Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Four killed in Palestinian shooting attack in Tel Aviv, gunmen held - police

People hug each other following a shooting attack that took place in the center of Tel Aviv June 8, 2016.
REUTERS/BAZ RATNER--Israeli policemen work inside a restaurant following a shooting attack in the center of Tel Aviv June 8, 2016.REUTERS/BAZ RATNER
Israeli policemen work inside a restaurant following a shooting attack that took place in the center of Tel Aviv June 8, 2016.REUTERS/BAZ RATNER--An Israeli policeman clears the area after a shooting attack took place in the center of Tel Aviv June 8, 2016.REUTERS/BAZ RATNER. REUTERS/AMMAR AWAD


BY RAMI AMICHAY-Thu Jun 9, 2016

Two Palestinian gunmen killed at least four people at a popular shopping and restaurant area in Tel Aviv on Wednesday in an attack that sent diners, some clutching small children, running for their lives just outside Israel's Defence Ministry.

Both gunmen, identified by police as Palestinians from a village near the city of Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, were apprehended, and one was wounded.

Security footage showed the pair, dressed in suit and tie and posing as customers at a restaurant, suddenly pull out automatic weapons and open fire, shooting one man point blank, as other diners fled.
Police said the assailants killed four people in the 9:30 p.m. (1830 GMT) assault and that six were wounded.

The attack, as families were enjoying a balmy evening out at the trendy Sarona complex, was one of the most serious in the country's business and entertainment capital since a wave of Palestinian violence erupted eight months ago.

A lull over the past several months in what had been near-daily stabbings and shootings made the attack just metres (yards) from the sprawling defence compound surprising and was likely to bring back a sense of insecurity to Israeli streets.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, returning from a visit to Moscow, rushed directly to the Defence Ministry to assess the situation with senior ministers and security chiefs.

"I was with the family, eating pizza. We heard the shots, we didn't know what was happening, and everybody got down on the floor. We managed to escape to a cellar," a woman, who gave her name only as Annette, told Israel's Channel 10 television.

Security personnel who guard the Sarona complex fired back.

In the last half year, Palestinian attacks have killed 31 Israelis and two visiting U.S. citizens. Israeli forces have shot dead at least 196 Palestinians, 134 of whom Israel has said were assailants. Others were killed in clashes and protests.

Tensions over Jewish access to a volatile and contested Jerusalem holy site, revered by Muslims as Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) and Jews as Temple Mount, have fuelled the violence.

Israel says incitement in the Palestinian media and personal problems at home have been important factors spurring assailants, often teenagers, to carry out attacks.

But Israeli officials also have pointed to efforts in recent months by the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank, to curb the assaults.

In a similar attack in Tel Aviv five months ago, an Israeli Arab killed two people on a main shopping street and the driver of a taxi he used to flee the scene. The assailant was killed a week later in a shootout with police at a hideout in his home village in northern Israel.

(Additional reporting by Ori Lewis; Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Mark Heinrich and James Dalgleish)

SitRep: Chinese Jets Intercept U.S. Plane; Fallujah Stalled

SitRep: Chinese Jets Intercept U.S. Plane; Fallujah Stalled

BY PAUL MCLEARYADAM RAWNSLEY-JUNE 8, 2016

Faceoff. Another U.S. surveillance plane has been intercepted by Chinese fighter jets. The details: On Tuesday, a U.S. Air Force RC-135 “Rivet Joint” was intercepted by two Chinese J-10 fighter jets over international waters in the East China Sea. “One of the intercepting Chinese jets had an unsafe excessive rate of closure on the RC-135 aircraft,” U.S. Navy Cmdr. Dave Benham said in a statement. “Initial assessment is that this seems to be a case of improper airmanship, as no other provocative or unsafe maneuvers occurred,” he said.

It was the second such incident in the past month, and comes as Secretary of State John Kerry and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew are in Beijing for the annual U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue, and just days after U.S. and Chinese defense officials shook their fists at one another at a major international defense conference in Singapore.

Bad actor. In a stunning set of revelations, FP’s Colum Lynch writes that Saudi Arabia threatened to pull hundreds of millions of dollars from U.N. programs if the international body included the kingdom in a report detailing how various regimes and militias around the world are guilty of killing and maiming children. The report included details about the Saudi-led bombing campaign in Yemen, which has killed thousands of people, including hundreds of children. The U.S. has provided extensive aerial refueling and intelligence support to the Saudis over the past year in the bombing effort.

The threats led U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to scrub mentions of Saudi in the report, and sparked international outrage over his decision. Lynch reports, “senior Saudi diplomats told top U.N. officials Riyadh would use its influence to convince other Arab governments and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to sever ties with the United Nations.” The upshot? Now that U.N. officials have been telling the media about the kingdom’s behavior, the report has received more press than it likely would have in the first place

Fallujah trouble. The Iraqi army’s assault on Fallujah has stalled. And the problems have less to do with any resistance Islamic State fighters are putting up than with infighting — or lack of coordination — among the disparate Iraqi army units and various militia groups. Overall, the “seven battalions of Iraqi special forces units have been unable to advance for two days,” Reuterscorrespondents on the ground report. Maj. Ahmed Na’im with the Anbar police force said that his men and the Iraqi federal police never coordinate operations or share intel. “They have their own plans and take their orders from their own people,” he said.

Ousted. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has fired several key government officials, including the country’s intelligence chief Zuhair al-Gharbawi. It’s unclear why now and what comes next, but al-Gharbawi was appointed by former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Hamas ready for war. Tensions in the Gaza Strip are high, and Hamas leaders say they’re getting ready. FP contributor David Patrikarakos sat down with a few militants recently in Gaza, where one told him, “The military is training…We control all the security in the strip, and we are hidden, so I am sure Israel has few obvious military targets. If they start a war, thousands of civilians will die.”

Tagging out. Defense Secretary Ash Carter is saying goodbye to his Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Christine Wormuth in a small, private ceremony at the Pentagon Wednesday, almost two years to the day after she was confirmed by the Senate in June 2014. Replacing her in an acting capacity is Brian P. McKeon, who was Wormuth’s principal deputy, with Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs David Shear stepping in to take McKeon’s old job. Got that? Finally, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs Kelly Magsamen is stepping in to take Shear’s old job. Welcome to the waning days of a presidential administration, everybody.

Big money, fast choppers. Qatar has signed a $667 million contract with Boeing to buy 24 Apache attack helicopters to be delivered by 2020. The plan is for the Apaches to replace Qatar’s SA-342 Gazelle attack helicopters to provide close air support, armed recon, and anti-tank missions.

Good morning again from the Sitrep crew, thanks for clicking on through for the summer 2016 edition 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

Carriers

The Navy is sending out more aircraft carrier strike groups lately, with six of the service’s ten carriers carrying out operations at sea, Defense Newsreports. Four of those carriers are deployed abroad. The USS Harry S Trumanis carrying out airstrikes against the Islamic State from the Mediterranean and the USS Dwight Eisenhower is headed towards the Gulf. In Asia, the USSRonald Reagan recently set sail from Japan and the USS John C Stennis is in the South China Sea. Two other carriers, the USS Carl Vinson and USS George Washington, are engaged in training operations off both U.S. coasts. The U.S. hasn’t seen this high a level of carrier activity since 2012.

Japan

The U.S. is broadening its military relationship with yet another east Asian ally. Breaking Defense reports that Japanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatanisigned a deal with the U.S. at the Shangri-La Dialogue that will allow the two countries to buy weapons from each other absent export and import restrictions. Japan has only recently begun to export weapons abroad within the past two years, shedding the long-held prohibition as the country begins to inch away from its post-war pacifism. The deal could see the U.S. buying selected parts and components from Japanese suppliers, if not whole systems.

North Korea

North Korean nuclear proliferation continues to move full speed ahead. An anonymous senior State Department official tells Reuters that North Korea has restarted plutonium production. That echoes similar claims from the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency, which recently said it had seen indications that the North was reopening its plutonium reprocessing facility at Yongbyon, which is used to reprocess spent fuel from a plutonium reactor. The move could allow Pyongyang to make more weapon-grade fuel to build out its nuclear arsenal. North Korea tested a nuclear weapon in January and has signaled it has no intention of ratcheting back its weapons program.

India

Senator Ben Cardin (D-Md.) is hinting that there may be a big U.S.-India defense news announced during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the United States this week. Defense News reports that the news might involve a Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), which had been the subject of talks between the U.S. and India during Defense Secretary Ash Carter’s visit to the country in April. The LEMOA could allow for the U.S. to engage in defense-related technology transfers. The U.S. is also working on two other agreements with India related to communications security and geospatial intelligence.

Syria

Syrian opposition media is carrying claims by a Syrian military official thatIsraeli warplanes carried out an airstrike against Hezbollah weapons caches earlier this week. The unconfirmed report, picked up by Israel’s Ynetnews, claims that a Syrian radar and air defense installations were also targeted in the attack. Israel has reportedly carried out a number of airstrikes against suspected transfers of sophisticated Iranian weapons to Hezbollah since the conflict began and is said to have leaned on Russia to help prevent the arms trafficking.

Navy

Range is all the rage in naval artillery these days and Scout Warrior reports that Raytheon is working on another way to extend the distance at which American cruisers and destroyers can reach their targets. The defense contractor has developed a new round, the Excalibur N5, in order to meet the Navy’s request for a longer-range round. The Excalibur would be fired by the existing 5-inch Mk 45 guns and reach distances of up to 26 nautical miles.

2016

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump tried to get Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi to invest in a business venture, according to a scoop from Buzzfeed. In 2009, Gadhafi rented an estate owned by Trump in Westchester, New York to pitch his tent and stay during the United Nations general assembly meeting. Sources tell the news outlet that Trump hoped to use the visit to pitch Gadhafi on investing some of Libya’s oil money held by the Libyan Investment Authority in some unidentified business venture. Local opposition ultimately prevented Gadhfafi from taking up residence. Trump, however, attempted to portray himself as a supporter of the opposition to the now-deceased dictator’s stay, claiming to have “screwed him.”

Business of defense

Kalashnikov, the Russian company which makes the iconic AK-47 assault rifle, has found success in reorienting its business after sanctions on Russia put a crimp in its business. The New York Times reports that the company is back on track after focusing on the domestic consumer market in Russia rather than selling to the American gun buyers. The U.S. had made up nearly 40 percent of Kalashnikov’s sales, but American sanctions on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine and annexation of Crimea cut off the company’s access to the lucrative market. Instead, Kalashnikov has turned a product by eschewing the crowded defense marked and offering semi-automatic versions of its guns to Russian hunters at home.

Photo Credit: China Photos/Getty Images

Hillary Clinton celebrates 'milestone' victory but Sanders refuses to quit

Clinton cements status as presidential nominee with a win in California, but Sanders vows to keep campaign alive all the way to Democratic convention


 in San Francisco, in New York and  in Santa Monica-Wednesday 8 June 2016

Hillary Clinton has cemented her status as the Democratic nominee for president with convincing primary wins in California, New Jersey and New Mexico, calling on supporters of her rival, Bernie Sanders, to unite behind her historic candidacy.

But on a night when it became clear that Clinton would secure a majority of pledged delegates, Sanders refused to bow out, telling supporters that their fight would continue to the Democratic National Convention in July.

The senator’s defiant remarks came after Clinton effectively declared victory in her overall battle against Sanders at a rally in New York.

Clinton told supporters that she had “reached a milestone” as the first woman to be a major party’s nominee for president, and immediately framed November’s general election as a contest between two opposing visions of the future.

“He’s not just trying to build a wall between America and Mexico, he’s trying to wall off Americans from each other,” Clinton said, taking aim at the policies and slogans that have become the hallmark of her Republican rival, Donald Trump. “When he says let’s make America great again, that is code for let’s take America backwards.”

In her speech, Clinton praised Sanders for exciting “millions of voters, especially young people” in what she said was an “extraordinary campaign”.

“I know it never feels good to put your heart into a cause or a candidate you believe in and come up short,” she said, referring to her defeat to Barack Obama in 2008. “I know that feeling well.”

Sanders had been pinning his hopes on an upset in California, the most delegate-rich contest on the primary calendar, and one where polls had recently shown him neck and neck against Clinton. But on Wednesday, with 91.7% of precincts reporting, Clinton had 56% and Sanders 43% of the vote, the Associated Press reported.

She had also won New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota, while Sanders had triumphed in North Dakota and Montana.

On the Republican side, Trump remained mired in a remarkable clash with the most senior members of his party, including the leaders of the House and the Senate, some of whom were in effect accusing the nominee they had just endorsed of outright racism.

Bernie Sanders fights on in Democratic presidential race

Sanders vows to stay in the race


The senator from Vermont, his voice hoarse, struggled to be heard above screaming supporters in Santa Monica. “We are going to fight hard to win the primary in Washington DC,” he said, referring to the caucus that is last in line to vote next week.

Promising to continue all the way to the July convention, he added: “And then we take our fight for social, economic, racial and environmental justice to Philadelphia.”

However, the short speech from Sanders, amid reports that he plans to lay off up to half his staff on Wednesday, added to the expectation that his campaign may soon wind down.

Obama, who is said to be planning to endorse Clinton in the coming days, is expected to play a mediating role between the Democratic adversaries after their bruising campaigns. The president called both candidates after polls had closed, the White House said, and plans to meet with Sanders on Thursday.

Clinton claimed the mantle of the Democratic nominee exactly eight years to the day after she conceded defeat in her campaign against then senator Obama, memorably telling supporters that she had fallen short in her quest to shatter “that highest, hardest glass ceiling”.

On Tuesday, she returned to that metaphor, telling ecstatic supporters that the ceiling above them, in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, was made of glass. “But don’t worry,” she said. “We’re not smashing this one. Thanks to you, we’ve reached a milestone. The first time in our nation’s history that a woman will be a major party’s nominee.”

Going Back To Afghan Lands

Recently the law enforcement agencies arrested six agents of the Afghan intelligence agency, National Directorate of Security from Balochistan. According to the media details, they were arrested from different Afghan refugee camps. The culprits admitted that they had killed at least 40 innocent Pakistanis in last few months. Everyone knows that NDS is an agency more hostile to Pakistan even than the RA&W.
Afghan_NA
by Ali Sukhanver

( June 7, 2016, Islamabad, Sri Lanka Guardian) Has anyone ever thought of those wretched ones who migrated to Pakistan from Afghanistan almost three decades back? Will the Ashraf Ghani government say them welcome if the government of Pakistan sternly decides to push them back to the land they actually belong to? And what would be the choice of these refugees if they are given the option to stay in Pakistan or to go back to Afghanistan?

There are countless questions regarding the issue of Afghan refugees in Pakistan. These Afghan refugees started coming to Pakistan somewhere in 1979. Those were the days when the whole of Afghanistan had turned into a bloody battlefield and life for the innocent people who were neither among the Taliban nor with the Russian forces became simply a blazing hell.  After a long period of ten years, in 1989 the Russian troops had to say good-bye to the Afghan lands but even after their withdrawal, peace remained an unfulfilled dream for the people of Afghanistan. There had been a state of civil war in Afghanistan.

The Taliban had been trying their best to get hold on the whole system and somewhere in 1996, they succeeded in capturing Kabul and establishing the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. The story did not stop here. The US had a very old dream of ruling over Afghanistan through its proxy-rulers and it always wanted to bring India into the Afghan scenario as the representative of US but this situation was certainly never acceptable to Pakistan. The Taliban were also of the opinion that no foreign forces had any right to intervene in Afghan situation.

A state of clash and conflict continued for many years and at last, the US and NATO forces entered Afghanistan making the 9/11 attacks the basis of this intervention. In the beginning, this intervention was given the name of the War on Terrorism but with the passage of time it was exposed that 9/11 and the War on Terrorism were simply lame excuses, the actual target was to materialise the centuries-old dream of capturing Afghanistan.

 In short, since 1979 till 2016, Afghanistan has always been in a state of war; the unfortunate people of Afghanistan could never see the dawning of a peaceful day. During all that period they were left only with two options; either to become a part of that war or take shelter in Pakistan as refugees. So most of the Afghans went for the second option; they simply crossed the Durand Line and entered a safe haven named as Pakistan.

Today according to an estimate there are more than 1.7 million Afghan nationals living in Pakistan. These refugees are a huge burden on Pakistan’s economy because Pakistan has to spend a lot on their food, accommodation, clothing, health and education. So many of these refugees have succeeded in getting fake identity cards and now they claim that they are the nationals of Pakistan. The intelligence agencies of Pakistan and the law enforcement authorities have so many times pointed out the involvement of these Afghan Refugees in serious crimes like drug trafficking, targeted killings and kidnapping for ransom. But the most painful aspect of their presence is that so many agents of the Indian RA&W and Afghanistan’s NDS enter Pakistan in a guise of the refugees and create law and order problems. Such agents are so many times arrested from different parts of Pakistan for their involvement in terrorist activities.

Recently the law enforcement agencies arrested six agents of the Afghan intelligence agency, National Directorate of Security from Balochistan. According to the media details, they were arrested from different Afghan refugee camps. The culprits admitted that they had killed at least 40 innocent Pakistanis in last few months. Everyone knows that NDS is an agency more hostile to Pakistan even than the RA&W.

Last year, the government of Pakistan and the government of Afghanistan had arranged to sign a cooperation agreement between the NDS and the ISI but unfortunately, NDS’ former chief Rahmatullah Nabil absented himself from the meeting willingly as he was not in favour of any such co-operation agreement. Now the situation regarding the Afghan refugees is getting more serious day by day as the agents of the NDS are simply trying to make things complicated for Pakistan in the garb of refugees. If Pakistan wants to concentrate on its own problems in a better way, the better option for the government of Pakistan is to send all the refugees back to Afghanistan.

Bangladesh's Deep Sea Port Problem

China, Japan, and India are all competing to build Dhaka’s first deep sea port.

Ships anchored in Karnafuli River, Chittagong.Image Credit: REUTERS/Andrew Biraj
Bangladesh's Deep Sea Port Problem

By Wade Shepard-June 07, 2016

Bangladesh needs a deep sea port. The country has one of world’s fastest growing economies, which is expected to rise at a 7.1 percent clip this year. It is onGoldman Sachs’s list of the “Next 11” emerging economic powerhouses of the 21st century. On the strength of the second-most dynamic textile industry on the planet, Bangladesh’s export sector is booming, and is expected to eclipse $50 billion per year in value by 2021. This is all in a country without adequate maritime infrastructure.
The Diplomat

In its 45-year history as an independent state, Bangladesh has never built a new port. While $60 billion of annual trade currently pours through the country’s two existing seaports, Chittagong and Mongla, both are too shallow for large container ships and require costly load transfers to smaller vessels to get cargo in and out — an added step that can cost an additional $15,000 per day and severely decreases the ports’ global competitiveness.

However, finding solutions to this problem has proven problematic for Bangladesh. But this isn’t because of a lack of options, a deficit of investors, or even a dearth of international support, but exactly the opposite: too many powerful players are pushing for too many contending plans. This has left Bangladesh geopolitically stalemated, making and breaking deals, going with one project and then changing position and going with another. Ultimately, this plethora of options has pitted China, Japan, and India in direct competition with each other to build Bangladesh’s first deep sea port.

Although a small country, Bangladesh is of clutch geopolitical importance, being located in the armpit of India and right on the Indian Ocean. The Indian Ocean region contains 25 percent of the world’s land, 40 percent of its oil and gas reserves, and a third of the global population. It hosts one of the world’s busiest and most important shipping lanes, which supplies East Asia with the bulk of its Middle Eastern crude oil. Dhaka is still politically and economically pliable–like a ball of clay–and has become one of the preeminent global staging grounds of interests from east and west, which are trying to mold the country to be what they want it to be and not get pushed out of the game. Bangladesh is a keystone nation in the region, balancing together the contending influences of India, China, the United States, and Japan.

The Belt and Road initiative is the formalization of China’s strategy for securing and bolstering their commercial trade routes, and Bangladesh is a major part of its maritime agenda. China has been establishing a network of ports, dubbed the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, extending from their own coastlines through Southeast Asia, the Indian Ocean, the east coast of Africa, and up through the Mediterranean to Greece. Although designed as a commercial project, this endeavor has instilled a sense of trepidation in the other actors in the South Asian theater, who perceive it as potentially having militaristic ramifications — or at least leveraging this reasoning to push their own competing agendas. This trepidation was brought up by consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton in a 2005 internal report prepared for the U.S. Department of Defense, which first dubbed this plan the “String of Pearls” — a label that has been used ever since to denigrate China’s ambitions in the watery parts of South Asia.

This geopolitical competition has risen to an apex when it comes to selecting the site and the financier of Bangladesh’s first deep sea port, with some powers making great financial and political strides to secure their own interests and to keep those of others at bay. There are currently at least four potential locations for the impending new port: Chittagong, Sonadia, Matarbari, and Payra.

Chittagong

Chittagong, positioned a little way up the Karnaphuli River on the northeast curve of the Bay of Bengal, has always been the largest and by far most important seaport in Bangladesh. Once a major hub on the ancient Maritime Silk Road, Chittagong has a history that stretches back to the fourth century B.C. Ptolemy, the Chinese traveler-monk Faxian, and Ibn Battuta all wrote about the place. Today, this position of relevance still rings true.

“We handle 98 percent of the country’s container cargo, 92 percent of the total cargo volume,” a port development administrator explained. “So you can imagine how important this port is to Bangladesh. If Chittagong port collapsed the whole economy will collapse.”

Ninety-two percent of Bangladesh’s total ocean freight equates to over 30 million tons of bulk cargo and more than 1.8 million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units) each year. And these numbers are rising fast. Cargo volume through Chittagong port is rising at a 14 to 15 percent clip annually, and at the present growth rate it is estimated that the port would top out by 2018.

The problem with Chittagong is that the current maximum draft of the port is just 9.2 meters — definitely not deep enough for many modern container ships. This requires a time-consuming and costly transfer operation, as smaller ships must be used to transport cargo to and from big ocean freighters that are anchored out in the bay.

One proposal to remedy this problem is the construction of a new port on a 1,200 acre island in the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Patenga, and in proximity to Chittagong. Dubbed the Bay Terminal, this would not technically be a deep sea port–as its maximum draft would be up to 13 or 14 meters, rather than the 15 needed to be granted this designation–but it would allow for larger ships to come directly into port.

As early as 2010, China was publicly invited to get on board with expanding and modernizing Chittagong port, and at one point the country pledged $9 billion toward the endeavor.

“It will be a great achievement if China agrees to use our Chittagong port, which we want to develop into a regional commercial hub by building a deep seaport in the Bay of Bengal,” Bangladesh’s Foreign Minister Dipu Moni told Reuters.

This plan bode well for China’s broader ambitions of building an overland corridor from Yunnan province to a port on the Bay of Bengal. The plan would essentially provide China with a link to the sea that, aside from transiting Myanmar, could bypass Southeast Asia and the snake pit of potentially volatile interests there. This prompted international commentators to quickly brand the Chittagong deep sea port proposal as one of China’s “pearls,” which put Bangladesh in a rather precarious geopolitical position. So much so that in June 2015Bangladesh granted Indian cargo ships permission to use Chittagong port.

Sonadia

Realizing that Chittagong may fall through, China had a contingency plan for another deep sea port in Bangladesh all cued up and ready to go. A few years following a 2009 Japanese survey in Sonadia, an island near Cox’s Bazar in the south of the country, which determined it a suitable location for a deep-draft port, China jumped in and offered its financial assistance.

China Harbor Engineering Company, a subsidiary of the state-owned China Communications Construction Company–the same enterprise that is building Colombo Port City in Sri Lanka, and which also happens to be blacklisted by the World Bank on allegations of corruption–was chosen as the developer, and Bangladesh appeared to have given China the green light. During Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s 2014 visit to Beijing it was widely assumed that a deal for Sonadia was going to be formally signed, but then it wasn’t.

It was widely assumed that political pressure was put on Bangladesh from India and the United States to disallow China to build and operate the Sonadia port. With China already building ports in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the Maldives, and Myanmar, Bangladesh was the last remaining link on a chain that would leave India completely surrounded.

“India’s not very happy that China and Pakistan are holding a strategic and economic relationship, and part of their objection is the One Belt, One Road and the Pakistan-China economic corridor,” said Shahid Islam, a research fellow at the BRAC Institute of Governance and Development, a Dhaka-based center for policy research.

After a period of being quiet about the prospective port, in February of 2016 Bangladesh made the formal announcement that it had been scrapped.

“The cancellation of Sonadia is clearly a strategic decision by Bangladesh, doubtlessly helped along by India, Japan and the U.S.,” wrote Indrani Bagchi in an article in the Times of India.
Matarbari

Another reason for the potential cancellation of the Sonadia port was that Bangladesh had granted a contract to Japan to build a deep sea port at Matarbari, just 25 kilometers away.

Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is to build the port along with a liquefied natural gas terminal, a series of four 600 MW coal-fed power plants, as well as rail lines, roadways, and electrical systems as part of a monumental infrastructural package deal. The master plan is that the port would be used to receive coal, which could power an entire new industrial zone in the far southeast of the country.
To make this happen, JICA offered a loan to take care of $3.7 billion out of the total $4.6 billion price tag, at 0.1 percent interest for 30 years and a 10 year grace period thrown in on top of that, according to the South China Morning Post.

Payra

Originally seeming like a condolence prize for China, which had been beaten out for a deep sea port in the south of the country by Japan, Bangladesh proposed a deep sea port at Payra, which is located on the northwestern coast of the Bay of Bengal.

The construction of this port, which was being financed on a public-private partnership (PPP) platform, was originally granted to a Chinese company, and it was starting to look like China was finally going to get its deep sea port in Bangladesh. Then the usual chorus of India, Japan, and the United States resounded once again.

However, as a change of pace, India stepped in and stated that they wanted to get in on the action and be one of the port’s big investors. This was a very different strategy than simply trying to prevent China from having their port while offering no other viable alternative, which had previously been the diplomatic model.

The Payra deep sea port was then reconfigured as a cooperative port that many different countries could invest and operate terminals in. It has been reported that Indian companies are now participating and 10 countries have considered jumping in with $15.5 billion of investment, which is felt to be very different than China having a port in Bangladesh all to themselves.

“Bangladesh politics are driven by India, and the U.S. to some extent,” Shahid Islam explained. “Bangladesh can’t move ahead with China in terms of big collaborations, in terms of making the Silk Route or One Belt, One Road or an economic corridor.”

Like many other countries along the Belt and Road, Bangladesh wants to leverage its keystone position between major global powers and be “a friend to everyone.” But at this junction the country finds itself in very turbulent waters as the great game of geopolitics exerts its influence on every horizon.
Wade Shepard is a journalist and author of Ghost Cities of China.

China: Students caught cheating in university entrance exams could face 7 years in jail

In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, an examinee is checked before taking the national college entrance exam at the Xiji Middle School in Xiji County, northwest China. (File photo) Pic: AP.
In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, an examinee is checked before taking the national college entrance exam at the Xiji Middle School in Xiji County, northwest China. (File photo) Pic: AP.

 
CHEATERS, beware: if you’re caught red-handed during “gaokao” (university entrance exams), you could face up to seven years in jail, warned the Chinese government.

This is the first year the government has introduced such a strict punishment on cheaters, treating it as a criminal offense in an attempt to curb incidences of cheating in the nation’s notoriously grueling exams.

In the recently amended law, those convicted will also be banned from taking other national exams for three years.


The exams began on Tuesday, with up to 9.4 million high school students sitting for the papers this year.

How their future turns out depends on how well they do in the exams, leading some to take desperate measures.

“Educational authorities believe that by dangling the prospect of a harsh punishment in front of the test-takers, it will safeguard the fairness of the tests,” the Global Times reported.


However, some disagree with the criminalization of cheating, stating that it would not solve the problem.
Liu Lijun, a parent of an exam-taker in Hefei City of Anhui Province, told Xinhua: “The effect of cheating on society is not that severe, so I think making cheating in exams a criminal offense is taking things too far.”

Xiong Bingqi, an education specialist, suggested an overhaul of the system so that the entrance exams would only be one part of the university entrance process.

“To fully eliminate cheating, not only must the punishment be strengthened, but the admission system must also be reformed,” said Xiong.

Some of the more popular methods of cheating involve concealed wireless devices and the use of substitute examinees.

Just before the exams kicked off, renowned physicist Stephen Hawking inspired exam-takers by wishing them good luck via his Weibo account on Monday, which currently has more than 4.1 million fans.

In the post, Hawking wrote:

“As many of you prepare to take the National Higher Education Entrance Examination, I want to wish you, the next generation of scientific minds, success in your academic endeavors. This culmination of your hard work marks just the beginning of your very bright futures.

“Growing up, my parents placed a high value on education and I am grateful for the limitless opportunities provided by my studies. Whether you aim to be a doctor, teacher, scientist, musician, engineer, or a writer — be fearless in the pursuit of your aspirations. You are the next generation of big thinkers and thought leaders that will shape the future for generations to come.”

June 8 at 4:28 PM
 When Shannon Harmon moved to the United Kingdom from Chicago, she did not plan to put down roots. But after nearly eight years, she has a master’s degree from a prestigious British university, works as a digital producer at a science-news organization and has built strong ties in her local community.

She also has a massive, five-figure problem: She earns less than 35,000 pounds, or about $50,000, which means that under new visa restrictions introduced this spring she could be deported after her visa expires in January 2018.

The new rules require immigrants on skilled-worker visas from non-European countries, including Americans such as Harmon, to earn at least 35,000 pounds if they want to settle here. Critics of Britain’s immigration policies say that the country is, effectively, rolling up the welcome mat for non-Europeans who do not make enough.

“For me, getting a raise from 25K to 35K is pretty unimaginable,” says Harmon, a 33-year-old with bright red hair who wants to stay in the United Kingdom but earns only 25,000 pounds. She is a driving force behind Stop35k, a grass-roots campaign against new visa restrictions that triggered a debate in Parliament.
 
The changes to Tier 2 visas — the equivalent of the H1B in the United States, given to skilled workers from outside the European Union — come amid an increasingly intense debate over Britain’s membership in the E.U. Britons will head to the polls this month for an in-or-out referendum that has pushed the issue of immigration onto center stage.

In recent days, the momentum has swung towards the campaign to leave the E.U., also known as "Brexit," with its supporters arguing that Britain is overflowing and that something needs to be done to limit numbers.

“The system has spun out of control. We cannot control the numbers,” lawmaker Boris Johnson has said.
As a member of the E.U., Britain has to abide by freedom-of-movement rules, meaning it cannot bar entry to citizens from the 28-nation bloc. Curbing the number of non-European immigrants is one of the few alternatives the government has.

The British government is “focusing on non-Europeans because this is the only group they can really control under the current conditions as a member of the E.U.,” said Franck Düvell, a professor at the University of Oxford’s Center on Migration, Policy and Society.

British Home Secretary Theresa May, whose department is responsible for implementing the changes to settlement rules, has said that they will encourage employers to train a home-grown workforce to “ensure that our migration system does not perpetuate reliance on migrant labor.”
 
"In the past it has been too easy for some businesses to bring in workers from overseas rather than to take the long-term decision to train our workforce here at home,” the Home Office said in a statement. "We need to do more to change that, which means reducing the demand for migrant labour.”

May has said that the new restrictions will reduce the number of non-E.U. migrants being granted residency by up to 40,000 a year.

Britain remains a hugely attractive draw for migrants who are not easily deterred by rocketing house prices or a national obsession with talking about the weather.

The country boasts a number of excellent universities and has the advantage of being an English-speaking country in Europe. Britain’s buoyant economy has prompted Prime Minister David Cameron to call it “the jobs factory of Europe.”

But the United Kingdom’s status as a country of mass migration has put pressure on hospitals, schools and transportation in some areas. It is also a source of deep embarrassment for Cameron, who pledged to reduce net migration — the number of people arriving minus the number of people leaving — to less than 100,000.

New figures recently published showed net migration in 2015 at more than three times that figure. The Sun tabloid responded by printing on its front page an image of Cameron with his eyes closed and fingers in his ears, seemingly trying to ignore the statistics while muttering “la la la.”

The new visa restrictions for non-E.U. workers include increasing the salary threshold for those living in the United Kingdom for less than 10 years who want to settle here. Previously, after five years, migrants on a Tier 2 visa could apply for permanent residency if they earned at least 20,800 pounds; as of April, that threshold has jumped to 35,000 pounds. These new rules do not apply to those with PhD-level jobs, workers on the “Shortage Occupation List” and nurses, who were made temporarily exempt after an outcry that not doing so could put patients at risk.

The changes have sparked a debate about whether income is the right measure for deciding who can stay and who must go and whether salary thresholds should be tweaked across industries and regions.

“Whereas there might be places in the middle of London where 35,000 is regarded as some sort of miserly salary, I can tell honorable members that it is regarded as a very good salary indeed in my constituency,” Tommy Sheppard, a lawmaker from Edinburgh, Scotland, told Parliament during a debate on the issue.
Campaigners say that Britain’s tough immigration policies unfairly target those in lower-paying jobs, including those in health, technology, charity, arts and creative sectors.

Britain’s curry industry — purveying a favorite dish — has also felt the heat of the country’s immigration policies. Under new entry rules that were recently implemented, restaurants that want to hire skilled chefs from outside the E.U. have to pay a minimum salary of 29,750 pounds, along with food and accommodation, to qualify for a Tier 2 visa.

“Nobody can afford that for a chef,” said Oli Khan, a spokesman for the Bangladesh Caterers Association, a trade body. An owner of three curry houses, Khan says that a top chef makes around 25,000 pounds and that the industry is, reluctantly, moving away from hiring chefs from India and Bangladesh to hiring those from Eastern Europe, whom he says do not have the same “passion” for cooking curries.
Some proponents of Brexit argue that if Britain votes to leave the bloc on June 23, it would create a fairer system for skilled workers outside the E.U.

“By voting to leave, we can take back control of our immigration policies, save our curry houses and join the rest of the world,” Priti Patel, Britain’s employment minister, recently told the Evening Standard.
Kymberly Blackstock, a 35-year-old from Seattle, is one of those caught up by the new visa restrictions. A mother of two young children, Blackstock earns 21,800 pounds a year working for a charity in Scotland. Her husband, a dependent on her visa, works night shifts as a careworker for the elderly.

She does not think it is fair that her salary may determine whether her family can settle in the United Kingdom after her visa expires.

“We make a much bigger social contribution to the society than somebody sitting at some management office at a bank,” she said.