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, August 3, 2016

BOI chief says his life at risk


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Board of Investment (BOI) chairman Upul Jayasuriya told The Island yesterday that there was so much pressure from special interest groups all out to twist his arm to get certain BOI projects approved which are inconsistent with the policies of the institutions.

"The pressure is so overbearing that you need to be steely-nerved to resist it and go ahead doing the right thing. Sometimes, I feel my life could be at greater risk than it was when I was the BASL president," he said,

The BOI chief noted that both parties (BOI and potential investors) would be well served by engaging in correct practices in the process of reaching investment agreements.

Asked why the BOI had stopped allowing Mr. Paint Lanka Ltd in Vauxhall Street from going ahead with a land-lease agreement and a Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) proposal made by them, Jayasuriya said it was a questionable deal aimed at making a fast buck.

The BOI chairman said Mr. Paint was holding on to a lease of 24 perches of land out of 254 perches owned by JEDB and pressuring the BOI and JEDB to lease out the entirety of the property at Rs. 5.6 million per perch taking cover under a valuation made by the Valuation Department.

"Initially the lease value was Rs 4.5 million per perch in 2014 as per the government valuation and it was subsequently valued at Rs 5.6 million in March 2016. Then the BOI succeeded in increasing the price from Rs. 5.6 million to Rs.7.5 million per perch.

Now the latest valuation shows that a perch in this area with the much treasured water front is fetching at least Rs. 10 million.

"The land in question is in three separate plots and currently the lease term of two of the plots has ended, but the Company has paid the lease for 4-5 months without the concurrence of the JEDB, and on the strength of this fact, Mr. Paint has obtained an enjoining order to prevent the JEDB from selling the land to a third party at the true market value.

"Apart from obtaining the right price, the BOI has to be prudent when it assigns lands to local partners to ensure that they are able to obtain financing from foreign investors with respect to development of the property. The BOI can’t let a so-called local partner make an undue profit by leasing out state-owned property to foreign investors."

Chaminda B. Goonathilake, Managing Director of Mr. Paint Lanka Ltd. in Vauxhall Street, contacted for comment, he said the allegation was not true and he could establish his company’s bona fides.

"Our proposed mixed-use development project- BOI agreement (EC4/179)- has the ministry approval, JEDB chairman’s approval, Cabinet approval (Ref NO 13/1684/561/02) in 2014 for a 99-year lease, Economic Committee approval of the present government, UDA development permit for 37 floors, BOI facilitator agreements and BOI investment agreement draft. As there were plans to acquire this land, evict us and lease it bypassing us, we obtained an injunction against our eviction without a judicial process. On 24th June 2016, when we went to the Legal Department to sign the investment agreement with our Singaporean investor, we were informed that the signing had been cancelled. We were not given any reasons for doing so. Such cancellations will not help in attracting foreign investments to this country"."

Gamini’s brother-in-law swindles Lalith’s Mahapola Fund

Gamini’s brother-in-law swindles Lalith’s Mahapola Fund
Aug 02, 2016
The Mahapola Fund is faced with a grave risk of liquidation due to the actions of its present management, reliable sources say.
The Fund has begun incurring losses since 2015, and by the end of the 2016 financial year, the loss stood at Rs. 200 million.
In 2014, it had earned profits of Rs. 513 million.
Coming under the Industries and Commerce Ministry, the Fund is managed by National Wealth Corporation-affiliate Natwealth Securities (Ltd.).
From 2015, its chairman has been Dr. Wickrema Weerasooria, brother-in-law of the late Gamini Dissanayake.
Using his powers, Weerasooriya is allegedly abusing assets of the Fund and using them for his family businessWealth Trust Securities.
Therefore, he has intentionally breached the responsibility of trust, say the sources.
Weerasooria has even disregarded a Central Bank directive in 2015 over the misappropriation of Rs. 90 million owned by two customers, and obtained a court order to prevent CB interventions.
The Court of Appeal recently repealed that order.
However, the Fund, having assets of nearly Rs. seven billion, is at grave risk of liquidation due to their being absorbed by the chairman’s family business, say its employees.
Weerasooria is allegedly using connections to powerful figures in the government to carry out his nefarious deals.
It is unfortunate that financial irregularities are taking place in the Fund even under the present government of good governance, say the Fund’s employees.
They want immediate intervention by the government before this matter gives it a black mark and prevent the collapse of the Fund which was pioneered by the late Lalith Athulathmudali and is an asset for the university students.
Attempts to reach subject minister Risath Badurdeen for a comment failed.
Given below are revenue reports of the Fund:

MPs not fit to work in a kitchen attempting to compile a code of ethics for journalists is a joke

TUESDAY, 02 AUGUST 2016
Those who are not fit to work in Parliament’s kitchen, notwithstanding being elected as MPs, talking about preparing a code of ethics for journalists is nothing but a joke says the convener of Voice Against Corruption (VAC) JVP Member of North – Central Provincial Council Wasantha Samarasinghe.
Speaking at a ceremony held at Anuradhapura Mr. Samarasinghe said the present government that promised masses before the general election that a code of ethics would be compiled for all people’s representatives in the country has conveniently forgotten that and is preparing to compile a code of ethics for journalists in an attempt to subdue them.
He said recently a Deputy Minister of the government was seen, via media, pretending to commit suicide by hanging on to a ceiling fan while his henchmen were supporting him by holding his feet so that the noose around his neck would not get tightened.  It is such jokers, bar owners and other criminals who have been elected to Parliament who are attempting to compile a code of ethics for journalists said Mr. Samarasinghe adding that before a code of ethics is compiled for journalists a code of ethics should be compiled for Parliamentarians.

Business ‘Class Divide’ @ SriLankan Airlines


Colombo TelegraphBy Rajeewa Jayaweera –August 2, 2016 
Rajeewa Jayaweera
Rajeewa Jayaweera
Staff of national carrier SriLankan Airlines are upset over the withdrawal of the facility of the usage of the Business Class lounge in Colombo. The Pilot community are up in arms over the issue. Previously, staff entitled to Business class travel were permitted to avail themselves of lounge facility at Colombo Airport during both Duty and Personal travel for themselves and dependents. Since lounge facilities at overseas stations involved the payment of a fee on per person basis, this facility was not permitted to staff and dependents at airports abroad. The lounge in Colombo is operated by the national carrier and the cost involved is only for the food and beverages consumed.
Manager Industry Affairs of SriLankan Airlines, vide circular MIA/GN/03/089 dated 01 July 2016 titled Policy Guideline on providing lounge facility for passengers holding Agency Discounted / Industry Discounted (AD/ID) tickets has announced the withdrawal of this facility.
The circular announcing the withdrawal of lounge facilities contains the following exceptions.
  1. Chairman / Board of Directors and their eligible dependents travelling on official or vacation will be entitled to lounge facilities at Colombo and Overseas Airports.
  2. Chief Officers travelling on official duty will be entitled to lounge facilities at Colombo Airport only
  3. All other staff members entitled to Business Class Firm tickets travelling on official duty will be entitled to lounge facilities of Colombo Airport only
A maximum of 5 staff from categories ii and iii are permitted in the lounge at any given time.
The cost per person for use of the One World lounge used by SriLankan Airlines at London Heathrow Airport is GBP 25. At Paris Charles De Gaulle and Frankfurt Airports, it amounts to Euro 40.
Cost saving measures, especially in loss making concerns is not a matter for protest or industrial action. Cost saving should not be limited to some categories of staff. All those in a company, top down, starting with the Chairman and Board of Director all the way to staff in the lowest grade need be involved in cost saving efforts. The exemption granted to Chairman and Board members by themselves to themselves, spouses and dependents, bearing in mind the high costs involve for lounge facilities at overseas airport while depriving staff of the facility can only be described as callous. It indicates a total disregard to any sense of decency and a mentality described by the Sinhala idiom ‘handa athe thiyanakota atha diga erala bedaganna’ – serving one self liberally when serving spoon is in hand.
Chairman, Directors and dependents are entitled to Business class travel on both duty and vacation travel on firm basis. When making reservations for duty travel, staff are required to make reservations in Economy class. Seats for those entitled to Business class travel are confirmed 48 hours prior to travel, in case seats are available. However, reservations for Chairman, Directors and their dependents for both duty and vacation travel are made directly in Business class and are confirmed immediately, if seats are available. Business class cabins of SriLankan Airlines aircraft have 28 seats. Prior confirmation of seats could easily lead to loss of revenue especially in busy routes such as London, in the event cabin becomes full after confirmation of seats, something this ailing carrier can ill afford. The appropriate policy should be, seats for all concerned on duty travel to be confirmed in Economy class and those entitled to Business class travel be given seats, in case cabin does have empty seats, at time of closure of check-in counters for the flight.
MR’s govt. threatened Malwatu Mahanayake 

Thero

MR’s govt. threatened Malwatu Mahanayake Thero

logoAugust 2, 2016

Minister Lakshman Kiriella today accused the government of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa of threatening the Mahanayake of the Malwatte Chapter of Siyam Nikaya for trying to organize a blessing ceremony for Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka, who was the Presidential candidate at that time. 

The observation was made while speaking at a press conference held in Colombo this afternoon (02). 

Minister Kiriella charged the former government of ambushing late Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thero through a “pre-organized” road accident who was on his way to the blessing ceremony as well.


Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Bribery Commission urged to probe nearly Rs. 1 bn transaction

SLFP Gen. Secy denies any wrongdoing on his part 


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By Shamindra Ferdinando-August 2, 2016

National Freedom Front (NFF) MP Jayantha Samaraweera yesterday alleged that the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) hadn’t initiated an inquiry into his complaint in respect of the Agriculture Ministry renting a building for a five-year period at a staggering cost of about Rs 1bn.

Kalutara District MP Samaraweera said that in accordance with an agreement between the Agriculture Ministry and Upali Jayasinghe, the proprietor of the building at No 288, Rajagiriya-Kotte, Jayawardenepura road, the government had paid him rent for two years amounting to approximately Rs. 570 mn. The MP said that he was acting on behalf of the Joint Opposition.

MP Samaraweera told The Island that the CIABOC had been obviously reluctant to inquire into his complaint lodged on April 28, 2016 against Agriculture Minister Duminda Dissanayake, who was also the General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP).

"I have received a communiqué dated May 2, 2016 from the Secretary to the CIABOC acknowledging the receipt of my complaint:"

Minister Dissanayake on Monday night admitted that the CIABOC hadn’t even contacted him regarding the complaint. The SLFP General Secretary was responding to a spate of questions regarding the controversial transaction on ‘Salakuna’, a live political programme on Hiru TV. Minister Dissanayake repeatedly denied allegations that CIABOC had only inquired into complaints against those opposed to the yahapalana government.

Pressed for an explanation why the Agriculture Ministry had rented a new office space, Minister Dissanayake said that the Parliament wanted to acquire Govijana Mandiraya on Rajamalwatte road, Battaramulla. The SLFP General Secretary said that parliament planned to set up sectorial oversight committees therein.

The Island sought a clarification from MP Samaraweera in respect of Minister Dissanayake claim that the sectoral oversight committees were to be established at Govijana Mandiraya. MP Samaraweera said that the parliament had established Sectoral Oversight Committees as well as Committee on Public Finance. The Parliament had suspended Standing Orders that set guidelines for Consultative Committees which oversaw ministries, to pave the way for Sectoral Oversight Committees’ and Committee on Public Finance, MP Samaraweera said.

The 16 Sectoral Oversight Committees empowered to examine all Bills, Resolutions, Treaties, Reports and other matters relating to subjects within their jurisdiction are: Economic Development; International Relations; National Security; Sustainable Development and Environment and Natural Resources; Women and Gender; Education and Human Resources Development; Health and Human Welfare, Social Empowerment; Transport and Communication; Agriculture and Lands; Legal Affairs (anti-corruption) and Media; Youth, Sports, Arts and Heritage; Business and Commerce; Energy; Manufacturing and Services; Internal Administration and Public Management; and Reconciliation and North & East Reconstruction.

MP Samaraweera said that that the Agriculture Ministry still functioned at Govijana Mandiraya though the government had already paid Rs 570 mn rent for a private building which was still being refurbished. According to him, monthly rent amounted to over Rs 20 mn and rent had been paid for five months though the Agriculture Ministry was weeks if not months away from moving there. In line with the agreement, following completion of three years of five-year agreement, the owner would receive 15 per cent increase in monthly rent, MP Samaraweera said.

MP Samaraweera said that Sectoral Oversight Committee had been functioning in parliament though an attempt was being made to deceive the public they couldn’t function for want of required accommodation.

The MP said parliament had received two proposals regarding the proposed setting up of Sectoral Oversight Committees. Some believed they could be established outside the parliamentary complex, MP Samaraweera said, adding that others felt that the space used to park vehicles belonging to officials could be modified to accommodate the proposed committees. Although, there had been several rounds discussions in this regard the parliament never decided on this matter, MP Samaraweera said, alleging that the Agriculture Ministry went ahead with the transaction in spite of the Auditor General’s Department strongly recommending against it.

MP Samaraweera said that he was in possession of the relevant documents pertaining to the transaction.

Responding to another query, MP Samaraweera said that the Chief Government Valuer estimated a square foot of the rented building at Rs 150 whereas the Agriculture Ministry finalized the transaction at Rs 167.50 a square foot plus service charges amounting to Rs 60.50 per square foot.

The MP said that the Agriculture Ministry could have moved to the government-owned Sethsiripaya as their total staff was about 90. However, the Agriculture Ministry had declined to move there claiming lack of space and instead made fresh representations to cabinet regarding the private building.

Those who had been preaching the country about good governance, accountability and transparency in the run up to presidential and parliamentary polls last year remained silent, MP Samaraweera said.

CIABOC didn’t respond to a query regarding MP Samaraweera’s complaint forwarded by The Island.

The MP said that he would take up the Agriculture Ministry matter again with the CIABOC and other agencies probing waste and corruption. The government should review the entire transaction as obviously Sectoral Oversight Committees could comfortably function in parliament and even if there was a problem regarding space, the country couldn’t afford to waste taxpayers’ money.

Selvanathans profit from beer tax relief

Selvanathans profit from beer tax relief

Aug 01, 2016
The government stands to lose billions of rupees in revenue due to the nearly 60 per cent tax relief being given to Lion Brewery, which has the beer monopoly in Sri Lanka, reports say.

The company’s brewery at Biyagama was affected by the recent floods, and its production was suspended. After the company informed that it could not supply for the demand, several powerful ministers in the government have intervened and paved an opportunity for the company to import beer under tax relief.
 
Up to now, Lion Brewery paid Rs. 528 per litre as tax, and under the new tax relief, it will have to pay only Rs. 211 per litre to the state as tax. That means the state loses Rs. 317 per litre.
 
This tax relief will be effective until November. Reports say that Rs. 72 million had been lost by last week for the beer imported by the company. As per the estimates, the state will have to incur a total loss of Rs. 5.565 billion, according to reports.
 
In addition to getting this tax relief by the government, Lion Brewery is set to receive insurance compensation running into billions of rupees for the damage caused to its brewery.
 
Lion Brewery is owned by one of the wealthiest businessmen brothers in the country, Mano and Harry Selvanathan. They own Lion Brewery (Ceylon) PLC, Carson Cumberbatch PLC, Ceylon Guardian Investment Trust, Guardian Fund Management Trust and Bukit Darah PLC.
 
Bukit Darah PLC is a major company managing a 40,000 acre palm plantation in Malaysia.
 
Although many businesses have been affected by the floods, the ‘Yahapaalana’ government has given tax relief only to these two wealthy businessmen.
 
Ex-MP Sajin Vaas Gunawardena was imprisoned recently over a charge relating to the Selvanathan family too.
 
Sajin was accused of extorting a considerable amount of money from Mano’s son Krish, but an attempt was made at the related court hearing to portray it as a business transaction. That was a deal there too. Selvanathans who had struck deals with the Rajapaksas and their cronies then are today striking deals with the ‘Yahapaalanaya’, to swallow billions of rupees tax revenue due to the state.
 
However, Colombo chief magistrate Gihan Pilapitiya has ordered the CID to immediately investigate the assets of Krish Selvanathan and submit a report.
 
It is known that the government is faced with a serious financial crisis. The VAT amendment introduced as a solution has been suspended by the Supreme Court. A government that is prepared to impose taxes even from the people’s plate of rice is, on the other hand, giving billions of rupees of tax relief to their cronies. It should not be told here as to what sort of mischief is that. This is how the financial management of ‘yahapaalanaya’s is ‘dripping out of its clothes.’

Ranjan To Lodge Complaint With FCID Over Pāda Yātrā


Colombo TelegraphAugust 2, 2016
Deputy Minister Ranjan Ramanayake will lodge a complaint with the FCID requesting for an investigation on how the Joint Opposition found the finances to sponsor the recently concluded Pada Yathra.
Ranjan Ramanayake
Ranjan Ramanayake
According to Ramanayake, the cost for the first day of the walk on July 28 alone was a staggering Rs. 18 million. “I have proof that they spent Rs. 18 million on the first day,” Ramanayake told a news conference in Colombo.
He accused the joint opposition of trying to split the SLFP in their effort to safeguard their corrupt practices. He also called on the media to question these MPs about their corrupt practices.
The Pada Yathra which concluded yesterday evening in Colombo at the Lipton Circus, resulted in severe traffic congestion in and around Colombo severely inconveniencing the public. According to eye witness accounts, the protestors who took part in the Pada Yathra from Peradeniya, was seen thronging liquor stores to purchase liquor, whenever the protest march passed an outlet selling alcohol.

A guide to online security for activists

Amid growing digital threats from Israel and other governments, individual activists and organizations can take practical steps to protect themselves and their communities.Ryan Rodrick BeilerActiveStills

Jillian C. York-2 August 2016

The last year has seen an uptick in digital threats faced by individuals and organizations around the world, and those working on the question of Palestine are no exception.

Over the past few months, there have been attacks on boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement websites, threatening emails to activists and new information emerging on Israel’s surveillance
capabilities.
“The latest cyber-attacks against BDS seem to be part of a full-fledged Israeli war on the movement that includes McCarthyite legal repression, use of intelligence services and yet more funding for ‘brand Israel’ propaganda,” said Mahmoud Nawajaa, the general coordinator of the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC). “These attacks smack of Israel’s despair at its growing isolation around the world, after failing for years to stem the growing support for the nonviolent BDS movement as a strategic and effective means to achieve Palestinian rights under international law.”
Following several new stories involving digital threats to BDS and solidarity activists, I started speaking with different people in the movement to learn more about the specific concerns faced by individuals.
The concerns they raised vary, as do the threats they perceive to their work and the work of others, but everyone I spoke with agreed that digital threats to the movement are on the rise.
Omar Barghouti, a Palestinian human rights activist and co-founder of the BDS movement, told me that the common response to such threats has been “to further enhance our electronic security but without panicking or adopting stringent measures in that regard.”
Barghouti says that an “unexpected common outcome” of such attacks “has been to raise the morale of activists who feel further reassured about the effectiveness of the human rights campaigning that we are conducting.”
Although such attacks can serve as an affirmation, they are nevertheless a hindrance to important work.
This article serves as a concise resource to address the most commonly cited concerns. It is by no means exhaustive, but should provide a series of first steps toward improving digital security for activists and organizations.

Problem: Solidarity websites are regularly experiencing distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks.

As eQualit.ie – an organization that provides free and open source digital security for civil society – reported in June, there were six recorded incidents against bdsmovement.net, the high-profile website of the BNC between February and March of 2016.
Ali Abunimah of The Electronic Intifada, which has experienced DDoS attacks as wellobserved that the attacks “look like another element of Israel’s increasingly aggressive effort to silence the BDS movement by all means.”
The technical report from eQualit.ie “uncovers important evidence that the distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks carried out on the main website of the BDS movement and websites of other groups critical of Israel’s occupation and violations of human rights are complex and highly coordinated,” Barghouti said. “We’re encouraging all of our partners to use anti-DDoS services such as the Deflect service provided by eQualit.ie and to encrypt their communications wherever possible.”
DDoS attack can prevent a website from functioning efficiently, temporarily or indefinitely.
Typically, the attack saturates its target with server requests designed to flood its bandwidth, leaving the server incapable of responding to legitimate traffic. To the user, this results in an inability to access the site in question.
Although a DDoS attack can be leveraged against any website, journalists and activists are frequent targets. And where a corporation or government may have the resources to fend off such an attack, many smaller organizations or individuals don’t know what to do when they experience one.

What you can do:

  • The eQualit.ie Deflect service – which was employed to protect bdsmovement.net – offers DDoS protection to eligible organizations.
  • Cloudflare’s Project Galileo provides DDoS protection for at-risk public interest websites.
  • Regularly backing up your website is important and can ensure that even if a DDoS attack takes it offline, your content remains intact.
  • Mirroring your site is another good option for ensuring that your content remains online during an attack.

Problem: Governments are monitoring and capturing communications and could use them against activists.

Three years ago, Edward Snowden, leaking information from the National Security Agency, demonstrated thecapacity of the United States and other world governments to spy on their citizens.
This built upon previous suspicions and information that governments have been conducting surveillance on the digital communications of their own citizens and of people in other countries.
“Israel’s military and intelligence services act with impunity. It seems highly likely that Israel is using them in its surveillance of electronic communications and phone calls of BDS activists in western countries, in contravention of these countries’ respective laws,” Barghouti said. “Governments must take action to protect their citizens from the intrusive surveillance of Israel’s intelligence services.”
Many organizations and institutions are working to combat surveillance by challenging the system through legal and legislative means.
At the same time, it is important that individuals and communities protect themselves by changing their habits and/or adopting new technologies that offer additional protection from spying.
Barghouti agrees. “We’re keen to raise awareness of the fact that while it’s important to take basic online security measures, Israel has huge cyberwar capabilities at its disposal so is likely able to intercept even encrypted communications – don’t communicate anything via telephone or online that you’re not prepared for your adversaries to intercept.”
The type of strategy you should take depends on what you’re trying to protect, and who you’re trying to protect it from – as well as the amount of effort you’re willing to put in, and the likelihood that you’re at risk.
Before changing your behaviors, it’s helpful to conduct a risk assessment by thinking through some questions about your work and lifestyle.

What you can do:

  • Mobile apps that employ end-to-end encryption and allow users to verify one another using fingerprintsinclude Signal, WhatsApp, and Wire, all of which also have desktop and encrypted voice calling options. It’s also possible to add end-to-end encryption to many messaging tools, including Facebook, by using desktop apps Adium or Pidgin along with off-the-record (OTR) messaging.
  • Device security is also important. Understanding how mobile phones can be insecure can help you make informed decisions about how you use them in your advocacy.
  • For more information and guides on how to use some of these tools, see the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Surveillance Self-Defense or Security in a Box, a project of the Tactical Technology Collective and Frontline Defenders.

Problem: Facebook groups and other communities are often infiltrated, putting individuals and their networks at risk.

Student groups, both activist and academic in nature, have long expressed suspicions that anti-Palestinian political groups are spying on them. In 2014, The Electronic Intifada published documents demonstrating that a student spied on members of a University of California “conflict analysis” group called the Olive Tree Initiative and reported back to the AMCHA Initiative, an anti-Palestinian group “behind a number of initiatives to silence and intimidate students and teachers perceived to be critical of Israel.” The AMCHA Initiative was co-foundedby Tammi Rossman-Benjamin, a lecturer at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Online, digitally savvy organizations employ similar tactics. Canary Mission, which launched in April 2015, targets campus BDS activists, tarring them with labels like “fake Jew” with the “stated aim of denying future employment opportunities to the students they had targeted,” journalists Max Blumenthal and Julia Carmelwrote last year.
There have also been incidents, some publicized, some not, in which members of pro-Israel groups and intelligence agencies have disguised themselves in order to infiltrate BDS or Palestine solidarity groups.
Many individuals I spoke with expressed concern that their online communities could be, or had been, infiltrated by those seeking to do harm. Most expressed that this threat came from groups that at least appear nominally independent from government (such as AMCHA).
When I asked a followup question – “Do you feel that you’re careful when accepting new friends on Facebook?” – several people admitted that they base their decision on the number of mutual friends they have with the person trying to add them, rather than on other trust factors (such as confirmation with a mutual friend that the person is known).

What you can do:

  • When accepting friend requests from individuals you can’t immediately identify – even if you have many mutual friends on Facebook – check in with someone to verify the person’s identity.
  • Check the privacy settings on your Facebook account. Facebook’s privacy checkup feature walks users through the various settings applied to posts, photos and other content and allows them to make changes, including ones that apply to all older content.
  • Consider using encryption tools for more private communication. Facebook and other social networks can sometimes be vital for activists organizing across borders, but some conversations might be better off taking place using some of the more secure messaging apps mentioned above.
  • Surveillance Self-Defense has more information on protecting yourself and your privacy on social networks.

Problem: Activists sometimes receive suspicious attachments or links in emails and aren’t sure how to assess whether it’s safe to open them.

In June, a number of Palestine solidarity activists received threatening emails from a group calling itself “Brigade Juive” (“Jewish Brigade” in French) that contained suspicious links.
Although the links were found not to contain malware, it’s important to be vigilant when receiving links and attachments.
Malicious content can pose huge risks to the security and privacy of your device. It can allow an attacker to record from your webcam or microphone, disable the notification settings for certain anti-virus programs, record what you type, copy your content, steal passwords and more.

What you can do:

Problem: It’s hard to convince people to use encryption.

A common response to the revelations about government surveillance has been “I have nothing to hide.”
In the American context, this response often comes out of privilege; the perception that one is doing nothing wrong or illegal and therefore has nothing to hide.
Much has been written about the phenomenon, and an article by Whisper Systems founder and Signal developer Moxie Marlinspike perhaps explains it most concisely: We won’t always know when we have something to hide (because structures of authority and threat models change), and sometimes we do have something to hide.
Marlinspike reminds us that free speech allows us to “create a marketplace of ideas, from which we can use the political process to collectively choose the society we want,” a process that sometimes results in agitating or advocating for changes to the law and involves discussion of the forbidden, something with which activists are well acquainted.
In talking with Palestinian activists, I found that the “nothing to hide” argument takes a different turn. “In the movement, we assume everything we say and do is monitored,” said Nadia Hijab of Al-Shabaka: The Palestinian Policy Network. “So, everything we do or say is above water. We feel we have nothing to hide. But it is kind of a spooky thing to think that if you write a person an email, that it’s being monitored.”
Barghouti expressed a similar sentiment: “Since we launched the BDS movement in 2005, we worked with the assumption that Israel can and will use advanced surveillance to monitor everything we communicate. A major advantage that the BDS movement has, however, is that it is anchored in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, rejects all forms of racism and seeks to nonviolently pressure Israel’s regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid in order to achieve Palestinian rights under international law, just as apartheid South Africa was pressured. There is nothing clandestine about that.”
Another activist, who did not want to be named, told me that in the West Bank there’s a division between two realities. “If you have something to hide, you’re a militant, or planning something militant in nature. As long as you don’t do the act or are not planning to do anything, then you have nothing to hide.”
This can result in a false sense of security for activists or journalists whose work is legal or “above board,” whennew threats emerge – Israel has aggressively jailed journalists, activists and academics merely for comments they’ve allegedly posted on Facebook.
Furthermore, in a context where activists can be viewed as militants for using privacy-enhancing technologies, it can create an impossible conundrum: Use encryption, and risk getting labeled, or don’t, and risk getting in trouble.
“Not every tool or technique is applicable to every situation,” said Morgan Marquis-Boire, a senior researcher at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab. “What works for a journalists working on leaks in the US may not work for a human rights activist in the [Middle East and North Africa region].”
One idea that many privacy advocates agree on is that when more people adopt encryption, its use becomes normalized; in other words, the more people who are using it, the more difficult it becomes for others to accuse us of wrongdoing.
“Certain approaches rely on the principle that people don’t stand out in crowds,” Marquis-Boire explained. “In sensitive situations, where someone is likely to be under scrutiny, the observed use of certain security tools might be viewed as suspicious behavior. In such environments, the use of common software [like WhatsApp] that has strong security built in might be less suspicious.”
For those of us who are less at risk, using encryption can be an act of solidarity. Here’s how this practice can look in action: In 2004, an Italian project emerged called Cryptokitchen.
In order to encourage mass adoption of PGP, an encryption program that provides privacy and authentication for email and other communications, a group of activists created Cryptokitchen with the following tagline: “Crypto-Recipes 4 the masses, recipes and encryption for all!”
The idea was to practice and spread the use of encryption by using it to send innocuous (and delicious!) recipes to one another – perhaps an idea Palestinians can get behind.
There is no one-size-fits-all solution to any of these problems, but by taking small steps to improve our awareness and digital security (and the security of those around us), we can create a safer space in which to do our work.

Resources:

  • Access Now’s Digital Security Helpline offers round-the-clock assistance to civil society actors around the world, free of charge.
  • The Digital First Aid Kit is helpful for individuals with digital security skills who have been tasked with helping individuals or organizations. It aims to provide preliminary support for people facing the most common types of digital threats.
  • The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Surveillance Self-Defense guide is available in 11 languages and aims to help users protect themselves from digital surveillance.
  • The Tactical Technology Collective offers a number of useful guides designed to help users improve their security and privacy.
    • Security in a Box contains digital security resources and guides in 17 languages.
    • The Holistic Security Manual seeks to help individuals create a process to develop or improve personal strategies for security.
    • Zen and the Art of Making Tech Work for You is a community-built resource especially for women and trans activists.
    • Me and My Shadow helps users discover and remedy the digital traces they leave behind.
    • LevelUp provides resources to those who are trying to teach digital security to their communities.
    • May First/People Link “engages in building movements by advancing the strategic use and collective control of technology for local struggles, global transformation, and emancipation without borders” and offers highly recommended resources to its membership.
Jillian C. York is Director for International Freedom of Expression at The Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Dozens of civilians hit with toxic gas in Syria: White Helmets

Syrian Civil Defence Force that operates in rebel held areas said the gas was fired near where a Russian helicopter was shot down
First responders from Syrian Civil Defence Force helps victim of toxic gas attack (YouTube screengrab)

Areeb Ullah-Tuesday 2 August 2016


More than 30 Syrian civilians have been affected by a toxic gas attack carried out on a town close near to where rebel forces shot down a Russian helicopter, a Syrian rescue service said.

A spokespersons for the Syrian Civil Defence Force, known as the White Helmets, released a statement on the group’s webpage on Tuesday, saying that 33 people, mostly women and children, had been injured in the apparent chemical attack.

The group also released footage showing numerous casualties in a makeshift hospital struggling to breath and being given oxygen masks by people in civil defence uniforms.

Initial reports, tweeted out by the White Helmet chief late on Monday, indicated that the casualty toll was somewhat lower and said that 25 people were injured by the gas shortly after rebel forces downed a Russian helicopter nearby, killing five Russian military personnel.


The attack allegedly took place in the city of Saraqeb, in the rebel-held province of Idlib where the White Helmets have operated since the Syrian civil war began.

It remains unclear what type of gas was used in the attack but the White Helmets said it suspects that the gas used by the attackers was chlorine.

It remains unclear as to who conducted the toxic gas attack but various social media usersclaiming to be on the ground in Saraqeb are suggesting the attack was conducted by Syrian government helicopters in retaliation for the Russian helicopter being shot down.

Unconfirmed reports have also claimed that the hospitals in Saraqeb are being evacuated to make way for patients who are critically ill from the toxic gas attacks.

Monitors at the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks violence on all sides in the civil war, also reported that barrel bombs had fallen on Saraqeb late on Monday, wounding a large number of citizens.

The Syrian National Coalition (SNC), an umbrella opposition group, also accused President Bashar al-Assad of being behind the attack. Assad has previously denied allegations that he has used chemical weapons on civilians.

The SNC in a statement said: “After shelling, besieging and killing civilians and perpetrating war crimes on them, the Assad regime has resorted once again, and in breach of UN resolutions 2118 and 2235, to using chemical substances and toxic gases.

“The daily reality confirms that all the international agreements and previous Security Council decisions, be they about chemical weapons or otherwise, are meaningless for the Assad regime.”

A spokesperson for the White Helmets also said that it was the second time Saraqeb had been hit by toxic gas. The group said it was aware of around nine suspected chlorine gas incidents across Idlib province since the conflict began.

The Syrian government agreed to hand over its cache of chemical weapons for destruction after the US threatened the government with a military strike in 2014.

This agreement however only covered Sarin, Mustard and VX nerve gas, alongside the precursor chemicals which could be used to make them. The agreement did not include chlorine and ammonia, which has a wide array of civilian uses but can also be weaponised. 

Chlorine as a chemical is commonly used as an antiseptic and often used to make drinking water safe and to treat swimming pools. Large amounts of chlorine are used in many industrial processes, such as in paper products, plastics, dyes, textiles, medicines, insecticides, solvents and paints. 

In 2014 both the United States and France claimed to have seen "raw" information that chlorine had been used by Syrian government forces in rebel held areas and that the incidents would constitute a violation of the chemical weapons convention that Syria signed in 2013. 

Possessing chlorine is not a violation of the convention signed by Syria that led to it surrendering its chemical weapons arsenal, but the treaty bans the use of the gas as a weapon. 

More than 700 people killed in Philippines drugs crackdown

 During his campaign for the Philippine presidency, Rodrigo Duterte said 100,000 people would die in his drugs crackdown. Photograph: Malacanang Photo Bureau/Handout/EPA
 Jennelyn Olaires, 26, cradles the body of her husband, Michael Siaron, who police said was killed on a street by a vigilante group in Pasay city, Metro Manila. The cardboard sign near his body reads: “Pusher Ako”, which translates to “I am a drug pusher.” Photograph: Czar Dancel/Reuters

-Tuesday 2 August 2016

Human rights groups call on UN to denounce killings of suspected users and dealers since Rodrigo Duterte won presidential election in May

More than 700 suspected drug users or dealers have been killed by police or vigilantes in the Philippines in less than three months, say human rights campaigners, who are calling on the UN to denounce the violence.

Human Rights Watch, Stop Aids and International HIV/Aids Alliance are among more than 300 civil society groups that have signed joint letters to the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), calling on them to break their silence over the crackdown.

“We are calling on the UN drug control bodies to publicly condemn these atrocities in the Philippines. 
This senseless killing cannot be justified as a drug control measure,” said Ann Fordham, executive director of the International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC), which coordinated the letter.

“Their silence is unacceptable, while people are being killed on the streets day after day.”

Rodrigo Duterte, the president of the Philippines, won an electoral landslide in May after pledging to fill funeral parlours with drug dealers. He told Filipinos on the day of his inauguration last month: “If you know of any addicts, go ahead and kill them yourself as getting their parents to do it would be too painful.”

Since 10 May – the day Duterte was announced the winner of the presidential poll– at least 704 people have been killed because they were suspected to have been involved with drugs, according to monitoring by journalists at ABS CBN News, a Filipino news network.

One influential Philippine senator has called for an investigation into the killings. In a speech before the senate, Leila de Lima, a former justice minister, said: “We cannot wage the war against drugs with blood. We will only be trading drug addiction with another more malevolent kind of addiction. This is the compulsion for more killing.”

De Lima, who has also headed the Philippines’ national human rights body, said police were summarily killing even innocent people, using the anti-drugs campaign as an excuse.

statement issued last week by the citizens’ council for human rights accused Duterte and his officials of abandoning due process and human rights in their zeal to fight the war on drugs. “Units of the Philippine national police, under the command of his close associate General Ronald “Bato” de la Rosa, have turned many low-income neighbourhoods in the country into free-fire zones,” it said.

“The bloody encounters taking place daily have polarised the country between those who support the president’s quick and dirty methods of dealing with drugs and crime, and those who regard them as illegal, immoral, and self-defeating.”

The killings appear to have been carried out by police, who attribute the violence to suspects who “resisted arrest and shot at police officers”, and vigilante groups emboldened by Duterte’s promises of impunity.

In one case last month, eight suspected “drug personalities”, including a woman, were shot dead by police in a pre-dawn raid in the town of Matalam, about 900km (559 miles) south of Manila. On the same day in Manila, police said they found a man lying dead with his head wrapped in packaging tape and his torso covered with a cardboard sign reading: “I Am A Pusher.”

On another night in the capital, six people were killed by gunmen on motorcycles. One of the victims’ wives was photographed cradling his dead body in an image that has become emblematic of the Filipino drugs war.

Jennelyn Olaires, the wife of Michael Siaron whom police said was killed by a vigilante group, told Reuters her husband had not been a drug dealer but that he was addicted to drugs. She said the 29-year-old made money by riding a pedicab – a bicycle with a sidecar – and did odd jobs. He even voted for Duterte in the 9 May election.

“I don’t need the public’s sympathy. I don’t need the president to notice us,” Olaires said. “I know that he doesn’t like this kind of people. But for me, I just hope that they get the true offenders.”

The IDPC’s letters ask the UNODC and the INCB to call on Duterte to immediately end all his incitements to kill people suspected of dealing drugs and act to fulfil all international human rights obligations, including rights to life, health, due process and a fair trial.

Phelim Kine, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said: “International drug control agencies need to make clear to Philippines’ president Roderigo Duterte that the surge in killings of suspected drug dealers and users is not acceptable ‘crime control’, but instead a government failure to protect people’s most fundamental human rights.

“President Duterte should understand that passive or active government complicity with those killings would contradict his pledge to respect human rights and uphold the rule of law.”

A spokesman for the INCB said that a response to the IDPC’s open letter would be considered over the next few days. The UNODC said that it had received the letter and that it would be reviewed.

The most widely abused drugs in the Philippines are methamphetamine hydrochloride, known locally as shabu, and cannabis, which can easily be grown in the country’s rural areas. In 2014, 89% of drug seizures involved shabu while 8.9% involved cannabis, according to the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency.

Before he was elected president, Duterte was a lawyer who earned a reputation as an authoritarian figure while he mayor of the southern city of Davao. His campaign pledges included the reintroduction of the death penalty by hanging, as well as offering bounties for the bodies of drug dealers.

During the campaign, Duterte said 100,000 people would die in his crackdown, with so many dead bodies dumped in Manila Bay that fish there would grow fat from feeding on them. After his election win, Duterte also launched a seemingly unprovoked attack against the UN.

“Fuck you UN, you can’t even solve the Middle East carnage ... couldn’t even lift a finger in Africa [with the] butchering [of] the black people. Shut up all of you,” he said.