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

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Sri Lanka: July cruelties and August tamashas — Pada Yathra politics then & now

MR_DG

On the positive side, there appears to be quiet but steady progress in the drafting of constitutional changes. The whole purpose of the current ‘National Government’ is to secure the required two-thirds majority in parliament for constitutional changes and to carry that over to a successful national referendum.
by Rajan Philips

( August 7, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Pilgrimages are an essential part of religious and cultural life everywhere. In earlier times when the modes of communication were primitive, pilgrimages were a key medium of widening social awareness and expanding social consciousness. Based on anthropological studies of pilgrimages, Benedict Anderson insightfully accounted for the role of pilgrimage in the imagining of nations and the forming of national consciousness. South Asians and Sri Lankans can relate to this quite easily and experientially. They are also familiar with the modern use of pilgrimages as instruments of political assertions. Examples range from the sublime to the ridiculous – from Mahatma Gandhi’s freedom marches in India to Mahinda Rajapaksa’s padayathra in Sri Lanka. There have been other marches in Sri Lanka: the Tamil Federal Party’s Trincomalee march (Tirumalaiyathiri) in August, 1956 that led to the B-C Pact in July 1957; and JR Jayewardene’s Kandy march in October, 1957, mobilizing opposition to that pact and leading to its eventual abrogation in April, 1958.

The government has been quick to dismiss the padayathra as an admixture of political clowning and lack of serious political purpose, except the self-preservation of the Rajapaksas. But the government’s own politics and its messaging are also lacking in purpose and consistency. The revelation that the Port City project was put on hold apparently because of Indian pressure and not because of environmental concerns is an indication of not only the government’s duplicity, but also its stupidity. And while the Joint Opposition will blow hot on the government for bowing to India, it will coldly ignore the adverse environmental effects of this massive undertaking. Our political leaders across the divide are more eager to fight over India and China than to be alert to protecting the environment from the externalities of ill-thought out development projects. Neither are they alert to the rules of parliament in enacting legislation, or administrative procedures in awarding tenders. The government has been caught napping and has had its knuckles rapped by the Supreme Court over (VAT) taxation and tender awards. The JO, more keen on political street dancing than the finer points of process, forgot to petition the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the Office of the Missing Persons (OMP) Bill within the stipulated seven day period.

On the positive side, there appears to be quiet but steady progress in the drafting of constitutional changes. The whole purpose of the current ‘National Government’ is to secure the required two-thirds majority in parliament for constitutional changes and to carry that over to a successful national referendum. The JO is watching for changes in the constitution that could be used to mobilize opposition to the government and augment its own political relevance. Remarkably, either by choice or chance, the JO did not make the incidents at the Jaffna University an issue during its padayathra demonstrations. And the government can justifiably sigh in relief after bringing together the representatives of both the Jaffna University Tamil and Sinhalese students and the parents of the latter to an amicable discussion facilitated by the President himself.

Sadly, though, it is not a sign of the country’s maturity when university orientations get embroiled in pseudo-cultural conflicts and require the intervention of the Head of State for their resolution. But that is how immature we have become, and President Sirisena needs to be commended for getting himself involved in resolving the Jaffna University dispute and stopping it from becoming a major nuisance. Unlike some of his predecessors, he did not ignore the problem as too unimportant for his office. Also unlike some others, President Sirisena did not call on the police and the army to restore order on a university campus, but took the more patient but prudent route of consultations and understanding.

Past cruelties and current politics

That brings me to the very positive intervention by Mr. ML Wickremasinghe in last week’s Sunday Island (July 31, 2016) to my article: “July and its cruelties” that appeared a week earlier. While agreeing with virtually everything suggested by Mr. Wickremasinghe, I can only add a rather sub-conscious reason for my not going over the war period and listing the string of atrocities committed by the LTTE. It was because I was trying to focus on the need to anticipate, identify and defuse tense mixed-ethnic situations that could erupt into a major a conflict. In my view, the failure to do so in the past contributed to the country being dragged into a prolonged war of varying intensities, and the government and authorities in public institutions should remain vigilant and avoid history repeating itself again and again.

As I wrote in the July 24th Sunday Island, the present UNP-SLFP government and the TNA Opposition are acting positively differently in contrast to their respective predecessors in times past. Equally positive are the Muslim and Indian Tamil representatives in parliament, as well as the JVP. Unlike in the past, there appears to be much better co-ordination and goodwill across the ethnic divides in parliament to keep the communal peace and build towards better relationships. Even the Joint Opposition voices are trying hard not to come across as being anti-Tamil or anti-Muslim while routinely castigating the government’s reconciliation agenda as an abject surrender to the forces of western imperialism. Put another way, the current parliament although technically incompetent in many respects is also ethnically benign.

The inter-ethnic dynamic involving the different parties and individual MPs in the current parliament is different from what was there in 1977 – with a juggernaut UNP government in power and the miniscule TULF in opposition insisting on separatism while searching for viable alternative. The political circumstances within and outside parliament in 1977 and the years following, gave rise to organizations like the Civil Rights Movement (CRM) in the field of human rights, and the Movement for Inter-Racial Justice and Equality (MIRJE) in the area of inter-ethnic relationships. For several years and against tremendous odds, they played a valiant role in defending human rights and promoting inter-ethnic harmony.

In contrast, today’s circumstances in parliament appear to be giving rise to the emergence of quite different civil society voices. These new voices are appropriating the language of human rights and that of law and order in defence of the indefensible, namely, practices, institutions and individuals that have long been associated with blatant human rights violations and inter-ethnic conflicts. This development is unfortunate, but there should be no surprise in its rise as a new phenomenon. Its danger is in its capacity to fuel future padayathras. For now, the purpose of the padayathra is more self-serving than unselfish, intended as a show of strength to warn the government, and more pointedly as a message to those investigating the myriads of allegations against the previous regime to beware of the potential return of the Rajapaksas. In future, it can grow into something more ominous and the government can ignore it only at its peril.

Expose` - MR and brigand invited to S. Korea by religious fundamentalists but shunned by its president and officials there !

LeN expose` with evidence !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -06.Aug.2016, 3.20PM)  Medamulana Mahinda Rajapakse who used a group of   hooligan  robed monks that called themselves as fundamentalists to attack  religious centers of other religions in Sri Lanka , left for  South Korea on the 4th at the invitation of a similar fundamentalist terrorist religious group in that country by the name of ‘Sarang’ 
S.Korea is also a Buddhist country, and  like in Sri Lanka with  a view to win over the poverty stricken  sections , the various nikayas (religious divisions) are resorting to diverse dubious tactics. These are groups  not of  the ancient conventional Christian or Catholic churches but are fundamentalist groups of some so  called  ‘churches’  that are ‘selling’ religion and deities to make a fast buck and achieve their selfish agendas. 
One such fundamentalists’ church is the ‘NamGajoo Sarang.’ These group have queerly recognized deities only after 1970. That nikaya (order) was inaugurated only after that .Their primary goal is spawning ‘ disciples of god’ , and to accomplish this they have got hold of those helpless innocents who migrated to S. Korea. 
In the world with a population of about 7 billion people, about 2.2 billion are Christians and of them about 1.1 billion are Catholics, whereas , there are only just about 40,000 Sarang fundamentalists across the whole wide world , which alone is testimony , what ‘great’ fundamentalists they are.
It is significant to note Mahinda Rajapakse who voluntarily invited international disgrace upon himself, and is now defeated , deposed and discarded by the people , was not welcomed by any State Institution  or Buddhist Institution of that country. It was only the church of the ‘NamGajoo Sarang’ fundamentalists that came forward to save face for poor Mahinda who traveled all the way there to fan fundamentalism after bringing his own country to the brink of irretrievable disaster while he was in power pursuing  policies of racism  , while also  using violence prone blood thirsty hooligan monks to achieve his fell foul designs which  ultimately courted him disaster.

The name of that fundamentalist church that received him in S. Korea was the ’Global Sarang.’ Herein is published the invitation letter sent to Mahinda Rajapakse in proof .
Any organization can invite  any individual, scoundrel or rascal , and it is of no relevance to us. But when a Sri Lankan who makes a huge din to call  himself as a ‘great Buddhist’   and insults adherents of other religions while calling them as puppets , it becomes incumbent on  us to report  , and unmask the double faced , double tongued and ‘double game’ playing Rajapakses and the low breed rascals aligned with them who are inciting racism and religious fanaticism to achieve their  destructive and traitorous agendas to the detriment of an entire nation. 
It is no less a person than Ms.  Park Geun Hye the leader of S.Korea, chief of the cabinet , the chief executive of the country and  chief in command of the three forces, who had not  granted an opportunity to Mahinda Rajapakse to meet her or her officials . They have  frowned upon Mahinda who committed mass murders and outrageously robbed his own country of its wealth. 
When a Sarang church that sponsored Mahinda entreated  the S. Korean president to meet Mahinda, the former  had instead of granting such  an opportunity to  Mahinda to meet her  ,  only given  permission to the S. Korean prime minister who is most powerless in that country to meet  Mahinda . This is like granting permission to a VIP guest arriving in  SL, to meet only  Dimu Jayaratne (the  P.M. then ) ,  prior to the augmentation of parliamentary powers via the 19 th amendment.
The intelligence division of S. Korea which is aware of the crimes including mass murders and monumental financial frauds committed in SL for which Mahinda Rajapakse is responsible ,is keeping  Mahinda and his  group under their special surveillance  . This is because international investigators have analyzed that the Rajapakses go abroad for money laundering purposes or/ and to destroy criminal evidence existing against them .  
The other members of the group of Mahinda Rajapakse who are with the latter in S. Korea from 5 th to 12 th August are ….
1.Gamini Lakshman Peiris alias G. L. Peiris – passport No.  N5557305
2.Dallas Daham Kumara Alahaperuma alias Dallas Alahaperuma – passport No.  D 3643321
3.Sumithra Arachige Don Bandula Chandrasiri Gunawardena alias Bandula Gunawardena M.P. – passport No. D 3644121
4.Meethalawe Mahindananda Aluthgamage alias Mahinda Aluthgamage M.P. – passport No.  D 3643344
5.Lohan Eveendra Ratwatte alias Lohan Ratwatte M.P. – passport No. D3644923
6.Hadhuwa Merenja Piyal Nishantha De Silva alias Piyal Nishantha M.P. –passport No.  D 3644777
The two below mentioned passport holders too have gone as workers of Mahinda Rajapakse.
7.Tharanga Nalin Gamlath –passport No. N 5592922
8. and  ASP Pelpita Gamaralalage Sarathchandra Gunathileke – passport No. OL 194220
 The S.Korean officials are keeping a close special eye over the above passport holders who are accompanying a deposed infamous leader defeated and discarded  by the people in his own country, according to reports reaching Lanka e news.
 ( The invitation sent to Rajapakse by religious fundamentalists is hereunder. By clicking on the image it can be read after magnification. If further magnification is necessary , please click again  on the magnified   image  )


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by     (2016-08-06 09:58:56)

Pujitha in mission to save molesters! 


Pujitha in mission to save molesters!
Aug 06, 2016
A topmost official in the police is involved in a secret mission to prevent the arrest of the owner of a human leadership academy at Hantana in Kandy where a group of female students had been sexually abused.
Identified as Nimal Peiris, he has been given anticipatory bail. He is said to be a close friend of IGP Pujith Jayasundara. It was Peiris who had organized a reception including posters and banners for the police chief in Kandy upon his appointment.
Peiris is on warrant over two court cases, while two other cases are pending, say police sources.
17 girls abused
The main lecturer of the academy, Chandimal Gamage, has been arrested, and remanded until August 11 by Kandy magistrate Buddhika Sri Ragala.
There are complaints that he had sexually abused 17 girls under his care.
Aged between 15 and 17 years, the girls from various parts of the country had been staying at the academy. Parents had paid Rs. 140,000 for each girl as fees for the course. They had been recruited following a newspaper advertisement that they would be prepared again for the GCE O/L examination.
Girls had been sold
On the night of last Poson Poya day and another day, they had been taken by vehicle to another location, parents say. There, they had been sold to certain VIPs and wealthy businessmen of Kandy, parents say.
As this was going on secretly, when parents had come to meet the girls, female wardens of the academy have disrupted their meetings. The chief warden is accused of giving facilities for the liquor parties taking place regularly at the academy.
Gamage has borne full expenses for a leadership training Gamage has held at the Kandy governor’s office two weeks ago. Two girls, who had taken part in that training too, had been taken out of their hostel and sexually abused.
The victimized girls and their parents doubt if justice will be done as all top police officers and wealthy businessmen in Kandy are close friends of Peiris, and he owes money from ruling and opposition politicians of Kandy for their election campaign work.

Weliamuna Appeared For Lasantha’s Murder Suspect Under Rajapaksas’ Watch: TI Director Now Evades Questions


Colombo Telegraph
August 7, 2016
The high profile murder of Sunday Leader Founder Editor Lasantha Wickrematunge, has taken a new twist with the Colombo Telegraph reliably learning that another Army Intelligence Officer who was also allegedly involved in the murder of the well-known journalist was exonerated by Court in 2012.
JC Weliamuna
JC Weliamuna
The Colombo Telegraph is in possession of information that confirms thatKandegedara Piyawansa, an Army Intelligence Officer who had been involved in obtaining five SIM cards in the murder operation of Wickrematunge, was acquitted by the Mount Lavinia Court, which not only ordered for his release from remand, but also exonerated him from all charges and the TID which was investigating the case at that time had not objected to the move.
Piyawansa was accused of purchasing five SIM cards which were used in the murder operation of Wickrematunge. Piyawansa is alleged to have purchased the SIMs under the name of Pitchai Jesudasan whose ID card was stolen by Piyawansa. Jesudasan reportedly died in remand custody under natural causes during the tenure of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s presidency. TID was also investigating the case on grounds that Jesudasan had terrorist links.
According to highly placed sources, Piyawansa had served in the contingent of former Army Commander Sarath Fonseka, and when Piyawansa had been brought before court he had been heard making a loud remark at the Court to the effect that certain officers of the Army and CID had not fulfilled the promises made to him provided he named Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka in the case.
Soon after Piyawansa’s outburst, the Army had pushed for his release. Piyawansa subsequently made a statement before the Mount Lavinia Magistrate who ordered the then IGP to follow up the matter, which however was never followed up. Incidentally, the lawyer who appeared for Piyawansa was reportedly Good Governance activist and Director of both Transparency International and its Sri Lanka chapter J. C. Weliamuna. He is also a advisor to the President Maithripala Sirisena.

Frenchman brutalized by drunken revellers


By Nelani De Costa and Thilini Weerasooriya-2016-08-08

French national Dominique Cardinaud escaped certain death, at the hands of a group of drunken revellers in Matara on 2 August.
The group, angered by his attempts to stop them continuing a prolonged disturbance, was near to killing the 60-year-old Frenchman when a neighbour rushed to his rescue.

Cardinaud was rushed to hospital with several broken ribs and in deep trauma.
The group was partying at a house next to Cardinaud's and he had gone to the fence hours after the disturbance began and blown a horn as loud as he could to attract their attention, because of the very loud noise they were making. However, instead of apologizing, the men had hopped across the fence and assaulted him. They then proceeded to drag him across the fence to a nearby stream and had held him by his neck under water in an apparent attempt to kill him, when a neighbour burst on the scene.

The full account of what transpired was unclear because his wife, also deeply traumatized, spoke to Ceylon Today through an interpreter.

Cardinaud and his wife Edith first came here as tourists in 2004, when the Tsunami disaster struck and stayed back to help with relief operations. They fell in love with the country and came back six years ago and have lived here ever since, at their residence in Matara.
A French Embassy source confirmed that Cardinaud and his wife had been of great assistance to Tsunami victims for a long time.
Matara Police said only one suspect had been arrested. There was no further information at the time of writing.

‘Don’t get killed, you army f…kers who spoilt this’ say Wadduwa police officers and brutally assault two youths


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -07.Aug.2016, 7.10PM) While IGP Poojitha Jayasundara (police koloma – police clown ) is making loud and proud announcements and blabbering about his police service as a service that is committed to serve the public, his own police officers under his very own nose  are committing criminal offences outrageously and with impunity against the very public. This was clearly borne testimony to at the Wadduwa police station on the 1 st of August when two youths who went to the station to see their father in police custody were most brutally assaulted by the police . What ‘s more? These youths have been falsely implicated in a case . It is noteworthy that one victim  is an army soldier . 
Of course these incidents occurring  during the corrupt brutal lawless era of Rajapakses are unsurprising  , but under a government that is for good governance and for which it was elected by the people such criminalities cannot take place specially  with the police force acting as hooligans  and  leading  the criminal attack. In the circumstances these police officers deserve the  maximum and most deterrent punishment. 
The police brutality and hooliganism… 
Kavinda (army soldier) and Theekshana are own brothers who went to see their father on the 1 st of August who was in the custody of Wadduwa police . 
Kavinda has reported the incident to the IGP and Human rights Commission as follows :
I went to the Wadduwa police station at about 5.30 p.m. to see my father who I noticed was in the police cell. As I was walking towards the cell to see him  , a police officer (49556) by the name of Soysa , at once shouted at me ‘ where are you trying to go?’ and began pushing me out again and again holding me by my shirt and neck .Then ,  I went to the veranda and sat down in  a chair.
 While I was trying to take a call to my brother this officer came up to me and said , ‘you (umba) can’t sit here’ and pushed me out to the compound holding me by my neck again. I phoned and told my brother to come immediately to the police station  whereupon he replied he was just close by. 
My brother Theekshana who arrived , after speaking to police officer Soysa went towards the cell where my father was. When I was following my brother towards the cell, Soysa came up to me and asked ’where are you going’ and tried to push me while holding by my neck , when I told him ‘ I came to see my father’ and wanted him to take his hand off my neck. My brother too asked him to take his hands off me. Soysa then said , those inside cannot be seen by you , and chased us out.
Meanwhile we heard our father screaming from within the cell  , ‘don’t attack them , he is from the army’ .When we came near the gate and were about to get on the motor bike, an officer from the upper floor shouted in a loud voice, ‘army paka (fu….k)  – you are the fellows who spoilt this…. Don’t allow them to go.’ Several others who were inside also shouted similarly. Immediately thereafter , about four or five of them came close and surrounded us. Among them three or four were in uniforms. One of the officers was wearing a red tee shirt marked No.3. and a pair of trousers.
Soysa (49556) who was among them tried to hold my shirt and assault me, while saying he will not attack me before the people. He then pulled me by my shirt and took into the police station. Those who were on  the upper floor shouted ‘ bring them here to thrash them…’. Subsequently , they  took us up while screaming ‘ you rascals, you f u…..kers, don’t try to get killed by us..’
From where we were ,  Galle road was visible. There  ,  six of them surrounded us. Two of them were in civil attire. Their Nos. are 49556 (Soysa) , 1803(name unknown), 39144 (Munasinghe) , Perera SI, and two others who we were unable to identify. However if see we can identity them. These officers  began attacking us with the fists , wooden strips , a club resembling a spade, and the  butt of the T 56 rifle  . We were    taken downstairs again , held by our necks and pushed into the cell .
Soysa then told Theekshana to go home and bring my ‘leave’ . However when Theekshana brought the leave permission paper , Soysa  has gone by that time. It was another officer who was there . He said, ‘now that is of no use, the case  has been turned over to the  courts.’
 One officer who was in civil attire while saying ‘this can be used as court production’ took the helmet that was with Theekshana.
I became very ill. I vomited twice in the night. Those who were in the cell told a reserve policeman that I was very sick , yet I was not taken to the hospital.. 
On the 2 nd of August , I was taken out from the cell, and my statement and details were  recorded , and my signature was obtained without being allowed to  read what was recorded.  Thereafter I was  handcuffed and taken to Panadura base hospital . While at hospital I was produced before a judicial medical officer. I showed the bruises and told him I was assaulted by the police. No directive was given to treat me medically. The form given by the police was perfected , and a part of  it was given to the police officer. 
Later, I was taken to   the Panadura magistrate court where I was kept until 3.00 p.m. before being produced before the magistrate when   a lawyer appeared on my behalf. The police stated that I obstructed them in the execution of their duties; and I tried to distribute betel and cigarettes to the police cell inmates, and made a request to remand me for 14 days. I was released on bail on condition that I provided two personal sureties of Rs. 1 million each, and the next date of hearing is fixed for 8 th August.
Myself and my brother Theekshana were brought to Panadura base hospital where we were warded. The following day ,( 3 rd August ) Theekshana was discharged from hospital. Measures were taken to transfer me  to the military hospital , and today (5 th) I was produced before the Judicial medical officer.
My plea is …
Please take action against the police officers of the Wadduwa police including :
Soysa  49556
1803 (name unknown)
Munasinghe ( 39144)
Perera Sub Inspector
who brutally and ruthlessly assaulted my brother Theekshana and I ,  when I went to see my father at the police station ,  followed by my brother, and for falsely charging me on a frame up thereby violating my fundamental rights .  
Kavinda


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by     (2016-08-07 13:49:28)

Coal racket continues!


Coal racket continues!

Aug 06, 2016
A cabinet paper is to be submitted on the coming Wednesday by disregarding a suspension order issued by a three-member Supreme Court bench on June 24 to handover a coal tender to Swiss Singapore company, say sources at the power and energy ministry.

Another competitor, Nobel Resources International filed the petition in the SC, alleging the procurement committee has amended the tender procedure to make it advantageous to Swiss Singapore and handed over the tender to that company.
Considering the fundamental rights violation case, the SC noted fresh bids should be called as per the laws to supply coal for the Norochcholai plant in accordance with the competitive bidding procedure. As per that ruling, awarding the tender to Swiss Singapore company is illegal.
Eight companies made bids in April 2015 to secure this tender. The technical evaluation committee recommended to the procurement committee that the lowest bidder, Nobel Resources should be given the tender. However, the procurement committee members and heads of Swiss Singapore reached underhand agreements, with the company being awarded the tender.
After complaints were made and on the orders of the president, the procurement appeal board investigated and decided the procedure of awarding the tender was wrong.  However, minister Ranjith Siyambalapitiya and his deputy Ajith P. Perera insisted the tender was not illegal, and that the country would not suffer any losses. Ex-minister Patali Champika Ranawaka was accused of being responsible, but he directly rejected the charges. He said he has written to the president then, asking that the tender be cancelled.
Ministers have been accused, but it is clear that top government officials responsible for implementing the tender procedure have neglected their responsibilities and allowed a corrupt deal to take place.
Had this particular company been given the tender, the government would lose an estimated 8,300,222 US dollars. The lowest bidder Nobel Resources made a bid for 49,632,134.70 dollars. Swiss Singapore’s bid was 57,932,356.96 dollars. However, the coal price in the world market has come down considerably now. Therefore, if fresh bids are called, the price can be brought down further. But, disregarding all these, attempts are being made to handover the tender to Swiss Singapore, ministry officials say.
The procurement committee members were the secretary to the power and energy ministry, secretary to the foreign employment ministry, general manager of the CEB and the additional secretary to the power and energy ministry.
Source - Sathhada

Susiya village on brink of destruction by Israel

Children in a playground in Susiya in April. Israeli occupation forces may move within weeks to destroy the West Bank village.Oren ZivActiveStills

Charlotte Silver-6 August 2016

Israel’s high court placed the fate of the Palestinian village Susiya and its 340 residents in the hands of defense minister Avigdor Lieberman on Monday, leaving it to him to decide whether the army will demolish nearly half its structures, mostly ramshackle dwellings.

On Monday, the court punted a petition the village had submitted with Rabbis for Human Rights requesting that it compel Israel’s occupation administration to recognize the legality of structures that Palestinians had built without permits from the army.

The president of the court, Miriam Naor, said she would reject the petition, but left the decision to Lieberman.

The Civil Administration, the name Israel gives to the military bureaucracy that rules the lives of millions of Palestinians, has refused to grant any building permits to the village.

Susiya is in the South Hebron Hills, and is part of “Area C” – about 60 percent of the West Bank that remains under full Israeli military control with no presence of the Palestinian Authority, according to the terms of the Oslo accords signed by the PLO and Israel in the early 1990s.

The South Hebron Hills, an area that Israel has targeted for intense colonization by Jewish settlers, has in recent months seen some of the biggest mass demolitions of Palestinian homes in years.

This is the second time the high court has ruled unfavorably to Susiya in just over a year.

In May 2015, the court struck down the village’s petition seeking to halt any more demolitions. That ruling initiated a series of talks between the village and occupation authorities over the last year.

According to human rights group B’Tselem, occupation authorities have been in discussion with Susiya residents to reach a compromise that would not involve forced displacement, and would possibly include retroactive recognition of the village structures to permanently stave off destruction.

But Israel “abruptly halted” the talks last month, B’Tselem said in a 26 July statement.

It was reported last summer that military officials had suggested to the villagers they were under increasing pressure from settlers to relocate the village.

The Jerusalem Post reported that Israel cut off the talks in June, as soon as Lieberman was appointed defense minister, but only informed the village a few weeks ago.

The ring of Israeli settlements that surrounds Susiya has effectively cut the villagers off from their own land.

Settlers have been documented harassing Palestinian residents, cutting down and stealing their crops and damaging property.

Last year, the looming demolition of Susiya attracted an unusual round of condemnations from Israel’s European and US allies. Though the demolitions were delayed at the time, B’Tselem fears there are imminent signs the army will soon begin bulldozing villagers’ homes.

The court gave Lieberman two weeks to rule on the village’s survival. The Palestinian Authority has made public appeals to the “international community” to stop the plans to raze Susiya.

Record demolitions

Palestinians in Area C are more vulnerable now than ever before.

Israel’s army has demolished more Palestinian structures there in the first half of 2016 than in any single year in the last decade, with the exception of 2013.

A total of 168 buildings were demolished in the first six months of this year, making 740 people homeless. But the ramifications of the incessant threat of destruction go far beyond these numbers.

“The policy adopted by the Israeli authorities vis-à-vis these communities keeps residents from maintaining any semblance of a normal routine, imposes a life of constant uncertainty on local residents and constitutes harassment per se,” B’Tselem wrote last month.

Sixty-two-year-old Rizqiyeh Abd al-Rahman Bani Fadel of Khirbet al-Twayel in the Jordan Valley, told B’Tselem earlier this year that the Israeli army destroyed her family’s room made of concrete blocks and a corrugated metal roof, forcing them to move back into a small tent where she felt “suffocated” by the cramped confines. “You couldn’t even stand up in it for prayers.”

“At night we listen all the time for the sound of military vehicles that could come at any moment – not only to demolish our home, but the homes of everyone who lives in this area. That makes it hard to sleep,” she added.

While residents of Area C endure the brunt of Israel’s occupation, B’Tselem emphasizes that its policies there have deep ramifications for all Palestinians in the West Bank: “The majority of the West Bank’s land reserves and natural resources lie in Area C so that making use of them – for expanding Palestinian communities or building factories, for agriculture, for laying water pipes or paving roads – is subject to Israeli approval, and such authorization is rarely granted.”

Meanwhile, in recent weeks the Israeli government has also approved a series of tenders for settlement construction in the West Bank, including in East Jerusalem.

Iranian nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri addresses journalists on his arrival in Tehran in July 2010. (Raheb Homavandi/Reuters)

 

Iran has executed a nuclear scientist who mysteriously turned up in the United States six years ago and returned to Tehran a few months later, authorities said Sunday, in the first official confirmation of the researcher’s fate since he arrived back in his homeland.

Iranian officials offered no details about the charges against Shahram Amiri, whose case has left unanswered questions about whether he voluntarily defected to the United States or — as he claimed — was abducted by agents while on a religious pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia in 2009.

Amiri surfaced in 2010 in videos posted online from an undisclosed location in the United States. Later that year, he arrived unannounced at the Iranian interests section at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington and demanded to be sent home.

An Iranian judiciary spokesman, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, told reporters in Tehran, the Iranian capital, that Amiri was convicted of spying charges as he “provided the enemy with vital information of the country,” according to state-run media. But Ejei did not shed light on why Amiri’s detention and trial were carried out in secret or on the extent of the alleged information he passed along.

It also was unclear when the execution occurred, but Iran carried out several hangings on Tuesday, and a death notice later appeared in Amiri’s home town of Kermanshah, about 300 miles southwest of Tehran, the Associated Press reported, citing the Iranian reformist newspaper Shargh.
 
Amiri’s disappearance in 2009 came amid targeted killings in Iran of scientists and others associated with the country’s nuclear program — attacks that Iran blamed on the United States and Israel. A deal last year between Iran and world powers to limit Tehran’s nuclear program cleared the way for the easing of some international sanctions, but it has been met by opposition from powerful hard-line groups in Iran, including the judiciary and the elite Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Although the circumstances of Amiri’s months in the United States remain murky, the case unfolded during Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s time as secretary of state — raising the prospect that it could become another element in the U.S. presidential campaign. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has denounced the nuclear deal and other Obama administration decisions regarding Iran.
Amiri claimed he was forcibly held by Saudi and U.S. agents and then transferred to the United States. “I was under the harshest mental and physical torture,” he said after returning to Iran in a propaganda-heavy ceremony broadcast across Iran.

Amiri was embraced by his family and greeted by a senior envoy from Iran’s Foreign Ministry. Amiri smiled and gave the V-for-victory sign.

U.S. officials said at the time, though, that Amiri, an expert in radiation detection, agreed to leave Iran and was offered $5 million to provide information on his country’s nuclear development but left the United States before any payments were made.

Manoto, a private satellite television channel based in London and thought to be linked to Iranian activists, first reported Amiri’s execution Saturday, citing family members.
 
Amiri appeared to be mentioned in emails released last year by Clinton as part of investigations into her use of a private server while she was secretary of state. An email forwarded to Clinton on July 5, 2010 — nine days before Amiri returned to Tehran — apparently refers to Amiri’s case.

“We have a diplomatic, ‘psychological’ issue, not a legal one. Our friend has to be given a way out,” wrote Richard Morningstar, who was then a State Department special envoy for Eurasian energy affairs. “We should recognize his concerns and frame it in terms of a misunderstanding with no malevolent intent and that we will make sure there is no recurrence.”

Last Call to Cash In on a Vicious Civil War

Two-and-a-half years into South Sudan’s fighting, the U.N. might finally make it illegal to sell tanks and attack helicopters to the combatants.
Last Call to Cash In on a Vicious Civil War

BY JUSTIN LYNCH-AUGUST 5, 2016


JUBA, South Sudan — Latjor Thiyang was sitting on his bed in a displacement camp protected by U.N. peacekeepers here in the South Sudanese capital of Juba last month when a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) crashed into his makeshift home and knocked him unconscious. Moments later, he came to with a river of blood flowing from his head, legs, and one of his arms.

“A rocket has pieces,” Thiyang later explained, producing what remained of the RPG’s shell. “Once it falls or it explodes, there are many pieces, which cause cuts and bleeding.”

Roughly the length of an American football, though slightly slimmer, the shell probably came from a Type 69 RPG intended to destroy tanks, according to a weapons expert who reviewed photographs of the exploded rocket for Foreign Policy. It was most likely manufactured by Norinco, the Chinese state-owned arms dealer, and supplied to the South Sudanese government as part of a 2014 deal with the company worth $38 million for 40,000 such weapons, as well as 2 million rounds of ammunition and 2,394 grenade launchers, the expert said.

Since civil war broke out here in December 2013, the South Sudanese government has purchased hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of weapons and military hardware on the international market, including attack helicopters, armored personnel vehicles, and heat-guided missiles, that have been used to kill an unknown number of civilians — estimates for the total death toll over the last two-and-a-half years range from 50,000 to 300,000 — and to carry out what the United Nations has said may be war crimes.

All of these weapons have been acquired legally, since the U.N. Security Council has declined to put in place an arms embargo despite repeated calls by European countries to do so. (Rebel forces also acquired weapons during the course of the war, but in smaller quantities and mainly from Sudan.)

One of the biggest impediments to an arms embargo was the United States, which helped negotiate South Sudan’s independence from Sudan in 2011 and remains an important backer of the young country. Since the beginning of the current civil war — which was supposed to have ended almost a year ago after President Salva Kiir signed a power-sharing agreement with rebel leader and former Vice President Riek Machar in August 2015 — the United States has used its position on the U.N. Security Council to shield the South Sudanese government from an arms embargo. U.S. officials offered various justifications for this position, including that a weapons ban wouldincentivize the government to escalate the war and that it wouldn’t work unless South Sudan’s neighbors agreed to enforce it. U.S. National Security Advisor Susan Rice, whose involvement with South Sudan policy dates back to former President Bill Clinton’s administration, was reportedly one of the staunchest opponents of the proposed embargo.

But after fierce fighting erupted once again last month in Juba, leaving hundreds of people dead and casting doubt on the viability of the August 2015 peace agreement, U.S. officials are finally working behind the scenes to put an embargo in place. Last week, U.S. officials met with their Russian and Chinese counterparts at the U.N. to discuss a draft resolution containing an embargo, as well as a mandate for a new regional peacekeeping force, that could be brought to the full Security Council as early as Aug. 12.

The negotiations come at a perilous moment for South Sudan, with rebels threatening to march on the capital if a regional intervention force is not sent in to secure Juba and enforce a faltering peace agreement. The government, meanwhile, has said it won’t accept a regional force, and a military spokesman has threatened to fight foreign troops that enter the country without permission. More bloodshed could soon be on the horizon, and if the past is any guide, new weapons purchases will surely follow.

Experts say an arms embargo is unlikely to fully halt the flow of small arms or ammunition into South Sudan. Bullets are easily hidden and difficult to trace, making it simple for suppliers to skirt the ban. Likewise, light weapons like AK-type rifles are already common in even the most remote of villages. But where the ban would make a difference, experts say, is in prohibiting purchases of the kind of heavy military equipment — including vehicles and aircraft — that has been used with devastating effect against soldiers and civilians alike over the past two-and-a-half years.

Attack helicopters acquired in 2014 and 2015 gave the government a key military advantage, enabling it to roll back many of the rebels’ gains in the northern part of the country. The government purchased four Mi-24 helicopters during this period, at least three of them from a Ukrainian company as part of a $42.8 million deal. But rebel soldiers were not the only ones targeted. In July 2015, government Mi-24 helicopters fired rockets in what the U.N. called an “attack” on a Red Cross hospital in the town of Kodok, in Upper Nile state, killing two people and injuring 11. Attack helicopters were reportedly used again last month to bomb Machar’s compound in Juba during a week of fighting that left at least 500 people dead, including dozens of civilians.

Other heavy weapons purchased by the government during the war include Cougar- and Typhoon-type armored personnel carriers, supplied by a Canadian company, and what experts believe to be 10 Russian-made amphibious tanks whose seller remains a mystery. All of these vehicles appear to have been used to target civilians. During a scorched-earth offensive in Unity state last summer, for example, the government used amphibious tanks purchased in 2014 to chase “fighters and civilians into the swamps of the Sudd,” a U.N. report reads. Likewise, a 2015 Human Rights Watch report recounted scores of instances where government tanks were used to crush civilians during the same offensive.

An arms embargo would not only prevent the government from purchasing additional attack aircraft, tanks, and amphibious vehicles. It would mean that foreign personnel, like Ukrainian nationals who service the government’s Mi-24 helicopters, would have to leave the country, according to Lucas van de Vondervoort, a former member of the U.N. panel of experts for South Sudan. As a result, some equipment might eventually become inoperable.

An arms embargo would also provide a symbolic deterrent to countries funneling weapons to the warring parties. China pledged to suspend weapons transfers to the government after its Norinco shipment became public in 2014, prompting an outcry from rights groups, but other countries have stepped in to fill the void.Uganda, especially, has become a key supplier of weapons to South Sudan,reportedly purchasing weapons on behalf of its government from Israel, among other countries. The South Sudanese government has also sought to buy four additional attack helicopters worth $35.7 million from a Kampala-based company called Bosasy Logistics. (It’s unclear whether that sale was ever completed.)

On the rebels’ side, Sudan has been the major supplier of arms, at times airdropping weapons and ammunition deep into South Sudanese territory. In 2014, the weapons research organization Conflict Armament Research analyzed hundreds of small and heavy ammunition rounds that had been airdropped to rebels but later captured by the government. It found that a large portion of the ammunition was manufactured in Sudan after the civil war began — meaning that it would have been illegal to transfer had an arms embargo been in place.

The success of the proposed arms embargo will likely turn on the support of other African countries. Russia and China, which have vetoed similar measures in the past, are not expected to block the weapons ban if African countries present a unified front in favor of the embargo at the U.N. Security Council. Egypt could end up being the key vote, as Senegal and Angola — the two other African countries on the Security Council — are in favor of the proposal, according to foreign diplomats who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

South Sudan’s minister of information, Michael Makuei Lueth, opposed the idea of an embargo, saying it threatens the country’s sovereignty and would weaken the government more than the rebels.

“This is an elected government being equated with rebels,” Lueth told FP. “We are a sovereign state.… Why should others talk about an arms embargo simply because we are fighting rebels?”

Thiyang and other civilians in South Sudan are likely to suffer the most from renewed conflict. At the U.N. camp in Juba, a bullet was found behind one of the medical clinics that was hit during the recent round of fighting. It was manufactured in Sudan in 2014, according to the weapons expert who examined it for FP.
If an arms embargo is put in place, bullets like these will probably continue to fly. But larger weapons like the RPG that hit Thiyang’s house could become less common as both sides deplete their stocks. For a country perched on the brink of yet another civil war, that could be a step in the right direction.

Photo credit: CHARLES LOMODONG/AFP/Getty Images

Philippines: President Duterte publicly accuses more than 150 officials of links to drug trade

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. (File photo) Pic: AP.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. (File photo) Pic: AP.

 
PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte publicly announced the names of more than 150 current and former officials, accusing them of having links to the drug trade in a nationally televised speech on Sunday.

Among them were judges, mayors, and members of Congress, as well as police and military officers.
Duterte also revoked their gun licenses and told them to turn themselves in for investigation.

Members of the military and police force who were named in the list were immediately fired, while government-assigned security personnel were to be withdrawn from politicians on the list.

Duterte declared that those he accused would have their day in court, but was quick to add: “My mouth has no due process”, reported Al Jazeera.

Duterte justified his public outing of the officials by saying that it was his duty to inform the public about the state of “narco-politics” in the country.

However, he added that he would take full responsibility if any of those he named turned out to be innocent.


This is Duterte’s latest move in his war against drugs, which has already left more than 400 suspected dealers and pushers dead and more than 4,400 arrested in a month since he took office. Nearly 600,000 people have surrendered to authorities.

Earlier this week, Duterte said he would not rescind the ‘shoot-to-kill’ order he had issued on drug offenders, despite knowledge of abuses by enforcers.

In response to public outcry questioning the ethics of his methods, according to official transcripts released by the presidential palace, he said: “I don’t care about human rights, believe me.”

In a statement posted online, Catholic leader Archbishop Socrates Villegas, who is also president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, condemned the latest killings, saying, “I am in utter disbelief. If this is just a nightmare, wake me up and assure me it is not true. This is too much to swallow.

“From a generation of drug addicts, shall we become a generation of street murderers?”
Additional reporting by Associated Press