Cricket Federation from 2008 to 2012 and an active committee member for the Italian Cricket Federation since 2004 to present. Jayarajah and his friend Simone Gambino, the President of the Italian Federation are the only two Italians who hold the Full Membership of the MCC (Marylebone Cricket Club- the holder of the Laws of Cricket) with voting rights.

The torch has now been passed on to the next generation. Jayarajah’s son Leandro Mati Jayarajah plays cricket for Roma Capannelle Cricket Club in the Series A since 2001 where he has been the Captain of the team since 2005. Leandro played his first game for the Italian National Team in August 2010 during the European Cricket Championship against Holland. He is also a qualified cricket coach and currently he is involved in coaching the Italian Under 17 team. Jayarajah’s daughter Francesca Maria Suriakumari is also a keen cricketer and plays for the women’s cricket team since its start in 2009.

Jayarajah’s best friend and beloved wife Franca Maria Beranger, President, Roma Capannelle Cricket Club 1988—2014 and a staunch advocate of Italian cricket, passed away peacefully after a brief illness on January 1, 2015.

Jayarajah was born on 18 June 1947 to Ligory Francis (Master) of Mirusuvil, and Mary Regina Vanderkoen Francis of Rambaikulam, Vavuniya, Sri Lanka. He is the brother of the author of this article Agnes Thambynayagam of Texas, USA. Jayarajah began playing cricket at St. Patrick’s College Jaffna, Sri Lanka in the sixties. He continued to play cricket in Rome, Italy after he moved there for higher studies in 1968. Jayarajah captained the Italian National Cricket team from 1984 to 1992. He is currently a Committee member for the Italian Cricket Federation and represents the Federation at ICC meetings. 

Jayarajah continues to play for Roma Capannelle Club in Series A that won titles in 1988, 1990, 1991, 2000 and 2013. Jayarajah himself won eight Italian Cup Titles. Today, the Roma Capannelle Cricket Club founded by Jayarajah is an Internationally recognized cricket club for boys and girls who aspire to play for Italy. Jayarajah is the president of the club since January 2015.

Azerbaijan says 12 of its soldiers killed in fighting

Doctors render aid to 12-year-old Gevorg Grigoryan, who was wounded in a missile barrage by Azerbaijani forces, in a hospital in Stepanakert, in the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh region, Armenia, Saturday, April 2, 2016. Heavy fighting has broken out between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces along the front lines of the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh region, reportedly killing at least one child in what one official called the worst clashes since 1994. (Areg Balayan/PAN Photo via AP)

AIDA SULTANOVA-April 2, 2016

BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) — At least 30 soldiers and a boy were reported killed as heavy fighting erupted Saturday between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces over the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The fighting was the worst outbreak since a full-scale war over the region ended in 1994. Since then, mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh — officially part of Azerbaijan — has been under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces and the Armenian military.

Armenian forces also occupy several areas outside Nagorno-Karabakh proper. The sides are separated by a demilitarized buffer zone, but small clashes have broken out frequently.
Each side blamed the other for Saturday's escalation.

In a statement, Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry said 12 of its soldiers "became shahids" — Muslim martyrs — and said one of its helicopters was shot down.

The statement also claimed that more than 100 Armenian forces were killed or wounded and that six tanks and 15 artillery positions were destroyed.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan told his national security council that 18 Armenian soldiers were killed and 35 wounded.

Armenia earlier claimed to have inflicted heavy damage on Azerbaijani forces, but did not immediately give figures. A statement from the Nagorno-Karabakh defense ministry claimed more than 200 Azerbaijani soldiers were killed, but there was no corroboration for that figure.

"This is the most wide-scale military action that Azerbaijan has tried to carry out since the establishment of the 1994 cease-fire regime," Sargsyan said.

David Babayan, a spokesman for Nagorno-Karabakh's separatist president, said a boy of about 12 was killed and two other children were wounded in a Grad missile barrage by Azerbaijani forces.

Russian President Vladimir Putin urged all sides to cease firing and "show restraint," Russian news agencies quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying. Russia's foreign and defense ministers contacted their Azerbaijani and Armenian counterparts in hopes of stabilizing the situation, the ministries said.

"The situation along the entire length of the line of opposition between Karabakhi and Azerbaijani armed forces continues to be extremely difficult," Armenian defense ministry spokesman Artsrun Hovhannisyan told The Associated Press.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry issued a statement saying that the United States "condemns in the strongest terms the large scale ceasefire violations" along the Nagorno-Karabakh buffer zone.

"We urge the sides to show restraint, avoid further escalation, and strictly adhere to the ceasefire," Kerry said. He called on both sides to enter into "immediate negotiations" on a comprehensive settlement of the conflict under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

Years of negotiations under the OSCE have brought little progress in resolving the territorial dispute.
The negotiation efforts are led by a troika of envoys from the United States, Russia and France. On Saturday, the envoys jointly issued a statement calling on the sides "to stop shooting and take all necessary means to stabilize the situation on the ground."

Armenian forces also occupy several areas outside Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenian Defense Ministry said Azerbaijan used aircraft, tanks and artillery to try to make inroads into Nagorno-Karabkh and that "Azerbaijani authorities bear all responsibility for the unprecedentedly supercharged situation."

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said the fighting began when Armenian forces fired mortars and large-caliber artillery shells across the front line. Ministry spokesman Vagif Dargyakhly told The Associated Press that more than 120 shots were fired, some of which hit civilian residential areas.
___
Associated Press writers Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, and Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this story.
PKK bomb attack kills six Turkish security 

forces

Attack comes days after seven police were killed in car bomb blast in southeastern city of Diyarbakir -
Residents return to Diyarbakir after curfew was lifted last month (AFP)

Saturday 2 April 2016
Five Turkish soldiers and one special forces police officer were killed on Saturday in a bomb attack blamed on Kurdish militants in the southeast of the country, the Dogan news agency reported.
The members of the security forces were carrying out a military operation in Nusaybin in the southeastern Mardin province when a bomb planted by rebels from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) was detonated, it said.
Nusaybin has been under curfew since mid-March amid a military operation to push the PKK out of the town, where the authorities say the group dug trenches and put up barricades.
The PKK first took up arms against Turkey between 1984 and 1999 in a civil war that sought an independent Kurdish state for Turkey's largest ethnic minority, but it now focuses on autonomy and greater rights. About 40,000 people died in that initial conflict, according to Der Spiegel.
The fighting resumed in 2004. The PKK declared a truce in March 2013 but it collapsed last summer and the government has since moved to eradicate the group's presence in urban centres in a relentless military campaign.
The new attack comes two days after seven police were killed and 27 others wounded by a massive car bomb attack on a police bus in Turkey's main southeastern city of Diyarbakir.
Turkish authorities on Saturday detained the suspected perpetrator, identified as A.C., of that attack, which was claimed on Friday by the military wing of the PKK.
The bombing - unlike previous recent attacks in Turkey - was not a suicide attack but remotely detonated, officials said at the time.
Dogan said A.C. is believed to be the man recorded on security camera footage walking away just before the attack from a parked white car which would later explode when the police bus passed.
The Dogan report said nine others suspected of links to the attacks had been detained on Friday prior to A.C.'s arrest.
In other violence blamed on the PKK overnight, one civilian was killed and 18 people wounded in an attack on a military sub-station in the Kiziltepe district of Mardin province, the army said.
The civilian killed was reportedly a Syrian who had been working on a building site project.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said earlier this week that 355 members of the security forces had been killed in the fighting since the truce collapsed last summer. 
He also claimed 5,359 members of the PKK had been killed, but it was not possible to confirm that toll.
Turkey has been shaken this year by two attacks in the capital Ankara claimed by Kurdish rebels that killed dozens and two deadly bombings in Istanbul blamed on militants that targeted foreigners.

The Liberation of Mosul Has Begun


The Liberation of Mosul Has Begun

BY MICHAEL KNIGHTS-
MARCH 30, 2016

“No one talks about liberating Mosul anymore,” I wrote for Foreign Policy in August, as Iraq’s war against the Islamic State grinded on inconclusively. But seven months later, with a win in the city of Ramadi under the anti-Islamic State coalition’s belt, they’re doing more than talking about Mosul: The first phase of the Fatah, or “Conquest,” operation to liberate Mosul has begun.

Admittedly, the Iraqi government’s announcement this week of its effort to push the line forward near the town of Makhmour, 40 miles southeast of Mosul, is a bit of a red herring. This is just a tidying up of the front line, to push Islamic State rocket teams farther back from Iraqi and U.S. bases, including Forward Operating Base Bell, where U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Louis Cardin was killed by indirect fire on March 19.

But though Mosul will not be liberated next week, or next month, real progress is being made in the war against the Islamic State. Returning from a week in Baghdad and Iraqi Kurdistan, I found that a lot of interesting things are happening below the surface to pave the way for the real offensive to relieve the city.

It has always been clear that there will be no defeating the Islamic State in Iraq without liberating and stabilizing Mosul. Iraq’s second-largest city, home to over 1 million people, is a major source of funding and manpower for the terrorist group. Positioned just 60 miles west of Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan region of Iraq, it is a major source of terrorist threats to the Kurds as well.

The new coalition-built 15th Iraqi Army division, which is concentrated in Makhmour, is entering the battle and will be crucial in weakening the Islamic State’s grasp on Mosul. I visited this unit at the Taji military base near Baghdad last autumn as its officers were being trained. The U.S.-trained divisional headquarters staff was mainly from Mosul, and they were itching to get back in the fight for their home province. Many were from the units that collapsed in Mosul during the Islamic State’s capture of the city in June 2014and they clearly felt a degree of shame about how the Iraqi security forces had given way.

I also saw one of the main combat units of the 15th division, the 71st brigade, as it was trained by Australian and New Zealand troops. In the summer of 2015, the Islamic State had battered this unit, after it was twice thrown into battle near Samarra and Fallujah before it had been completely trained and equipped. In one particularly devastating attack, the unit lost its commanding officer to a massive armored suicide truck bomb.

After an extended 10-week retraining, focused on incorporating anti-tank and artillery weapons to defeat the suicide bombs, the 71st brigade is fighting alongside two other 15th division brigades and supporting artillery in the Makhmour peninsula, a corner of Iraqi Kurdistan that is home to many of the Mosul liberation forces.

Makhmour is a good location for the 15th division, because it is something of a no man’s land – a place where Iraq’s Kurds are comfortable with the presence of Iraqi Army units. Although it is formally within the Kurdistan Regional Government’s Erbil province, it was not liberated from Saddam’s forces until 2003, over 20 years after the rest of Erbil province was liberated by the Kurds and their Kurdistan Regional Government formed.

Makhmour, which is home to a mixture of Arabs and Kurds, is also a symbol of the pragmatism that is increasingly undergirding the war against the Islamic State. The Kurdistan Region has allowed its rival, the federal government in Baghdad, to host a whole Iraqi army division there – a mere half-day’s drive from the Kurdish capital of Erbil. Baghdad, meanwhile, is paying the salaries of the Iraqi Army 91st brigade (also part of 15th division, stationed near Makhmour) which has always been made up of Kurdish Peshmerga. It is also the only place in Iraq where the Kurds have embraced the U.S.-promoted idea of Sahwa, or Awakening forces, building their own Arab auxiliary force, the Brayati, since 2009 and until this day.

The KRG and the federal government make deals they don’t like because the alternatives are worse. The Iraqi army will never be welcome near Kurdistan’s borders — but the Kurds much prefer it to the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), the predominantly Shiite volunteers who took up arms after the fall of Mosul. In the race to liberate Mosul, the Kurds are backing the Iraqi army and giving it a head start at Makhmour.

Building the coalition to liberate Mosul

Just as the Kurds accepted the deployment of Iraqi army forces in Makhmour, a lot of thinking is going into the coalition of local actors who will be required to capture Mosul from the Islamic State and stabilize the city the day after its liberation.

Kurdish and local Arab leaders agree on one thing: The PMUs have to play as limited a role as possible, because the predominately Sunni residents of Mosul could react negatively to the presence of large numbers of Shia fighters. There is likely to be an ancillary role for the PMU — most probably they will get to liberate Tal Afar, the Islamic State’s heart of darkness 40 miles west of Mosul, home to many of the Islamic State’s leadership and a place where Shia Turkmen were driven out by the Islamic State after Mosul fell. Many of the Islamic State’s key leaders were Sunni Turkmen from Tal Afar, as was the case with the movement’s forerunner, al Qaeda in Iraq.

As I heard last week in Baghdad and Iraqi Kurdistan, local leaders also seem to agree on some basic spheres of influence. There is a general agreement that authentic Moslawis (Mosul’s urban natives) must rule the city, not the Arab tribal leaders of rural Nineveh province.

The Kurds will undoubtedly play a major role in sling-shooting their favored Moslawis back into the city. One of these actors is former Nineveh governor Atheel al-Nujaifi, who has collected a force of about 3,000 fighters and has secured Turkish military training plus Kurdish and Turkish artillery support for their advance.

The Kurds are likely to play an important part in the liberation of “left bank” Mosul – the parts east of the Tigris. These are the areas of the city closest to the Kurdish front lines, and the side of the city where the most Kurds lived. The Christian militias associated with the Kurds will also come from the east with Kurdish support. These forces, backed by multiple Peshmerga brigades and artillery, will tie down important elements of the Islamic State, making the Iraqi army’s job easier in predominately Arab west Mosul. Though involving Peshmerga in the urban battle could risk a negative reaction from Mosul’s Arabs, their presence alongside non-Kurdish Moslawi units is probably a risk worth taking.

How will Moslawis react?

The great unknown about the coming battle is how urban Moslawis will react to the imminent prospect of liberation. Mosul was always unique. Until the Islamic State captured the city in 2014, Mosul was never fully conquered —but never fully compliant either. Al Qaeda never entirely gave up its grip on the criminal underbelly of the city. Mosul was never “surged” by the United States or the Iraqi military.

The Islamic State will have controlled Mosul for at least two years by the time the liberation comes – compared with nine months in Tikrit and less than six months in Ramadi. It is hard to know how the city’s youth have changed over the last two years: A young boy who was 13 when Mosul fell might be a strapping 16-year-old street fighter by the time the fight for the city begins.

If the population stands shoulder-to-shoulder with the Islamic State, then the government will simply not be able to recapture Mosul. Thankfully, this is probably the least likely scenario. The visible presence of government forces on Mosul’s outskirts will put the Islamic State’s grip on the city under unprecedented strain. In all likelihood, the group will choose to limit its defense to certain neighborhoods, and other areas will “self-liberate” as Islamic State fighters pull out.

But Moslawis will take a lot of convincing that liberation is permanent. They will fear the Islamic State’s return, so their embrace of government forces may be tentative, particularly in predominantly Arab areas of west Mosul, where the Islamic State has drawn the strongest support. Some areas may already have covertly cut deals with the Iraqi and Kurdish governments before the urban battle even starts, opening the way for their rapid recapture.

After the city is captured, of course, its liberators will face a whole set of new challenges. Whereas most of the areas liberated from the Islamic State have been tribal areas, Mosul is still a city of urbanites. There is a tried and tested formula for resolving intra-communal vendettas in post-Islamic State areas farther south: The tribes work with the security forces to negotiate huge community-wide blood money payments from locals who worked with the Islamic State to those victimized by the Islamic State to bury the hatchet. This is happening right now in Ramadi, Tikrit, and many other places.

But the tribes are not as strong in Mosul city, meaning that the authorities will need another way to tackle the issue of all the abuses that pro-IS locals have heaped upon their fellow Moslawis. If Mosul’s residents have been impressed by any aspect of Islamic State rule, it has been the rapid judicial processes that speedily resolve everyday civil conflicts. One option being discussed to minimize revenge killings is quick-fire justice, with local courts rapidly convening to convict known Islamic State affiliates during the short honeymoon period in which Moslawis will look to the state, rather than the gun, for justice.

Some local leaders, notably Atheel al-Nujaifi, believe that the city will need more than justice and security to recover. They posit the need for a fundamental change to Iraq’s political order: the creation of a Sunni regional government, akin to the Kurdistan regional government next door, bolstered by Turkish-backed trade deals. Others, like Kurdish Moslawi politician Khasro Goran, favor splitting Nineveh into three provinces: Mosul for the Arabs, the Nineveh Plains for the Christians, and Sinjar for the Yezidis.

These ideas underline the mixture of promise and peril that will unfold as Operation Fatah grinds on toward the liberation of Mosul in late 2016 or early 2017. There are probably as many ideas about the future of Mosul as there are Moslawis inside that beleaguered city – over 1 million by most estimates.

If the coalition-backed Iraqi and Kurdish governments make the right deals and send the right messages, the liberation of Mosul could be very different from the military slogs in Tikrit and Ramadi. The future of one of Iraq’s great cities hangs in the balance: The Moslawis, to a greater extent than any of the other captive populations held in the Islamic State’s thrall, will probably get a vote on whether their city rejects outsiders and is reduced to rubble, or makes a deal and metaphorically opens its doors to the liberators as in the sieges of old.

AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/Getty Images

Let Us Guide The R&AW

KUL-BHUSHAN-YADAV
It is a reality accepted by everyone that Pakistan has world’s one of the few best intelligence agencies as well as very skillfully trained and devotedly talented law-enforcement agencies. For the last thirty years, Pakistan has been facing the ever-worst interference of different international intelligence agencies including the MOSAD, the KHAD, the CIA the NDS and the R&AW.

by Ali Sukhanver

( April 1, 2016, Islamabad, Sri Lanka Guardian) The arrest of Kul Bushan Yadev is no doubt a wonderful achievement of the intelligence agencies of Pakistan but it must be kept in mind that history is replete with such marvelous achievements particularly with reference to the agents of Raw. These agents have ever been involved in very cruel type of terrorist activities in Pakistan though the intelligence agencies of Pakistan did never let them enjoy a long time working. Same is the case with Kul Bushan Yadev, the Indian terrorist of RAW who was arrested just a few days back. In this very short span of time the intelligence and security agencies of Pakistan succeeded in exploring all that was hidden in the brain and heart of this RAW operative.

According to the details this recently arrested RAW terrorist was found deeply involved in different terrorist activities in Pakistan including a plan of sabotaging the CPEC project. The security agencies also traced his involvement in providing financial and technical support to the groups of so-called Baloch separatists. But there is nothing new in all these incidents; Raw had ever been very active in Pakistan and it is not for the first time that a RAW operative has been arrested. Let us look back to 23rd September 2015; the Security forces of Pakistan in collaboration with the Intelligence agencies of Pakistan arrested two individuals working for Indian intelligence agency RAW from Parachinar in Kurram tribal agency. The Indian agents were arrested after an intelligence based operation (IBO) was carried out by security agencies. Shahidullah the Assistant Political Agent of Kurram agency that time said talking to media, “During investigation the arrested individuals have confessed to working for the Indian agency RAW.” He further added that the arrested individuals were involved in terrorism related activities and sectarian attacks in Kurram agency. Earlier in August 2015, the law enforcement agencies had arrested four suspects linked to India’s RAW spy agency from Lahore. Besides Balochistan, finding RAW’s footprints in Fata and Karachi is also a routine matter. Different defense analysts link the presence of the RAW operatives in Pakistan with the statement of Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval who said that it is a part of the Indian strategy to weaken Pakistan by promoting terrorism and separatism with the help of the RAW agents.

Before that in early 70s we come across Ravinder Kaushik who was recruited by RAW and was given extensive training in Delhi for two years. According to the media reports Ravinder Kaushik underwent Circumcision so he could pass as a Muslim. He was taught Urdu, given religious education and acquainted with the topography and other details about Pakistan. In 1975 he was sent to Pakistan and given the name of Nabi Ahmed Shakir. Somehow or the other he got a trivial type of job in government sector from where he tried to pass on valuable information to RAW which he thought was of great help to the Indian defense forces. He couldn’t conceal his identity for a long time from the intelligence agencies of Pakistan and was soon caught red-handed. As per tradition he was totally disowned by RAW and the Indian authorities after being caught. He died a miserable death and the Indian authorities provided him no help no support, however Indian Media started a campaign to have his efforts acknowledged after his death. In 2013 the Baghdad police station of Karachi arrested another agent of RAW during raid in a house on the basis of information provided by the intelligence agencies. The fake name of that agent was Syed Alam and he was found involved in so many sectarian killings and other terrorist activities in Karachi. Several fake CNIC’s were also found in his room an Indian passport too during the raid. In short there is a long list of agents who were sent to Pakistan by the RAW but luckily none of them could be successful in hiding himself from the eyes of the intelligence agencies of Pakistan.

It is a reality accepted by everyone that Pakistan has world’s one of the few best intelligence agencies as well as very skillfully trained and devotedly talented law-enforcement agencies. For the last thirty years, Pakistan has been facing the ever-worst interference of different international intelligence agencies including the MOSAD, the KHAD, the CIA the NDS and the RAW. They all have joined hand together to destabilize Pakistan with their heinous crimes but they have yet not succeeded in their plans yet. It is only because of the unbeatable and undefeatable professional skills of the intelligence and security agencies of Pakistan. It is something very deplorable that Pakistan’s closest neighbour India lets no opportunity of destabilizing Pakistan go waste. In spite of the fact that Pakistan has always tried to create an atmosphere of cordiality and harmony with India by doing all that is possible but this unlucky neighbour of Pakistan never appreciates or encourages any of such efforts rather India’s response to such efforts is always in shape of some conspiracy against Pakistan. Whenever Pakistan struggles to arrange peace-talks between the two countries, India certainly does something to mar this effort. In this way the peace process always remains incomplete. We have ample examples of this non-cooperation from the Indian side. Be it the Pathankot incident or the Mumbai blasts or the so-called Boat-Incident, India has always been involved in a dirty blame game against Pakistan. The RAW high-ups must review their approach and behavior.

Nelson Mandela’s fellow ANC activist breaks silence to demand Jacob Zuma’s resignation

Ahmed Kathrada, who stood in dock at Rivonia trial, tells South Africa president to go as scandal mounts over government cash for private mansion
Ahmed Kathrada, left, with Winnie Mandela, Nelson Mandela and Walter Sisulu at a rally in 1990. His intervention in the leadership crisis may prove pivotal, experts believe. Photograph: Rex Features/SIPA

Mark Townsend-Saturday 2 April 2016

One of South Africa’s most revered anti-apartheid activists dramatically intervened in the growing row over President Jacob Zuma’s future by urging the country’s embattled leader to step down.

In a development described by analysts as potentially pivotal, Ahmed Kathrada, who was jailed alongside Nelson Mandela in 1964, called on Zuma to quit after the country’s highest court ruled on Thursday that the leader had acted dishonestly over state spending on his private mansion.

In a letter addressed to the president and published on Saturday, Kathrada said the scandal that has engulfed Zuma’s seven-year presidency had reached the point where only his resignation would allow the government to recover from “a crisis of confidence”.

Kathrada wrote: “In the face of such persistently widespread criticism, condemnation and demand, is it asking too much to express the hope that you will choose the correct way that is gaining momentum, to consider stepping down?”

This condemnation echoed calls for Zuma’s resignation from opposition parties led by the Democratic Alliance, Economic Freedom Fighters, Inkatha Freedom party (IFP) and the United Democratic 

Movement (UDM), which stressed Zuma’s failure to even apologise unreservedly to South Africans. UDM leader Bantu Holomisa said Zuma had given the country “the middle finger”, and IFP leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi dismissed Zuma’s presidential address to the nation last Friday as “obfuscation”.

The opposition has launched impeachment proceedings against Zuma, but these are unlikely to prove fruitful given the large majority the African National Congress (ANC) has in parliament, where it holds 249 out of 400 seats in the national assembly.

Yet the response of the ANC itself to Zuma’s reaction has become a focus of concern for many South Africans, exposing the divide between the “elder statesmen” of the party, such as Kathrada, and its younger members. Last Friday, after the address, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said the president had “humbled” himself: “We are comfortable with the fact he has apologised.”
But the intervention from 86-year-old Kathrada may carry considerable weight within the party, which has governed the country since apartheid ended in 1994. Mandela and Kathrada were among eight ANC activists sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted of trying to overthrow the apartheid government during the 1963-1964 Rivonia trial.

The scandal is probably the biggest yet to hit Zuma, whose leadership has been mired with repeated accusations of wrongdoing since he took office in 2009. The latest revelations follow reports that the Guptas, a powerful business family close to Zuma, had a hand in choosing cabinet members. Last month a government official claimed that members of the Gupta family had offered him the post of finance minister.

Other scandals include a dodgy arms deal over which the former president Thabo Mbeki fired Zuma as his deputy, and another where Zuma was charged with the rape of a friend’s daughter but later acquitted.

In 2014 an independent inquiry found that Zuma got the government to pay for lavish improvements to his home at Nkandla, in KwaZulu Natal. The president refused to pay back some of the £10m state funds spent on renovation of the property, and this led to the constitutional court’s ruling last Thursday.
In March 2014 a report by the public protector, a similar role to an ombudsman, found that Zuma had “unduly” benefited from non-security upgrades such as a swimming pool, cattle kraal, chicken run, amphitheatre and visitors’ centre at his sprawling residence.

Extracts from Kathrada’s letter

Ahmed Kathrada. Photograph: Stephane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty Images
I have agonised for a while before writing this letter to you. I have been a loyal and disciplined member of the ANC and broader Congress movement since the 1940s. I have always maintained a position of not speaking out publicly about any differences I may harbour against my leaders and my organisation, the ANC. I would only have done so when I thought that some important organisational matters compel me to raise my concerns.

Today I have decided to break with that tradition. The position of president is one that must at all times unite this country behind a vision and programme that seeks to make tomorrow a better day than today for all South Africans. It is a position that requires the respect of all South Africans, which of course must be earned at all times.

I am not a political analyst, but I am now driven to ask: Dear Comrade President, don’t you think your continued stay as President will only serve to deepen the crisis of confidence in the government of the country?

And bluntly, if not arrogantly, in the face of such persistently widespread criticism, condemnation and demand, is it asking too much to express the hope that you will choose the correct way that is gaining momentum, to consider stepping down?

If not, Comrade President, are you aware that your outstanding contribution to the liberation struggle stands to be severely tarnished if the remainder of your term as President continues to be dogged by crises and a growing public loss of confidence in the ANC and government as a whole.

To paraphrase the famous MK slogan of the time, “There comes a time in the life of every nation when it must chose to submit or fight”. Today I appeal to our President to submit to the will of the people and resign.

Yours comradely,
Ahmed M Kathrada

Vietnam requires 100 years, US$10 billion to clear unexploded mines, bombs

People watch a presentation about landmines in Vietnam. Pic: AP

 

THE VIETNAMESE government said it needs at least 100 years and more than US$10 billion to clear all the unexploded landmines and bombs leftover from previous wars.

The mammoth figure does not even take into account the billions more needed to pay for resettlement and social security in the affected areas.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs estimates that 800,000 tonnes of unexploded mines and bombs remain scattered across 20 percent of the nation’s territory, presenting a continuing and significant risk to its citizens. All 63 provinces and cities in Vietnam have at least some mines.

These mines and bombs – the often forgotten and deadly legacy of the US war in Vietnam – have killed about 42,130 people and injured 62,160 more.

From 1945 to 1975, the US dropped more than 15 million tonnes of bombs and mines in Vietnam – four times the amount used in the Second World War.

According to VietNamNet Bridge, statistics indicate that one-third (34 percent) of landmine-related accidents happen when victims look for war scrap, 27 percent when farming or grazing cattle, and 21 percent while playing with the explosives.

Deputy chief of the ministry’s secretariat Lưu Hồng Sơn blamed the mines and bombs for their terrible effects on the Vietnamese people as well as the nation’s socioeconomic development, reported Việt Nam News.

He said that while Vietnam has made significant progress in dealing with the mines and bombs – decontaminating tens of thousands of hectares of land – there is much more to be done.