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

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

India: BJP Leader’s Son Kidnapped by Rebels, Demands 1 crore in Ransom

In the video, Moran’s son is surrounded by five armed masked men and the footage seems to have been shot in a forest area.

Members of the banned United Liberation Front of Assam Independent also sent the video to the media through WhatsApp.

( August 22, 2016, Guwahati, Sri Lanka Guardian) Members of the banned United Liberation Front of Assam Independent (ULFA-I) have kidnapped the son of an Assam BJP leader and released a video on Monday demanding Rs 1 crore as ransom.

Kuldeep Moran, who is the son of Tinsukia district panchayat’s vice president Ratnaswer Moran, was abducted on August 1 but Moran received a video message from group demanding ransom on Monday (August 22).

ULFA(I) rebels used WhatsApp to send the video to both Moran and the media. Security sources said that releasing the video of a person in their captivity to the media was aimed at creating panic among people.

In the video, Moran’s son is surrounded by five armed masked men and the footage seems to have been shot in a forest area.

“I have been abducted by Ulfa-I and they are taking me to different places blindfolded. I have become very weak and my health has also deteriorated. I am afraid I might die in cross-firing,” Kuldeep reportedly says in the video.

In the video, he pleads Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal to help secure his release.

Security sources said that ULFA(I) rebels have been asked to make their presence felt by resorting to various terror activities. Security sources said that sending video of an abducted person to local media houses was a pre-planned and conscious decision of the outfit.
( Agencies)

Philippines: Economy ‘in a good spot’ amid war on drugs

(File) New Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte takes the oath during his inauguration ceremony in Malacanang Palace. Pic: AP.
(File) New Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte takes the oath during his inauguration ceremony in Malacanang Palace. Pic: AP.

23rd August 2016

PHILIPPINES president Rodrigo Duterte has been given a thumbs up by the business community due to his prolific economic policies, despite widespread publicity on his war on drugs which has claimed nearly 1,800 lives since he took office less than two months ago.

According to Reuters, business executives are cheering the new administration’s focus on making new infrastructure projects, saying it would likely serve as a catalyst for a long term economic boom.

Other executives, the news agency reported, also view Duterte’s violent war on drugs in a positive light.
Antonio Moncupa Jr., president and CEO of East-West Banking Corp, one of the top 10 lenders in the country, said the Philippines was currently “in a good spot”.

“The pronouncement of government prioritizing infrastructure spending, accelerating it and cutting red tape, solving peace and order, I think all point to very good prospects ahead,” he was quoted as saying.


The Philippines’ economy grew to its highest level in three years at 7 percent in the second quarter of this year, compared to the same period in 2015, the government announced last week – making it one of the fastest growing countries to report their growth for the second quarter.

Six weeks into his presidential tenure, Duterte has recorded a staggering 91 percent approval rating in the latest public survey. Businesses were also said to be lining up to announce expansion plans.
Reuters pointed out that the mainstays of the economy – remittances and the outsourcing sector – are flourishing and boosting domestic consumption.

Alan Richardson, Hong Kong-based investment manager at Samsung Asset Management, said: “Investors have been positively impressed by Duterte.”

“He will likely receive positive reviews for his first 100 days presidency. Clear and consistent policy implementation should strengthen business and investor confidence and in turn sustain superior economic growth relative to the Asia region,” Richardson was quoted as saying on Bloomberg.

Although Duterte has been making headlines over ‘unsavory’ remarks, Soo Hai Lim, investment director at Baring Asset Management in Hong Kong, said: “Investors probably see the new president in a favorable light, especially with regards to the economy.”

Turkey tells border town to evacuate due to skirmish with Isis

Mortar rounds hit town of Karkamış as Turkish army responds with shelling of Islamic State-held border town in Syria

Two tanks
 Two tanks in Karkamiș. Photograph: AP

-Tuesday 23 August 2016

Turkish authorities have ordered residents to evacuate the border town of Karkamış after it was hit by mortar rounds fired from an area of Syria controlled by Islamic State.

The Turkish army responded by firing about 60 artillery shells on positions around Jarablus in Syria, amid preparations by Turkish-backed Syrian rebels to retake the Isis-controlled town.

Turkey announced a major offensive against Isis after a devastating explosion killed 54 people at a wedding in the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep. Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, blamed the attack on the extremist group.

While the Turkish moves are likely to increase pressure on Isis in one of its last major redoubts, they are also likely to amplify an ongoing conflict between Ankara and Washington over the direction of the war, in particular whether the priority should be defeating Isis or preserving Syria’s territorial integrity.


Now in the middle of its fifth year, Syria’s civil war took an unexpected turn earlier this month when Syrian Kurds who had been battling Isis turned their guns on forces loyal to Bashar al-Assad in the northern city of Hasakah. The move drew a quick response from Damascus, which sent jets to bomb Kurdish positions and forced Washington to scramble jets to defend its proxies and US special operations forces deployed alongside them.

The development underscores both the complexity and the stakes involved inSyria’s war, which has drawn in the region’s powers, laid much of the country to waste and forced a reshifting of longstanding alliances.

Turkey is furious at Washington’s use of Syrian Kurds as a ground force in an area over which they have claimed de facto autonomy, and has vowed to curtail Kurdish ambitions emerging from the chaos.
“It is more important to them than fighting Isis,” said a western diplomat. “And that has been clear from the outset.
A funeral for victims of the suicide bombing at a wedding in Gaziantep
“We have seen that whenever the Syrian Democratic Front [the Kurdish/Arab proxy force] get ahead, the Turks get more energised.”

A recent Turkish detente with Russia, following 10 months of conflict over Moscow’s robust support for the Syrian leader, stemmed from both sides’ belief that maintaining Syria’s current borders was paramount. Ankara agreed to compensate Moscow for shooting down a Russian jet that had entered Turkish air space from Syria last year.

At the same time, Russia ordered the closure of a political office that Syria’s Kurdshad established in Moscow. Over the past week, signs of common ground between Turkey and Syria – antagonists throughout much of the war – have also emerged.


Amid unconfirmed reports that the Turkish intelligence chief, Hakan Fidan, had visited Damascus, Syrian officials pointedly referred to the Syrian Kurdish political organisation, the PYD, as “PKK extremists”. Turkey says there is no difference between the Syrian body and the PKK, with whom it has been fighting for four decades inside its own borders.

Moscow last week sent a delegation to broker a truce between Damascus and the PYD’s military wing, the YPG, but returned without a result. The YPG has said it will not honour earlier agreements with Damascus, which saw both sides stay out of each other’s way for much of the war and over the past 10 months had seen Kurdish forces move into Arab areas of northern Syria under Russian air cover.

Defeating Isis has been the dominant priority for the US, which had until now entered into a tacit non-aggression pact with Damascus, and has been willing to stay out of the way of Russia and Iran as they shore up the struggling Syrian leader.

US officials have told allies in the region that Barack Obama wants one of the two Isis bastions – either Raqqa in Syria, or Mosul in Iraq – to have fallen by the time he leaves office. However, the Kurdish move on Hasakah is a wild card Washington had neither prepared for nor knows how to deal with.

“The Turks will not let this stand,” said an Ankara based western official. “The next few weeks are pivotal.”

It's Time to End the U.S.-Saudi Arabia Special Relationship

Obama is clearly irritated that foreign-policy orthodoxy compels him to treat Saudi Arabia as an ally.
Photo Credit: hikrcn/Shutterstock

By Vijay Prashad-August 17, 2016
Home
Sitting with Jeffery Goldberg of The Atlantic in 2016, US President Barack Obama offered his frustrations with Saudi Arabia. Here was a theocratic state that repressed all dissent internally and exported a virulent ideology across the world. All this is paid for by petro-dollars.

Obama’s annoyance was highlighted by Saudi Arabia’s reticence to ‘share’ the Middle East with Iran. Both major powers had tentacles in the region. When Iran began to stretch out its arms after the US knocked out its adversaries – Saddam Hussein in Iraq and the Taliban in Afghanistan – Saudi Arabia became apoplectic. It was furious when Obama pushed a deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program, which – in many ways – is an indication of surrender to Iran. The Western sanctions policy was never really about nuclear weapons, for Iran did not have such an agenda. It was always a political attempt to push Iran back to its borders. Saudi Arabia refused to join in the West’s capitulation to Iranian ambitions.
Goldberg said that Obama was ‘clearly irritated that foreign-policy orthodoxy compels him to treat Saudi Arabia as an ally’.

No break in the special relationship between Saudi Arabia and the United States seems possible. Obama’s irritation appears merely temperamental. Under Obama’s watch, the United States has sold Saudi Arabia billions of dollars worth of arms. In 2011 alone, the US sold Saudi Arabia $60 billion of arms. This money, Obama’s administration said then, would create at least fifty thousand jobs in all forty-four states. The economic benefits to the United States of the billions of petrodollars that funnel through the Western banks and into the military-industrial complex narrow the horizon of American liberalism.

Medea Benjamin’s new book – Kingdom of the Unjust – is an activist’s dossier of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and American complicity. She is like an accountant of suffering – lining up columns and columns of information about human rights abuses, denial of basic democratic freedoms and export of nastiness that borders on terrorism. The United States government is aware of everything in Medea Benjamin’s book – for, after all, she makes good use of US reports on these violations of basic questions of human dignity. Obama is also clear about the problems with the Kingdom. But, as he told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in January 2015, ‘Sometimes we have to balance our need to speak to them about human rights issues with immediate concerns that we have in terms of countering terrorism or dealing with regional stability.’ In other words, the United States will do nothing to shake the Saudi regime. It will, for various reasons, uphold what Benjamin calls the Kingdom of the Unjust.

Indeed, it is cemented in US policy that the Saudi regime must be protected from all its enemies. The Carter Doctrine of 1980 promised to use US military force to defend the Persian Gulf states – not only Saudi Arabia, but also the Gulf Arab emirates that line up the eastern coastline of Arabia. These autocracies are to be under the US military umbrella. In October 1981, the Reagan Corollary extended Carter’s promise: now the US would not only defend the Saudi regime from external threats, but from internal ones as well. The United States government, in other words, will not only use its military to shield this autocracy from attack, but it will also safeguard it from internal pressures towards democracy. As Medea Benjamin points out, the US spent close to $8 trillion protecting the Gulf monarchies between 1976 and 2000. Obama’s dithering is the end-point of US liberalism, which coughs out platitudes but extends its arms firmly in friendship to its autocratic allies.

A long-standing labour organizer inside Saudi Arabia told me last year that the question of the collapse of the Saudi regime is not an academic one; signs of its morbidity are clear. The economic crisis engendered by low oil prices and by rotten internal economic planning has put the country into crisis. 

Attempts by the new leadership to shore up the economy – Saudi Vision 2030 – are almost entirely public relations gambits. The economic crisis has struck not only the Saudi middle class, but also the migrant workers who toil in difficult conditions. Harsh treatment towards these migrants under a semi-slavery labor regime known as the kafala system goes by without much comment. States that send these migrants to work in Saudi Arabia rely on the remittances. They are loath to get involved too deeply in criticism of the Saudi regime. It is this migrant labor system combined with the transfer payments to the middle class and the dangerously violent repression by the Saudi state that prevents the creation of any serious reform movement inside Saudi Arabia. The system is sclerotic.

Medea Benjamin is optimistic about the possibilities of change in the Kingdom. ‘There is reason to hope,’ she writes, ‘that Saudi society can evolve in a more liberal fashion.’ Benjamin points to women entering the workforce and into sections of elected office as well as frustrations among these women against the social suffocations that comes in the way of their lives. She spots the liberal reformers who formed the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (HASEM) in 2009. She sees the on-line activism, which flourishes in its criticism of the regime. There is more too – the workers’ struggles in eastern Saudi Arabia, the Shia and other minority discontent and the general sense amongst liberal and left Saudis of the failure of the Saudi regime to properly manage a transition to even a Constitutional Monarchy such as they have in the United Kingdom. This weariness is key. It is both an indicator that people want more and a sign of futility that change is simply not possible. Benjamin is too much of an optimist to allow the second into her book. She wants the first, and would like CodePink, the group she heads, to provide space for their allies in Saudi Arabia to produce a democratic space (in a recent interview, Benjamin told me that her book ‘is designed to help spark outrage against the cozy but toxic US-Saudi relationship.’).

‘If the regime falls suddenly,’ said the Saudi labor organizer, ‘ there will be chaos. We cannot predict what will happen.’ The pace of change, he said, has to be slow. The space for reform has now narrowed even more with the 2014 Saudi anti-terrorism law. It goes after anyone accused of atheism, anyone who has contacts with anti-Saudi regime groups and anyone who seeks to ‘disrupt national unity.’ The clauses are so vague that everyone is threatened with incarceration. HASEM’s founders are in prison for about fifteen years. Their goals were limited. Even they could not be tolerated.

The crime of ‘disobeying the ruler’ hangs over anyone who wants to imagine a new Saudi Arabia. The liberals – the reformers – and the small left – including the Saudi labor organizer – are not strong enough to sufficiently challenge the regime. ‘Our weakness worries us,’ said the Saudi labor organizer. ‘We hope for change from above, because we are not confident that we can produce change from below.’ So many of his comrades are in exile, he says. They agitate for change and are often frustrated by the pace of movement. But what is the alternative? There is none. They seek to widen the space to imagine an Arabia outside Saudi control. Their small gestures are heroic acts in such an asphyxiated political context.

Medea Benjamin is invested in the future of Saudi Arabia. But she has a different political horizon. She writes with passion about the need for the US left to agitate against the special relationship between Washington and the Saudi regime. If there is a possibility that this relationship could be shaken, then there might be space created within Saudi Arabia to challenge a regime now increasingly isolated. There is a great deal of merit in Benjamin’s assessment, which would bring the US left – for the first time – into direct confrontation with one of the most repellent alliances of the past century.
 
Vijay Prashad is professor of international studies at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. He is the author of 18 books, including Arab Spring, Libyan Winter(AK Press, 2012), The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South(Verso, 2013) and the forthcoming The Death of a Nation and the Future of the Arab Revolution (University of California Press, 2016). His columns appear at AlterNet every Wednesday.

Historic Victory Assured For Hillary Clinton

Colombo Telegraph

By S. Sivathasan –August 19, 2016
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
When Hillary lost the Primary in 2008, a fortune awaited her. The office of Secretary of State which came her way added to her political stature. Resulting therefrom was a four-year experience at top echelons. A further four years of preparation followed for the highest office. When the primaries for 2016 concluded by end July, her victory at the Presidential was for sure.
Hillary Wins Before Voting Starts
She had won even as the contest had commenced was a sharp comment. How? From 1992 to 2012, Democrats had won 18 states consecutively at 6 elections, securing in a row 242 electoral votes. To that may be added in November, 29 votes from Florida which voted Democrat thrice in 6 recent elections. Two of the latest were consecutive and this win takes the total to 271 electoral votes. To become President, 270 would suffice.
Unerring Knack of Florida and Ohio to Pick the Winner
Not to be discounted in 2016, is Ohio voting Democrat in 4 out of 6 elections since 1992. With this addition of 18 votes, the total reaches 289. There is a further spectacle. Florida and Ohio have a remarkable knack in voting for the winning candidate. Since 1976, Florida selected the winning side unerringly on 9 out of 10 occasions. Ohio’s record was 10 out of 10. Accurate discernment explains the consistent success of the past. In these two states the party gap is ever widening in favour of Hillary after nominations, with no sign of abatement. It is said as a truism that the winner of Florida becomes President. Same is said of Ohio. Hillary’s victory is therefore doubly sure.
As constant as the North Star is Winning Trajectory of Democrats
In the US Presidential election 2016, the degree of certainty in Hillary’s victory has stood constant as the North Star. Conversely, predictability of her opponent’s defeat has been equally unwavering. Both phenomena have gone apace from July 28, the day Democratic Convention concluded. A shattering effect on the Republican candidate is now countrywide. The process never took 20 months to reach this stage by mid-August 2016.
Victory Was Writ Large in the Stars
It commenced in January 2015, well ahead of the primary. Hillary had a head start with a popularity rating of 80%. Trump’s stood at 3%. A gap that started as a chasm narrowed to a hair crack by July 2016, the month of the conventions. Hardly anyone was flustered at the latter’s progress. Thereafter a picture of slide unfolded as foreseen and unsurprisingly. Why? To the discerning among the citizenry, Trump was never ‘Presidential Material’. The more percipient believed He will ‘talk his way out of the contest’. It has happened so and is continuing steadily on. Even the unprecedented step of withdrawing the mandate was considered by Republicans. Idea of changing the Republican horse midstream too was seriously entertained.
Republican Bubble Burst Against Democrats’ Bounce
In the days of Republican Convention in August 2016, Trump got the usual bounce which was prematurely trumpeted. In the week that followed, the Democratic Convention put paid to the seeming bubble that was. Outstanding speakers with impressive records captured the voter audience nationwide. Bernie Sanders who emerged from the primary as a great man and greater still at the Convention, helped weld the Democratic camp with his impassioned oratory. The millennial vote wafted instinctively into Hillary’s fold.
Mischelle Obama with an aura of her own as the nation’s First Lady delivered a speech that was gripping. It was as passionate as Bernie’s, drawing millions to the support of Hillary instantly. John Biden’s oratory, both forceful and persuasive had a strong impact on the elector’s mind. It was unmatched even by his own previous speeches. Coming as it did from the heart of the Establishment, it carried much conviction.
Bill Clinton, ever the most magnetic personality at elections, projected the Hillary that the nation had not fully known. Presented were her predilection for bold initiatives, relentless pursuit of change and tenacity for sustained engagement as pillars of her character. Empathy with students, responsive to the needs of the health seeking, employment for the young and equitable tax regime for all were among the salient transformative policies that Hillary was committed to as affirmed by Bill. They have resonated with the peoples’ mood.

Over 300 dead in India as floods force villagers into relief camps

Incessant rains flood villages, settlements in parts of India

A man wades through water with a horse in a flooded residential colony in Allahabad, India August 23, 2016.REUTERS/Jitendra Prakash

Rescue workers lift a boat with the help of a crane at the Sabarmati river after a flood alert in Ahmedabad, India, August 22, 2016. REUTERS/Amit Dave

Tue Aug 23, 2016 1

NEW DELHI/BHUBANESWAR, India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - At least 300 people have died in eastern and central India and more than six million others have been affected by floods that have submerged villages, washed away crops, destroyed roads and disrupted power and phone lines, officials said on Tuesday.

(See pictures here)

Heavy monsoon rains have caused rivers, including the mighty Ganges and its tributaries, to burst their banks forcing people into relief camps in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand.

Government officials in Bihar, which has seen some of the worst flooding this year with almost 120 dead and more than five million affected, said the situation was serious.

"The flood waters have engulfed low-lying areas, homes and fields of crops," said Zafar Rakib, a district magistrate of Katihar, one of 24 districts out of Bihar's 38 districts which have been hit by the deluge.

"We have shifted people to higher ground and they are being provided with cooked rice, clean drinking water, polythene sheets," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, where 43 people have died and over one million are affected, schools were closed in the cities of Varanasi and Allahabad as both the Ganges and Yamuna rivers crossed danger levels and flood waters continued to rise.

The holy city of Varanasi, where thousands of Hindus flock daily, was also forced to halt cremations along the banks of sacred Ganges river -- forcing families to cremate their relatives on the terrace roofs of nearby houses, officials said.

Television pictures showed villagers wading waist deep in floodwaters with their livestock, mud-and-brick homes collapsing and people climbing into wooden boats to get to relief camps.

"We are all worried about what we should do. For the last four days we have living like this. We don't even have any food to eat," 42-year-old villager Doda Yadav told the NDTV news station from Ballia district in Uttar Pradesh.

In the central state of Madhya Pradesh, where at least 70 have died since the onset of the monsoons in June and more than 40,000 homes partially or fully destroyed, almost 20,000 people have been evacuated to relief camps.

Officials said villagers would return home when water levels receded, although the Indian Meteorological Department has forecast more rains for central India over the next two days.

MODI OFFERS FEDERAL SUPPORT

India usually experiences monsoon rains from June to September, which are vital for its agriculture -- making up 18 percent of its gross domestic product and provides employment for almost half of its 1.3 billion population.

But in many states across the country, the rains frequently cause landslides and flooding that devastate crops, destroy homes and expose people to diseases such as diarrhoea.

Officials said the fast-flowing waters had breached embankments and eroded dykes in some areas, leaving some roads inaccessible, compounding efforts to rescue marooned villagers.

National Disaster Response Forces (NDRF) have been deployed to the five states, rescuing more than 33,000 people stranded in remote villages. The NDRF have also distributed relief and provided medical assistance to over 9,000 survivors.

The devastation prompted Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday to offer additional support from the federal government.

"I pray for the safety and well-being of those in areas affected by floods," said Modi in a statement. "The Centre assures total support in the rescue and relief operations."

Aid agencies responding in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh said it was critical to be better prepared to minimise the deaths, displacement and devastation which is caused every year.

"Nowadays, floods are seen as a chronic problem and are viewed quite differently from other emergencies – so they often no longer attract adequate attention from either the media or donors," said Thomas Chandy, CEO of Save the Children in India.

"In such a scenario, therefore, it is critical that we develop better, more effective, long-term solutions to cater to the plight of people and children in preparedness for floods."

(Reporting by Nita Bhalla and Jatindra Dash; Editing by Katie Nguyen. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)

Leaked documents reveal serious '7-day NHS' concerns

Internal Department of Health documents reveal serious concerns about the impact of a 7-day NHS policy.

News

MONDAY 22 AUGUST 2016

Documents leaked to Channel 4 News and the Guardian newspaper reveal serious concerns about the impact of a 7-day NHS policy - even in the heart of the Department of Health.

The documents show how some senior civil servants have doubts about the lack of detailed costings, lack of risk assessment of the proposals and the lack of evidence and data to support this policy.

The government's key pledge to provide a 'truly 7-day NHS' by 2020 featured in the Conservative's election manifesto.

But now there are warnings from within the Department of Health itself, over the risks with this policy. 

And it is clear from these documents that Ministers and Number 10 have been warned.

One document seen by Channel 4 News dated 25th of July is the Risk Register for 7 day services programme. It includes the risk that there won't be enough money to meet the deadline for the "complete roll out", that there isn't enough data to track performance to ensure the policy can be delivered and crucially, that it won't be possible to find enough skilled staff "meaning the full service cannot be delivered".

A second document from a meeting with the 7 Day Services Governance Group says under key risks and issues: "The detailed costs of delivering in hospitals, including accurate estimates of additional workforce requirements are not understood early enough."


Winter warning


This comes following warnings of serious gaps in hospital rotas and amidst claims today that thousands of operations and appointments are to be cancelled in a bid to stop the NHS buckling under this winter,
Another document titled Building the Evidence Base, reveals that no impact assessments have been done in advance on how 7-day services will affect GPs, hospitals and urgent and Emergency Care.

The Department of Health said in a statement: "Over the past six years eight independent studies have set out the evidence for a 'weekend effect' - unacceptable variation in care across the week. This government is the first to tackle this, with a commitment to a safer, seven day NHS for patients and £10 billion to fund the NHS's own plan for the future, alongside thousands of extra doctors and nurses on our wards."

The pledge for a 7-day NHS was at the heart of the bitter dispute with junior doctors.


(Cameron Cottrill for The Washington Post)

 

Melissa Curley Bogner was baffled: Why did her feet feel suddenly hot — in January?

The 41-year-old management analyst for the Navy had grown accustomed to periodic bouts of neuropathy — numbness in her hands and feet — the apparent legacy of a severe allergic reaction to a drug she took in 2000 to treat a gynecological infection.

But this 2015 episode was different. Along with the sensation that her feet felt unusually warm, the skin on the second toe of her right foot looked inflamed. Weeks later, she noticed a small blister.

Bogner, who lives in Southern Maryland, initially shrugged it off. She figured that whatever was wrong would go away on its own.

“I didn’t go to the doctor because it didn’t hurt,” she recalled. But eight months later, Bogner would learn that her foot problems were classic signs of a condition that was neither temporary nor trivial.

“It’s been life-altering,” Bogner said of the diagnosis. Summer, a time of year Bogner once eagerly anticipated, has become the season she finds hardest to endure. To cope with her new reality, she has sought to channel her energy into a self-help group for people diagnosed with the little-known malady.
A fungal infection?

At first, Bogner tried to largely ignore the problem, assuming that her shoes were to blame. Changing footwear didn’t help. Sometimes her toe would itch and feel tingly. At other times, the redness seemed to lessen, but it never disappeared entirely.

In April, when she took her son to an urgent care center for treatment of a skateboarding injury, she asked the doctor what he thought might be wrong with her toe. He told her it looked like a fungal infection and suggested she try an over-the-counter remedy. Bogner took his advice but discovered that the ointment irritated her toe. Instead of clearing up, there were signs that the redness was spreading to her third toe.

At the time, Bogner was preoccupied with more pressing medical problems. During a three-day hospitalization for a hysterectomy, she asked doctors about her toe. They were reassuring; if it was serious, Bogner said they told her, the problem would affect all her toes, not just one or two.

By the end of May, her toes were still inflamed and her feet felt so hot that she routinely removed her shoes while she was sitting down. Bogner consulted her primary-care doctor. He, too, suspected a fungal infection and prescribed a potent cream containing a corticosteroid in the hope that it would quell inflammation.

In fact, Bogner said, the cream, which she used for about a month, exacerbated the problem. What had been a small blister “blew up into a cyst on the top of my toe,” she said. The sensation of heat and the tingling were undiminished.

“I thought, ‘When is this toe going to give me a break?’ ” Bogner recalls.

Melissa Curley Bogner suffered with excruciating pain for many months before a doctor finally diagnosed her with a very rare and poorly understood condition. (Deirdra O'Regan/The Washington Post)

Spreading redness

Next stop was a podiatrist, whom Bogner saw in June. By then, three toes on her right foot sometimes turned crimson and the problem seemed to be affecting her left foot as well. The podiatrist was concerned that although Bogner did not have diabetes, her toe discoloration might signal a vascular problem that was impeding circulation in her legs. She sent Bogner to a cardiologist.

Testing by the cardiologist found nothing to account for the skin discoloration or tingling, such as peripheral artery disease. “I thought, ‘I’m back to square one,’ ” Bogner recalled. By this time, the problem had spread from her toes to the rest of her feet.

Increasingly alarmed, Bogner said she “began obsessively Googling ‘burning red feet.’ ” One possibility was a condition called small fiber neuropathy, a form of peripheral neuropathy that can cause a burning sensation and severe foot pain.

Another option was erythro­melalgia (EM), a rare and poorly understood disorder; the term literally means “red limb pain.” First described in 1878, the condition is characterized by red, hot and painful extremities, usually the feet and less commonly the hands. In some patients, the ears or face are affected.
Some EM cases are caused by a genetic mutation, while others are the result of a blood disorder, including thrombocytosis, which occurs when the body produces too many platelets, disrupting normal clotting. But many people develop EM for no discernible reason. There is no cure for the disorder, which causes abnormalities in the way blood vessels dilate and constrict. Symptoms range from constant and extremely painful to intermittently bothersome; treatment largely consists of drugs to blunt the pain from flares and to help patients sleep, and of functional measures such as avoiding heat and elevating the legs.
Numbers are imprecise, but EM is estimated to affect about 1 in 100,000 Americans, many of them white women who develop the condition in middle age, although some people are affected as children. “I thought, ‘I can’t believe that I’m that 1 in 100,000,’ ” Bogner recalled, fearing that in fact she was.

Desperate for guidance, Bogner called the National Organization for Rare Disorders, a Connecticut-based clearinghouse and advocacy group that provides information about more than 1,200 conditions, including several of the possibilities Bogner had found. A staff member suggested she print out the information about EM, which most closely matched her symptoms, and take it to the neurologist she had seen over the years for treatment of her neuropathy. She was also advised to take pictures of her red feet during a flare to show the neurologist.

Ahmed Kafaji, a neurologist who practices in St. Mary’s County, saw Bogner in early July.

Her hands, he recalled, looked fairly normal but felt hot. When she showed him cellphone pictures of her feet, their appearance was consistent with EM, which he had seen previously once or twice in his career. Kafaji said he also noted that the skin on Bogner’s hands seemed somewhat coarse, which is consistent with EM.

“If doctors haven’t seen a case, it’s often misdiagnosed as eczema or allergies,” he said. As a result, some patients go from doctor to doctor without an accurate diagnosis.

Kafaji said he was concerned that Bogner might have an underlying blood or autoimmune disorder. So the following month, Bogner drove to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where she sought a second opinion and testing to rule out other abnormalities.

Blood tests ruled out cancer, Lyme disease, various auto­immune or bone-marrow problems, and a genetic mutation known to cause EM. After seeing two neurologists, a rheumatologist and a hematologist, Bogner was told that she had primary idiopathic EM — meaning the cause was unknown.
‘A dreadful season’

The definitive diagnosis plunged Bogner into the despair that can accompany the wrenching adjustment required to live with a disabling, possibly permanent, condition.

While EM can improve, or even largely disappear, that doesn’t happen often.

study of 168 patients treated at the Mayo Clinic between 1970 and 1994 found that 10 percent reported that their EM resolved after an average of nearly nine years. Of the others, about one-third reported that it worsened and one-third that the problem improved but did not disappear. The rest reported no change.

Bogner’s condition has not improved. She takes medicines to help her sleep and to try to blunt the worst of the flares, which can last from five minutes to all day.

“The heat can be like submerging your toes into burning water,” she said. When her ears are affected, “it feels like my head is on fire.”

Avoidance is a key strategy; she stays out of the summer heat and sun, which can trigger a flare, and remains in air-conditioned settings as much as possible. Last week, she and her family ventured north for their first vacation in Maine.

“Summer is a dreadful season,” she said. Trips to the pool or beach are now out of the question. Alcohol and spicy food can trigger a flare, so Bogner largely avoids both, but misses having a glass of wine with friends.

She holds out hope that there will be more effective treatment in her lifetime. “Doctors don’t understand the depression that goes along with this,” she said.

Involvement in an online group has been her most important source of support, Bogner said, and has enabled her to feel less isolated and lonely and to help others in similar or more difficult circumstances.

“We talk people off the ledge,” she said. “Our bond is very strong.”

Submit your solved medical mystery to sandra.boodman@washpost.com. No unsolved cases, please. Read previous mysteries atwapo.st/medicalmysteries.

Monday, August 22, 2016

Submission by Hashtag Generation to the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms

Photo courtesy Consultation Task Force

HASHTAG GENERATION on 08/21/2016

Thank you very for hosting us this evening at this consultation on reconciliation mechanisms.  Meaningfully consulting young people is imperative to ensure the legitimacy of any transitional justice process adopted. Therefore, we are extremely pleased that you recognized youth and youth-led organizations as a demographic that should be covered though your sectoral consultations.

Hashtag Generation is a movement of young Sri Lankans from different backgrounds who have come together to volunteer their time to steer projects that promote and advocate for the meaningful civic and political engagement of young women and men.  While this may be understood, allow us make it clear that the following is a submission that was drafted in consultation of the members of Hashtag Generation and it does reflect the views of various other organizations our members are employed at or are a part of.

Youth played a key role in the conflict that unfolded in Sri Lanka. While, age disaggregated data is not available, we are all aware that a substantial number of those who fought in both sides of the battle lines- that is, a large portion of the soldiers from the government forces and well as the LTTE happened to be young people. However, as often happens in the aftermath of conflicts, we saw older people assuming key decision making roles in ‘post conflict’ Sri Lanka and young people being pushed to the sidelines. Often young people were engaged only as a show of tokenism- to wear stereotypical national consumes and pose for photographs that supposedly exhibit national unity or to give the betel leaves or hang garlands around necks of older decision-makers.

This paternalistic and attitude towards young people is nothing new in Sri Lanka. Even policies and institutions that are in place perpetuate this kind of thinking. This is partly because a lot of the policies that are in place as well as institutions such as the National Youth Services Council are ones that were developed following the youth insurrections in the 1970s and ’80s that tried to topple the existing system of government. As such, young people are often seen as angry, radical and too idealistic and as a group that should be pacified by giving carrots. Phrases being used to describe young people such as ‘tharuna asahanaya’ which loosely translates into English as ‘the restlessness of youth’ mirror this kind of thinking.

While we commend you for your decision to consult young people, we cannot stress enough that young women and men should also be represented at all levels of decision-making in transitional justice processes including design, implementation as well as monitoring and evaluation. Young people often bring fresh perspectives which could deepen our understanding of the causes and the potential solutions to a problem. Youth will only feel a sense of ownership to a process in which their needs were meaningfully represented and only such a process is likely to achieve a just and lasting peace.

The United Nations Security Council’s historic resolution on youth, peace and security on the role of young men and women in peacebuilding and acknowledged the urgent need to engage young people in promoting peace and countering extremism. It echoes that it’s important that young people are engaged in not just informal channels but through formal, institutionalized processes as well.

While it’s important to ensure that young people active in civil society and other peace-building efforts are represented in these processes, it is even more important to ensure that those young people who were most marginalized by the conflict such as young refugees and internally displaced persons, former child soldiers and young single mothers who have become the heads of their households represented in these processes. To this end, it is imperative to create safe, supportive and inclusive environments in which young people will feel comfortable sharing their stories and opinions.

We call ourselves the Hashtag Generation because we understood that young people are increasingly using technology and social media and this is not only changing our personal and social landscapes but also transforming our civic and political spaces in more ways than one. For instance, while we exercise our freedom of expression offline, we also exercise it online. While we exercise our freedom of assembly at the Galle Face Green or the Lipton Circus we also exercise it on Whatsapp or Facebook groups. With now over 25.8% of the Sri Lankan population having access to the internet, it is more important than ever to examine the impacts of these developments. Of course, this also means that 74.2 percent of Sri Lankans do not have access to the internet. However, it is important to note that 25.8% is a substantial demographic of the population- a much bigger population that one could cover from any consultation.
Social media is a great tool for two way communication; to consult key populations for example.  During the May 2018 Presidential Elections politicians often spoke about how social media played a key role in the ‘revolution’. However since then, not much has been done to understand how social media could be an important tool to obtain citizen input.  On this note, we would like to emphasize the importance of well resourced and reasonably staffed communications departments for each of the institutions that have been proposed for the transitional justice project.

Last month, Hashtag Generation held two communications trainings in Sinhala and Tamil for two groups of women aspiring to run for public office from parties across the political divide. The Sinhala language training was in Colombo and the Tamil language training was held in Jaffna. All women who attended the two trainings were leaders in their communities and were already holding various positions of leadership. Meeting these two groups within the time span of two weeks showed us the stark polarity that exists between the communities in terms of the narratives they held on the conflict, inequality and transitional justice.

It’s important to recognize that Sri Lankans in the North and the South have largely been fed different narratives through their preceding generations, systems of education, the media, politicians and so on. As such, when they’re now exposed to a different narrative to what they’ve heard all their life, there’s a natural sense of resistance to accept it. This is only exacerbated by various conspiracy theories and hate propagated by racist politicians who thrive on our differences.

While the higher levels of the political establishment appears to hold relatively progressive views on reconciliation and accountability it’s questionable if these views have trickled down to their electorate.  Much of the public remains to be in the dark about these developments and there is also a lot of misinformation that is being spread. This is why a good communications strategy is extremely imperative to get the buy in from the general public. The previous government understood the need for strategic communications extremely well. It was their well crafted campaigns that mobilized the support that was required for the war project among the masses.

The recent clash at the University of Jaffna and the uninformed reactions that followed, have showed the need to ensure that universities and educational institutions are inclusive, multicultural and multi-religious spaces.  Sri Lankan universities, especially those faculties that teach liberal arts disciplines should rise as institutions that conduct research and foster an intellectual space where students are encouraged to not accept certain realities such as majoritarianism, patriarchy and heteronormativity at face value but to question all forms of injustice and inequality. Furthermore, peace studies and conflict resolution should be formally integrated to curricula from school, if not kindergarten levels. Carefully reexamining the ‘version’ of history told through our textbooks is also extremely imperative.

While policies and institutions can help address injustices and structural inequalities; art and sport have proven time and again that they have the power to bring people together. The gift of modern technology could also be used for storytelling which could help people see ‘the other’ not as an abstract concept, but as people, like themselves and their loved ones — while it’s easy to hate the idea of a person, once you know circumstances that led that individual to act in the ways they did, it’s harder to judge or hate any longer.

We thank you for giving us this opportunity. As young people we are looking forward to seeing how we can continue to stay engaged in this important process the outcome of which will hopefully outline the inalienable truth that Sri Lanka belongs to all those who lives in it.