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

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Sri Lankan Christians blocked from using public cemeteries

(Reuters/Dinuka Liyanawatte)Monks from Buddhist organization Bodu Bala Sena attend a speech by Ashin Wirathu at a BBS convention in Colombo, Sri Lanka on September 28, 2014

Lorraine Caballero-19 April, 2016 
Sri Lankan Christians cannot bury their dead in public cemeteries because Buddhist monks are stopping them from doing so, charity group Release International says.

The persecution of Sri Lankan Christians has now reached the level where Buddhist monks have joined forces with nationalists and prevented Christians from burying their dead in public cemeteries. Local government officials have also been shutting down churches and prayer gatherings in the country.

A prominent human rights lawyer, who spoke under conditions of anonymity, recalled one occasion wherein a Christian burial was interrupted by Buddhist monks. She said the monks suddenly began shouting that Christians cannot bury their dead in that location. The villagers around the public cemetery then came in with the police and drove the Christians out, telling them that they can bury their dead in a faraway place.

The said lawyer also told of an incident when two Buddhist monks interrupted a prayer meeting and began shouting and threatening the pastor leading the gathering. When the pastor filed a formal complaint with the police, he was told that it was his fault.

In line with the reported incidents of persecution of Sri Lankan Christians, Release International Chief Executive Paul Robinson released a statement calling for the acts of the Buddhist monks to be exposed.
"You don't normally associate Buddhism with violence, but time and again we hear that it is Buddhist monks who are leading the attacks against the churches," said Robinson. "And our partners have found the monks are being aided by pro-Buddhist authorities ... This has to be brought into the spotlight."

The persecution of Christians in Sri Lanka traces its roots to the country's chaotic history of invasion, colonial rule, nationalism, and ethnic conflicts. In 2009, the minority Tamil Tiger rebels were defeated by the majority Sinhalese ethnic group. Christians became the new target of persecution after that landmark defeat, Christian Today (CT) reports.

A local religious lawyer who helps defend persecuted Christians told CT that the situation still has not changed even after a new government came into power last year. In fact, she said their organization has recorded more than 120 cases of persecution under the current administration, versus 52 in 2012.

I was born here, in Colombo

people-srilanka
Why on earth are so many desperate to leave Sri Lanka and do work in unpleasant conditions and very long hours in an unfriendly work environment, say for example, in Sainsbury’s Freezer Rooms packing and stacking food, for a measly wage and studying during daytime to qualify for Student non-support Visas to UK?
by Victor Cherubim

( April 20, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) To many in Sri Lanka, life overseas is a bowl of cherries. It is quite natural for longing to travel outside our shores of our small island, to see the world. Strangely from birth, it becomes a cherished ambition for some, in search of the unknown, the unchartered, the new frontier of experience? Could it hardly be a comparison, as a step on the Moon?
Over centuries however, many world travellers too have come to our land, some in search of adventure, and others in search of trade. We ask ourselves what makes them travel? Is it a pastime to find solitude, solace or sobriety or in hope to conjure memories of the hidden jewels of pleasure?

Life in our land and life abroad

If life in our land is so different to life abroad, or seen to be different, why is it that many leave our shores taking perilous journeys over land and sea(s) and many continents, as refugees?

If life in our land is so different to life abroad, why is it that they are willing to give fictitious accounts of persecution in today’s Sri Lanka,perhaps, to earn a crust abroad?

Sumal Perera his ‘golden heifers’ and Rs. 5 billion racket !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -21.April.2016, 11.45PM) An attempt to cheat in a sum of Rs. 5000 million ! under the pretext of making Sri Lanka (SL) self sufficient in milk  production  had fortunately been put in abeyance for the moment , based on reports reaching Lanka e news.  
The culprits  behind this colossal racket are none other than those of  the erstwhile Rajapakse regime , and the wheeler dealer is no less a person  than  Sumal Perera the chief of ‘Access,’  in this Rs. 5000 million ‘milk’ racket which is  milking dry mother Lanka. Interestingly  this Sumal Perera is a cousin brother of Dilan Perera who is infamously famous for honeyed words and stupid utterances.

This Sumal Perera the wheeler dealer who gobbled up public funds jointly with the Rajapakses during their ‘ ‘nefarious regime’ has now ingratiated himself into the favor of the government of good governance . That is along with the corrupt scoundrels of Rajapakse era now with the good governance government he has turned into a  hybrid . Sumal Perera  planned his ‘milking dry mother Lanka’ milk racket as follows : 
The Rajapakses claiming that they were  going to make SL self sifficient in milk ,  wanted  to import pregnant heifers from Australia . With this in view  a commercial loan at high interest rate from a bank ‘Rado,’  of Netherlands  was taken, and  Basil Rajapakse got down 2500 such heifers during the Rajapakse era. 
After the present gvernment came into power the remaining part was to be completed. Sumal Perera obtained the permission of the Finance ministry to import 20,000 pregnant heifers from Wellard , Australia , a company that exports milking cows , but the controversial issue erupted when Sumal Perera quoted Rs. 700,000.00 as the price of a pregnant heifer whereas the actual price is Rs. 450,000.00 approximately. Moreover , this deal has been granted to Sumal Perera without calling for tender bids !
Minister Harrison in charge of animal husbandry on hearing of this price and the quotation had questioned , ‘are these golden cows?’  Sumal Perera has included in this price his profit component of Rs. 250,000.00 on each heifer. The total profit therefore on 20,000 heifers is a whopping Rs.5000,000,000.00 !! Mind you since this is based on a government  loan , it is the people who will have to pay back these loans together with interest , like how the people are now paying for the egregious sins committed by the Rajapakses  and their curse of the shawl corrupt administration of the past.

Even the  prime minister had expressed his  resentment at  the agreement that had been signed by the Rajapakses. This is because the loan taken from the Rado bank is a commercial loan on prohibitive rates of interest . Consequently , the mega deal of wheeler dealer Sumal Perera had been suspended , though it had not been completely cancelled. 
When Lanka e news inquired from an owner of a Cattle farm in Dambulla that produced milk for the last 30 years about the import of Sumal Perera’s ‘ golden heifers,’ he had this to say …
If  SL is to be made  self sufficient in milk  , getting down high quality  cows which could augment the  production is necessary , but  why should the government import them ? he questioned. If the government is not interested in  importing the necessary hens for the farms,  why is the government seeking to import cows ? the owner of the cattle farm questioned, while proposing to the government, to give permission to the cattle farm owners to get down the cows to meet their requirements under its aid and survey  program ,in which case the ‘brokers’ and intermediaries lining their pockets with billions can be eliminated. Besides , simply importing pregnant heifers spending heavily , without a follow up program to improving on the next generation of those heifers is meaningless,’ he added.
The cattle farm owner also went on to ask, what is the knowledge Sumal Perera has on cattle farming  and milk production  to import  these pregnant  heifers?  when Sumal Perera is only well known as one who would  even get down bullets if he can make a fast buck from that , if that serves his selfish  aims and objectives.   
---------------------------
by     (2016-04-21 22:09:17)

The former prime minister defaults Hilton Residency

The former prime minister defaults Hilton Residency

Apr 21, 2016

Hilton residency Colombo has sent a letter demanding a sum of more than Rs. 4 million for the food and liquor supplied to the former prime minister between 20th July 2014 to 19th December period.

The Hilton residency has supplied this food and liquor for the request of the then prime minister public relations secretary K.A. Dharmasena, personal secretary shiraz Mohamed and senior assistant secretary H.G. Bandara to the Visumpaya. This is the second reminder to the prime minister office.
According to the bills the supply of food and liquor has been made to seven local guests for a dinner held at Visumpaya on 14th of July 2014 which has cost Rs. 2.1 million.

Two young Brit tourists 'kidnapped and sexually assaulted in Sri Lanka' while on luxury holiday

Kandy, Sri LankaLocal media reported that the women were from Scotland and were seized in the Hantana area of the city

POLICE in Sri Lanka have made an arrest after two Brit holidaymakers were allegedly kidnapped and sexually assaulted.

Local media reported that the women, aged 20 and 21, were abducted from the central city of Kandy.

After being grabbed in the Hantana area of the city the women, reportedly from Scotland, were robbed of their mobile phones and about 122,000 rupees (£1,200).
 
They were also sexually assaulted before apparently managing to escape, and were said to be safe and receiving treatment in hospital.

Cops have since arrested a deserter from the army in connection with the attack.

Police spokesperson ASP Ruwan Gunasekara told Sri Lankan broadcasterNews First that the man was found in possession of 5,000 rupees (£52) and one of the stolen phones when he was picked up.

He also confirmed the ages of the victims as being 20 and 21, and told the news station that the alleged attack happened on April 14.

It’s not known exactly how the victims managed to get away or when the suspect was arrested, but three police teams were reportedly assigned to the manhunt after the incident was reported.
Belly the elephant: Greedy animal nearly tips tourists’ vehicle over as it tries to reach inside to grab their food 



  • MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health storiesBy CHRIS SUMMERS FOR MAILONLINE-19 April 2016
  • A convoy of tourists were ambushed by an elephant in Sri Lanka after their vehicle broke down in Yala National Park
  • It was rummaging around for food which was inside the vehicle - but fortunately nobody was hurt by the elephant

  • A hungry elephant demanded food from terrified tourists on safari - and nearly sent them flying when it tried to reach inside their vehicle.
    The cheeky tusker stuck his trunk inside a broken-down truck while begging for treats at Yala National Park in Sri Lanka.
    Photographer Sidath Wanaguru captured the extraordinary moment from a vehicle travelling in convoy behind.
    There are an estimated 6,000 elephants in Sri Lanka but they are an endangered species as humans increasingly encroach into their habitats. 
    Unlike their African cousins, only an estimated seven per cent of Asian elephants have tusks and in Sri Lanka the percentage is believed to be even lower so these tourists were a tad unlucky to come across one.
    Mr Wanaguru, 36, said: 'No-one was harmed but the guests were terrified due to the sheer size of the elephant and because they were helpless to getting away due to breaking down.'

    These tourists got more than they bargained for when they went on an elephant safari in the Yala National Park in southern Sri Lanka. Their truck broke down, leaving them at the mercy of the boisterous tusker
  • These tourists got more than they bargained for when they went on an elephant safari in the Yala National Park in southern Sri Lanka. Their truck broke down, leaving them at the mercy of the boisterous tusker


  • READ MORE


    MAY DAY – A CLASH OF THE GIANTS


    WINSTON DE VALLIERE-2016-04-22
    While Political parties and Trade Unions flex their muscles to observe May Day in just a week's time, the enormity of the explosive emotions sizzling just beneath the surface of the two major political parties can be expected to manifest themselves in grandstanding such as that seen in the days of the Second WW by Hitler on the one side and Churchill on the other.
    Make no mistake about it May Day in Sri Lanka is just an euphemism for venting political venom on one's opponents with labour issues being exploited expressly for that purpose. That's the moral low that Lankan political forces have got mired in. Funding will have come from numerous sources abroad to boost attendance at many rallies in this macabre show of force. Cash, food packets and drinks on the house is the name of the game. This will be hailed as 'proof' of electoral popularity. One can logically, therefore, expect some disturbance of the peace on May Day of which I am not too far wrong in my assessment of the psyche of the masses at the lower spectrum of society who will comprise the majority of those attending some rallies.
    The last few years have been used by losing politicians to imbue in the public mind, what they hope, is a deep hostility towards the government. People are made to believe that political decisions are consciously taken in the full knowledge that they are 'anti-people',
    anti-national [deshadrohi], and the populace is endlessly barraged with innuendo that they are to be overburdened with higher costs of living. The health, education and public administration systems are under siege by insiders in these institutions egged on by their political preferences and allegiances. In this maelstrom of iniquity it is perhaps unique to observe that the government's leaders have been unusually restrained in their responses to being maliciously maligned in the absence of justifiable cause for such political vulgarity.
    We've also in the few months of this year already seen politically backed forces fling abuse at Judges and the judiciary system, the Constitution of the country with a flagrant show of hostility born of fascist bidding.
    Petty political hatred
    This is the cauldron of petty political hatred and revenge that can be expected to manifest in the grandstanding and brinkmanship that defeated political leaders can be expected to unleash in vituperative language from some platforms.
    Thankfully, the government has manipulated the art of governance in such a way that it has been able to find logical reasons for postponing the LG elections which were to have been held in early June, while some officials had even been placed on alert for a snap May 2016 LG Poll. Filtering to the party enclaves through the grapevines in ministries that seemed to snuff out much of the demands for early LG polls.
    But this will feature high on Opposition agendas on May Day platforms. The President's stern action on deterring VAT impositions on consumer commodities did much to de-fang the Opposition that would have been sharpening their swords to slash the government with, in May Day speeches. That move also blunted plans by trade unions to lash out at the government and generate anti-government fervour among the masses. Having had a relatively more comfortable time during the New Year season, compliments of the Rs 10,000 wage allowance increase and restoration of several freedoms, especially media freedoms, the Opposition is basically left with only the trumped up arguments of Sirisena trying to break up the SLFP and guns being turned on Ranil and Ravi Karunanayake on issues of consumer prices and fiscal management. They won't tell the masses that it's President Sirisena who holds power to use his newly manifested powers of 'suasion' to make that duo think twice about imposing any logical but politically devastating economic measures.
    The stage seems set for political collapse of sorts. By this, I mean that President Sirisena goes to the May Day platforms with more weapons in his hands than those in the collective hands of the Opposition. The collapse I speak of will be perhaps the clearer identification of those sincerely committed to Sirisena's rather ultra-idealistic objectives of good governance, and those who have been full of double-speak, living off Sirisena's largesse, while being to all intents and purposes die-hard MR loyalists.

    parting of the ways
    May Day can then see a parting of the ways...the clearer demarcation of the lines between the MR camp and a new MR-led SLFP offshoot , and as I've always predicted, the inevitable ideological divergence spearheaded by Sirisena and those disposed to back him to the hilt. This means there will be a more permanent sense to the cracks on the walls of the SLFP. A deeper understanding of the baser instincts in most of today's genre of politicians is what determines how far, wide and deep this split will be, over the coming year or two.
    With Sri Lanka sending a powerful team to New York led by Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake to negotiate a US$ 3 billion bailout facility, the need for any more consumer-negative, direct or indirect taxes can be put on hold. Sirisena is desperately juggling with attempts to keep Western lobbies at bay by fending off calls for a foreign element in the war crimes probes. But with the next UNHRC meet looming threateningly near, time is running out on that score. But, it will not be a May Day issue.
    The see-saw battle continues and MR and Sirisena seem to be now entering a deeper phase in their diametrically opposite natures, principles and issues of political morality.
    May Day will essentially see this new phase take shape in the battle of brains and wits between these two men... and this basically is what May Day 2016 has unfortunately come to mean in Sri Lanka. Others featuring in May Day rallies will be mere side shows.
    This is where the clash of the giants will begin emerging in tangible form.

    ‘I owe Rs. 500 to Sri Lanka police’

    ‘I owe Rs. 500 to Sri Lanka police’
     Apr 21, 2016
    This incident that happened some time ago was related to us by a senior DIG. The high ranking policeman had a drink with a friend at the police mess. The friend paid the bill and left for home around midnight.
    On the way, he was stopped by two PCs on duty at Baseline Road. A little inebriated, the DIG’s friend put down the glass pane to speak to the PC. He was told, “Ah. It appears you have had many drinks. By the smell of it, it cannot be coconut or old arrack, but Black. It is not just Black, but Double Black. Am I saying the truth?”
    “Don’t you know, Ralahami, met a friend after a long time. So, has had something. But, I did nothing wrong.” The PC replied, “Isn’t drunken driving an offence? We are suffering on the streets in the nights. At least give that cigarette packet,” he said, pointing to a Marlboro packet in the front seat. But, it had only one cigarette remaining.
    “Oh, Ralahami, there is only one left. I cannot give it to you. I need it to survive until a packet is bought tomorrow.”
    The PC ordered the friend, “I too, have no use of one cigarette. At least give money to buy a Gold Leaf packet.” Seeing that he will have to give something to escape the policeman, he went through his shirt pocket and found Rs. 200, which was the balance after paying the bill at the police mess. He gave that to the PC, who had a look around, grabbed it and put it into his pocket.
    The friend, about to leave the policeman, told him, “Sorry, Ralahami. That is what is left with me. I had to pay the bill for the drinks. When we have drinks with your bosses, we cannot expect them to pay the bill. Their positions may be big, but they get a small salary.”
    Becoming alarmed, the PC said, What, what did you say? Did you drink with our bosses? What is his name?”
    When the friend mentioned the name of the DIG, the PC immediately took out the money he was given and returned it to him, saying “Aren’t you a funny man? You should have said that you drank with the DIG. Do not tell the DIG about this. I will be in trouble.”
    The friend had a hearty laugh and went home. Before getting undressed, he put the money returned to him by the PC on the table, and found that in addition to the Rs. 200 he had given him, there was a Rs. 500 note too. What had happened was that alarmed by the mention of the DIG’s name, the PC had given him not only the Rs. 200, but also a Rs. 500 note in his pocket.
    Since that day, the friend keeps a watch when returning home late to find that PC to return the Rs. 500. But, he has not yet been able to locate him. So, he is saying that he owes Rs. 500 to Sri Lanka police.
    Abbas cracks down on rival groups as Palestinians call for his resignation 
    File photo of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (AFP)

    Sheren Khalel-Thursday 21 April 2016

    BETHLEHEM, West Bank – As violence continues in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, tensions within the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) appear to be rising, with critics accusing Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of increasingly trying to weaken and silence opponents. 

    The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a socialist movement and the second largest faction in the PLO has been at the heart of the growing controversy.

    Since the latest upswing in violence began in October, the PFLP has become one of the most vocal factions to challenge President Mahmoud Abbas' stumbling administration. The group has been highly critical of the government, accusing it of not supporting the people’s uprising.

    The PLO encompasses several Palestinian factions, but Abbas' Fatah movement is by far the most prominent group in the alliance.

    Last week the PLO cancelled funds that should legally be funneled from the PLO to its various members, increasing tensions that have been growing for months.

    The PFLP was quick to go on the offensive, saying the move was a response to their criticism of Abbas.
    A day after the announcement, PFLP members burned photos of Abbas during a protest in Gaza City. 

    Hani al-Thawabta, a leader of the PFLP in the Gaza Strip and member of the PFLP’s central committee, told Middle East Eye that Abbas’s actions were an attempt to turn the PLO into “a weapon to acquire power”, by pushing out anyone who disagrees with his positions.

    PLO cuts funding to affiliated groups  Read More


    Civilians under fire as Islamic State seizes Yarmouk

    A street in Yarmouk refugee camp photographed in April 2015.
     Rami al SayyedUNRWA

    Maureen Clare Murphy-21 April 2016

    Thousands of civilians in Yarmouk refugee camp near Damascus are once again in immediate danger as fierce fighting between rival groups has trapped families in their homes, preventing access to food and water.

    The Palestine Liberation Organization’s envoy to Syria said Tuesday night that Islamic State militants were in control of 70 percent of the camp and were beheading and raping residents.

    Control over the remainder of the camp is split between Jabhat al-Nusra and allied Palestinian fighters, on the one hand, and the Syrian government, on the other, according to the Jafra Foundation, a Palestinian relief group in Syria.

    The Palestine Liberation Organization’s Anwar Abd al-Hadi told the Ma’an News Agency that Jabhat al-Nusra, al-Qaida’s affiliate in Syria, had allowed Islamic State fighters to infiltrate the camp last year, “but the two extremist groups had since turned on one another, and [Islamic State] now held the majority of the camp,” the agency reported.

    “[Abd al-Hadi] said at least 20 people in the camp had been beheaded and buried before anyone was able to identify them,” Ma’an added.

    Food and water shortages

    An estimated 6,000 families remain in the camp, according to UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees.

    “The continuous, highly intense fighting is not only causing civilian casualties and fatalities, but has also acutely aggravated shortages of food and clean water,” UNRWA stated last week.

    The agency was unable to deliver aid between late September last year and mid-February this year, causing severe food shortages.

    Once home to 150,000 residents, Yarmouk was formerly the largest Palestinian population center in the country before it became an arena of fighting in December 2012. Thousands fled after rebel forces entered the camp and its central mosque was hit in government airstrikes.

    Since then, electricity and water supplies to the camp have been cut and a complete siege was imposed by government forces and allied groups in July 2013.

    Dozens in the camp starved to death that following winter, and many more have been killed during clashes and ongoing shelling and strikes on Yarmouk.

    The Jafra Foundation said in a statement on Monday that the latest bout of violence erupted after Islamic State fighters seized a checkpoint between Yarmouk and the neighboring suburb of Yalda, “completely cutting off civilian access to any and all supplies.”

    Seven civilians, including two children, were killed by sniper fire, Jafra said. The group added that one of those slain, Hisham Zawabe, was a relief worker who was shot outside his home.

    Residents are unable to evacuate the dead and wounded from the streets “due to continuous sniping,” the group said, adding that two civilians were beheaded by Islamic State fighters.

    No doctors, medical supplies

    The camp currently lacks functioning medical facilities and doctors to treat injured persons.

    Palestine Hospital, the main medical center in the camp, has no fuel to operate equipment, Jafra stated, and Basel hospital, the only other facility in the camp, was lately destroyed by Islamic State fighters.

    “Amputation has become a common form of treatment to save lives, as surgical tools and equipment are unable to be used and no doctors remain in the camp,” the group added.

    Jafra warned that there is a great need for drinking water and water treatment tabs in the camp, where the groundwater is contaminated and residents have been cut off from drinking water service for more than 500 days.

    The Action Group for Palestinians of Syria meanwhile called for an immediate end to the fighting and for the evacuation of civilians to safer areas of the camp, and a lifting of the siege and the entry of medical aid and emergency relief.

    The monitoring group also called on the Syrian government and the Palestine Liberation Organization to intervene “to save what remains of Yarmouk” and ensure the protection of civilians there.

    The Worst Dictatorship You’ve Never Heard Of

    Gambia is facing its biggest protest movement in years. It will either be a breakthrough or a bloodbath.
    The Worst Dictatorship You’ve Never Heard Of

    BY JEFFREY SMITH-APRIL 21, 2016

    Since taking power in a bloodless coup in 1994, Yahya Jammeh has presided over the worst dictatorship you’ve never heard of. The eccentric Gambian president, who performs ritual exorcisms and claims to heal everything from AIDS to infertility with herbal remedies, rules his tiny West African nation through a mix of superstition and fear. State-sanctioned torture, enforced disappearances, and arbitrary executions — these are just a few of the favored tactics employed by his notorious security and intelligence services.

    Elsewhere in Africa, rights advocates have increasingly lamented a plague of “third-termism” as more and more leaders move to scrap constitutional limits in order to remain in power. But in Gambia, Jammeh will probably cruise to a fifth five-year term in elections scheduled for December. That is, of course, unless the unprecedented wave of protests that began last week boil over into a full-fledged popular revolt.

    Tensions have been slowly building in Gambia for years, not least because of the repressive security environment, widespread corruption, chronic food shortages, and terribly mismanaged economy.
    (Gambia ranks dead last in West Africa in terms of GDP per capita, the only country to experience a decline since 1994.) But Jammeh has mostly succeeded in keeping discontent in check, in part because of Gambia’s Indemnity Law — signed by the president in 2001 — occasioned by an incident the previous year in which security forces opened fire on a group of student protesters. In total, 14 people were murdered in broad daylight. The new law gave the president sweeping powers to prevent security forces from being prosecuted for quelling “unlawful assembly.”

    On April 14, however, long-simmering frustrations inevitably boiled over. Scores of Gambians bravely took to the streets that day to demand electoral reforms before the December elections. Unsurprisingly, Jammeh’s riot police cut the demonstration short, roughing up protesters and firing tear gas to disperse the crowds that had gathered in a seaside suburb of the capital, Banjul.

    The regime’s initial response to the protests was actually quite subdued when compared with similar events in Gambia’s past. But citizens mobilized again two days later, on April 16, staging the largest and most sustained act of public defiance against Jammeh since he seized power more than two decades ago.

    This time, the agitated police responded more forcefully, spraying demonstrators with live ammunition and assaulting people in the streets. In total, 55 people were reportedly arrested; many of them were brutalized in detention.

    Most shockingly, Solo Sandeng, the leader of the youth wing of Gambia’s main opposition movement, the United Democratic Party (UDP), was allegedly tortured to death while in state custody. After news of Sandeng’s death broke, the UDP once again rallied, marching peacefully through the capital to demand answers. And once again, riot police rushed to the scene,arresting Ousainou Darboe, secretary-general of the UDP, and other senior members of the party. According to a UDP news release issued on the evening of April 16, over two dozen party members were reportedly detained and three people were killed, including Sandeng. Many of them have been charged with “unlawful assembly,” among other crimes, but the party has said it will organize more demonstrations in the coming days.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the African Union, and the U.S. State Department all condemned the Gambian government’s severe response to the peaceful protests, the latter urging the government to exercise “restraint” and “calm.” But if the UDP goes ahead with its plan for more protests, there is a risk that Jammeh’s paranoid government will respond with additional deadly force. In fact, the president has already threatened that “protesters will not be spared” and blamed Western countries for instigating the unrest.

    It is for this reason that the United States should move beyond rhetoric and sanction Jammeh’s regime for its clear record of abuse. It should impose travel restrictions on individuals implicated in grave human rights abuses and freeze the U.S. assets of Jammeh, his immediate family, and members of his inner circle. Jammeh’s lavish $3.5 million mansion in Potomac, Maryland would certainly be a good place to start.

    Part of the reason Jammeh’s government is so jittery is that it weathered a coup attempt less than two years ago. In December 2014, an unlikely band of diaspora members — including two U.S. Army veterans and a Minnesota businessman — staged an assault on the presidential palace while Jammeh was outside the country. The putsch failed and the regime responded with fury, sentencing eight alleged coup plotters to death and indiscriminately jailing scores of Gambians suspected of being associated with them, some as old as 84 and as young as 14.

    The crackdown drew harsh rebukes from rights activists, but it was later revealed that the United States may have indirectly tipped off the Gambian government that a coup was in the works. According to the Washington Post, the FBI had been monitoring some of the plotters’ communications, and the State Department later informed another West African nation that one of them had left the United States in the hopes it would intercept him. Despite Jammeh’s egregious rights record, the U.S. government has largely refrained from speaking out against him over the years. (The Gambian leader waswelcomed to the White House as recently as August 2014, when he attended the first-ever U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit.)

    But in truth, the tide had begun to turn against Jammeh months before the attempted coup, when he signed a harsh anti-gay law as part of an overhaul of the country’s penal code. The European Union responded by suspending$186 million in aid while the United States made Gambia ineligible for the African Growth and Opportunity Act, a trade preference program that provides duty-free treatment to U.S. imports from sub-Saharan Africa, making it the only nation besides Swaziland and South Sudan to lose eligibility because of its dismal human rights record.

    International isolation has made Jammeh only more vulnerable at home. Before last week’s protests, Gambia’s notoriously fractious political opposition had begun to piece together a unified front, with top decision makers from different political parties putting forward a common agenda: namely, unseating Jammeh at the polls in December.

    But even if the opposition works together, it will be fighting an uphill battle against Jammeh’s ruthless political machine. So blatant was the government’s intimidation of the opposition during the last election in 2011 that the Economic Community of West African States refused to send observers — an unprecedented move for the regional bloc. That is why it’s crucial that international donors, namely the United States, both invest in Gambia’s newly unified pro-democracy movement and signal to Jammeh that his government’s brutal and ongoing crimes will no longer be tolerated.
    Image credit: ALAIN JOCARD/AFP/Getty Images

    Sabrina De Sousa at her former home in Washington in 2012. She faces extradition from Portugal to Italy for her alleged role in the CIA abduction of Abu Omar in 2003 in Milan. (Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post)

    By Ian Shapira-April 21

    More than 13 years after an Egyptian cleric was kidnapped off the streets of Milan by CIA operatives, one former agency officer now living in Portugal faces extradition to Italy, where she was sentenced to four years in prison for the abduction.

    Sabrina De Sousa, 60, was one of 26 Americans convicted in absentia by Italian courts for her alleged role in the February 2003 rendition of Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, also known as Abu Omar.

    Like the other convicted Americans, De Sousa never really faced the threat of Italian imprisonment, because she had moved back to the United States long before the Italian trials began.

    But last spring, De Sousa moved to Portugal to be near relatives. In the fall, she was detained by local authorities at the Lisbon airport on a European arrest warrant.

    This week, Portugal’s highest court upheld the country’s lower courts’ rulings, declared that they did not violate the constitution, and said De Sousa should be sent to Italy as soon as May 4. Portugal’s Constitutional Court also reiterated a condition set by the lower courts — and guaranteed by Italy in De Sousa’s European arrest warrant — that once she arrives in Italy, she must be given another trial or a chance to appeal with new evidence, and the ability to call Italian and U.S. witnesses, because she had been tried in absentia.

    US presidential poll throwing-up vital foreign policy issues 


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    US Democratic presidential canditate Bernie Sanders (R) and Bolivia’s President Evo Morales attend a conference on social and environmental issues, organised by the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences in the Vatican on April 15, 2016. AFP

    The US or any other major economy cannot afford to let opportunities for new economic tie-ups promising growth, to slip past them. Added growth as a result of normalizing relations with Iran is one such opportunity the West cannot afford to miss. Likewise, Iran cannot afford to lose new growth opportunities which would come in the wake of it mending relations with the West. As often pointed out in this column, economics drive politics. Currently, no less a quarter than the Iranian political leadership is leading from the front in strengthening economic ties between Iran and the foremost economies of the West.

    The current presidential polls campaign in the US has helped focus on some foreign policy issues of great significance for the US and the world. It should be plain to see that these questions and the debates surrounding them are as vital to the world community as the domestic policy matters that have thus far surfaced in the campaign. For example, Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders has raised the issue of the dignity of Palestinians and for doing so he needs to be complimented. It amounts to breaking new ground in debates of this kind.

    One could say that it is high time that the issue of the rights of Palestinians was raised in a forthright and consistent manner by those hoping to lead the US. Thus far, policy issues on the Middle East question have been handled by US presidential candidates with a degree of reserve and caution on account of the significant role the Jewish lobby is seen to play in US politics. Among other things, sections of this lobby are seen as bank-rolling presidential candidates who are viewed as important for their interests and this factor has prevented the majority of presidential candidates from broaching the question of Palestinian rights with the required forthrightness. This is the perception an objective observer in South Asia is prone to subscribe to.

    Consequently, matters of importance in the Middle East imbroglio have gone largely unaddressed and unexplored to the desired extent by those aspiring to the presidency of the US. Nor has the US public been afforded an opportunity to debate these issues with the required candidness and vibrancy on account of this factor. The end result is a continuation of policy perceptions among the public which are detrimental to Middle East peace.

    Accordingly, Sanders’ interventions on the Middle East question should be seen as timely and appropriate. As he has said, the rights and dignity of the Palestinians go to the heart of the problem. Speaking on the issue of the ‘disproportionate’ nature of the Israeli response in the 2014 Gaza war, Sanders was reported as saying: ‘If we are ever going to bring peace to that region, which has seen so much hatred and so much war, we are going to have to treat the Palestinian people with respect and dignity.’

    Even the Israeli state has come a considerable distance by endorsing the ‘two state principle’ in the Middle East but Israel and the US need to go very much beyond this policy position if the basis is to be laid for a degree of peace and stability in the region. Israel and Palestine need to fully recognize the dignity and rights of each other and this is where the Middle East needs to get to if the political process in the region is to be greatly advanced. In other words, the two sides need to see each other as being equal in dignity. Unless and until this principle is recognized fully and implemented peace would evade the Middle East.

    Land borders are a complex and demanding question in the Middle East but antagonisms are bound to only heighten if the Israeli side continues to establish Jewish settlements on contested land. This is no way to building confidence among the main parties to the conflict. Much could be achieved by way of conflict resolution if each side respects the others land rights. Such achievements would be possible only if one side respects the dignity and rights of the other and vice versa.

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump has shown a disquieting ineptness in deliberating on foreign policy issues by saying that he would dismantle the accord on nuclear issues arrived at between Iran and certain key world powers a few months back. This amounts to succumbing readily to US populist sentiment. More precisely, Trump betrays a strong penchant, here, to pander to the more hard line sections among the Jewish lobby. Needless to say, this is not the sort of material a world political leader in the waiting, of any exceptional stature, ought to be made of.

    Trump’s deficiencies and unsuitability for the US’ highest political office need to be gauged not only on these populist pronouncements, which smack of a substantial lack of political foresightedness, but also on the basis of his unsure grasp of international economic trends. Given the extreme complexity of the current world economic situation, the US would be acting most inadvisedly by working against the Iranian nuclear accord at some future date. While it is true that the US economy remains in the number one slot as regards growth, developments on the international economic plane, are characterized by a high degree of fluidity and uncertainty.

    The US or any other major economy cannot afford to let opportunities for new economic tie-ups promising growth, to slip past them. Added growth as a result of normalizing relations with Iran is one such opportunity the West cannot afford to miss. Likewise, Iran cannot afford to lose new growth opportunities which would come in the wake of it mending relations with the West. As often pointed out in this column, economics drive politics. Currently, no less a quarter than the Iranian political leadership is leading from the front in strengthening economic ties between Iran and the foremost economies of the West.

    Growing material interdependence is the chief feature of the contemporary international economic order. Neither the US nor China could afford to ignore this stark fact. This is the reason why China has been attaching top priority to strengthening economic relations with the so-called emerging economies of the global South. A notable result of these efforts is the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. The latter is certain to strengthen China’s hands in its dealings with the West and its financial institutions. It is on account of the current international economic fluidity that the US decided to put in place the Trans-Pacific Partnership, for example, which brings together some of the most vibrant economies of the Asia-Pacific region, for the purpose of common economic uplift.

    The conclusion is inescapable that the US, no less than China, is guided by a spirit of economic pragmatism. It could not be otherwise on account of the current global economic uncertainties. It is abundantly clear that, given these realities, Donald Trump and his camp are merely idea-mongering and very dangerously so.

    Snowden to take Norway to court to secure free passage

    American whistleblower Edward Snowden delivers remarks via video link from Moscow to attendees at a discussion regarding an International Treaty on the Right to Privacy, Protection Against Improper Surveillance and Protection of Whistleblowers in Manhattan, New York September 24, 2015.  REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/FilesAmerican whistleblower Edward Snowden delivers remarks via video link from Moscow to attendees at a discussion regarding an International Treaty on the Right to Privacy, Protection Against Improper Surveillance and Protection of Whistleblowers in Manhattan, New York...REUTERS/ANDREW KELLY/FILES
    Thu Apr 21, 2016 

    Edward Snowden will take the Norwegian state to court in a bid to secure free passage there, a Norwegian law firm representing the former U.S. spy contractor said on Thursday.

    Snowden has been invited to Norway to receive a freedom of speech award from the local branch of writers' group PEN International, but is worried that he would be handed over to the United States, his lawyers say.

    "The purpose is to get legally established that Norway has no right to extradite Snowden to the U.S.," the law firm, Schjoedt, said in a statement.

    "U.S. authorities have already asked that Snowden will be extradited to the U.S. if he was to arrive in Norway," Hallvard Helle, the lawyer representing Snowden, told Reuters.

    "It is a case they (the Norwegian authorities) have not wished to comment on previously, so therefore we want a legal clarification of this," Helle said, when asked whether Norway had said it would extradite Snowden if he entered the country.

    The Norwegian justice ministry said: "The ministry does not wish to comment on a case that potentially will be handled and decided by the court."

    Norway, a member of the NATO military alliance, has very close diplomatic ties with the United States, but the judiciary can defy the government.

    A court ruled on Wednesday that Norway had violated the human rights of mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik by keeping him in isolation since he was sentenced in 2012 for killing 77 people..

    Snowden, whose supporters say he boldly exposed government infringements of privacy, fled the United States in May 2013 and now lives in Russia where he was granted asylum. The U.S. government filed espionage charges against him for leaking intelligence information.

    Snowden is among the top tips for this year's Nobel Peace Prize, an award picked by a Norwegian committee and awarded in Oslo.

    Norway and Russia share a border making it possible to travel by land.
    (Reporting by Camilla Knudsen and Stine Jacobsen; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)