Peace for the World

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

Saturday, July 9, 2016

RAJAPAKSA READY TO USE SINHALA BUDDHIST CARD AGAINST CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM


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Sri Lanka Brief09/07/2016

Former president Rajapaksa getting ready to use Sinhala Buddhist nationalism card against the proposed new constitution, according to media reports.

The Daily Mirror reports Rajapaksa saying the new constitution is against the Sinhala Buddhist as follows:

“We have come to know that the government is trying to pass a new constitution. The constitution may include some hidden terms and clauses that will only divide the country and which are detrimental to Sri Lankan Buddhists and Buddhism. The People and especially the Buddhist clergy must be alert to this situation,”

“It is very important for the people to know that 15 Acts are to be presented to Parliament soon. Most of them were promised in the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva. Among these proposals is the establishment of hybrid courts to address allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the war”

” Rajapaksa alleged

A Cabinet of shadows getting longer each day



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The so-called Joint Opposition, which was never an elected Opposition, has taken a bigger stride to call itself the Shadow Cabinet. There is little doubt this gives them more feeling of being Cabinet Ministers, even in shadow, which was denied them through the machinations of electoral politics, with the failure of the MR team in the UPFA to win a majority in parliament.

They have scored a big victory at the outset – a victory in numbers. This Shadow Cabinet is larger than the real Cabinet of Ministers, with the Mahinda Rajapaksa Shadow Team having 51 members – all of its members in parliament – unlike the Sirisena Team with only 44 members. With Brexit and all those problems for British democracy, this may be one more way for the Rajapaksas to say go to hell to the democratic traditions of the Brits. Why limit the size of a Shadow Cabinet to that of the actual governing Cabinet?

Now you must not rush to the conclusion that this shows there are more shadowy members in the Joint Opposition. Of course, when it comes to wielding power, they do remain much less than a shadow of what they were, when Rajapaksa held the reins of power. But such is the stuff of electoral democracy when combined with political and electoral astrology.

With this Shadow Cabinet being a show of the infighting within the SLFP, there are proposals already made in government to make a generous offer of 51 super luxury cars to all members of the Shadow Cabinet; more luxurious than those already proposed for Cabinet Ministers, Deputies and Ministers of State, of government. Those who propose this believe it will help members of both the real and shadow cabinets to enjoy and display their common pride in luxury transport, and making it much more comfortable to carry out their politics of fooling the people all the way.

It is interesting to see that Mahinda Rajapaksa will have the shadow portfolios of Buddha Sasana and Defence. He is certainly no stranger to Defence, having held it for as long as he was Executive President. The new shadow of Buddha will certainly be in keeping with his new trend of using Buddhist temples and festivals to promote the politics of enmity, both political and communal, which is strongly backed by the his shadow fellows such as Udaya Gammanpila and Wimal Weerawansa, to name just two.

It must be the limitation of places with the shadow realm that has ensured that all three Rajapaksas in the Joint Opposition are in this team. In the days of huge Rajapaksa power we had just two of them in the Cabinet – the brothers Mahinda and Basil. In terms of parliament, brother Chamal was Speaker. But now it is a case of father, son and brother all in the same shadow – with Namal shadowing Foreign Affairs and Chamal keeping the shadow on Public Transport and Civil Aviation.

One does not yet know whether there will soon be a Shadow Cabinet Paper presented, which will seek official facilities for the members of the Shadow Cabinet to carry out their functions. This would mean that Namal will have plenty of foreign travel at State expense once again, and Chamal having plenty of helicopter rides within Sri Lanka, with no questions asked by PRECIFAC or any other of those snail probe bodies of "good governance".

One major problem with this Shadow Cabinet is that it is confined to the official titles in the real Cabinet, and not to the reality of activities taking place in government today. Surely, there could be a shadow minister on nepotism in government, knowing very well that it is very much the stuff of both politics and government today.

With the recent Thevarapperuma episode, there is certainly room for a shadow minister of political suicides, possibly combined with a shadow ministry of politically influenced admissions to government schools.

They have also missed out on appointing a shadow minister on apartment renting, seeing the huge sums spent on luxury abodes for ministries and other state institutions; the stuff of news and much criticism in recent months.

Of course one must understand that those who thought of this Shadow Cabinet would not have wanted a bigger shake up on issues such as corruption and fraud, the stuff of the past regime; which the current manipulators of yahapalana or good governance, keep mouthing for their own advantage. It is the stuff that makes Mahinda Rajapaksa threaten to slash his throat over a single missing dollar, and shadow Bandula Gunawardena to slash his abdomen about alleged frauds in state spending.

The Shadow Cabinet will take its place amidst the politics of confrontation. It may not be able to remove all the shadows from the past that keeps haunting those in the Joint Opposition, as well as within the Government. They will not be able to shake off the shadow of voting for the 18th Amendment, which hugely widened the powers o Rajapaksa, or the Parliamentary Select Committee that led to the removal of former Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake. These are just two shadows that will keep growing longer each day.

Central Bank Officials Tell COPE: “Arjuna Mahendran Broke All Laws”


Colombo Telegraph
July 8, 2016 
Top officials of the Central Bank accused ex-Governor Arjuna Mahendran of giving scant regard to any regulation at the bank, breaking all laws, during his tenure as Governor.
Mahendran
Mahendran
During an inquiry conducted by COPE on Thursday, even Deputy Governor P. Samarasiri, who sided with Mahendran while he was in office, had claimed that he along with other officials of the bank were under instructions from Mahendran to go for a higher amount since private placements have been stopped by Mahendran with immediate effect.
However, despite the officials accusing Mahendran of wrongdoing openly, two UNP MPs, who are members of the COPE continued to defend Mahendran at Thursday’s meeting, although the rest of the members had acted in a professional manner.
According to the officials of the Bank, Mahendran had claimed that he was carrying out instructions issued to him by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. The accusation comes amidst allegations that Wickremesinghe was continuing to shield Mahendran despite his alleged wrongdoings in the issuance of the Treasury Bonds in 2015 and 2016.
During the meeting, COPE Chairman Sunil Handuneththi had had inquired from members of the tender board members whether anyone of them had objected to it; Samarasiri had been silent but another Assistant Governor had explained that he objected but he was overruled by Samarasiri who had consulted Mahendran on the phone after walking out of the tender board meeting.

SRI LANKA: ASPs hold the key to change at police stations

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By Basil Fernando-July 8, 2016

The media reported a speech made by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Pujith Jayasundara., wherein he stated quite openly and categorically that the police should make use of the present opportunity and take steps to change. This is a welcome statement in a climate where any kind of positive development in Sri Lanka either in the economic front or in any other area of development requires a radical change in the entire administration of justice, of which the police are integral.

Crisis of law enforcement is the primary crisis in Sri Lanka. Dealing with the problems that prevents proper law enforcement in Sri Lanka remains the ‘Achilles Heel’ for any government that wishes to make a significant change in Sri Lanka.

The present government has come to power promising change. However, there is a widespread disappointment in the speed at which the government is moving and there is a kind of public perception that no significant change has taken place to address the kind of structural disruption that about 40 years of authoritarian rule did to Sri Lanka.

The strategy for authoritarian rule in Sri Lanka, which began with the 1972 Constitution and was achieved with greater intensity through the continued implementation of the 1978 Constitution, was to dismantle the legal structure of Sri Lanka. It was to dismantle it in a manner that allowed the Executive President to do whatever he wished to do, whether his proposed actions were legal or illegal. The basic principles bequeathed by the British in the legal system that they left behind were subtly manipulated to give the impression that no big change had been made in the legal set up. In fact, there was a radical undermining of the entirety of the legal structure taking place. Thus, we need to undo the authoritarian structures constructed by the previous governments to ensure that the basic structure of the rule of law is reprised.

The crisis of law enforcement was a result of the undermining of the basic legal structure of Sri Lanka. The fact that this has been understood by the stakeholders today is a positive step and we hope that the words of the IGP will be put into effect by the institution he represents. We are also happy to put on record that the National Police Commission is also of the view that there should be radical changes to make it possible for the police to function as they are expected to function.

We wish to point out a practical step that can be, and should be, taken urgently as a first step towards creating a functional system. It is the critical evaluation of the role of the Assistant Superintendents of Police (ASPs) in Sri Lanka. The ASPs play the immediate supervisory role over police stations in Sri Lanka. An ASP supervises each police station and, according to the police regulations, the ASPs duties have been enumerated in great detail.

An ASP is expected to visit a police station every week and also to visit the scenes of crimes in all instances of serious crimes. The ASP is expected to look into every aspect within the police stations, for example the cells where the suspects are kept, and the kind of services that are rendered to the suspects being kept inside the police stations. Thus, the legal position is that everything that happens within a police station should be within the strict and direct supervision of an ASP.

However, in the last 40 years this role has been lost and a nexus has developed between the ASPs and the police stations. Gradually the role of the ASP as a supervising officer responsible for proper carrying out of duties within the police stations was lost, and in many instances the ASPs themselves became a part of the problem of, rather than a solution for, dysfunctional police stations.

There is no provision within the police regulations to hold the ASP accountable. Many of the applications, even for fundamental rights applications and other complaints regarding the police to other institutions, have not taken up the issue of the responsibility of the ASPs regarding these violations.

ASPs are responsible for all the violations that happen within the police stations from the point of view of the command responsibility, because the ASP is a direct link for the command to administer the police stations. One of the clear examples of the failures of ASPs is the extent to which cases of torture are being reported from police stations.

In a recent demonstrations organised by the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, it was reported that within the last year there was 314 cases of torture. It is acknowledged that the number of cases that get reported are far less than the actual instances, as most people are afraid to make complaints against the police.

It is not possible for torture to take place in any police station without the ASPs knowing about it. Torture is not an act that can be done in secret, for the simple reason that the even tortured persons make enormous noise and protest against torture. Everyone at a police station knows of the torture that takes place there. An ASP who is the direct supervising officer would be presumed to know every such act of torture that takes place within police station.

Therefore, acts of torture taking place in police stations are an indictment against ASPs who are in charge of those police stations. It means that either they approve this practice of torture at police stations or that they are willing to overlook the issue and to let it happen anyway.

If the IGP’s instructions and exaltations for a change of the police are to have practical value, the very first step that should be taken is a strict examination of the liability of the ASPs for every misdemeanour and crime that takes place within a police station. If the government, the ranking police officers, and the public takes notice of this issue of liability of the ASPs and insists on the due performance of their duties, it is likely that significant change will take place in the manner in which police stations function in Sri Lanka.

IGP Poojitha now dubbed ‘Idiot of a General of Police’ - His disgraceful conduct shocks all !

-Women police officers squirm in shame..!

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 09.July.2016, 8.40AM) During the recent conference held with the participation of police officers (male and female) including those of the higher rungs  , the IGP  Poojitha Jayasundara had conducted himself most disgracefully ,  uncouthly and insolently damaging his self respect (if any is still remaining in him) showing  scant  respect to  his uniform and lofty position, based on reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.
Poojitha convened a conference on the 6 th after inviting  the officers (male and female) of the CID and FCID .( though Poojitha is noted for delivering lectures , but since just one lecture of his lasts a minimum of  2-3 hours , the police force had turned bitter to his lectures which stinks with flatulence and is sans substance)
While saying the police officers should take guard against two things he had by gestures illustrated those. He had said ,’ this is what police officers should safeguard against’ and shown the counting of money using his fingers. 
‘The second thing the police officers should guard against is this’ he had said , and made gestures with his two fingers most obscenely , after lifting his hand up. While  the women police officers  began to squirm in shame , the senior police officers were rudely shocked because never had an IGP behaved so shamelessly or stooped to this disgraceful level before .
‘I know , now these will be published by the websites’ Poojitha had exclaimed  as though he knew that fact  much more than his own mental and sexual frustration.
In any event , Poojitha who is already known as  “Police pathi Koloma” (clowning IGP) has acquired another nickname now: The women officers have nicknamed him “Foolishpathi,” that is IGP  the ‘Idiotic General of Police.’  
It is most unfortunate only in Sri Lanka, when some higher up is appointed to replace one corrupt or inefficient scoundrel or rascal , the successor is either  worse than his/her  predecessor or becomes so sooner than later.  It is therefore little  wonder , when other countries are progressing our country is still in the backwoods and drowning in the backwaters. 
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by     (2016-07-09 03:15:22)
Body of a doctor found inside hotel room

Body of a doctor found inside hotel room

logoJuly 8, 2016

The body of an individual, believed to be that of a medical doctor, has been discovered inside the room of a hotel on Ja-Ela Road in Gampaha.  

Gampaha Police said that acting on information received, a team of officers have been dispatched to the location for investigations. 

 Police said that no additional information regarding the deceased has been uncovered as of yet. 

 They suspect that the death could be a possible suicide as a number of injection syringes were found inside the hotel room, which was booked by the deceased.   

JVP take to streets against the government!

JVP take to streets against the government!jvp protest 5
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 Jul 08, 2016
Yesterday (07) the members of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna in protest against the government for increasing unfairly the VAT component thereby burdening the people launched a protest in Maharagama town.

During the protest launched  it was added that the people who voted this government to power having hopes of purchasing a car their intentions shattered and those who intended to do so now cannot even purchase a three wheeler. However in contrary the Prime Minister and the Ministers are in the process of importing luxury vehicles amounting to billions of rupees.
 
At this occasion the former Member of Parliament Lakshman Nipunarachchi and a congregation of JP members had participated.

Attorney General Says MP Car Permit Abuse Is Not A Matter Of National Importance


Colombo Telegraph
July 9, 2016
The Attorney General has informed the Supreme Court that ‘car permit abuse is not a matter of National Importance’ and therefore there is no need for a fuller bench to be nominated to consider the case filed by a right’s activist over the abuse of car permits given to MPs.
GAMMANPILA PERMIT
GAMMANPILA ENTRY
However, despite the Attorney General’s stand, the Supreme Court decided to refer the matter to the Chief Justice to consider nomination of a special bench and afforded an early date on 18th July 2016 to the right’s activist to support the case.
The case filed against the President Maithripala Sirisena and Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake by rights activist Nagananda Kodituwakku for MP car permit abuse. The Attorney General gave his standing on the matter when the case was taken up at the Supreme Court yesterday.
The activist submitted to the Court that the matter involves gross betrayal of people’s executive and legislative power by the Cabinet of Ministers and MPs as they have betrayed the power entrusted in them by the people purely on trust to commit revenue frauds and therefore there is an unavoidable national duty vested in the Judiciary, to take cognizance of these financial crimes and deal with wrongdoers decisively and appropriately.

Friday, July 8, 2016

The Tragic Downfall of British Media

The Tragic Downfall of British Media

BY STEVEN BARNETT-JULY 8, 2016

There is a conceit among many senior editors in the U.K. that Britain has “the best journalism in the world.” At its best, certainly, British journalism is very good indeed. From the sober analysis of the Financial Times and the Economist to the tub-thumping of the tabloid press to the BBC’s worldwide reputation for accuracy and impartiality, the British public has access to a healthy mixture of domestic, foreign, and investigative reporting. On many occasions, democracy has been well served by journalists here who make important stories accessible and hold power to account.

At its worst, however, journalism in Britain can be truly awful. Five years ago, much of the world was rightly shocked by revelations of phone-hacking on the Rupert Murdoch-owned Sunday tabloid News of the World. The subsequent judicial investigation into the culture, practice, and ethics of the press, led by Lord Justice Leveson, exposed the tasteless practices on which some British tabloids had come to rely: the invasions into personal privacy, the gross intrusions into private grief.

At the time, it seemed like a new low for the industry. If the Leveson inquiry revealed the tawdry side of the media business in the U.K., however, the Brexit campaign has featured a different kind of journalistic abuse: contempt for basic norms of truth and accuracy.

In the lead-up to the June 23 European Union referendum, British mainstream media failed spectacularly. Led, inevitably, by the viscerally anti-EU Daily MailSunDaily Express, and Telegraph papers, most of Britain’s national press indulged in little more than a catalog of distortions, half-truths, and outright lies. It was a ferocious propaganda campaign in which facts and sober analysis were sacrificed to the ideologically driven objectives of editors and their proprietors.

The interests of readers, much less the interests of British democracy, were barely considered. Three days after the vote, I spoke to a Labour Member of Parliament who represents a constituency in northern England with one of the lowest proportions of immigrants in the country. Despite this, a majority of her constituents had voted to leave the EU. Why? Mainly, she said, because they were convinced that waves of immigrants would soon overwhelm their communities, take their jobs, and undermine their way of life. They were particularly concerned about the looming massive influx of Muslims, given the imminent European debut of Turkey – a country that stands no chance of joining the EU in my lifetime, let alone in the next few years.

How did things get so bad? In part, you can blame the internet, which has gutted traditional business models of journalism around the world. British journalism has been particularly vulnerable: For historical and geographical reasons – partly due to early industrialization and partly due to efficient distribution networks in a small country – Britain has long enjoyed the largest national press in any mature democracy. Nine national newspapers (10, until March, when the Independent went online-only) still battle furiously for eyeballs. This is, in many ways, for the good. But this frantic competition for a diminishing pool of readers and shrinking ad revenue, particularly at the tabloid end of the market, partly explains why some publications have been willing to sacrifice basic journalistic norms of accuracy and respect for privacy.

But a second, equally powerful reason is unique to the United Kingdom — the passionate right-wing ideology that drives many of those newspapers. The country has a long history of explicit partisanship in its journalism. While there has always been a predominance of right-wing papers (at times, very right wing: the Daily Mail famously supported pro-Fascist groups during the 1930s), in the past, this was partly balanced by the mass circulation of theMirror newspapers. But the Mirror’s decline has been precipitate; the Mailsonline dominance, on the other hand, driven by its embrace of celebrity news and pictures (mostly of young women in various states of undress), has enhanced its popular and political influence. Led by the Murdoch-ownedSun, the Daily Mail, the Daily Express, and the Telegraph, with the Times(also Murdoch-owned) in a supporting role, the partisan right now overwhelms the comparatively insignificant presence of the Daily Mirror andGuardian on the left, especially with the left-leaning Independent now relegated to an online-only presence. During the referendum campaign, this toxic combination of uncompromising devotion to a political cause and contempt for the truth played a major role in leading Britain down the Brexit road.

In a June 18 blog post, journalism blogger Liz Gerard compiled a montage of front-page headlines in order to demonstrate how the constant reiteration of words such as “migrants” and “borders” in large, bold font systematically ramped up the xenophobic message. “Turks, Romanians, Iraqis, Syrians, Afghans, Albanians: millions of them apparently want to abandon their homelands and settle in the English countryside — and only leaving the EU will stop them,” Gerard wrote.“No claim was too preposterous, no figure too huge to print.” The tabloid campaign against the EU itself — its faceless pen-pushing bureaucrats, its absurd regulations, and how much it costs the U.K. as an institution — lent itself perfectly to the oft-repeated Leave mantra of “Take back control.”

Perhaps the most egregious example was a front-page Daily Mail headline on June 16 (inevitably repeated by the Sun) claiming that a truckload of migrants had arrived in the U.K. demanding, “We’re from Europe – let us in!” The story ran despite video footage that clearly demonstrated the new arrivals had informed officials that they were, in fact, refugees from Iraq and Kuwait. In a futile attempt to demonstrate that they aspired to some notion of journalistic integrity, the following day’s paper carried a “correction” consisting of 54 words at the bottom of Page 2.

This was a much-repeated pattern throughout the referendum campaign: Journalist Hugo Dixon, who founded a pro-Remain fact-checking site called InFacts, drew attention to both the number of inaccurate stories and the chronically inadequate “corrections” relegated to inside pages. The problem was compounded by the sheer weight of anti-EU press. According to a Loughborough University study, once newspaper circulation is taken into account, just 18 percent of media coverage was pro-Remain compared with 82 percent pro-Leave.

It’s difficult to prove conclusively that this constant drumbeat of headlines directly influenced voters’ decision-making. What is clear, however, is that it influenced the national conversation and, in particular, played an agenda-setting role for broadcasters, which in the U.K. (as in most of Europe) are bound by strict impartiality rules and are therefore more trusted by consumers to provide a nonpartisan approach. Remain campaign strategists were confident that the message of economic risk would succeed – as it had in the Scottish independence referendum – but they did not factor in a deeply hostile press whose slogans served as an echo chamber that broadcasters could scarcely resist.

This echo chamber was particularly evident on the vaunted BBC, which, by an unfortunate coincidence, is immersed in negotiations with the government about the renewal of its 10-year charter, always a tricky and delicate task. As a result, its normally self-assured journalists have been obsessed with “balance”: Any argument that receives airtime is accompanied by a counterargument, however patently absurd. This silliness was on display, for example, during a broadcast on the highly influential Radio 4Today program, which featured an eminent scientist on the huge scientific research risks of Brexit. She was then “balanced” by a marginal and wholly unrepresentative cancer specialist who had previously stood as a candidate for the anti-EU UK Independence Party. Overall, the BBC’s EU referendum coverage was much more inclined to follow rather than lead. Film director Lord David Puttnam, the former deputy chairman of Channel 4, a competing broadcaster, memorably described the BBC’s journalism during the campaign as “constipated.”

In her post-referendum media roundup, the Guardian’s Jane Martinson revealed that, within an hour of Leave’s declaring victory, Sun editor Tony Gallagher told the Guardian: “So much for the waning power of the print media.” There was a further twist a few days later, when, on one of the most dramatic days in British politics, prominent Leave campaigner Boris Johnson, long considered the most likely next Conservative leader, abandoned his leadership bid. A leaked email suggested that, among other obstacles to a successful bid, he didn’t have the support of Murdoch or Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre. Even in the age of social and digital media, which so many commentators believe will democratize communications, old-fashioned media proprietors and editors still serve as political kingmakers in Britain.

Can any of this change? In the aftermath of the phone-hacking scandal, Parliament did, in fact, accept Leveson’s key recommendation: that the press’s efforts at self-regulation should be periodically scrutinized by an independent body in order to ensure that it is abiding by its own Code of Conduct – whose first rule is that newspapers should “take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading or distorted information”. A Leveson compliant system would include regulatory sanctions for errant publications, such as equal prominence for corrections and fines for systematic code breaches. Had such a system been put in place, perhaps Brexit coverage would have been different. The kind of deliberate distortions that featured repeatedly across most of the tabloid press may have, at the very least, been discouraged by a regime that would oblige newspapers to print a front-page headline correction to counter a front-page headline lie.

In any event, the new Conservative government, under huge pressure from the same press barons who undid Johnson, has stalled on implementing Leveson’s recommendations, and the British press today therefore feels free to break its own industry code with as much frequency and impunity as before 2011. To deflect criticism, it has established a “new” regulator, the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO), which is owned and run by the major publishers. As the referendum campaign demonstrated, IPSO has been ineffectual in holding its newspaper members to account.

Those same commentators who preach the revolution of social media also like to cite new media like BuzzFeedVice News, and other online outlets as examples of greater plurality and more opportunities for journalists. These are all welcome additions, but so far they have been unable to compete with the legacy of traditional news brands, which are extending their online presence. According to some sources, the entertainment-focused Daily Mailwebsite, which attracts upward of 200 million global visitors every month, is the most popular English-language site in the world. Perhaps that will gradually change. Meanwhile, broadcast journalism still aspires to the highest standards of accuracy and impartiality, and another hope lies in detaching those broadcast newsrooms from their mind-numbing dependency on agenda-driven newspapers.

All of these changes, however, will be gradual and hardly constitute a journalistic revolution. Meanwhile, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Britain’s mainstream media failed us at a time of greatest need, with political consequences that will reverberate for decades.

UK thwarts war crimes probe of former Israeli minister

A British judge has found sufficient evidence to investigate Tzipi Livni for personal responsibility for a massacre in Gaza in December 2008. (Flickr)
Tzipi Livni sits at desk looking at paper with an Israeli flag hanging behind herLandscape view of neighborhood flattened by bombing and dust rising up from ruins
Fifty civilian police officers and trainees were killed when Israeli launched a three-week assault on Gaza on 27 December 2008.Naaman OmarAPA images

Charlotte Silver- 8 July 2016

For the fourth time in seven years, the British government has intervened to protect Tzipi Livni, Israel’s former foreign minister, from a possible a war crimes investigation into her role in Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip in December 2008.

Last week, ahead of her planned trip to London for a conference organized by the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz, Scotland Yard’s War Crimes Unit telephoned Livni to invite her to come in for a voluntary police interview.

After receiving the summons, Israel initiated “diplomatic contact” with Britain, according to Haaretz, and the UK’s Foreign Secretary arranged for Livni to receive, once again, the status of a “special diplomatic assignment.”

The police summons was prompted by the police and Crown Prosecution Service’s review of a war crimes complaint that was originally filed in 2009, Daniel Machover, an attorney representing litigants in the case, told The Electronic Intifada. But the UK government has repeatedly intervened to prevent the case from advancing.

Machover lamented “the apparent ease” with which the British government seeks “to interfere with due process by classifying otherwise private visits of suspects from ‘friendly countries’ as ‘special missions’ with a view to providing such suspects with immunity.”

The complaint was lodged by Palestinian victims of Israel’s three-week attack. They are represented by the London-based law firm Hickman and Rose, for which Machover works, and the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights.

One of those complainants is the brother of Naim Ashouf al-Ghifari, one of 50 civilian police officers and trainees killed by an Israeli strike during a training course. Most of the casualties were found to have been performing morning fitness exercises when the missiles struck the police headquarters.

Law changed

In 2009, a British judge reviewing the complaint found that there was sufficient evidence – though it was not released – to investigate Livni for personal responsibility for the attack on the police headquarters.

Livni is not the only Israeli leader named in the complaint, but only hers was made public by media reports at the time, Hickman and Rose attorney Machover told The Electronic Intifada.

The 2009 ruling sparked outrage from political leaders in the UK, and ultimately resulted in changes restricting the application of the country’s universal jurisdiction law. The warrant that was issued after the judge’s ruling was retracted after determining it was issued in error because Livni was not in the country.

The change to the law, implemented in 2011, was supposedly meant to curb “abuses” of universal jurisdiction by requiring the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions before an arrest warrant is issued to make it harder to prosecute foreign officials.

Yet the Scotland Yard summons last week shows that even after Britain restricted its courts and repeatedly granted special diplomatic immunity to Livni, the case for Israeli war crimes is not closed and is still being actively pursued.

The allegations of war crimes committed during the winter 2008-2009 assault that left more than 1,400 Palestinians dead include shooting at civilians waving white flagsusing human shields and firing white phosphorous shells on civilian targets, including a United Nations school.

After receiving diplomatic immunity, Livni declared, “I’m proud of the decisions I made as a cabinet minister in the Israeli government.”

In a comment made to Middle East Monitor, Machover wondered why Livni would refuse to meet with the police if she was so confident of her actions.

Livni joins Benny Gantz and Doron Almog, who have also been granted immunity by the UK, allowing them to avoid answering for the military orders they made that resulted in the deaths of scores of Palestinian civilians in Gaza.

Avoiding litigation

Though Israeli leaders publicly dismiss legal complaints against them, they have gone to great lengths to avoid the reach of a court order.

In the recent deal between Turkey and Israel, Israel promised $20 million to the families of victims of Israel’s lethal raid on the Turkish-owned Mavi Marmara in international waters in 2010 that left nine persons dead and fatally injured a 10th. Israel conditioned the money on Turkey passing legislation in parliament that would shield Israeli officials from prosecution.

Hakan Camuz, a spokesperson for some of the families of those killed on the Mavi Marmara, told The Electronic Intifada that he doubted such legislation would pass in parliament.

Camuz said that none of the victims’ families were consulted about the deal and all reject the proposal to withdraw their criminal complaint in Turkish courts for compensation.

Meanwhile, two civil complaints against senior Israeli officials in California and Washington, DC are currently pending.

NATO takes over U.S.-built missile shield, amid Russian suspicion

NATO heads of state and other leaders participate in a family photo at the NATO Summit in Warsaw, Poland July 8, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
BY ROBIN EMMOTT AND YEGANEH TORBATI-Sat Jul 9, 2016

NATO took command of a U.S.-built missile shield in Europe on Friday after France won assurances that the multi-billion-dollar system would not be under Washington's direct control.

The missile shield, billed as a defence against any strike by a "rogue state" against European cities, is one of the most sensitive aspects of U.S. military support for Europe. Russia says the system is in fact intended by Washington to blunt its nuclear arsenal, which the U.S. denies.

"Today we have decided to declare initial operational capability of the NATO ballistic missile defence system," NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told a news conference.

"This means that the U.S. ships based in Spain, the radar in Turkey and the interceptor site in Romania are now able to work together under NATO command and control," he said, adding that the umbrella was "entirely defensive" and "represents no threat to Russia's strategic nuclear deterrent".

Russia is incensed at the show of force by the United States, its Cold War rival in ex-communist-ruled eastern Europe.

Washington hopes handing over control to the multinational NATO alliance can calm Russian fears. 

European NATO members states are seen as having nothing to gain by provoking Russia, their major energy supplier.

European nations will be responsible for some funding and adding assets to the shield over time.
The system comes as NATO prepares a new deterrent in Poland and the Baltics following Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea. In response, Russia is reinforcing its western and southern flanks with three new divisions.

France, which is leading diplomatic efforts with Russia and Germany to bring peace to eastern Ukraine, needed assurances that control of the shield was genuinely being transferred to NATO, not kept under the command of U.S. generals.

SECONDS TO DECIDE

"The key is political control because of the consequences of any interception," Gen. Denis Mercier, the Frenchman who heads NATO's command, told Reuters. "The leaders have found a good compromise."

Military commanders will have only seconds to decide whether to use the shield to try to shoot down a ballistic missile. Officials say NATO will follow rules set down by alliance ambassadors in Brussels.
France was believed to be reluctant to allow U.S. generals too much authority to act in such a missile crisis, fearing that would escalate tensions, although its concerns were never enunciated publicly in detail.

Mercier said the decision to hold another meeting of the NATO-Russia Council, a forum bringing together NATO envoys and Russia at NATO headquarters in Brussels, allowed the alliance to better explain its position to the Kremlin.

"The second thing is dialogue with Russia, to say clearly that this shield is against the proliferation of missile threats, not against one country and especially not against the nuclear capabilities of Russia," Mercier said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he doubts NATO's stated aim of protecting the alliance against Iranian rockets, following last year's historic nuclear deal with Tehran and world powers, which Russia helped to negotiate.

The United States switched on the $800 million missile shield base in Romania in May and will break ground on a final site in Poland due to be ready by late 2018, completing the defence line first proposed almost a decade ago. When fully operational, the defensive umbrella will stretch from Greenland to the Azores.

(Editing by Andrew Roche)

President Obama on the Fatal Shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile

Summary: 
Today, President Obama posted a message on Facebook on the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
Update: This evening, President Obama delivered a statement on the fatal shootings in Louisiana and Minnesota. Watch below:

Today, President Obama posted the following message on Facebook:

HomeBY MELANIE GARUNAY-JULY 7, 2016 


"All Americans should be deeply troubled by the fatal shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Philando Castile in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. We’ve seen such tragedies far too many times, and our hearts go out to the families and communities who’ve suffered such a painful loss.

"Although I am constrained in commenting on the particular facts of these cases, I am encouraged that the U.S. Department of Justice has opened a civil rights investigation in Baton Rouge, and I have full confidence in their professionalism and their ability to conduct a thoughtful, thorough, and fair inquiry.

"But regardless of the outcome of such investigations, what's clear is that these fatal shootings are not isolated incidents. They are symptomatic of the broader challenges within our criminal justice system, the racial disparities that appear across the system year after year, and the resulting lack of trust that exists between law enforcement and too many of the communities they serve.

"To admit we’ve got a serious problem in no way contradicts our respect and appreciation for the vast majority of police officers who put their lives on the line to protect us every single day. It is to say that, as a nation, we can and must do better to institute the best practices that reduce the appearance or reality of racial bias in law enforcement.

"That's why, two years ago, I set up a Task Force on 21st Century Policing that convened police officers, community leaders, and activists. Together, they came up with detailed recommendations on how to improve community policing. So even as officials continue to look into this week's tragic shootings, we also need communities to address the underlying fissures that lead to these incidents, and to implement those ideas that can make a difference. That's how we'll keep our communities safe. And that’s how we can start restoring confidence that all people in this great nation are equal before the law.

"In the meantime, all Americans should recognize the anger, frustration, and grief that so many Americans are feeling -- feelings that are being expressed in peaceful protests and vigils.  Michelle and I share those feelings. Rather than fall into a predictable pattern of division and political posturing, let’s reflect on what we can do better.  Let’s come together as a nation, and keep faith with one another, in order to ensure a future where all of our children know that their lives matter."

Five Dallas police officers were killed by a lone attacker, authorities say


At least five Dallas police officers were killed and seven wounded July 7, after a peaceful protest over recent police shootings. Here's what we know so far. (Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

 
DALLAS — Five Dallas police officers were killed and seven others wounded Thursday night when sniper fire from what turned out to be a lone gunman turned a peaceful protest over recent police shootings into a scene of chaos and terror.
The gunfire was followed by a standoff that lasted for hours with an attacker told authorities “he was upset about the recent police shootings” and “said he wanted to kill white people, especially white officers,” according to Dallas Police Chief David Brown. The gunman was killed when police detonated a bomb-equipped robot.
After the bloodshed — the deadliest single day for law enforcement officers since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks — authorities said they were still working to investigate the shooting, saying they would need several days to continue exploring the crime scene downtown. Officials said two civilians were also injured in the attack.
“We are heartbroken,” Brown said during a news conference Friday. “There are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred to our city.”
While police had said Thursday they believed “two snipers” opened fire on officers “from elevated positions,” authorities said Friday that they determined only one person shot at police.
“At this time, there appears to have been one gunman with no known links to or inspiration from any international terrorist organization,” Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said Friday afternoon.
The eruption of violence at around 9 p.m. occurred during a calm protest over recent police shootings in Minnesota and Louisiana, with similar demonstrations occurring in cities across the country. As a barrage of gunfire ripped through the air, demonstrators and police officers alike scrambled.