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

Friday, August 5, 2016

Why The Pāda Yātrā Had Only One Objective


Colombo Telegraph
By Shyamon Jayasinghe –August 4, 2016
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Shyamon Jayasinghe
“The Yahapaalana government must realise one thing, namely that freedom and liberty has a way of consuming itself”
Plainly, and demonstrably the Pāda Yātrā led by the so-called Joint Opposition (JO) had just one purpose. This was to frighten those who are entrusted with investigating the serious charges for murder, embezzlement and abuse against Mahinda Rajapaksa and his family and against the second line of leaders. Pāda Yātrā was a campaign of the accused and the impugned.This is evident from the fact that the campaign had ‘political witch hunting,’ as one of its vociferous slogans. This witch – hunting referred to the investigations ongoing and yet to come. Curiously, during the very first few months of the Yahapālana (YP) government these first rung and second rung leaders mocked and challenged the government to come out with the findings related to alleged corruption. JO told the nation that the government was conning. On the other hand,now, when the investigations are getting into shape and when arrests are being made the JO accuses the government of witch hunting. Not-doing is wrong and doing is also wrong!
True, there were other slogans, mainly relating to the rise in the cost of living and the proposed VATincreases. These slogans are merely being dragged in to provoke the people who now face the burden of the increase in cost of living. The economic slogans are mass -mobilisation – slogans. JO cannot be serious about these problems because they know only too well that their ten year long dispensation had created the crisis. Indiscriminate debt, wasteful profligacy, corruption, absurd White Elephant projects had all brought about a serious crisis at the time of the fall of the Rajapaksa government. Here is an extract of a report pertaining to the state of the economy after the YP government came to office. Obviously, the negative outcomes were products of the Rajapaksa government. The report is by Professor A.D.V. de S .Indraratna – independent and respected economist:
“We have been experiencing,” says professor Indraratna, “falling current revenue relative to current expenditure and bludgeoning budget deficits rising to unsustainable levels on the one hand, and a crippling public debt and unsustainable external debt burden on the other hand, in the face of sluggish inflow of FDI. There has been agreement among the enlightened economics analysts that every effort should be made to increase current revenue while containing current expenditure, and to decrease the debt burden so as to halve the 2015 Budget deficit before the end of this decade.
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Thursday, 4 August 2016

President Maithripala Sirisena, who has a good understanding of what is happening on a daily basis in a rural Sri Lanka where the majority of our people live, has asked for greater support for Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) as their development would directly improve the livelihoods of our lower middle class Sri Lankans and wants his Government to actively create avenues to support private sector investment, including providing tax concessions where possible.

Credit for SMEs from banks have largely been in short supply, where loans and other long-term funds have generally been hard to come by for many reasons. Therefore, support for SME agriculture, healthcare and education has to be bumped up if the Government is looking to promote sustainable development and reconciliation among all communities.

Untitled-1Education and skills training is another key sector that needs new investments. Technological innovation in the educational sector will produce ‘bots’ or robots who can teach and answer questions in real time, as automated student advisors, this will take place within the next 10 years. The country is not geared to support such innovations. Therefore the specific sustainable development goals to be adopted must be made clear.

Sustainable development requires sound economic governance and a focused domestic policy framework to facilitate inclusive growth and there by advance the economic, environmental and social welfare of all our people and also the planet we live in. The benefits of economic growth have to be more widely distributed, because inclusive growth is the cornerstone of sustainable development. Mainstreaming sustainability considerations in policymaking will, in turn, support inclusiveness.

Economic growth of over 5% in the last 10 years has effectively reduced extreme poverty in many of our regions, along with broader development. But much work remains to be done because better growth is contingent on strong and sustained domestic reforms. Structural weaknesses, such as poor infrastructure, low investment in education, low savings, low productivity and huge social deficits unless addressed, will prevent us from realising our full growth potential.

Important lesson

The important lesson of recent decades is that, although economic growth is vital and necessary, it is not enough to create shared and sustainable prosperity. That requires shifting the focus of development policies to address not only “inequalities of income” but also “inequalities of opportunity”. This distinction is important, because different kinds of deprivation reinforce each other.

Lack of access to adequate healthcare, basic nutrition, clean drinking water, better sanitation and quality education, for example, can harm people’s employment prospects, widening the gap even further between haves and have-nots, and creating a vicious spiral of inequality. For sustainable development to succeed, growth must be made more inclusive, by addressing social and environmental deficits.

It is essential for the Government to launch integrated and well-designed packages of inclusive policies to boost opportunities for productive employment and job security, equitable access to finance and to provide adequate access to basic services, such as education, healthcare, energy and water.

Addressing the shortcomings of inclusive growth, together with prudent and consistent management of risk to growth, has to be a key part of our country’s transformation for the real sustainable future the people want.

Way forward

From now on the package of social and economic reforms needs to be very clear. There should be no room for playing with taxpayers’ money. Wasteful and unproductive public expenditure has to be curtailed; public institutions have to be more efficient and demand-driven; public enterprises have to be on equal-footing with private enterprises and our debt burden has to be reduced and be manageable. Tax collection has to be fair and efficient.

Then for years we have lived on a fragile exchange rate. Weak external finances clearly show the vulnerability of our exchange rate. In the current account of our Balance of Payments (BOP), it should be the export potential that reflects the country’s productive strength. But, our net exports, shows a $ 6+ billion deficit in 2014, which is covered by over $ 6.5 billion worker remittance.

In the financial account of our BOP, Foreign Direct Investment is less than $ 1 billion, but net debt liabilities are over $ 1.8 billion, this is our debt either directly or indirectly. This has continued into 2015 and 2016. These are surely not signs of economic and social prosperity, but to many outsiders as sheer incompetence and mismanagement. All this needs to change and happening slowly to achieve any form of sustainable development and for us to cross the $ 100 billion GDP target before 2020.

(The writer is a senior company director.)

LASANTHA KILLING: ARMY’S TOP SPY ACCUSED AT IDENTITY PARADE

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Sri Lanka Brief(Lasantha Wickrematunge )

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And Then ‘They’ Came For Him.

by Vimukthi Yapa.-04/08/2016

But who is “they”? One household employee of Wickrematunge had harboured a suspicion that “they” were sent by former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, a suspicion that he had openly voiced. That suspicion did not win the employee a lawsuit or even the ignobility of a summary arrest for defamation. Instead, he was stopped on the street, hooded, gagged, tied up and abducted in one of the white vans synonymous with the former regime.

Different law for Wadduwa police ?


Different law for Wadduwa police ?

Aug 04, 2016
Police are notoriously ahead of most institutions in Sri Lanka for its infamy. It is very common to see bribery, corruption and human rights violations committed by the police. Within that department, Wadduwa police have earned the notoriety of being regularly in the news for such wrongs. On the 01st of this month, arrogance of the uniform left two youths badly beaten up and tortured. This is about that incident.

On that day, K.D. Theekshana Madhushanka went to Wadduwa police after receiving a message that his 62 year old father was under arrest over a certain incident. While on the way, he told his younger brother K.D. Kavinda Srinath and asked him to join him at the police station. Officers there did not permit Kavinda who was the first to arrive, to see his father in the cell. They had insulted him, grabbed him by the neck and pushed him away. A little while later, Theekshana too, arrived. And, both requested the officers that they be allowed to see their father.
 
The same officers who grabbed Kavinda by the neck, started by saying he would not be permitted to see the father. It grew into an exchange of words, and the officers abused the two brothers in filth and also threatened them. The duo decided to leave the police station, and as they were nearing its gate, the officers came to them and dragged them back to the station. Taking them to a room, the officers had beaten up the two brothers using rifles and a club. According to what Theekshana and Kavinda say, the attackers were Munasinghe (39144), Soyza (49556), name unknown (1803), SI Perera and two others.
 
After assaulting them badly, they released Theekshana only, telling him to bring the leave permit of Kavinda, who is a soldier. The elder brother brought the leave permit and his helmet was seized by one officer, saying “Will write that he tried to use it to attack the police.”
 
Produced before courts on the 02nd, the two brothers were released on bail. They were then hospitalized due to the injuries they have suffered. Kavinda had not been given even a panadol tablet until being produced before courts. Theekshana was discharged on the same day, but Kavinda still remains in hospital.
 
It is a daily occurrence that persons get arrested over various charges. But, there are laws to govern arrests. However, police or anyone else does not get permission by any law to beat up people. Most policemen believe their uniform permits them to harass people and to demand various privileges. Their habit is to plant fabricated charges.
 
The other most recent incident happened following the rape and murder of the little girl Seya. Police accused a schoolboy and a youth by the name Dunesh to be responsible and gave information to the media, including a ‘confession’ by Dunesh which they forced out of him by way of assault. However, DNA tests proved they were innocent. Without stopping there, the police again leveled a false drug-offence charge against the schoolboy. Such is the conduct of uniformed thugs among the law-protectors in the police. If law and peace are to prevail, people should have faith in the law. If that is to happen, the law should be enforced against offices who misuse the uniform. The public too, should know that only the judiciary has the powers to decide the limits of the police and to mete out punishment. Also, the judiciary should be aware of its being insulted by the police’s having used a nonexistent power of assaulting people. 
 
Attempts to reach the Wadduwa police and its OIC for a comment were unsuccessful.

Maithri – Ranil regime gearing to suppress trade unions


FRIDAY, 05 AUGUST 2016
Maithri – Ranil administration, just as Mahinda Regime did, is taking first steps to repress trade unions by threatening them. The government, through the Chairman of UGC, has issued a threatening order to non-academic employees of the universities who are carrying out a strike action at present.
The order states all members of non-academic staffs in universities who are on strike should report for duties today (5th) and those  probationary and are under  training who do not report for duties would be considered as having vacated their posts if they fail to report to duties tomorrow,
Instead of using its state power on those who are engaged in a strike action the government should have listened to them and fulfil their just demands. However, what the government has chosen to do is to use its state power and suppress trade union action.
During former Mahinda Rajapaksa regime state power was used step by step to repress trade unions, student movement and mass protest campaigns and finally this move ended in using weapons to suppress mass movements.
The media spokesman of University Trade Union Joint Committee K.L.D.G. Richmond sspeaking to the media government’s oppressive actions cannot halt their trade union action.
They would have to take strict trade union action if the government proceeds to suppress workers and ignore their just demands said Mr. Richmond.

Did People’s Bank Fudge Tender Procedures Over Digital Banking & Luxury Vehicles?


Colombo Telegraph
By Rusiripala Tennakoon –August 4, 2016
Rusiripala Tennakoon
Rusiripala Tennakoon
Is People Bank Going Easy With Depositors’ Funds USD 11 Million For Digital Banking And Luxury Vehicles Costing? Are Tender Procedures Followed? 
Bank of Ceylon (BOC) and Peoples Bank (PB) are the two major state owned commercial Banks in this country. Both Banks from years occupied the envious leading position in the Banking Industry. Having successfully emerged from a capital inadequacy in 1992 they became the leading players in the country’s economy and as the principal commercial banking agent for the SOE’s and the Government of Sri Lanka.
Till the beginning of last year BOC & PB were placed No.1 and 2 in the order of pre tax profit generation classification among the commercial banks. While the BOC still maintains the No. 1 placement, the PB has gone down to the 4th position in the 1st Quarter of 2016 and to the 5th position in the 2nd Quarter. It is a notable decline which requires a focused attention mainly for the reason that it is a wholly owned state bank.
Due to reports appearing publicly the affairs of the PB had become the talking point within the financial circles and its Ex-employees had written to the Auditor General pin pointing questionable areas in the published accounts of the Bank. Reportedly the matter is now under a review and investigation according to the Auditor General.
Among the issues high-lighted are the following:
  • Bank has failed to make adequate provisions in respect of retirement benefit funds in accordance with the actuarial determinations. This short-fall has been identified as an amount exceeding Rs. 13 Billion superficially while it is alleged by those raising the issue to be more complicated and grave than it appears, with the short-fall running to above 17 Billion, in real terms.
  • Funds belonging to the contributors of a Widows & Orphans Pension scheme are carried in the books of the Bank without being shown as a liability.
  • The income generation statistics show a poor performance in the commercial operations sector while the large share of the income is derived from Government of Sri Lanka operations in the Bank.
  • Development oriented lending activities have not shown any marked progress over several years now.
  • Loan-loss provisioning is manipulated by down playing allowing un-ethical rescheduling of over due facilities.
  • The percentage of pawning advances reflect a major proportion of the total advances segment thereby evidencing under performance in the development oriented lending areas.
  • In addition it has been pointed out to the Auditor General that the Bank has written off a huge sum amounting to Rs. 3 Billion from the profits as losses against the Oil Hedging transactions entered into by the Bank. No one has been held responsible for the colossal loss which involves depositors as well as public finds.
The PB over a period of 13 years, continues to engage the services of Senior Officials hired on contract with very high payments and emolument packages with no parallel else-where. Even the CEO/GM of the fully state owned bank is a contract employee, recruited many years ago for an entirely different job, he is paid over Rs. 2 Million per month as salary in addition to a massive comprehensive package of other fringe benefits which could be valued more than Rs. 1 Million a month.
Lecturer accused of molesting 17 girls remanded


Lecturer accused of molesting 17 girls remanded
logoAugust 4, 2016 
The suspect arrested over the alleged molestation of several young girls at a resident training institute in Hanthana, has been remanded by Kandy Chief Magistrate Buddhika Sri Ragala. 
Investigations were launched after several parents had lodged a complaint with the Kandy police station accusing him of molesting 17 girls who were receiving resident training at the institution.
The suspect, who is a head lecturer at the training institute, had surrendered to police on Tuesday (2).
- See more at: http://adaderana.lk/news/36372/lecturer-accused-of-molesting-17-girls-remanded#sthash.UaQ7lhBw.dpuf

Mahinda Balasuriya soon to keep company for Sri Ranga!

Mahinda Balasuriya soon to keep company for Sri Ranga!

Aug 04, 2016

In addition to former MP J. Sri Ranga, ex-IGP Mahinda Balasuriya too, is very likely to be get arrested allegedly for having aided the former to prepare fake documents to conceal evidence, to mislead the judiciary, to abuse state property and to insult the judiciary over a fatal road accident five years ago, say highly places sources in the Police Department.

Both are to be taken into custody on the basis of findings into the death of Ranga’s police bodyguard, which follows a petition filed by the mother of the deceased.
The mother of the deceased has petitioned the department with the mediation of sergeants and constables, due to the non-receipt of his salary until the time by which he would have reached 55 years of age.
The forum of junior policemen has roundly and with disgust condemned the ex-IGP’s having resorted to such low means to save an MP. They have now joined forces on behalf of the legal rights of the deceased. Three of the deceased’s colleagues at Settikulam police have given evidence without any pressure, in the course of the investigation.
They said that as they arrived at the crash scene where the vehicle in which Ranga and the deceased had been travelling, they saw the then MP in a highly drunken state, walking along the road. The trio has also revealed how, with the help of the area residents, they had got the deceased out of the front seat of the crashed vehicle. There was clear evidence that Ranga had been driving the vehicle at the time it had met with the accident near Settikulam Hospital in Vavuniya on 30 March 2011. However, the then IGP Balasuriya and senior SP in charge of the area Senaratne had intimidated the Settikulam OIC and got him to report to courts that the deceased had caused a fatal accident due to careless driving while under the influence of liquor.
Accusing the deceased of having committed a disciplinary offence, the department has refused to pay his salary to the dependents until he would have reached 55 years of age. However, sergeants and PCs have continued to fight against this injustice and subsequently the truth came to light. They are saying in one voice that the future investigations should be handed over to the CID to ensure justice for their deceased colleague.
The law should be enforced against Ranga, Balasuriya as well as Senaratne, now a DIG, and justice done for the mother and other dependents of the deceased, they say.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

A short journey across several lives

Ten people were killed in an Israeli air strike on the Abu Nejem family home on 4 August 2014. Shaima Qassem, 14, was pulled from the rubble alive but soon died of her injuries.Ezz ZanounAPA images
A youth searches in the rubble of the Abu Nejem family home after it was destroyed in an Israel air strike while the residents were at home, Jabaliya refugee camp, 4 August 2014.Ezz ZanounAPA images

Hamza Abu Eltarabesh-4 August 2016

One night in particular stands out for Hussein Thahir. Partly it is because the paramedic, now 30, had managed to secure a few hours of rest — a rare occurrence during the relentless 51-day bombardment that was Israel’s 2014 military assault on Gaza.

Mostly it is the memory of a young girl he pulled from the rubble.

Two years have now passed since his radio came alive the early morning of 4 August, disturbing his sleep.
“I still have nightmares about it,” said Thahir, an emergency responder of 10 years experience.

It was a hot night and the man on the radio was screaming about a missile strike on a home near the Tawba mosque in the Jabaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip. Reports said an air raid had targeted the home of the Abu Nejem family in a crowded neighborhood and while residents were home. There had been no warning.

By the time the emergency crews got there, remembered Thahir, it was a scene of pure devastation: “It looked like an earthquake had hit the area.”

The electricity supply was off, so the team had to work in the light of their handheld torches or those mounted on their helmets. The Abu Nejem house itself was completely destroyed. The team prepared itself to bring out the bodies.

A haunting experience

One of the neighbors told them that an entire family was buried under the ruins, Thahir told The Electronic Intifada.

The team had started to dig when he heard a low moaning from the rubble. He trained his light and called out. Pushing heavy stones and rubble out of the way, Thahir and colleagues finally found a nearly completely buried young girl, her face bloodied and bruised.

The team went into overdrive. Thahir administered oxygen to the girl through her nose and tried to reassure her. It took an hour and a half, but they finally got her out. Hussein stayed with her, his hand supporting her head as she lay prone next to the ruins of her home.

It was not enough. Two hours after they first found her, Shaima Qassem, 14, took her last breath.
“Shaima still haunts me,” said Thahir. “I can’t get her out of my mind.”

Ten people died in the strike on the Abu Nejem house. Eight were civilians and two were members of a Palestinian resistance group, according to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights. Three were children, the youngest of them was just 3. Twenty-two civilians were wounded, among them 10 children.

Deadly work

On 7 July 2014, Israel began its “Operation Protective Edge,” a military assault on the Gaza Strip that was to cost 2,251 Palestinians their lives, including 551 children, injuries to more than 11,000 people and the full or partial destruction of more than 18,000 homes and buildings.

But these figures only tell part of the story. Scars have been both physical and psychological, especially for those on the sharp end of things, health professionals and others whose work has seen them directly confronted with the misery, suffering and loss of that 2014 assault.

Emergency responders, medics, ambulance drivers and others often found themselves in the firing line andmany were injured or killed in the line of duty. Health facilities themselves were also directly targeted during the aggression. According to the World Health Organization, 17 hospitals and 56 primary health care facilities were damaged during the onslaught, with one hospital and five PHCs destroyed completely.

Forty-five ambulances were damaged or destroyed, either after a direct strike or because of collateral damage.

In all, 23 health workers died as a direct result of the violence, 16 of them while on duty. Seven were killed in their homes while 83 were injured, the majority ambulance workers. Together with the targeting of health facilities, WHO wrote in their September 2014 report on the impact of the Israeli offensive on Gaza, “this is a gross violation of International Humanitarian Law.”

“Every time we received a call, we put in our minds that we may never come back,” Thahir said. “Israel always intends to target Palestinian paramedics, to stop them doing their work.”

Shaima’s body was taken to the Kamal Adwan hospital in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip. Shehada Omran was the coroner to whom the task fell to examine the slight body of the 14-year-old.

“When they brought her body, I had to wipe the blood off her face. During a quick examination, it became clear to me that there was internal bleeding in the lungs and the whole digestive system had been shredded,” Omran, 44, said.

In his 10 years in the profession, Omran has seen plenty of traumatic cases. And, like Thahir, some simply won’t leave him. He remembers the Eid holiday that year when three children — “nothing more than pieces of meat” — arrived to the hospital. “It took me three hours to separate them and take them to the mortuary,” he said.

From rubble to dust

Omran is convinced that the damage suffered by Shaima could only have been wrought by special munitions. Like other medical professionals in Gaza who worked during that 51-day assault, the coroner accused the Israeli military of using experiemental weapons during the offensive.

He said the small amount of shrapnel damage to the body of Shaima did not seem sufficient to cause the amount of internal damage the girl suffered and suggested that Israel was using new weapons capable of causing such damage without leaving too many marks externally. He said he had seen a number of similar wounds on other bodies during the offensive.

He is also convinced that the 2014 war saw a repeat of the use of white phosphorous that had been used by Israel in its 2008-09 “Cast Lead” assault. Many bodies, he said, were brought in with white material on them, similar to that exhibited in 2009, when Israel said it had used the weapon — which is prohibited for use over populated areas — in a legitimate manner. In 2013, the military announced it would no longer use the weapon.

Omran kept working throughout the 51 days. But when the fighting finally died down, he sought professional help.

“When the war ended, the scenes of dead and defaced bodies didn’t stop flashing across my mind. I lost my social connections for a while, I wasn’t able to sit with my wife and children as I used to. All I wanted was to be alone.”

He turned to a friend, Khaled al-Buheisi, a psychiatrist with the Ministry of Health who also runs a clinic in theNuseirat refugee camp. Buheisi immediately signed him up for intensive therapy sessions and started him on a two-month course of antidepressants.

“Almost 60 percent of Palestinians in Gaza suffered some form of psychological disorder after the war,” al-Buheisi told The Electronic Intifada. Indeed, immediately after the offensive, UNICEF estimated that well over half of Gaza’s children were in need of psychosocial or child protection support.

Earlier this year, the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor estimated that 55 percent of Palestinians in Gaza suffer clinical depression after nearly 10 years of an Israeli blockade and three wars.

And though no specific studies on health care professionals have so far come out, al-Buheisi argued that a far greater proportion of those directly exposed to the violence of 2014 suffered emotional scars.

“I’d say most [health professionals] suffered psychological problems. Everyone who were close to the bodies of martyrs would have been confronted with images that the human mind cannot forget.”

Anecdotally, the doctor added, most of his friends in the profession “took pain relievers or sedatives until they gradually recovered.”

No space for the dead

Ramadan Shaban, 50, is the undertaker to whom Shaima’s body eventually arrived. The day he prepared Shaima was one that stood out in his memory.

“It was a day full of sadness; I had to shroud eight martyrs from one bombing.”

And that was not the worst night Shaban remembers. Just a few nights before, on 31 July 2014, he had been on duty when the Kamal Adwan hospital was notified about the Salam Tower bombing.

“I have never been so shocked. I had no choice but to put the martyrs in plastic sacks before getting them into graves.”

“When I got home, my wife didn’t allow me to enter the house before she had sprayed water and cleaned off all the blood that covered me.”

Traditions are different for those slain in war and those who die otherwise. In normal circumstances, Shaban will help relatives wash and shroud bodies before burial. But those slain in war are considered martyrs and are buried as is, with only a shroud covering their bodies.

The job itself is considered a religious function that secures special favor from God and is reserved for the pious. Paid work in normal times, during war and conflict, the job is performed on a voluntary basis.
For Shaban, it allows him “to get closer to God, and for God to forgive my sins.”

But that doesn’t mean it is not exhausting. On the day he shrouded Shaima’s body, Shaban prepared 17 others for burial. And with space at a premium, Shaban had no choice but to find what was available in the nearby Falluja graveyard.

There were just two empty spaces: Shaima was buried with eight of her relatives, four to a grave.

Hamza Abu Eltarabesh is a journalist from Gaza.

Philippines: Drug-linked town mayor’s six bodyguards killed in clash with police

Six bodyguards were killed in Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa's house in the Philippines early Wednesday morning. Screengrab via Youtube.
Six bodyguards were killed in Albuera Mayor Rolando Espinosa's house in the Philippines early Wednesday morning. Screengrab via Youtube.

 

SIX armed bodyguards of a town mayor linked to the drug trade in the Philippines were shot dead in a clash with police commandos on Wednesday morning in a continuing crackdown that has left more than 400 suspected drug criminals dead.

Regional police chief Elmer Beltejar said police were on patrol early Wednesday near the house of Mayor Rolando Espinosa Sr. in the central town of Albuera when they were fired upon by the mayor’s bodyguards.

The police fired back, killing six bodyguards and seizing at least 17 firearms and rifle grenades inside the compound.

The clash comes a day after Espinosa surrendered to national police chief Ronald dela Rosa.

Previously, the Philippine National Police tagged the mayor and his son as illegal drug manufacturers and traffickers.

Authorities accused Espinosa of being a drug protector; his son Rolando “Kerwin” Espinosa Jr., an alleged drug lord, has yet to surrender.


An exchange of gunfire ensued when one of the two armed men guarding the gate allegedly fired at the policemen.

Kerwin’s two bodyguards were among those who were involved in the shootout with police. Kerwin has been dubbed his father’s partner-in-crime and the mayoral successor.

According to the Philippine Inquirer, the police said that the gunmen at the mayor’s house “were using branded high-powered firearms” during their standoff with authorities.

They also estimated more than 50 to 100 armed men inside the residence.

Since his surrender, Espinosa admitted that he and Kerwin have been manufacturing and trafficking shabu (methamphetamine hydrochloride) from their base in Albuera town, Leyte, the Inquirer reported.
Additional reporting from the Associated Press


Chinese peasants suffering from the effects of the Great Leap Forward.


 

Who was the biggest mass murderer in the history of the world? Most people probably assume that the answer is Adolf Hitler, architect of the Holocaust. Others might guess Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, who may indeed have managed to kill even more innocent people than Hitler did, many of them as part of a terror famine that likely took more lives than the Holocaust. But both Hitler and Stalin were outdone by Mao Zedong. From 1958 to 1962, his Great Leap Forward policy led to the deaths of up to 45 million people – easily making it the biggest episode of mass murder ever recorded.

Historian Frank Dikötter, author of the important book Mao’s Great Famine recently published an article in History Today, summarizing what happened:
Mao thought that he could catapult his country past its competitors by herding villagers across the country into giant people’s communes. In pursuit of a utopian paradise, everything was collectivised. People had their work, homes, land, belongings and livelihoods taken from them. In collective canteens, food, distributed by the spoonful according to merit, became a weapon used to force people to follow the party’s every dictate. As incentives to work were removed, coercion and violence were used instead to compel famished farmers to perform labour on poorly planned irrigation projects while fields were neglected.
A catastrophe of gargantuan proportions ensued. Extrapolating from published population statistics, historians have speculated that tens of millions of people died of starvation. But the true dimensions of what happened are only now coming to light thanks to the meticulous reports the party itself compiled during the famine…. 
What comes out of this massive and detailed dossier is a tale of horror in which Mao emerges as one of the greatest mass murderers in history, responsible for the deaths of at least 45 million people between 1958 and 1962. It is not merely the extent of the catastrophe that dwarfs earlier estimates, but also the manner in which many people died: between two and three million victims were tortured to death or summarily killed, often for the slightest infraction. When a boy stole a handful of grain in a Hunan village, local boss Xiong Dechang forced his father to bury him alive. The father died of grief a few days later. The case of Wang Ziyou was reported to the central leadership: one of his ears was chopped off, his legs were tied with iron wire, a ten kilogram stone was dropped on his back and then he was branded with a sizzling tool – punishment for digging up a potato.
The basic facts of the Great Leap Forward have long been known to scholars. Dikötter’s work is noteworthy for demonstrating that the number of victims may have been even greater than previously thought, and that the mass murder was more clearly intentional on Mao’s part, and included large numbers of victims who were executed or tortured, as opposed to “merely” starved to death. Even the previously standard estimates of 30 million or more, would still make this the greatest mass murder in history.

While the horrors of the Great Leap Forward are well known to experts on communism and Chinese history, they are rarely remembered by ordinary people outside China, and has had only a modest cultural impact. When Westerners think of the great evils of world history, they rarely think of this one. In contrast to the numerous books, movies, museums, and and remembrance days dedicated to the Holocaust, we make little effort to recall the Great Leap Forward, or to make sure that society has learned its lessons. When we vow “never again,” we don’t often recall that it should apply to this type of atrocity, as well as those motivated by racism or anti-semitism.

The fact that Mao’s atrocities resulted in many more deaths than those of Hitler does not necessarily mean he was the more evil of the two. The greater death toll is partly the result of the fact that Mao ruled over a much larger population for a much longer time. I lost several relatives in the Holocaust myself, and have no wish to diminish its significance. But the vast scale of Chinese communist atrocities puts them in the same general ballpark. At the very least, they deserve far more recognition than they currently receive.
I. Why We so Rarely Look Back on the Great Leap Forward

What accounts for this neglect? One possible answer is that the most of the victims were Chinese peasants – people who are culturally and socially distant from the Western intellectuals and media figures who have the greatest influence over our historical consciousness and popular culture. As a general rule, it is easier to empathize with victims who seem similar to ourselves.

But an even bigger factor in our relative neglect of the Great Leap Forward is that it is part of the general tendency to downplay crimes committed by communist regimes, as opposed to right-wing authoritarians. Unlike in the days of Mao, today very few western intellectuals actually sympathize with communism. But many are reluctant to fully accept what a great evil it was, fearful – perhaps – that other left-wing causes might be tainted by association.

The social-political movement launched in May 1966 by Mao Zedong followed a botched industrialization campaign where millions starved. It's a sensitive period in modern China's history. That's why this museum filled with relics from China's "Red Era", is one of a kind. From busts to badges, plates to posters - Chairman Mao and his vision are everywhere. (Reuters)

In China, the regime has in recent years admitted that Mao made “mistakes” and allowedsome degree of open discussion about this history. But the government is unwilling to admit that the mass murder was intentional and continues to occasionally suppress and persecute dissidents who point out the truth.
This reluctance is an obvious result of the fact that the Communist Party still rules China. Although they have repudiated many of Mao’s specific policies, the regime still derives much of its legitimacy from his legacy. I experienced China’s official ambivalence on this subject first-hand, when I gave a talk about the issue while teaching a course as a visiting professor at a Chinese university in 2014.
II. Why it Matters.

For both Chinese and westerners, failure to acknowledge the true nature of the Great Leap Forward carries serious costs. Some survivors of the Great Leap Forward are still alive today. They deserve far greater recognition of the horrible injustice they suffered. They also deserve compensation for their losses, and the infliction of appropriate punishment on the remaining perpetrators.

In addition, our continuing historical blind spot about the crimes of Mao and other communist rulers, leads us to underestimate the horrors of such policies, and makes it more likely that they might be revived in the future. The horrendous history of China, the USSR, and their imitators, should have permanently discredited socialism as completely as fascism was discredited by the Nazis. But it has not – so far – fully done so.

Just recently, the socialist government of Venezuela imposed forced labor on much of its population. Yet most of the media coverage of this injustice fails to note the connection to socialism, or that the policy has parallels in the history of the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, and other similar regimes. One analysis even claims that the real problem is not so much “socialism qua socialism,” but rather Venezuela’s “particular brand of socialism, which fuses bad economic ideas with a distinctive brand of strongman bullying,” and is prone to authoritarianism and “mismanagement.” The author simply ignores the fact that “strongman bullying” and “mismanagement” are typical of socialist states around the world. The Scandinavian nations – sometimes cited as examples of successful socialism- are not actually socialist at all, because they do not feature government ownership of the means of production, and in many ways have freer markets than most other western nations.
Venezuela’s tragic situation would not surprise anyone familiar with the history of the Great Leap Forward. We would do well to finally give history’s largest episode of mass murder the attention it deserves.

In addition, our continuing historical blind spot about the crimes of Mao and other communist rulers, leads us to underestimate the horrors of such policies, and makes it more likely that they might be revived in the future. The horrendous history of China, the USSR, and their imitators, should have permanently discredited socialism as completely as fascism was discredited by the Nazis. But it has not – so far – fully done so.

Just recently, the socialist government of Venezuela imposed forced labor on much of its population. Yet most of the media coverage of this injustice fails to note the connection to socialism, or that the policy has parallels in the history of the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, and other similar regimes. One analysis even claims that the real problem is not so much “socialism qua socialism,” but rather Venezuela’s “particular brand of socialism, which fuses bad economic ideas with a distinctive brand of strongman bullying,” and is prone to authoritarianism and “mismanagement.” The author simply ignores the fact that “strongman bullying” and “mismanagement” are typical of socialist states around the world. The Scandinavian nations – sometimes cited as examples of successful socialism- are not actually socialist at all, because they do not feature government ownership of the means of production, and in many ways have freer markets than most other western nations.
Venezuela’s tragic situation would not surprise anyone familiar with the history of the Great Leap Forward. We would do well to finally give history’s largest episode of mass murder the attention it deserves.

India, Pakistan rivalry threatens to overshadow SAARC meet

A supporter of United Jihad Council holds up a placard during an anti India demostration in Islamabad, Pakistan, August 3, 2016.-Syed Salahuddin (R), leader of the United Jihad Council, leads a protest rally against the planned visit of Indian Interior Minister Rajnath Singh in Islamabad, Pakistan, August 3, 2016.
Supporters of Islamic charity organization Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chant anti-India slogans and beat an effigy during a protest against the visit of Indian Interior Minister Rajnath Singh, during a demonstration in Karachi, Pakistan, August 3, 2016.--Supporters of the banned Islamic charity Jamat-ud-Dawa chant anti-India slogans during a demostration in Peshawar, Pakistan August 3, 2016.

BY ASAD HASHIM AND MEHREEN ZAHRA-MALIK-Thu Aug 4, 2016


India called on Thursday for isolation of countries deemed to be supporting terrorism, while Pakistan decried "brutal force" against civilians resisting occupation as the nuclear-armed neighbours' rivalry spilled over into a regional conference.

Traditionally tense relations between Pakistan and India have been strained further in recent weeks by a flare-up in protests against Indian rule in its part of the disputed border region of Kashmir, in which about 50 people have been killed.

Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh arrived in the Pakistani capital Islamabad on Wednesday for a meeting with counterparts from the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC).
Singh had already ruled out bilateral talks with Pakistan on the sidelines, and in his speech to the forum castigated any support for militants.

"One country's terrorist cannot be a martyr or freedom fighter for anyone," he said. "Those who provide support, encouragement, sanctuary, safe haven or any assistance to terrorism or terrorists must be isolated."

Singh did not mention Pakistan by name but India accuses its neighbour of sheltering militants fighting against Indian rule in its part of divided Kashmir.

Pakistan denies supporting militants but say it offers political support to the "freedom struggle" of the people of the Muslim-majority region.

Pakistani Interior Minister Nisar Ali Khan, in his remarks, "drew the attention of SAARC member states to the use of brutal force ...against unarmed civilians engaged in a struggle against foreign occupation", a barely-veiled reference to Kashmir.

Khan said he hoped the SAARC meeting could be a forum for "a lot of soul-searching on all sides".

"Maybe that will provide us with the opportunity for ... our leadership to sit together informally and work out solutions to the problem that have been afflicting this region ...Discussions which might not be possible in the glare of media publicity, heart-to-heart discussions," Khan told the opening session.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars since their independence, including two over Kashmir, which both countries rule in part but claim in full.

While Pakistan says Kashmir is at their heart of their decades of rivalry, India says its main issue is the militancy that it accuses Pakistan of sponsoring.

Efforts to get talks going have stuttered for decades, at times derailed by militants attack in India that it has blamed on Pakistan.

Their rivalry has hampered efforts to transform the eight-member SAARC into a useful forum for cooperation in South Asia, which accounts for a fifth of the world's population but less than a tenth of its economic output.

(Writing by Mehreen Zahra-Malik; Editing by Robert Birsel and John Stonestreet)