Peace for the World

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

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

P’ment considers giving media access to COPE proceedings 

logoThursday, 25 August 2016

Parliamentarians yesterday considered inviting the media to witness the proceedings of the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE), a move that will keep the public better informed about its deliberations. 

COPE Chairman Sunil Handunnetti, highlighting a statement from Minister of Higher Education and Highways and Leader of the House of Parliament Lakshman Kiriella published in the newspapers, accused him of leaking information to the press and disrupting the ongoing investigations.
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MP Handunnetti’s charges paved the way for lawmakers to consider amending the Standing Orders to provide access to the media from September.

“Four newspapers have carried news items about the COPE proceedings. The media quoted Minister Lakshman Kiriella identifying the mismatches of the statements obtained from top officers of the Central Bank. He made this comment referring to the notes of the COPE, of which he is not a member and whose notes he has no right to access. Such media reports discourage the officers who came forward as witnesses and also interfere with the process,” said MP Handunnetti.

Seeking members’ assistance to avoid speaking to the press on COPE proceedings before the report was published, he said: “COPE met yesterday to prepare a roadmap. Our report will be presented in Parliament in October. We all came to an agreement on a timeline regardless of differing opinions. Until the report is published it is inappropriate to make statements to the media. I request the members to avoid making such statements. So let’s get the media to attend all of COPE’s proceedings.”

However, Minister Kiriella, justifying his move for sharing information with the media, said that the statements of Central Bank officers were contradictory. “I requested Parliament to invite the media to take part in the COPE proceedings. There is one Standing Order allowing us to invite the media. I have shown this Standing Order to MP Handunnetti. Rather than waiting for the new Standing Orders to come into effect, we can make use of the existing one. Anyway, if you look at the statements of these officers, there are contradictions. If the media is invited to COPE we could have stopped the spread of wrong information. With your consent we can invite visitors to COPE,” said Minister Kiriella.

Joining the debate to provide the media access to COPE proceedings, Chief Opposition Whip JVP MP Anura Dissanayake said: “The Speaker has the authority to decide the fate of the COPE report but not to make judgements of the content. The issue now is about inside information of the COPE proceedings coming out. Minister Kiriella has no right to make such statements.”

Minister of Finance Ravi Karunanayake, who served on COPE for almost 22 years, requested the committee to not only focus on the recent bond issuance but to investigate losses incurred from the Greek bonds and hedging scam. 

“We need to understand the fact that some stories appeared well before being brought in front of COPE. You are worried about a statement in the newspapers. Now is the time to take a decision whether to publish it all or to avoid doing so. Anyway, why are you only focusing on the recent bond issuance? You should also investigate the greek bonds and hedging scam,” said Minister Karunanayake.

However, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya said that some of the existing Standing Orders overrode Standing Order 130 (1) and the proposed amendments would make room to invite the media to witness proceedings from September.

Cyber stalking menace invades Sri Lanka

By Thilini Weerasooriya-2016-08-25

The inseparable nexus which is the umbilical cord of education linking children and technology, one might say were two destinies meant to merge. Not astonishingly therefore, parents find to their enormous pleasure, that the young generation is astoundingly savvy in nearly every branch of knowledge because of the easy facility of the social media access to that knowledge.
However, this tech-savvy capability is also a storehouse of trouble which is misused for harassment. Cyber bullying is a controversial topic, because of it being a huge global menace.
The bullies have been around ever since tech users became tech-savvy. Technology provides them more opportunities to access others and conduct bullying using advanced methods.
According to 2015 statistics of the Cyber Bullying Research Centre, 14% have actually admitted to have engaged in bullying another and girls are much more likely to be bullied than boys. 43% internet users under 18 have admitted to being bullied and 1 of four has claimed that it has happened more than once. Anyhow 81% of teens also think that one can get off scot-free after cyber bullying than by bullying one in person.
The National Child Protection Authority (NCPA) has identified the misuse of technology to abuse children in Sri Lanka. The NCPA monitors this via internet and mobile devices, yet the authorities have recognized the need for a constant watch to protect victims, while discouraging abusers in the process.
Along with UNICEF, the NCPA also launched a Facebook campaign in February 2016, to protect children online.
Speaking on the initiative, Chairperson of the NCPA, Ms.Natasha Balendra said "Children are especially vulnerable online and it is vital that parents establish open lines of communication and talk to their children about their child's life online, especially about things that make them feel uncomfortable."
In addition to this, Ediriweera Gunasekara, media spokesperson for the NCPA informed Ceylon Today that they are currently conducting a pilot project to combat the threat to children. The project which commenced on 22 July will continue until 22 August and is aimed at combating the growing threat to children posed by the improper use of internet and mobile devices to harass children sexually and otherwise.
The campaign facilitates children to complain to the NCPA using any social media platform, in addition to the 24-hour confidential telephone line.
"We received a lot of complaints via the hotline and social media platforms. We will release our report on the study of cyber bullying of children in Sri Lanka very soon. We are positive about the outcome of this project and its proceedings." he said.
What's so controversial about cyber bullying.
What is cyber bullying?
Cyber bullying is the act of offending, humiliating, harassing, threatening or abusing somebody with the use of information and communication technologies. This includes relaying hate-messages, threatening someone via an electronic source, making hate-comments in social media sites or posting humiliating pictures without the consent of the owner. It may also be referred as cyber harassment or cyber stalking.
Due to its rigidity, cyber bullying is made equivalent to physical violence.
Cyber bullying is scarier, because the internet is quite anonymous. On the other hand, while physical violence which can be traced with clear evidence, bullies in cyber space can leave the victim clueless about the bringer of misery. In addition, technology makes things quick, including the circulation of abusive pictures and rumours.
How does it happen?
Cyber bullying might be difficult to spot, since technology is complex and cyber space is enormous. Even more so, the internet is a haven for bullies. For instance, a teenage girl that is forced to share an inappropriate picture of herself with a stranger is more likely to be looked down upon, than the actual villain of the situation. 'Blame the victim' is the name of that game, invented by bullies.
According to CERT (Computer Emergency Readiness Team), cyber bullies tend to deceive teenage girls on the net by deceiving them into sending nude or semi-nude pictures and threatening to circulate their (non-existent) indecent pictures that they falsely claim to have access to.
What are the effects of cyber
bullying?
As experts define it, childhood and adolescence are extremely important stages as building blocks of life. Disturbances in these phases may cause dire consequences to the individual and thus to society. Cyber bullying is a threat to mental health as much as physical violence is hazardous to physical health. Generally, researchers have examined the relationship between involvement of cyber bullying and adolescents' with development of personality disorders, loneliness, anxiety, depression, somatic symptoms and inclination towards suicide.
How to cyber bully-proof a child?
You must be aware that cyber victimization is caused by persons who have disrupted relationships with their loved ones. For instance, a child's sense of isolation from family and friends which is a definite phase in the transition from childhood to teenage, could pave the way for him/her to be an easy prey of the pursuer who is also mentally sick.
Limitation
Although your child might see you as a stereotypical dictator, it is important to set limitations to the amount of time he/she spends in social media, or simply gaping at the smart phone. Be aware of his/her 'friends' on the internet and any person from cyber space the child is particularly mysteriously interested in.
Document
Keep a record of the online activities (emails, texts and social media posts). If things become more serious, you can get a printed copy of these posts,as well. Be smart. Always keep track.
Prevention
If you sense that your child is victimized, you can always block the number or the profile. It is technology, and a link or a number through some device must be present as a bullying mode. Obstructing access from your end is much safe. Response of any sort is highly likely to provoke a bully. If the food for the bully's thoughts is already provided, quit feeding the. Adjust privacy settings. After all, prevention is better than cure.
Educate
Some children and the majority of teenagers tend to be reluctant to report being bullied, due to the fear of punishment by parents or the bullies. Facing a bully can be a novel experience, but mingling with you is not. A majority of children struggle in the crucial transitional phase from a child to an adult so that sitting down with him/her and talking about their experiences may not be the most successful endeavour. However, a little pep-talk may not be as damaging as what the child might encounter in cyber space. Speak with the child. It might help him/her.
In addition, you can teach your young daughter or son that sharing a video or a picture with their friends can often be harmless, but that this is not applicable every time. Teach him/her to empathize with others, to substitute him/her to the same position of the person he/she is making fun of as well.
Report
If your child is being threatened, report to the authorities. According to CERT, cyber bullying is a crime and can have dire consequences under the law. The Police are a good starting point. You can always report to the NCPA or CERT who are willing to help in such situations. These law enforcement officials will help you and your child if a proper complaint is made.
According to Natasha Balendra, the NCPA will help any child whose photograph is being used against them online and the harassed child can contact NCPA via phone, SMS, WhatsApp, Viber or IMO on 0773220032 or 0713220046.

UN expert slams Chinese human rights records


UN expert slams Chinese human rights records
Aug 24, 2016
A UN expert accused China Monday of staging a “pincer movement” to curb the influence of lawyers, activists and non-governmental organisations and limit their ability to protest against abuses.
While China has made significant progress towards its ambitious goal of eliminating poverty by 2020, it has often ignored the harm done to individuals as it pursues greater economic development, said Philip Alston, the United Nations special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.
At the same time, he said, Beijing has cracked down on civil society, limiting the space for individuals and groups to influence public policy and air grievances.
Since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012, the ruling Communist Party has arrested hundreds of activists and lawyers in a sweeping campaign that has closed avenues for the legal activism which emerged in recent years.
Recently introduced laws have combined with police action against protesters and lawyers in “a pincer movement designed to systematically narrow and control the space for citizens to express discontent over matters such as land rights, workers’ rights and environmental threats”, Alston wrote in a statement.
In later remarks to reporters, he chided Beijing for asserting that governments should be able to choose which human rights to respect and which to ignore, depending on cultural practices.
“That approach is simply incompatible with the international human rights system,” Alston said.
“Given that China insists that it is part of the system… it would be very dangerous if we were to understand human rights with Chinese characteristics as authorising a fundamental departure from the full range of internationally agreed rights and standards.”
Alston’s comments came at the end of a nine-day tour of China, where he was invited to study the government’s poverty alleviation efforts.
He praised China‘s commitment to reducing extreme poverty — defined as an income of less than $2.30 per day — but said it faces serious challenges, including inequality levels that are “deeply problematic”.
Questions about the quality of Chinese data, however, made it difficult to assess the true nature of the challenges the country faces, Alston said.
“There is a need to focus more on the importance of getting accurate data and on greater transparency,” he said.
Chinese authorities also did not respond to his requests to meet academics and other private citizens, he said, instead advising them that they “should be on vacation” during his trip.
“We did not reach a common understanding of the role of a UN Special Rapporteur,” he said, adding that he was followed by a security detail during the visit.
https://www.hongkongfp.com -

Scientists have discovered what they believe to be a new planet, the closest one ever detected outside our solar system. It is a small, rocky planet not unlike our own, orbiting the sun's closest stellar neighbor.


Scientists have discovered a planet that they think is similar to Earth. They're calling it Proxima b and it is just 4.2 light years from Earth. (Reuters)

 

Astronomers have long suspected that the star Proxima Centauri could be home to a planet, but proof had been elusive. Dim red dwarf stars like Proximahave been found to host billions of small, closely orbiting planets throughout the galaxy. Now a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature provides the best evidence yet for a tantalizingly close target on which to seek alien life.

"It's so inspiring, it's our closest star," Lisa Kaltenegger, a Cornell astronomer who wasn't involved in the new study, told The Washington Post. "A planet next door. How much more inspiring can it get?"

This animation shows what it may be like to travel from our planet to the nearest Earth-like planet. (European Southern Observatory)

Artist's impression of the planet orbiting Proxima Centauri. (ESO/G. Coleman)


Artist's impression of the surface of Proxima b. (ESO/M. Kornmesser)

Located about 4.25 light-years from the sun, Proxima is less famous than the Alpha Centauri binary star system it hangs around with. But while Alpha Centauri is made up of two rather sun-like stars, Proxima is actually closer. It used to be that scientists were far more interested in stars like our own sun than in dim little dwarves like Proxima, but the times are changing — these types of stars are far more common in the galaxy, and scientists now believe they might be just as capable of hosting life as more familiar looking suns.


[You wouldn’t be a happy camper if you relocated to Proxima Centauri’s planet]

The proposed planet comes to light not long after a would-be-world orbitingAlpha Centauri B was determined to be nothing but a fluke in the data. Scientists know that most stars in the galaxy harbor planets, but we've had difficulty finding our closest companions in the cosmos.

Proxima b will no doubt be dubbed "Earthlike" by many, but let's not jump the gun. Here's what we know: The planet, based on statistical analysis of the behavior of its star, is quite likely to exist. Beyond that, we know very little.

Proxima b orbits its parent star every 11 days. Because of the method used to detect it, we don't actually know how massive the planet candidate is — but we can say with confidence that it's at least 1.3 times as massive as the Earth. It's just over 4 million miles away from its cool, tiny red dwarf of a star (much closer than we are to our own sun), so it is blasted with enough radiation to maintain a balmy surface temperature of around minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit.

Based on what we know about the planets that form around red dwarf stars, it's probably rocky — like Earth, Venus and Mars — and is likely tidally locked, meaning that one face of the planet constantly stares at the sun while the other half is left in darkness.
Full Story>>>

Russian Hackers Targeted New York Times Newspaper — Reports

Aug. 24 2016 

The Moscow bureau of The New York Times has been targeted by hackers believed to be working with the Russian authorities, the newspaper reported Wednesday.

Multiple American news organizations have faced similar cyber-threats in what U.S. officials believe to be a continuation of earlier attacks against the U.S. Democratic Party, the CNN news network reported.

CNN claimed that the cyber attacks were part of a Russian intelligence gathering operation targeting non governmental organizations. Washington-based think tanks and news agencies are thought to be prime targets due to their government contacts and unpublished works containing sensitive information, the news outlet reported. 

Eileen Murphy, a spokesperson for The Times, said the newspaper had no reason to believe the hackers had been successful. “We are constantly monitoring our systems with the latest available intelligence and tools,” she said Tuesday.

The F.B.I. are reported to be investigating the cyber attack on the Times, but have made no official statement on the case. The  New York Times newspaper has also denied reports that it has hired private security firms to investigate the incident.

Private investigators announced last month that hackers linked to Russian intelligence agencies had broken into Democratic Party computer systems days before the Democratic Party announced Hillary Clinton as Presidential Candidate. President Barack Obama has not made any formal accusations against Russia relating to the cyber-attack.

The Kremlin denies all allegations.     

Bilal Kayed suspends hunger strike as prison struggles continue

Palestinians rally in solidarity with hunger striker Bilal Kayed, in front of the Red Cross offices in the occupied West Bank town of al-Bireh, on 24 August.Shadi HatemAPA images

Charlotte Silver-24 August 2016

After refusing food for 71 days, Bilal Kayed has announced that he is suspending his hunger strike.
His lawyers with Addameer prisoners rights group have scheduled a press conference on the morning of 25 August to reveal details of the agreement with Israeli authorities that led to the suspension of his strike.

Kayed had vowed to continue his hunger strike until he was released from Israeli prison. His strike prompted at least 100 other Palestinian prisoners from several political factions to maintain a rolling, collective hunger strike in support of his release.

News that Kayed had suspended his strike was greeted with spontaneous celebrations in his home village of Asira al-Shamaliya near the West Bank city of Nablus.

Earlier on Wednesday, Israeli forces forcibly broke up a rally in solidarity with Kayed, near occupied East Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate. Videos released by Palestinian media show women activists defending themselves against Israeli forces.


The announcement of the suspension of Kayed’s hunger strike comes just days after the Israeli high court refused to rule on the lawfulness of the shackles that bound Kayed to his hospital bed while he undertook a life-threatening fast.

On 22 August, as the case came to the high court, Israeli authorities announced they had removed all restraints from Kayed, except one shackling an ankle to his bed.

As a result, the court said it could not rule on the issue as it considered Kayed to be no longer “fully restrained.”

Lawyer Tamir Blank of Physicians for Human Rights-Israel described the removal of some of his restraints as “an obvious and cynical tactical move by the state” to dodge a court ruling on the general policy of shackling hunger strikers.

In a statement, Physicians for Human Rights-Israel reported that the high court justices had noted that “the issues of principle raised in Kayed’s requests … deserved examination,” but they would not do so in this setting.

On 21 August, the night before the high court was scheduled to hear Kayed’s petition, his lawyer met with him in the intensive care unit at the Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon.

Farah Bayadsi of Addameer reported that at 68 days on hunger strike, Kayed had difficulty speaking and his vision is sharply deteriorating.

Kayed, who had only consumed salt and water since he launched his hunger strike on 15 June, finally agreed to eat a small amount of table sugar and some vitamin B1, which are recommended for hunger strikers in order toavoid neurological damage that often sets in after a strike has ended.

The Israeli doctor who has been monitoring Kayed, but from whom Kayed has rejected any treatment, said he was at imminent risk of losing consciousness.

The doctor told Kayed and his lawyers that if he did lose consciousness, the hospital would treat him against his wishes.

Forced treatment or feeding is a violation of the World Medical Association’s Malta Declaration, which forbids both applying pressure to end a hunger strike and forced medical treatment.

The United Nations’ Istanbul Protocol stresses the need for physicians to obtain informed consent from competent patients before conducting any medical treatment.

A direct threat

Kayed was placed under administrative detention for six months after he completed a 14.5-year prison sentence for his alleged work with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

During his nearly 15 years in prison, his fellow prisoners elected Kayed to serve on the factional coordinating committees that planned the collective hunger strikes in 2011 and 2012, which at their height involvedthousands of Palestinian prisoners.

For the last nine months of his sentence, Kayed was held in solitary confinementCharlotte Kates, the international coordinator for the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, told The Electronic Intifada.

But upon his scheduled release, Israeli authorities decided he was a “security threat,” and ordered him to remain under administrative detention, the practice of holding people indefinitely without charge or trial.

“This isn’t just another administrative detainee,” Kates said. “This is a direct threat to every other Palestinian prisoner serving their sentence and also an attempt at retaliating against prisoners who are leaders of movements inside prisons.”

“[The hunger strike] is about stopping a precedent that threatens every one of the 7,000 Palestinian prisoners.” The strikers are demanding Kayed’s release.

The United Nations also commented on Kayed’s prolonged detention, condemning the practice of administrative detention.

“This is an egregious case, in which Mr. Kayed was placed on administrative detention on the day of his scheduled release after completing a 14.5-year prison sentence,” Robert Piper, the UN Coordinator for Humanitarian Assistance and Development Aid in the occupied Palestinian territories, said in a press release.

“The number of administrative detainees is at an eight-year high,” Piper continued. “I reiterate the United Nations long-standing position that all administrative detainees – Palestinian or Israeli – should be charged or released without delay.”

But Palestinians in the West Bank have denounced what they see as insufficient efforts by the UN to work on behalf of the hunger striking prisoners. In Ramallah, protesters blocked an entrance to a UN building over the weekend before being shut down by Palestinian Authority police forces.

Kates, speaking to The Electronic Intifada from Brussels was recently denied entry by Israel to the occupied West Bank when she attempted to cross from Jordan.

Kates was travelling to accompany a delegation of European parliamentarians and lawyers in support of Kayed.

Kates said when she arrived at the final passport check, the Israeli security guard knew that she worked for a website for Palestinian political prisoners.

“They asked me, ‘are you here to do anything about Bilal Kayed?’”

Kates said she was also interrogated about her involvement with the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement and Israeli Apartheid Week.

She said she has not attempted to enter the West Bank since 2007 and travelled to Gaza in 2012 via the Rafah crossing with Egypt.

Earlier this month, Israel announced it was forming a task force to root out and deport BDS activists.
Kates says that she has observed “an intensified policy of exclusion” of internationals over the last year, particularly focused on Palestinians holding international passports.

Kates emphasized that Palestinians still experience the most scrutiny at the border, and are more frequently denied access or given restricted access to the land.

More hunger strikers

Several prisoners continue their hunger strikes in protest at their own administrative detention. Palestinian journalist Omar Nazzal saw his administrative detention extended by an additional three months earlier in August.

The International Federation of Journalists denounced the extension.

“We are extremely concerned that the Israeli authorities are extending this policy and that they are allowed to do so ad infinitum,” said Philippe Leruth, the federation’s president.

Nazzal, 54, has been on hunger strike for 20 days. He was arrested on 23 April while attempting to cross into Jordan on his way to a journalism conference in the Bosnian capital Sarajevo.

Hunger striker Mahmoud al-Balboul, meanwhile, was transferred to an Israeli hospital on 21 August after 50 days without food. His brother Muhammad has been on strike for 47 days.

Malik al-Qadi and Ayad Herama have been on strike for 39 days.

None of the strikers has been charged with any crime or stood trial.

Provoking Nuclear War by Propaganda

nuclear_blast

by John Pilger

( August 24, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) The exoneration of a man accused of the worst of crimes, genocide, made no headlines. Neither the BBC nor CNN covered it. The Guardian allowed a brief commentary. Such a rare official admission was buried or suppressed, understandably. It would explain too much about how the rulers of the world rule.

The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague has quietly cleared the late Serbian president, Slobodan Milosevic, of war crimes committed during the 1992-95 Bosnian war, including the massacre at Srebrenica.

Far from conspiring with the convicted Bosnian-Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, Milosevic actually “condemned ethnic cleansing”, opposed Karadzic and tried to stop the war that dismembered Yugoslavia. Buried near the end of a 2,590- page judgement on Karadzic last February, this truth further demolishes the propaganda that justified Nato’s illegal onslaught on Serbia in 1999.

Milosevic died of a heart attack in 2006, alone in his cell in The Hague, during what amounted to a bogus trial by an American-invented “international tribunal”. Denied heart surgery that might have saved his life, his condition worsened and was monitored and kept secret by US officials, as WikiLeaks has since revealed.

Milosevic was the victim of war propaganda that today runs like a torrent across our screens and newspapers and beckons great danger for us all. He was the prototype demon, vilified by the western media as the “butcher of the Balkans” who was responsible for “genocide”, especially in the secessionist Yugoslav province of Kosovo. Prime Minister Tony Blair said so, invoked the Holocaust and demanded action against “this new Hitler”. David Scheffer, the US ambassador-at-large for war crimes [sic], declared that as many as “225,000 ethnic Albanian men aged between 14 and 59” may have been murdered by Milocevic’s forces.

This was the justification for Nato’s bombing, led by Bill Clinton and Blair, that killed hundreds of civilians in hospitals, schools, churches, parks and television studios and destroyed Serbia’s economic infrastructure. It was blatantly ideological; at a notorious “peace conference” in Rambouillet in France, Milosevic was confronted by Madeleine Albright, the US secretary of state, who was to achieve infamy with her remark that the deaths of half a million Iraqi children were “worth it”.

Albright delivered an “offer” to Milosevic that no national leader could accept. Unless he agreed to the foreign military occupation of his country, with the occupying forces “outside the legal process”, and to the imposition of a neo-liberal “free market”, Serbia would be bombed. This was contained in an “Appendix B”, which the media failed to read or suppressed. The aim was to crush Europe’s last independent “socialist” state.

Once Nato began bombing, there was a stampede of Kosovar refugees “fleeing a holocaust”. When it was over, international police teams descended on Kosovo to exhume the victims of the “holocaust”. The FBI failed to find a single mass grave and went home. The Spanish forensic team did the same, its leader angrily denouncing “a semantic pirouette by the war propaganda machines”. The final count of the dead in Kosovo was 2,788. This included combatants on both sides and Serbs and Roma murdered by the pro-Nato Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). There was no genocide. The Nato attack was both a fraud and a war crime.

All but a fraction of America’s vaunted “precision guided” missiles hit not military but civilian targets, including the news studios of Radio Television Serbia in Belgrade. Sixteen people were killed, including cameramen, producers and a make-up artist. Blair described the dead, profanely, as part of Serbia’s “command and control”. In 2008, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Carla Del Ponte, revealed that she had been pressured not to investigate Nato’s crimes.

This was the model for Washington’s subsequent invasions of Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and, by stealth, Syria. All qualify as “paramount crimes” under the Nuremberg standard; all depended on media propaganda. While tabloid journalism played its traditional part, it was serious, credible, often liberal journalism that was the most effective – the evangelical promotion of Blair and his wars by the Guardian, the incessant lies about Saddam Hussein’s non-existent weapons of mass destruction in the Observer and the New York Times, and the unerring drumbeat of government propaganda by the BBC in the silence of its omissions.

At the height of the bombing, the BBC’s Kirsty Wark interviewed General Wesley Clark, the Nato commander. The Serbian city of Nis had just been sprayed with American cluster bombs, killing women, old people and children in an open market and a hospital. Wark asked not a single question about this, or about any other civilian deaths.

Others were more brazen. In February 2003, the day after Blair and Bush had set fire to Iraq, the BBC’s political editor, Andrew Marr, stood in Downing Street and made what amounted to a victory speech. He excitedly told his viewers that Blair had “said they would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end the Iraqis would be celebrating. And on both of those points he has been proved conclusively right.” Today, with a million dead and a society in ruins, Marr’s BBC interviews are recommended by the US embassy in London.

Marr’s colleagues lined up to pronounce Blair “vindicated”. The BBC’s Washington correspondent, Matt Frei, said, “There’s no doubt that the desire to bring good, to bring American values to the rest of the world, and especially to the Middle East … is now increasingly tied up with military power.”
This obeisance to the United States and its collaborators as a benign force “bringing good” runs deep in western establishment journalism. It ensures that the present-day catastrophe in Syria is blamed exclusively on Bashar al-Assad, whom the West and Israel have long conspired to overthrow, not for any humanitarian concerns, but to consolidate Israel’s aggressive power in the region. The jihadist forces unleashed and armed by the US, Britain, France, Turkey and their “coalition” proxies serve this end. It is they who dispense the propaganda and videos that becomes news in the US and Europe, and provide access to journalists and guarantee a one-sided “coverage” of Syria.

The city of Aleppo is in the news. Most readers and viewers will be unaware that the majority of the population of Aleppo lives in the government-controlled western part of the city. That they suffer daily artillery bombardment from western-sponsored al-Qaida is not news. On 21 July, French and American bombers attacked a government village in Aleppo province, killing up to 125 civilians. This was reported on page 22 of the Guardian; there were no photographs.

Having created and underwritten jihadism in Afghanistan in the 1980s as Operation Cyclone — a weapon to destroy the Soviet Union — the US is doing something similar in Syria. Like the Afghan Mujahideen, the Syrian “rebels” are America’s and Britain’s foot soldiers. Many fight for al-Qaida and its variants; some, like the Nusra Front, have rebranded themselves to comply with American sensitivities over 9/11. The CIA runs them, with difficulty, as it runs jihadists all over the world.

The immediate aim is to destroy the government in Damascus, which, according to the most credible poll (YouGov Siraj), the majority of Syrians support, or at least look to for protection, regardless of the barbarism in its shadows. The long-term aim is to deny Russia a key Middle Eastern ally as part of a Nato war of attrition against the Russian Federation that eventually destroys it.

The nuclear risk is obvious, though suppressed by the media across “the free world”. The editorial writers of the Washington Post, having promoted the fiction of WMD in Iraq, demand that Obama attack Syria. Hillary Clinton, who publicly rejoiced at her executioner’s role during the destruction of Libya, has repeatedly indicated that, as president, she will “go further” than Obama.

Gareth Porter, a samidzat journalist reporting from Washington, recently revealed the names of those likely to make up a Clinton cabinet, who plan an attack on Syria. All have belligerent cold war histories; the former CIA director, Leon Panetta, says that “the next president is gonna have to consider adding additional special forces on the ground”.

What is most remarkable about the war propaganda now in floodtide is its patent absurdity and familiarity. I have been looking through archive film from Washington in the 1950s when diplomats, civil servants and journalists were witch-hunted and ruined by Senator Joe McCarthy for challenging the lies and paranoia about the Soviet Union and China. Like a resurgent tumour, the anti-Russia cult has returned.

In Britain, the Guardian’s Luke Harding leads his newspaper’s Russia-haters in a stream of journalistic parodies that assign to Vladimir Putin every earthly iniquity. When the Panama Papers leak was published, the front page said Putin, and there was a picture of Putin; never mind that Putin was not mentioned anywhere in the leaks.

Like Milosevic, Putin is Demon Number One. It was Putin who shot down a Malaysian airliner over Ukraine. Headline: “As far as I’m concerned, Putin killed my son.” No evidence required. It was Putin who was responsible for Washington’s documented (and paid for) overthrow of the elected government in Kiev in 2014. The subsequent terror campaign by fascist militias against the Russian-speaking population of Ukraine was the result of Putin’s “aggression”. Preventing Crimea from becoming a Nato missile base and protecting the mostly Russian population who had voted in a referendum to rejoin Russia – from which Crimea had been annexed – were more examples of Putin’s “aggression”. Smear by media inevitably becomes war by media. If war with Russia breaks out, by design or by accident, journalists will bear much of the responsibility.

In the US, the anti-Russia campaign has been elevated to virtual reality. The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, an economist with a Nobel Prize, has called Donald Trump the “Siberian Candidate” because Trump is Putin’s man, he says. Trump had dared to suggest, in a rare lucid moment, that war with Russia might be a bad idea. In fact, he has gone further and removed American arms shipments to Ukraine from the Republican platform. “Wouldn’t it be great if we got along with Russia,” he said.

This is why America’s warmongering liberal establishment hates him. Trump’s racism and ranting demagoguery have nothing to do with it. Bill and Hillary Clinton’s record of racism and extremism can out-trump Trump’s any day. (This week is the 20th anniversary of the Clinton welfare “reform” that launched a war on African-Americans). As for Obama: while American police gun down his fellow African-Americans the great hope in the White House has done nothing to protect them, nothing to relieve their impoverishment, while running four rapacious wars and an assassination campaign without precedent.

The CIA has demanded Trump is not elected. Pentagon generals have demanded he is not elected. The pro-war New York Times — taking a breather from its relentless low-rent Putin smears — demands that he is not elected. Something is up. These tribunes of “perpetual war” are terrified that the multi-billion-dollar business of war by which the United States maintains its dominance will be undermined if Trump does a deal with Putin, then with China’s Xi Jinping. Their panic at the possibility of the world’s great power talking peace – however unlikely – would be the blackest farce were the issues not so dire.

“Trump would have loved Stalin!” bellowed Vice-President Joe Biden at a rally for Hillary Clinton. With Clinton nodding, he shouted, “We never bow. We never bend. We never kneel. We never yield. We own the finish line. That’s who we are. We are America!”

In Britain, Jeremy Corbyn has also excited hysteria from the war-makers in the Labour Party and from a media devoted to trashing him. Lord West, a former admiral and Labour minister, put it well. Corbyn was taking an “outrageous” anti-war position “because it gets the unthinking masses to vote for him”.
In a debate with leadership challenger Owen Smith, Corbyn was asked by the moderator: “How would you act on a violation by Vladimir Putin of a fellow Nato state?”

Corbyn replied: “You would want to avoid that happening in the first place. You would build up a good dialogue with Russia … We would try to introduce a de-militarisation of the borders between Russia, the Ukraine and the other countries on the border between Russia and Eastern Europe. What we cannot allow is a series of calamitous build-ups of troops on both sides which can only lead to great danger.”

Pressed to say if he would authorise war against Russia “if you had to”, Corbyn replied: “I don’t wish to go to war – what I want to do is achieve a world that we don’t need to go to war.”

The line of questioning owes much to the rise of Britain’s liberal war-makers. The Labour Party and the media have long offered them career opportunities. For a while the moral tsunami of the great crime of Iraq left them floundering, their inversions of the truth a temporary embarrassment. Regardless of Chilcot and the mountain of incriminating facts, Blair remains their inspiration, because he was a “winner”.

Dissenting journalism and scholarship have since been systematically banished or appropriated, and democratic ideas emptied and refilled with “identity politics” that confuse gender with feminism and public angst with liberation and wilfully ignore the state violence and weapons profiteering that destroys countless lives in faraway places, like Yemen and Syria, and beckon nuclear war in Europe and across the world.

The stirring of people of all ages around the spectacular rise of Jeremy Corbyn counters this to some extent. His life has been spent illuminating the horror of war. The problem for Corbyn and his supporters is the Labour Party. In America, the problem for the thousands of followers of Bernie Sanders was the Democratic Party, not to mention their ultimate betrayal by their great white hope. In the US, home of the great civil rights and anti-war movements, it is Black Lives Matter and the likes of Codepink that lay the roots of a modern version.

For only a movement that swells into every street and across borders and does not give up can stop the warmongers. Next year, it will be a century since Wilfred Owen wrote the following. Every journalist should read it and remember it.
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.

France and India to investigate data leak of top-secret submarine plans

DCNS' Scorpene-class submarine. Pic: AP.
DCNS' Scorpene-class submarine. Pic: AP.

24th August 2016

AUTHORITIES in France and India have launched inquiries into a massive data leak involving French submarine manufacturer DCNS, which included plans detailing the secret combat capability of its Scorpene-class submarine.

Up to 22,400 restricted pages featuring the submarines DCNS designed for the Indian navy were leaked, reported the Australian(paywall) on Wednesday.

The daily reported that the stolen data was thought to have been acquired in France in 2011 by a former French navy officer who was a subcontractor for DCNS at the time.


This poses a major security concern to the military forces of India, as the leak exposes sensitive information on the submarine’s sensors and its communication and navigation systems, as well as its torpedo launch system.

India’s defense ministry has started an investigation into the leak, reported Reuters.

“The available information is being examined at Integrated Headquarters, Ministry of Defense (Navy) and an analysis is being carried out by the concerned specialists.

“It appears that the source of leak is from overseas and not in India,” it said in a statement.
According to former naval officer Uday Bhaskar, however, the damage has already been done, as the leak had “compromised” the credibility of the submarines, which are currently being built in shipyard in Mumbai.


Meanwhile, a DCNS spokeswoman said in a statement that the company was aware of the reports and that “French national security authorities” had launched an inquiry into the matter, but declined to give further details.

“This inquiry will determine the precise nature of the documents which have been leaked, the potential damage to our customers, as well as those responsible,” she added.

News of the leak has caused a stir in Australia, as its government had earlier this year awarded DCNS a multi-billion-dollar contract to design and build its newest fleet of submarines.

However, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull sought to ease concerns, explaining that while the leak was “of concern”, Australia’s submarines were of a different model from those in the released plans, adding that the information was “some years old”.

Ukraine marks 25 years of independence a riven nation despite the flags

As the role of Ukrainians in the Soviet Union’s demise is celebrated, tensions still simmer in the east of country after two years of war
Servicemen at a military parade marking the 25th anniversary of Ukraine’s Independence in Kiev. Photograph: Mykola Lazarenko/TASS

 in Slavyansk-Wednesday 24 August 2016

Ukraine has marked 25 years of independence with a huge military parade through Kiev, and although two years of war with Russia-backed rebels in the east has united much of the country, the eastern territories remain divided.

Ukraine’s president, Petro Poroshenko, addressed the nation after a parade on Wednesday involving thousands of soldiers, columns of armoured vehicles and missile systems made its way through the capital.
He praised Ukrainians for helping bring down the Soviet Union a quarter of a century ago and mocked the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, for mourning its passing. Poroshenko also focused attention on the current conflict in his address.

“Looking back at more than two years of war, we can confidently say that our enemy failed to achieve a single goal – it was not able to bring Ukraine to its knees,” he said.

But many would argue his claims are an optimistic reading of a period during which more than 9,500 people have died and 2 million people have been forced to leave their homes.

Ukraine lost control of Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014, and still has no control over a swath of the country’s east, which is run by separatist rebels with strong logistical, financial and military support from Russia. Some of the territory initially seized by rebels in spring 2014 was regained by Ukraine that summer.

Slavyansk was the first town seized by rebels, when a group of armed men led by a former Russian security forces officer, Igor Strelkov, seized key buildings. It wasretaken by Ukrainian forces a few months later, and on Wednesday it too celebrated 25 years of Ukrainian independence.

The main square was adorned with Ukrainian flags, and patriotic music blared from a stage. A bicycle rally set out early in the morning from Slavyansk through several Donbass towns, with many of the riders in yellow and blue Ukrainian jerseys or holding Ukrainian flags.

Tensions still simmer, however, both among the population at large and the ruling elite in the east. Evgeny Fialko, a pro-Ukrainian activist and the editor of a local newspaper in the nearby town of Druzhkovka, said he believed about a third of the population were pro-Ukraine, another third pro-Russian and the rest apathetic.
 Locals in Slavyansk examine the aftermath of a military clash between separatists and Ukrainian forces, May 2014. Photograph: ITAR-TASS / Barcroft Media

In other towns, people gave similar figures and suggested that only by bringing economic improvement and political enfranchisement to the depressed areas of east Ukraine would Kiev be able to bring a true sense of inclusive nationhood. Many people in the region only receive television broadcasts from Donetsk, meaning they get no Ukrainian channels – a further challenge for Kiev.

In the nearby town of Toretsk, renamed over the summer because its old name, Dzerzhynsk, was given in honour of the founder of the Soviet Union’s secret police force, the mayor of 17 years was arrested last week for aiding the separatist forces over a referendum on “independence” two years ago. He was seized by special forces in his town hall office last Thursday and has been jailed for two months while awaiting trial.

In a scrapyard on the outskirts of town, monuments to Dzerzhinsky and Lenin, pulled down over the summer, have been tossed away and their plinths now stand empty. All the streets with Soviet-era names have also been renamed, as part of a law on “decommunisation” which came into effect earlier this year. 

While in Kiev the law was largely greeted with enthusiasm, in the east many locals have opposed it.

Poroshenko said during his speech on Wednesday that all Ukrainians, including those living in the separatist-controlled areas, were “a family which will definitely reunite and meet at the festive table”.

The war in the east and the fight against Russia has united much of central and western Ukraine around a new idea of Ukrainian identity, but including the east of the country will be difficult. While many in towns like Slavyansk are relieved the war is over and happy to be part of Ukraine, there are still wounds from the conflict, as well as rampant unemployment and economic depression in the east.

As Ukrainian folk music wafted from the town square in Slavyansk on Wednesday evening, an elderly woman who gave her name only as Galina muttered abuse about the celebrations.

“What are we celebrating? Twenty-five years of misery is no reason for a party,” she said.