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

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

New Year Kokis To Luxury Permits


Colombo Telegraph
By Asanga Abeyagoonasekera –April 19, 2016
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
The world is a fine place, and worth fighting for” ~ Hemingway
The Kokis eaten on our traditional New Year didn’t have much time to digest when the news broke that the luxury vehicle permits worth US$ 62500 was issued to all 225 Members of the Parliament of Sri Lanka which they can sell for close to Rs 20m each permit.
What is the change we voted for? Is this the culture we want to take forward? According to the Daily News editorial 25th November 2015 “Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake mentioned during his long Budget speech that the Government would abolish all kinds of vehicle permits, including those given to Members of Parliament.”
There was not much of noise for permits as I assume everyone has accepted and probably already taken home. Apart from this, each Minister will receive Rs35m for a Ministry vehicle and a Deputy Minister Rs28m. This is the grand new year gift for the common people of our nation. In contrast to the political elite, the office assistant in Government gets paid only Rs28,000 with close to 100 hours overtime payment as the monthly salary and has to look after his children, family and buy presents for the family to celebrate new year with the rising cost of living. The situation has not changed much for the forgotten assistant for the last ten years.
With this exorbitant spending we are going with a begging bowl to IMF asking for financial assistance to solve our financial crisis. Sri Lanka is requesting financial assistance in the next few weeks of around US$ 1 billion to US$ 2 billion from the IMF to sail over the current economic tide. To create a cabinet close to 100 Ministers was not the struggle the public or this author joined during the last election supporting the central theme Good Governance. The Sunday Times on the 17th of April carried that around Rs5m a month is the cost to maintain one individual Minister. While the politicians are asking the public to support their policies they are robbing the public in day light.
The cost of many products will rise with the increase of Value Added Tax VAT to 15% from 2nd May and again the common man has to add this addition burden to his life style. According to Economists the main conditions for the loan from IMF are to reduce the nations budget deficit, raise revenues and bolster its foreign exchange reserves. If the country is facing such economic situation, why is it that the politicians are accepting luxury permits and getting separate permits for Ministries.
Ideally, the State should be reducing permits and some members should not accept or go for affordable electric vehicles as pledged by President Sirisena in COP21, to create a better environment to reduce carbon foot print. Many speak of these good values but implementation is not evident in our society. According to Central Bank reports, by 2020 Sri Lanka aims to reach a per capita of $7000 which is in another four years. Now we are at $3500 and such unfruitful lavish financial spending one should question the direction of the country’s leader’s actions.

JVP wants Lankans in ‘Panama Papers’ probed





By Niranjala Ariyawansha-2016-04-20
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) emphasized yesterday the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) and the Inland Revenue Department (IRD) should begin investigations immediately into the alleged illicit money transactions that have been revealed through the 'Panama Papers'.
The Voice Against Corruption said the CBSL and IRD should commence investigations and......make inquiries into Sri Lankans whose names have been revealed as depositors in Panama banks.
The Convener of the Voice against Corruption, North Central Provincial Council member Wasantha Samarasinghe made this comment yesterday at a press briefing in Colombo.
He also alleged that the CBSL was using funds of the Rs 1,300 billion Employees' Provident Fund (EPF) account to invest in Treasury Bonds through primary dealers, thus causing massive losses to the EPF.
He also alleged that in order to prevent this situation from being disclosed, officers who are against corruption at the Central Bank are being transferred.
He also stated although the Voice Against Corruption has lodged complaints with the Financial Crimes Investigation Division (FCID), the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC), all these complaints, as well as complaints from other sources seem to have run aground under this government.

Development officers lodge a complaint to the human rights commission

Development officers lodge a complaint to the human rights commission

Apr 19, 2016
Unemployed graduates union lodged a complaint today 19th at the Human Rights Commission stating that the fundamental rights of the development officers working in the divisional secretaries around the country has been violated.

The complaint stated, by transferring the official duties constitutionally entrusted to the development officers by the national policy and economic affairs ministry, through the 02/2016 circular dated 24th march 2016, to some other officials the current duties assigned to them has been nullified.

Currently there are 16,000 of such officers around the country.
The complainers urge the relevant authorities to amend the circulars and assign the official duties for those development officers.

The hidden treasures of Gaza

Nafez Abed at his Gaza rooftop workspace.Momen Faiz
Nafez Abed’s copy of an ancient artifact.Momen Faiz--Replica antique coins made by Nafez Abed in his small workshop.

Hamza Abu Eltarabesh-19 April 2016

A small room on a rooftop in the occupied Gaza Strip’s crowded Beach refugee camp resembles a miniature archaeological museum.

It is the workshop of Nafez Abed, 55, who studies archaeological artifacts in order to replicate them in exquisite detail.

Abed copies antiquities photographed in history books and ones he’s seen during visits to archaeological sites across Gaza, which many a civilization has passed through, as well as in other Arab countries and Europe.

“I started collecting and copying artifacts one year after my release from Israeli prison in 1987,” Abed said. According to Abed, Israel accused him of being active with the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

“I didn’t study sculpture, but I became an expert in imitation and copying through practical experience,” he added.

The artifacts he copies range from the Greek to Islamic eras, and include mosaics, coins, buttons and pottery.

“I seek to found a museum to display our heritage and bridge the gap between lovers of heritage and the eras that can never be returned to,” Abed said.

Abed also hopes to impart his skills on the younger generation.

“Art opens youths’ minds to various corners and spreads hope,” he said.

Gaza’s modern situation imperils Abed’s work towards preserving the legacy of this historical gateway between civilizations.

“Terrified”

“During the last war, I was terrified for my sculptures; they’re very close to my heart,” he said.

The biggest obstacle to Abed’s work is Israel’s blockade on Gaza, imposed for nearly a decade, which prevents the importation of raw materials Abed needs for his work.

Egypt’s closure of the Rafah crossing — the sole point of exit and entry for the vast majority of Gaza’s 1.8 million residents — isolates the coastal strip from the rest of the world and prevents artists like Abed from exporting and exhibiting their work abroad.

The present conditions in Gaza mean that there is no tourism and no souvenir industry that goes along with it.

But Abed’s workshop has become a destination for Gaza’s few foreign visitors, as well as Palestinian collectors.

“Dutch, American, Polish, French, German and Swiss delegations visited this small room,” he said.
Abed said he was once offered an opportunity with the Museum of Art and History in Geneva but he turned it down so he could concentrate on his work in Palestine.

At the time, Abed explained, he was working for the Palestinian Authority; he was appointed to a position with the ministry of tourism and antiquities by the late Yasser Arafat in 1995.

Abed said he has worked with European experts at archaeological sites in the occupied West Bank, which is inaccessible to most Palestinians in Gaza due to Israel’s severe movement restrictions. He has participated in restoration projects at France’s Louvre and in Switzerland.

Wars, siege

Abed wishes that more care was taken to preserve Gaza’s great archaeological heritage.

“The monuments of Gaza are in danger as a result of the consecutive wars, siege, the limited roles of the responsible authorities, and the lack of societal awareness,” he said.

Israel has damaged and destroyed historical sites and appropriated them to expand settlements and its control over the land. In addition to the threats posed by the occupation, a spokesperson for the tourism and antiquities ministry in Gaza said it did not have enough resources or expertise to restore and take care of the strip’s antiquities.

“Gaza is full of hidden treasures of the great civilizations,” Abed said. “Greater care must be taken for their preservation.”

Hamza Abu Eltarabesh is a journalist from Gaza.

Syrian opposition leaders say they are leaving Geneva talks after government air strikes kill at least 44 people in Idlib

A wounded woman is evacuated after Syrian government jets bomb a bazaar in Maarrat al-Numan on Tuesday (AA) 

Tuesday 19 April 2016

Dozens of people were killed and many more injured on Tuesday in Syrian government air strikes targeting two towns in rebel-held areas of the northern Idlib province, according to monitoring groups and local officials. 

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that the death toll from the two attacks, which struck a marketplace in Maarat al-Numan and the nearby town of Kafranbel, was 44.

It said the death toll was also expected to rise because some of those injured were in a critical condition. It said air strikes had been reported in Jisr al-Shugar also in Idlib province.

Omar Alwan, a civil defence official based in Maarat al-Numan, told Turkey's Anadolu news agency that the combined death toll was 33 people and that all had been civilians.

The attacks, some of the deadliest since a ceasefire took effect in February, were condemned by the leading Syrian opposition group who said late on Tuesday that, as a result of the strikes, they were leaving Geneva where UN-led peace talks have been underway for the past week.

"It is a dangerous escalation of an already fragile situation, showing contempt for the whole international community at a time when is supposed to be a cessation of hostilities," the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) spokesman Salem al-Meslet said in a statement.

On Monday, the opposition announced it was halting its partipation in the talks to protest escalation violence and restrictions on humanitarian access in the country.

Muslet said Tuesday's raid was "Assad's response" to the HNC's decision to suspend its participation.
Warning: This video contains disturbing footage.

Alwan said 28 people had been killed and 33 people injured in the attack on the marketplace in Maarat al-Numan, and then five people left dead and 12 wounded in an attack by the same plane in Kafranbel.

Earlier, Raed Fares, a local activist in Kafranbel, told Middle East Eye the attack there had devastated the town's main square, killing and wounding dozens and destroying four houses.

"It was very busy," Fares said of the square on Tuesday before the strike.

Since the start of the war, the square has been the site where anti-government activists have gained widespread attention for raising banners and posters with messages to world leaders and the UN among others.

"Nobody knows who's turn it is [to be killed] anymore," Fares said. 

As Fares talked to MEE, he said that military planes were still in the sky overhead.

Video of the aftermath of the attack in Maarat Al-Numan was published on YouTube by the local Baladi News activist group showed scenes of lifeless bodies strewn on the streets, with debris everywhere.



Airstrike in Mara Numan fruit market (again). Dozens killed & injured against Geneva "peace talks" backdrop
The latest air strikes come after the Syrian government's chief negotiator said that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's future was not up for discussion at peace talks currently taking place in Geneva.

"This matter (the presidency) does not fall under the jurisdiction of Geneva,” Bashar Ja’afari said. “This is a Syrian-Syrian affair, Security Council or no Security Council."

SitRep: New Taliban Assault on Kabul, Dozens Killed


SitRep: New Taliban Assault on Kabul, Dozens Killed
BY PAUL MCLEARYADAM RAWNSLEY-
APRIL 19, 2016
Kabul rocked. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for a suicide car bombing and small arms attack on an Afghan security agency in Kabul that killed at least 28 people and wounded more than 320.
The assault followed a familiar pattern for Taliban attacks in the capital city: detonate a vehicle packed with explosives, then storm a nearby building and fight it out with Afghan security forces until the attackers are dead. It’s unclear how many fighters were involved in the assault, but it comes as the government of President Ashraf Ghani struggles to hold key districts in Helmand province in the south amid a renewed Taliban offensives there. The government in Kabul is also struggling to hold overdue parliamentary elections this fall amid the worsening security situation.
The Institute for the Study of War recently released a map of Taliban strongholds throughout the country, showing the Taliban gains in the south.
A spokesman for the U.S. military command in Kabul tells SitRep that no U.S. servicemembers were caught up in the attack. In a statement, Gen. John Nicholson, head of U.S. and NATO troops in the country, said that the attack “shows the insurgents are unable to meet Afghan forces on the battlefield and must resort to these terrorist attacks.” Nicholson, who took command of America’s longest war last month, is still working to draw up a list of recommendations for what assets he’ll need. It’s expected he will ask that troop numbers remain at the current level of 9,800, and not drop to about 5,500 by the end of the year.
All eyes on Mosul. There are another 217 U.S. troops headed to Iraq to help security forces fight their way toward the ISIS-held city of Mosul, bringing the official number of American servicemembers there to just over 4,000. Hundreds more are in country but are not counted on the official rolls, meaning the real number is over 5,000, defense officials have said.
As part of the new aid package announced in Baghdad by Defense Secretary Ash Carter on Monday, the Pentagon will also start handing over $415 million to the Kurdish government to help pay their fighters, who have gone without pay amid a budget crunch due to falling oil prices.
The new troops will move out with Iraqi forces, advising local commanders at the battalion level, potentially putting them closer to the fight as the Iraqi army pushes north toward Mosul. Until this point, American advisors generally stayed at the division level or above. The new troops will also fly Apache helicopters that will strike ISIS fighters and man artillery systems, including the HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System), which canfire multiple 200-lb. GPS-guided rockets over 40 miles. The HIMARS has already been used by U.S. forces to pound ISIS around Ramadi, and one U.S.-manned system has fired from Jordan into Syria in recent months. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) called the new deployment the kind of “grudging incrementalism that rarely wins wars.”
Syria talks. In a major blow for United Nations-backed peace efforts, the Syrian opposition walked away from talks in Geneva as rebels launched a new offensive against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in retaliation for government airstrikes, FP’s John Hudson reports. The Syrian opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC) said on Monday that talks could not proceed while the Assad regime and its partners continued bombing civilians, hitting rebel targets and refusing to discuss the formation of a transitional government in Damascus, the HNC said in a statement. As the rebel leadership walked away from the talks, their fighters launched a concerted attack against pro-government forces in Latakia province Monday and advanced farther east into Hama. At the same time, the Assad regime continued to pummel Homs province with airstrikes.
Terror cash crunch. Is ISIS out of money? Not quite, but analysts say that the group is feeling the pinch. According to a new report from IHS Inc., a consultancy that provides security advice to governments and businesses, the terror group’s monthly revenue has dropped by almost 30 percent in the last year, from $80 million in March 2015 to $56 million in March 2016. FP’sDavid Francis writes that 50 percent of the group’s revenue comes from confiscation and taxation, while around 43 percent comes from oil revenue. Drug smuggling, donations, and the sale of services like electricity make up the remainder.
Thanks for clicking on through this morning as launch another week of SitRep. As always, if you have any thoughts, announcements, tips, or national  security-related events to share, please pass them along to SitRep HQ. Best way is to send them to: paul.mcleary@foreignpolicy.com or on Twitter:@paulmcleary or @arawnsley.
China
The United States is letting China know it doesn’t approve of a Chinese military aircraft’s recent visit to the disputed Fiery Cross Reef. A Pentagon spokesman tells CNN that the Defense Department is wondering why China opted to send a military, as opposed to civilian, plane to the reef for an emergency transfer of three sick construction workers to a hospital on nearby Hainan Island. The Pentagon released a statement asking China “to reaffirm that it has no plans to deploy or rotate military aircraft at its outposts in the Spratlys.” A handful of neighboring countries, including Vietnam, Taiwan, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei also lay claim to the reef.
Despite all of the drama, China is still invited to this year’s Rimpac naval exercise, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said earlier this week while aboard the USS John C. Stennis in the South China Sea. Asked if China would still be allowed to attend, Carter said, “you’re right to use the word ‘allow,’ because actually we issued the invitations, and we have not taken the step of disinviting them,” Carter explained. China participated in the 2014 Rimpac exercise.
Dangerous love
Last week China observed National Security Education Day and, according to the AP, used the occasion to roll out a poster warning government employees of the dangers of attractive foreigners. The comic book, dubbed “Dangerous Love,” tells Xiao Li’s tale of woe as the young government worker arrested for passing classified documents to her foreign researcher boyfriend who later turns out to be a spy. The posters, meant to keep government employees vigilant about protecting national secrets, echo their counterparts in American national security facilities, warning about the risks of passing secrets to foreigners.
Help is on the way?
The U.S. government has struggled to manage its efforts to train and equip foreign forces, something the Obama administration has said is a key part of its efforts to beat back ISIS and al Qaeda around the world. Despite spending $2.9 billion on these programs since 2009 — and $675 million in 2015 — 13 of 54 project proposals “did not include required estimates of annual sustainment costs,” the Government Accountability Office reports.  And the Pentagon, never known for completing a project on time, has blown past deadlines to update Congress on its efforts. “Despite a legal requirement to complete and submit to Congress annual assessments within 90 days of the end of each fiscal year, DOD’s fiscal year 2013, 2014, and 2015 assessment reports were submitted up to 21 months late,” the report states.
Hotline
China and India are working on developing a hotline between the two countries just in case leaders need a quick chat in the event of a crisis, Agence France Presse reports. China’s defense minister Chang Wanquan and his Indian counterpart Manohar Parrikar met on Monday for talks and spoke positively of the prospect for a bilateral communications channel to defuse tensions. The two countries fought a war in 1962 over their shared border, the location of which remains a subject of dispute to this day.
The Islamic State
NBC News sent out a batch of 4,000 leaked registration forms filled out by foreign fighters arriving in Islamic State-held territory for analysis by West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center. Turns out, the docs are most likely legitimate. The tranche of recruitment forms were also leaked to Sky Newsand Zaman al-Wasl, but some experts questioned the authenticity of the documents after publication. The Combating Terrorism Center found that recruits ranged from their teens through their 60s, with an average age in their late 20s, better than average educations and a disinterest in carrying out suicide attacks. The dates at which the fighters arrive suggest that the Islamic State’s rapid territorial expansion after July 2014 significantly spiked recruitment for the group.
Iraq
British private security firm Aegis Defence Services is in trouble after one of its directors admitted that the contractor didn’t bother to check if the Sierra Leonean personnel it hired to provide security at British and American diplomatic facilities in Iraq were former child soldiers. James Ellery, a former director at the company, told a documentary filmmaker that the company thought it would be “quite wrong” to ask the recruits about their past and hold that past acts against them in making employment decisions. Aegis hired contractors from Sierra Leone, where Ellery served as chief of staff for the United Nations mission, paying them $16 a day to work as private security contractors in Iraq.
Russia has sent three Sukhoi Su-25 close air support planes to Iraq as part of a contract between the two countries, according to Russia’s TASS news agency, one of a number of such deliveries Russia has made to Iraq throughout its war against the Islamic State. A spokesman for Iraq’s defense ministry said the planes will be pressed into service soon.
Israel
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon says technology to find Hamas tunnels is a “top priority” and he’s looking to secure American funding in order to purchase it, Defense News reports. Israeli defense officials say they’ve spent $60 million on trying to destroy tunnels so far and are looking for around $120 million in aid for similar operations from the United States. For the past two months, Israeli forces have been involved in a classified operation to destroy a network of Hamas tunnels that extended beyond the wall surrounding Gaza and into neighboring Israeli neighborhoods. Ya’alon says Hamas has had lost a number of recruits in the tunnels due to collapses recently.
Russia
Russia says it plans to develop a new stealth PAK-DA bomber and an updated Tu-160M2 Blackjack bomber. The development plan would see Russia migrating technologies from the Tu-160M2 for inclusion on the PAK-DA. The PAK-DA is expected to adopt a flying wing design similar to that seen on the U.S. stealth B-2 bomber. While the PAK-DA would be Russia’s first stealth bomber, Russia has also been working on its first stealth aircraft, the PAK-FA fighter jet, alongside India.
And finally…
Don’t write “ISIS beer funds!!!” in the memo section of your online payments as a joke unless you enjoy awkward conversations with the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Photo Credit: WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images
April 18
A Ukrainian court on Monday sentenced two alleged Russian servicemen to 14 years each in prison for fighting alongside pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine’s restive southeast, concluding a politically charged trial that may set the stage for a prisoner swap with Russia.

Alexander Alexandrov and Yevgeny Yerofeyev, who were captured in a firefight with the Ukrainian army last May, were convicted of terrorism and of “waging aggressive war” against Ukraine, the Kiev court’s verdict read.

While awaiting trial, the two told reporters that they were on active duty in the Russian military, bolstering accusations of the Russian army’s direct intervention in the two-year-old conflict. The Russian Defense Ministry has denied sending materiel or men to fight in southeast Ukraine; it said Alexandrov and Yerofeyev had resigned from the military before traveling to fight in Ukraine as volunteers.

The conviction was widely expected. Meanwhile, defense lawyers for the two men also said that they had been pressured to drop the case.

Last month, Alexandrov’s attorney, Yuriy Grabovskiy, was kidnapped, shot in the head and buried in a garden south of Kiev. Military prosecutors investigating the murder released a video, apparently filmed by his captors, in which Grabovskiy said he would no longer defend Alexandrov in court. No arrests have been made.

The convictions of Alexandrov and Yerofeyev are seen as precursors to a possible prisoner exchange with Russia, where several Ukrainian nationals have been given decades-long prison sentences in connection with Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and the conflict in southeast Ukraine.

Among them is Lt. Nadiya Savchenko, a 34-year-old Ukrainian helicopter pilot who was sentenced to 22 years in prison by a Russian court last month for directing artillery fire that killed two Russian journalists in 2014. After her capture, Savchenko was made a member of parliament and awarded the distinction “Hero of Ukraine.” Secretary of State John F. Kerry in a statement last month urged Russia to release her, saying her “trial and continuing imprisonment demonstrate disregard for international standards.”

Ukrainian President Petro Poro­shenko said last month that he would be willing to make a trade for Savchenko.

Asked about a possible prisoner swap last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin told journalists the Russian and Ukrainian governments were in contact on the issue but that “it is better not to get ahead of ourselves.”

Alexandrov and Yerofeyev were captured almost three months after Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany signed a truce and “road map” out of the conflict.

Ukraine’s intelligence services said that Yerofeyev had admitted to heading a sabotage and reconnaissance unit of the self-declared Luhansk People’s Republic. Alexandrov was a member of that unit, the agency said.

While Russian officials have called for the two men’s release, their case has received muted coverage on Russian television.

U.S., Iran discuss fulfilling nuclear deal pledges to Tehran

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (R) meets with Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City, U.S., April 19, 2016.  REUTERS/Brendan McDermidBY LOUIS CHARBONNEAU- Wed Apr 20, 2016

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Tuesday discussed ways of ensuring that last year's historic nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers is implemented the way it was originally envisioned.

"We agreed we're both working at making sure that the ... nuclear agreement is implemented in exactly the way that it is meant to be and that all the parties to that agreement get the benefits that they are supposed to get out of the agreement," Kerry told reporters at United Nations headquarters in New York.

"We will meet again to sort of solidify what we talked about today," he said, adding that he and Zarif would resume discussions in New York on Friday on the sidelines of a signing ceremony at the U.N. for the Paris climate agreement.

Zarif said they discussed ways to "make sure that we will draw the benefits that Iran is entitled to from the implementation of the agreement."

Tehran's top diplomat added that he and Kerry on Friday would discuss ways of getting their ideas into operation.

Neither Kerry nor Zarif offered any details about the ideas they discussed.

U.S. officials said on Monday that Kerry was expected to raise Tehran's concerns over difficulties accessing the global financial system despite the lifting of some U.S. sanctions under the nuclear deal.
Iran and six world powers clinched a historic nuclear agreement in July 2015, which allowed for the easing of some sanctions imposed by the United States, European Union and United Nations in return for Tehran curbing its nuclear program.

Tehran has called on the United States to do more to remove obstacles to the banking sector so that businesses feel comfortable with investing in Iran without penalties.

Current U.S. policy bars foreign banks from clearing dollar-based transactions with Iran through U.S. banks. But U.S. officials have said the Obama administration is considering ways in which non-U.S. companies could use the dollar in some business transactions with Iran.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said on Monday that Kerry would also press Iran to use its influence over the Syrian government to end Syria's five-year-old civil war.
Neither Kerry nor Zarif mentioned Syria.

(Additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton in Washington; Editing by Toni Reinhold and Leslie Adler)

'Few absolute facts': Independent referendum analysis

NewsTUESDAY 19 APRIL 2016

A report providing "impartial analysis" on the EU referendum finds both sides presenting false assumptions with neither side able to rely on absolute facts. Read the full report here.

Another report on Brexit? Really, who needs it? Well you do, according to Sir Tom Hunter - a Scottish entrepreneur who made himself into a billionaire and then a philanthropist.

Depressed by what he saw as the obfuscation, hyperbole and bluster of the EU referendum debate, he's hired his own posse of academics to produce what he claims is a report that will give you the relevant facts and analysis to make up your own mind - and he's shared it exclusively with Channel 4 News.

So what's the conclusion, do we leave or remain? Well, you'll search in vain for a section at the back to tell you which way to vote. That's not the idea - you have to make up your own mind.

The report's findings include claims that:
  • While the UK makes an annual contribution of "£117 per person" per year to the EU budget, Norway contributes nearly the same - £107 - and it's not even a member.
  • 6.8% of Acts of Parliament had a role in implementing EU law between 1997 and 2009.
  • EU migrants account for 10% of total expenditure on in-work tax credits and housing support but only represent 6% of the workforce.
But what does it all prove? That's up to you to decide. Channel 4 News has not verified the claims made in the report. Read the entire report below:

Fidel Castro bids farewell to Cuba's communist congress

Fidel Castro during the closure of the VII Cuban Communist party congress at the Palacio de las Convenciones in Havana on Tuesday. Photograph: Omara Garcia Mederos/EPA

Tuesday 19 April 2016

Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro has delivered a valedictory speech to the communist party he put in power a half-century ago, telling party members he would soon die and exhorting them to help his ideas survive.

“I’ll be 90 years old soon,” Castro said in his most extensive public appearance in years. “Soon I’ll be like all the others. The time will come for all of us, but the ideas of the Cuban communists will remain as proof on this planet that if they are worked at with fervour and dignity, they can produce the material and cultural goods that human beings need, and we need to fight without truce to obtain them.”

Castro spoke as the government announced that his brother Raúl will retain the Cuban Communist party’s highest post alongside his hardline second-in-command.

That announcement and Fidel Castro’s speech together delivered a resounding message that the island’s revolutionary generation will remain in control even as its members age and die, relations with the US are normalized, and popular dissatisfaction grows over the country’s economic performance.

Government news sites said Raúl Castro, 84, would remain the party’s first secretary and José Ramón Machado Ventura would hold the post of second secretary for at least part of a second five-year term. 
Castro currently is both president and first secretary. The decision means he could hold a Communist party position at least as powerful as the presidency even after stepping down from the government post in 2018.

Machado Ventura, 85, is known as an enforcer of communist orthodoxy and voice against some of the country’s biggest recent economic reforms who fought alongside Castro and his brother Fidel, to overthrow the dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959.

Fidel Castro made his rare appearance at the Communist party congress to rousing shouts of “Fidel!” according to state media that showed a delayed, edited broadcast of the day’s events.

Government-run television showed rare images of the 89-year-old leader seated at the dais in Havana’s Convention Palace, dressed in a plaid shirt and sweat top and speaking to the crowd in a strong if occasionally trembling voice, pausing occasionally to consult a written version of his speech.

Raúl Castro’s decision to remain in power alongside a deputy even he has criticised for rigidity capped a four-day meeting of the Communist party notable for its secrecy and apparent lack of discussion about substantive new reforms to Cuba’s stagnant centrally planned economy. Even high-ranking government officials had speculated in the weeks leading up the seventh party congress that Machado Ventura could be replaced by a younger face associated with free-market reforms started by Castro himself.

The party congress also chose the powerful 15-member political bureau, mostly devoid of fresh faces associated with the party’s younger generations. Five members were new but none are high-profile advocates for reform.

Esteban Morales, an intellectual and party member who had complained about the secrecy of the congress, said he was gratified by Raúl Castro’s decision to submit the guidelines approved by the 1,000 delegates to an ex-post-facto public discussion and approval. He said he expected the first and second secretaries to remain in their positions only until Castro leaves the presidency in 2018, after what Morales called a necessary transition period.

A physician by training, Machado Ventura organised a network of rebel field hospitals and clinics in the Sierra Maestra mountains in the 1950s, participating in combat as both a medic and a fighter under Castro in the revolution against Batista. After the revolution he became health minister and later assumed more political roles within the Communist party. He also sat on the powerful politburo starting in 1975.

Machado Ventura was vice-president from Raúl Castro’s ascent in 2008 until 2013, when the post was taken by Miguel Díaz-Canel, widely seen as the country’s likely next president. Machado Ventura was named second secretary in 2011 in a move seen as a way to placate and empower party hardliners.

Machado Ventura was often employed by Raúl Castro and his brother Fidel to impose order in areas seen as lacking discipline, most recently touring the country to crack down on private sellers of fruits, vegetables and other agricultural goods. While Raúl Castro opened Cuba’s faltering agricultural economy to private enterprise, the government blames a new class of private farmers and produce merchants for a rise in prices.

Machado Ventura has been the public face of crackdown on what the government labels profiteering.
“He’s demanding! He’s very demanding!” Castro said of his deputy in 2008. “To be sincere, sometimes I’ve said it personally, he doesn’t use the best techniques in being demanding.”