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

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Ports chairman Dhammika Ranathunga threatens to kill one of the JSS leader !

-Says president is of no consequence and insults minister Akila

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -31.Aug.2016, 7.00PM) When the JSS (Jathika Sevaka Sangamaya) during the recent past stageda protest at the Port ,Piliyandala was  one of the committee members who climbed to the top of the gate and staged a fast.
During the period when  decorations were being made to welcome the JSS president cumminister  Akila Viraj Kariyawasam on the 22nd of August , the chairman of the Port had arrived and inquired for ‘Piliyandala’ . Whereupon ,an employee Arosh had moved forward and told, ‘Piliyandala’ is not there in office at that moment , and taken a call on his mobile phone to Piliyandala.
Chairman Dhammika had then suddenly wrested the employee’s phone and warned  ’ anyone who turns hostile towards  me or my younger brother , I shall see to it  that none of you get food here. Tell your superiors that Dhammika told this. You can’t be allowed to do things in the Port as you want’
Arosh had then explained he is one of those who helped Good governance to come to power , and he is an SLFP member. ‘Whether you are close toMaithripala or not is immaterial to me. I am one who doesn’t even fear the media ,hence you are nothing to me. I don’t care for the president.  We are working  according to the way my younger brother and I want,’ Dhammika had thundered , while furiously berating the employee.
Arosh who was frozen with fear had remained silent.
The chairman who behaved worse than the underworld rowdies and imitated ‘Maradana Choppe’ the notorious hooligan had even hurled abuses at Piliyandala who arrived at that moment. ‘You are doing these decorations for the funeral journey of Akila ?’ Dhammika had asked most disdainfully from him while abusing in filth.
Dhammika the rowdy chairman had not stopped his hooliganism and belligerence at that, and  had asked the officers to immediately obtain a statement from  Piliyandala who was associated with  the decoration activities.
Arjuna the minister who used  the Prime Minister and  managed to silence the trade unions , has started  using his thug of a brother Dhammikato intimidate and control  the Port employees violently .
No matter how clever the P.M. is, his falling prey to Arjuna the hypocritical culprit ‘s tricks and treacheries however had led to curbing and controlling  the struggle that was carried on  in Port on behalf of the truly suffering people.  The P.M. has been ensnared by Arjuna so much so that the P.M has wittingly or unwittingly contributed to Arjuna’s deceitful move and motive to destroy the  aims and aspirations of the true UNP supporters who suffered for over 20 years , thereby pushing them from the frying pan to the fire ,and alienating the genuine supporters  craftily from the UNP party .
At any rate , It is still the hope and firm conviction of the Port employees that even at this belated stage , the president and P.M. will move in to rescue them from turncoat minister Arjuna and thug Dhammika the Ports chairman . The Port  employees  say , if no remedial action is taken , they will have no option but to wage a struggle to  win their demands.


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by     (2016-08-31 14:47:24)

Gota, JO reject Mangala’s belated allegation

Secretly moving 200 hardcore terrorists out of Sri Lanka

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Gotabhaya Rajapaksa

By Shamindra Ferdinando-

Former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa yesterday said that the government was working overtime to discredit the former Rajapaksa administration which had defeated terrorism against numerous odds.

Gajaba Regiment veteran Rajapaksa said that those who had been demanding Geneva-supervised probe into accountability issues were now accusing him of helping terrorists escape.

The former Defence Secretary was responding to Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera’s claim that over 200 LTTE cadres had secretly left the country through his (Rajapaksa’s) intervention during the last week of the Vanni offensive. The UNPer made the allegation at a Foreign Ministry media briefing on Monday evening.

The military brought the war to a successful conclusion on May 19, 2009.

Rajapaksa alleged that the government had made contradictory statements on a number of issues, including matters pertaining to ex-LTTE cadres.

Former Defence Secretary Rajapaksa told The Island that the unprecedented accusation had been made in the wake of the passage of the Office on Missing Persons (Establishment, Administration and Discharge of Functions) Bill recently in Parliament. He said that those desirous of hauling the previous government up before Geneva-supervised judicial mechanism would have been certainly surprised by Minister Samaraweera’s accusation.

The Colombo-based diplomatic community, pro-LTTE Diaspora as well as civil society organisations couldn’t keep silent on the latest accusation, the former Defence Secretary said.

According to him, those who surrendered to the armed forces on the Vanni east front as well as other theatres of operations were rehabilitated and released. He urged the government to reveal everything pertaining to his alleged involvement of over 200 LTTE cadres fleeing the country.

Commenting on outgoing UNSG Ban Ki-moon’s forthcoming visit to Jaffna, the former Defence Secretary said that the military had liberated Jaffna in Dec 1995. The UN wouldn’t have even contemplated its chief undertaking a visit to Jaffna until the previous government liberated Vanni in 2009, the former Defence Secretary said. The UNSG should be told that national reconciliation wouldn’t have been a reality as long as the LTTE retained military capability, the war veteran said. The UNSG couldn’t be unaware of the bid made by the UN in May 1998 to halt child recruitment, the former Defence Secretary said, alleging that had the UN taken tangible measures the LTTE wouldn’t have survived for so long.

Meanwhile, top Joint Opposition spokesperson and Matara District MP Dallas Alahapperuma yesterday called the foreign minister’s accusation a blatant lie.

Addressing the media at Dr N. M. Perera Centre, Alahapperuma alleged that an attempt was made to tarnish the good name of a person who had rendered yeoman service to the nation.

The SLFPer accused Minister Samaraweera of willfully harming the former Defence Secretary’s reputation.

MP Alahapperuma alleged that the government had been engaged in a political project to cover up its failures. With the country in chaos, the Yahapalana rulers had no option but to propagate lies.

The former Defence Secretary said that thousands of terrorists had fled Sri Lanka over the years. Foreign governments had issued them with new identity papers and in some instances passports, the former Defence Secretary alleged. Some of those who had been categorized as missing could have perished while trying to reach Australia in boats, gone underground in various parts of the world or disappeared during the deployment of the Indian Army (July 1987-March 1990). Rajapaksa pointed out that the identity of Rajiv Gandhi’s assassin remained a secret. She, too, could be listed somewhere as a missing person along with 20 other LTTE operatives who had committed suicide during the hunt for the gang responsible for Gandhi assassination, the former Defence Secretary said.

Investigations into disappearances wouldn’t be completed unless an effort was made to establish the fate of those who had made an abortive bid to overthrow the Maldivian administration in early Nov, 1988, the former Defence Secretary said. India intervened to thwart the sea-borne PLOTE raid on Male, he said, recollecting the circumstances under which the Indian Navy intercepted and sank a merchant vessel commandeered by PLOTE cadres fleeing Male.

Sri Lanka: Corruption Charges Against Gota, Seven Others

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( September 1, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption yesterday filed a corruption case against eight persons including former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, and three former Navy Commanders for allegedly causing a sum of Rs.11.4 billion unlawful loss to the government when giving permission to the Avant-Garde Maritime Services (Pvt) Ltd to operate a floating armory.

Former Navy Commanders Somatilleke Dissanayake, Jayanath Kolambage and Jayantha Perera were among accused listed by the Bribery Commission. The eight accused listed in the corruption case were; former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, former Additional Secretary to the Defence Ministry Sujatha Damayanthi, Avant Garde Chairman Major Nissanka Senadhipathi, Somatilleke Dissanayake, Jayanath Kolambage and Jayantha Perera, Palitha Piyasiri Fernando and Karunaratne Banda Adhikari.
When the case came up before Colombo Additional Magistrate Nishantha Peiris, he decided to refer the case for the attention of Chief Magistrate Gihan Pilapitiya today.

The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption had filed this case against eight accused under Section 70 of the Bribery Act.

The Bribery Commi

Front Man Betrays Basil, Wants Tax Revision From Inland Revenue


Colombo Telegraph
September 1, 2016
A leaked letter has revealed how a very close associate of the once powerful Basil Rajapaksa has betrayed the former Minister of Economic Development, dragging him in to yet another money laundering scandal.
Basil
Basil
In a letter addressed to the Commissioner of the Inland Revenue, Muditha Jayakody has claimed that although he had accepted that a large sum of money amounting to millions which was in his bank accounts, the truth is that this was not his money and it belonged to someone else. He has therefore requested the Commissioner for a tax revision.
“That money is not earned by me, nor did it belong to me or my company. It belonged to another person, and based on his instructions, I purchased a land to build a house at 111/3, Mahawatta, Gangabada Road, Mapitigama, Malwana,” he said in the letter.
As per the letter sent by Jayakody, who is the owner of Muditha Jayakody Associates, an architect and engineering firm, the cost incurred to build the house stood at Rs. 2,500,000.00, Rs. 26,972,795.00 and Rs. 74,655,199.00.
Jayakody went onto say in his letter that the money was given to him by another person who requested him to handle all the payments in relation to the construction of the house in Malwana. Incidentally, Rajapaksa is the owner of a palatial river side villa in Malwana which was built at a cost of at least Rs. 100 million and the architects of the project was Muditha Jayakody Associates.
While reiterating that the money did not belong to him and it belonged to another person, who he did not explicitly name in the letter, Jayakody requested the Inland Revenue Commissioner to provide him with a tax revision as he has been taxed for money that did not belong to him.
“I have also been slapped with a nation building tax on the money that does not belong to me, so please review this matter,” he said in his letter.
Muditha Jayakody

Degraded and disgraced foreign envoy going to be appointed as the ambassador to Germany

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 31.Aug.2016, 7.30PM) While it is a well and widely known fact that there were women in Sri Lanka holding foreign  Diplomatic posts  who degraded and disgraced the very lofty positions they held, strangely though , it is also an indisputable fact that they are well off under the good governance with its blessings . For the present let us reveal one such notorious case which relates to  Saroja Sirisena who is currently working as Sri Lankan Consul General in Mumbai city . She is the ex wife of minister Dilan Perera .
Simultaneously with her divorce , Sajin Vaas the notorious fraudster  sought to get her down to Sri Lanka which implied  that she is depending on  ex minister  Basil Rajapakse for her protection. Because she worked in Basil’s ministry , Basil intervened to get her the Consul General post in Mumbai though  she had no eligibility or suitability to hold that post , and it is a post usually reserved for  an officer of the department of commerce.
Now Saroja Sirisena has taken refuge again under Dilan. The ex wife has again  turned into ‘sex wife’ of Dilan. Because  she aided and abetted in  the murky goings on in Basil’s ministry , in  the end , having understood the only way to escape from the FCID investigation is to secure a foreign diplomatic assignment , she has with   Dilan’s assistance via the president had got  herself nominated to the same aforementioned Diplomatic post she held .
Believe it or not ! now she is going to be appointed as the ambassador to Germany though she is far down rung in the seniority list of the foreign ministry occupying the 47 th rung.. While senior officers who have worked in Colombo are there who are more suitable and capable , Dilan has gone out of the way to propel her.

The crucial issue here is her suitability for this post, when considering her low  seniority position and going by her  putrid involvements  . 
While she was the Consul General in India she appeared   as cover page woman of a publication concerning food and beverage (liquor) , carrying a glass tumbler in her hand.  
It is therefore for the president to decide how suitable she is for a foreign diplomatic assignment . Such an individual who had committed such a grave mistake is liable for dismissal  from the post .Her photograph on that magazine cover is herein. 
Besides , going by her face book comments we cannot see in her any suitability or eligibility to hold the post of  foreign  ambassador unless it is a move made wittingly or unwittingly to disgrace the country globally.  
Interestingly and intriguingly In the photograph with her is not her husband .
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by     (2016-08-31 14:55:40)
Fire destroys 500 acres in Knuckles  mountain range

Aug 31, 2016
The fire which had broken out had continued for the third day on the eastern section of Knuckles mountain range had destroyed about 500 acres of forest area..The fire had started on the  night of the 28th instant but by the afternoon of the  30th instant the fire had been brought under control.,But at certain places the fire seems to show affect randomly..This had been added by people in Ududumbara and Hunnasgiriya areas.

The residents in the vicinity of the Knuckles mountain range had added that growing new grass for cattle,clearing the jungle by fire causing harm to butterflies and insects were factors for the fire.The entering in to the forest is prohibited as the mountain range in under the purview of the wild life department hence the people in the vicinity cannot enter to put off the fire was alleged by the villages. They had accused the authorities as they would be dealt with under the law in case they interfered voluntarily
It is also reported that owing to the  pine trees in the forest the tendency for the fire to spread is much more..Hence the dwelling houses in the vicinity are also in an unstable state was added by the villages.They had added that as the related  authorities had failed to take action to curtail the fire had been for three days.The fire had been brought under control only on the 30th afternoon with the assistance of the Police officers in the Ududumbara police station.They had been assisted by villagers, three wheeler drivers to put off the fire that had continued for three days.
It is reported that despite giving numerous telephone calls the authorities of the wild life department had kept quiet had resulted in the loss of wild animals, part of the mountain range. and the inconvenience caused to the villages in the vicinity..These facts were revealed by a highest official of the Ududumbara  police station.
Although the fire in the Eastern area of the Knuckles mountain range has been fully extinguished the mountain areas of Hunnasgiriya and Rajagalakanda the fire still prevails from last afternoon

The Genocide of the Palestinian People: An International Law and Human Rights Perspective

Genocide is a term that has both sociological and legal meaning. The term genocide was coined in 1944 by a Jewish Polish legal scholar, Raphael Lemkin. For Lemkin, “the term does not necessarily signify mass killings.” He explained: 

Cluster bombs killing hundreds in Syria and Yemen wars

Nearly 400 people, a third of them children, were killed by indescriminate weapons in two wars, according to Cluster Munition Coalition
Rebels show cluster bomlets collected Maaret al-Numan, Syria, in 2012 (AFP)

Thursday 1 September 2016 9:03 UTC

More than 400 people were killed by cluster bombs in 2015, most of them dying in Syria, Yemen and Ukraine, which have not signed up to a treaty banning the weapon, an international anti-cluster bomb coalition said on Thursday.

Cluster bombs, dropped by air or fired by artillery, scatter hundreds of bomblets across a wide area which sometimes fail to explode and are difficult to locate and remove, killing and maiming civilians long after conflicts end.

They pose a particular risk to children who can be attracted by their toy-like appearance and bright colours, a fact highlighted by Middle East Eye correspondent Peter Obone in his report from Yemen.

In 2015, cluster bombs killed 417 people, more than a third of them children, the Cluster Munition Coalition said, adding that the actual number of casualties was likely to be much higher.

"The suffering is still continuing and civilians continue to be the predominant victims of cluster bombs," said Jeff Abramson, programme manager at Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, which is part of the coalition.

"Unfortunately now we're seeing a new spate of people being injured at the time of attack, which is something that needs to be condemned very strongly," he told Thomson Reuters Foundation by telephone from Geneva.

Abramson did not give figures for 2014, saying data was constantly being revised due to difficulties in gathering it, especially in conflict zones like Syria.

The majority of cluster bomb casualties in 2015 were in Syria (248), followed by Yemen (104) and Ukraine (19), the coalition said in a report.

None of these countries are signatories of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which prohibits the use, stockpiling, production and transfer of the weapons, it said.

Handicap International, which helped compiled the study, said there was "compelling evidence" that Russian forces were using cluster munitions in Syria, a claim denied by Moscow.

"There is compelling evidence that Russia is using cluster munitions in Syria and/or directly participating with Syrian government forces in attacks using cluster munitions on opposition-held areas of governorates such as Aleppo, Homs and Idlib, and on armed opposition groups," the report said.

Handicap International urged signatories to the 2008 Oslo Convention on Cluster Munitions to demand that the warring sides stop using them.

The convention, which came into force in 2010, also requires the destruction of stockpiles of cluster bombs and clearance of contaminated areas.

Since August 2015, five more countries - Colombia, Iceland, Palau, Rwanda and Somalia - have ratified the convention, Cuba and Mauritius acceded, bringing the total number of states that have signed or accepted the treaty to 119, the coalition said.

Casualties were also recorded in Laos, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Western Sahara, Chad, Cambodia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

Convention signatories are to meet in Geneva next week.

Why Baltimore's Covert Spy Plane Program Is a Major Battleground for Privacy and Free Speech

Just because our privacy can be violated does not mean we should expect or tolerate such violations.
Photo Credit: risteski goce / Shutterstock

By Carl Messineo / AlterNet-August 31, 2016

HomeA hidden camera in the sky watches people's movements on the ground; ex-military private contractors control the cameras and run the operation to avoid government oversight. In the background, billionaire funders salivate at the possibility of plush government contracts. In the city of Baltimore, this dystopian scenario is already real life.

A private security firm, Persistent Surveillance Systems, with funding from a billionaire former hedge fund manager, has been filming and recording the people of Baltimore from the skies, using a surveillance plane with an ultra-wide-angle camera that circles the city recording the imagery to massive hard drives. The range encompasses 30 square miles simultaneously, almost a third of the city.
“Imagine Google Earth with TiVo capability,” gushes Ross McNutt, the founder of PSS.

The technology was first developed by the military and deployed in the siege of Fallujah. In an all-too-familiar transition, this battlefield technology needs a new marketplace in order to maintain profitability. Wars come and go, but the domestic marketplace is persistent.

Such is the growth cycle of the surveillance industrial complex, the morphed offspring of the military industrial complex that has distorted values and driven policies for years on end. Capital interests profit from the people’s collective and individual loss of personal privacy.

McNutt founded Persistent Surveillance Systems to bring that battlefield technology home to monitor the people of the United States. He viewed Baltimore as an excellent proving ground in the aftermath of the Freddie Gray case. However, McNutt lacked necessary finances. In stepped Texas-based hedge fund manager and billionaires John and Laura Arnold. The Arnolds' foundation donated $120,000 to a local foundation, the Baltimore Community Foundation, which funded the spy plane.

By securing private funding, the Baltimore Police Department was able to use the dragnet surveillance technology off-the-books. There was no government oversight or authorization from elected officials, no public disclosures to the community or hearings before the City Council. It was all surreptitious and undisclosed until described last week in a bombshell article in Bloomberg Businessweek.

The Baltimore City Council has, in the aftermath of the Bloomberg Businessweek disclosure, stated that it will hold hearings “as soon as possible” without yet setting a date. The Council should determine which top police officials, including Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, were aware of this covert surveillance program. Each should be terminated by the mayor.

Democratic society cannot tolerate secret police any more than it can tolerate secret police operations. It constituted a gross breach of official duties for police to have failed to bring this mass surveillance program to the attention of the public and elected officials. Termination is the bare minimum degree of individual professional accountability demanded by this breach.

The Supreme Court’s Behind-the-Times Analysis of Mass Surveillance

Not merely a violation of trust, the mass surveillance technology should be treated as a violation of law. The Supreme Court, however, has not charted a clear doctrine in the analysis of mass surveillance technologies’ impact on fundamental civil liberties. Some justices recognize the threat posed, but whether their views will gain a majority remains to be seen.

In United States v. Jones, presented with a challenge to the use of GPS technology to monitor a suspect’s movements on public roadways around-the-clock for 28 consecutive days, the Supreme Court’s nine justices bandied about no less than three distinct legal theories for finding such use of technology without a warrant to be unconstitutional.

The Jones majority opinion, written by Justice Antonin Scalia, avoided the core issues of how the Fourth Amendment addresses persistent surveillance technologies. The majority, resurrecting an old doctrine, found Fourth Amendment interests were violated because police trespassed on the suspect’s property interests by affixing the technology to the suspect’s car without a warrant.

Justice Alito, joined by three other justices, disparaged Scalia’s approach as applying "18th century tort law” to a controversy centered on a “21st-century surveillance technique.”

A second theory identified by concurring justices would have held the search unconstitutional under modern constitutional standards first articulated in the 1967 landmark case of Katz v. United States, that a Fourth Amendment search occurs when the government violates a subjective expectation of privacy that society recognizes as reasonable.

The reasonable expectation of privacy standard was historic because it detached the analysis from property or trespass law. In Katz, the Supreme Court held that “the Fourth Amendment protects people, not places,” finding a constitutional violation where police attached an eavesdropping device to monitor conversations that took place in a public telephone booth.

How the Government Creates an Intimate Picture of Your Private Life

“Mosaic theory,” the third legal theory referenced by concurring justices, is the most precise of all three and may ultimately have great significance for application to mass surveillance technologies, especially those that capture and catalogue public activities and movements.

The courts have held that there is not a privacy interest in publicly revealed activity, such as roadway movement. Mosaic theory recognizes that the aggregation of data or the persistent surveillance of public activities can create an intimate picture of a person’s life so revealing that government collection without a warrant violates Fourth Amendment privacy interests.

Even though a single snapshot of a person’s public movement does not trigger a privacy interest, the aggregation of many such snapshots or data points creates a mosaic that is so revealing that it unconstitutionally invades privacy.

While going on a single public trip, for example, a person understands her movements are observable to others, i.e., is not private. The whole of a person’s movements, over time, is not actually exposed to the public because it is impossible that any stranger or random person would observe all those movements. 
As one court described mosaic theory, “the whole is something different than the sum of its parts.”
Justice Sonia Sotomayor in Jones described how movement tracking “generates a precise, comprehensive record of a person’s public movements that reflects a wealth of detail about her familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations.” As she pointed out, this could include trips of an “indisputably private nature” including “to the psychiatrist, the plastic surgeon, the abortion clinic, the AIDS treatment center, the strip club, the criminal defense attorney, the by-the-hour motel, the union meeting, the mosque, synagogue or church, the gay bar and on and on.”

Justice Sotomayor observed that, “Government can store such records and efficiently mine them for information years into the future.” This is such a dramatic power, Sotomayor warned, that it “may alter the relationship between citizen and government in a way that is inimical to democratic society.”
Dragnet Surveillance Technology as a Tool of Social Control

History is filled with examples of how such information becomes tools, weapons, used by government for political control. One need look no further than J. Edgar Hoover’s dossiers on activists and dissenters, including Dr. Martin Luther King, and how abusive and repressive U.S. government institutions used such information to target and even destroy the lives of people whose social justice organizing threatened the status quo.

No longer does an official need to order breaking and entering to pilfer psychiatric records, as John Ehrlichman sought to do to discredit Daniel Ellsberg. In order to find details of a person’s activities, associations and intentions, the government can engage in dragnet surveillance, aggregation of information and data mining.

With each resurgence of the social justice movement filling the streets, we have seen a renewed devotion of government surveillance and abuse of anti-terrorism authority to target political organizing in the United States. The Partnership for Civil Justice Fund has uncovered and exposed thousands of pages from just the recent years alone documenting the FBI, DHS, fusion centers and other agencies targeting of dissent.

How People Can Reverse the Tide

While the law hesitatingly lurches forward, society need not wait for the justices of the Supreme Court to assert leadership and protect our rights, should a majority of the Court ever do so. As reflected in the Katz expectation of privacy standard, it is society that sets expectations of privacy.

There are some who misguidedly suggest that, given technology’s advances, we should expect an end to privacy because there are no limits to technology’s advances. Just because our privacy can be violated does not mean we should expect or tolerate such violations.

How would this look in action? The Baltimore City Council, when it conducts its hearings, should go beyond mere inquiry. It should take action to prevent recurrence and to establish the expectation of the people of Baltimore to not be subject to mass surveillance without their consent.

The Baltimore council should enact legislation banning deployment of mass surveillance technologies by police or any city agency without prior disclosure, debate and legislative approval. It should establish protocol whereby any such technology must be submitted to the council for an independently conducted Privacy Impact Evaluation that will disclose all nature of data collected, retention policies, access restrictions, and all other information needed to make an assessment of the impact on individual’s privacy including when aggregated with information from other data collection systems.

The decision whether to permit such surveillance rests with the people of the United States. Technology is a societal asset. The use of technology is controlled by us, society’s expectations of privacy, and not by the outer limits of technological capabilities, which as Edward Snowden has revealed, have virtually no limits at all.

Carl Messineo is Legal Director of the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund.

Why Hillary Is the Perfect Person to Secure Obama’s Legacy

full-hillary-clinton

In terms of pure competence, despite her assuming a public air of swaggering competence, her record is simply meagre to poor. We can return to that early instance, her dismissal from the Watergate Investigation for what her boss called unethical conduct and lying. .

by John Chuckman

( August 30, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) I read a piece that said Hillary, with her speech about racism and extremists taking over the Republican Party, was making a play for a one-party state. That seems rather an exaggeration, but it does contain an important bit of truth. I do indeed believe Hillary thinks along the lines of a one-party state as suggested, but without ever saying so directly, and she is not focused on the particular political party with which she is now associated.

Hillary stands for the establishment, and her views appear to include the idea that anyone without attachment to that establishment is to be designated as a kind of “plebe,” as in 1984, or even “untouchable,” as in the old Indian caste system. That’s the approach that she took in her “racism” speech. It is, if you will, very much a one-party approach to politics as well as an implicitly anti-democratic one.

And, of course, it represents a truly super-arrogant attitude.

But isn’t that the natural inclination of all tyrant temperaments? And there is every indication in Hillary’s past acts and words of a tyrant’s temperament.

Her views on the military and on a long history of events from the FBI Waco massacre (she advocated for aggressive FBI action to get the event out of the headlines) and the bombing of Belgrade (which she advocated privately to her husband) to the invasion of Iraq (which she supported as a Senator) and the death of Libya’s Gadhafi (there’s her infamous, “We came, we saw, he died. Ha, ha, ha,” quote as Secretary of State) to the employment of paid terrorists and poison gas in Syria (an operation she oversaw as Secretary of State), could provide a good working definition of a tyrant’s temperament.

And just look at her close friends and associates in, or formerly in, government, people like Victoria Nuland or Madeleine Albright, extreme Neocon advocates for violence and America’s right to dictate how others should live. Madelaine Albright is best remembered for answering a journalist in an interview, when questioned about tens of thousands of Iraqi children dying in America’s embargo, “We think it’s worth it.” She is also remembered for her dirty, behind-the-scenes work in dumping as Secretary General of the UN, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, a highly intelligent, fair-minded, and decent man who just happened to disagree with the United States once too often. Victoria Nuland’s claims to fame include being recorded talking about America’s spending $5 billion to create the coup in Ukraine. There is also her wonderfully diplomatic quote, “Fuck Europe,” and a seemingly endless stream of photos of her scowling into cameras.

And the same temperament is revealed in her record of “I know better than the expert`” when it comes to matters such as a Secretary of State’s protocols around computer security. Again, her record as First Lady with the Secret Service agents assigned to her protection was so unpleasantly arrogant that there is a residual of ill will still towards her in the Secret Service, enough to cause a number of past agents to tell tales out of school to journalists and in books.

Hillary likes to use language in public speeches which puts her “on the side of the angels” where various social issues are concerned, but it is entirely an advertising campaign of no substance, much resembling the big, clown-like or grimacing smiles she puts on at public events. Many mistakenly associate her with the historic traditions of the liberal left in the older Democratic Party, the kind of traditions Bernie Sanders brought momentarily flickering back to life, although they are in reality now virtually dead in the Democratic Party. Her actual record of behavior, as opposed to her “sound bites” and slogans, just cannot support that view of her as a liberal or progressive light.

Just to start, Hillary conducted the most corrupt campaign against Bernie Sanders I can recall in my adult lifetime. It included an inappropriate insider relationship with the Chairman of the Party, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who used every opportunity with the press and other means to disadvantage Bernie Sanders. It included voter suppression in a number of states as well as outright vote fraud in a number of others. Academic statistical analysis of the primaries’ data suggests that Bernie Sanders in fact won the nomination.

Search as you might, you will not find a history of Hillary actually being involved, beyond uttering slogans every so often, with social issues. She has no record at all. But her history does very much include such acts as being fired from her early job as a Watergate Committee lawyer for unethical behavior (the man who fired the young lawyer still has his contemporary notes of the event) and, in an early volunteer case, grinding down a 12-year old rape victim about fanaticizing over older men and getting her brutal 42-year old attacker freed, smiling in an interview later that she in fact knew he was guilty.

There is literally a line of women who were her predator husband’s lovers at one time or another who say that Hillary afterwards approached them with threats about keeping their mouths shut. And, perhaps her single clearest achievement on social issues, is her record of enabling her husband to carry on with a convicted pedophile, Jeffrey Epstein, who lives on a private island and keeps a stable of underage girls for the use of visitors. He is a very wealthy man with wealthy friends and arranges large political contributions, so he receives visitors such as Bill. Epstein actually once claimed he co-founded the Clinton Foundation, and he and associates have made large donations, tens of millions. We have a documented record of 28 trips to the island by Bill, and there is no way on earth Hillary wouldn’t know about them. Just as there is no way she could not know about important developments with the Clinton Foundation. She implicitly approved of the relationship with her often seen money-before-morals attitude.

Her husband’s office-leaving pardon of Marc Rich is often regarded as corrupt and having been paid for by Mr. Rich’s family and friends who donated large and continuing sums over time. Mr. Rich had been indicted in New York for tax evasion and fraud, but perhaps the outstanding aspect of his career, as it relates to Hillary and her slogans about social issues, is the way he made a considerable part of his fortune. He smuggled oil to the apartheid government of South Africa over time against international sanctions, and he is said to have made $2 billion doing so. Well, it does seem more than a little hypocritical to have supported a pardon for this man and then today to be giving speeches on someone else’s purported racism, and even to have been photographed, with toe-scrunching smarminess, eating fried chicken with a group of black voters.

We also have the fact of her talking, quite fiercely and recorded on video, about black “super-predators” when she was First Lady. Her husband signed legislation which likely put more young black males in prison than any other piece of legislation. Bill also bragged, as he signed another bill, of ending “welfare as we know it,” again legislation which hit poor black people hard. And, in all these acts, we know he had Hillary’s support. By a great many reports, Bill Clinton never dared do anything major of which his wife disapproved. With his years of flagrant sexual adventures and his need, on more than one political occasion, for her public lies of support when he was caught out, she had a virtual hammer over his head. Besides, Hillary has always regarded herself as having considerable acumen in such policy matters, and hers is a personality type you do not comfortably ignore.

In terms of pure competence, despite her assuming a public air of swaggering competence, her record is simply meagre to poor. We can return to that early instance, her dismissal from the Watergate Investigation for what her boss called unethical conduct and lying. Later, as First Lady, she took over the healthcare portfolio from her husband, the President, with unprecedented arrogance for an unelected person and one holding no formal appointment to office, and she failed badly in the complicated task.

As a Senator from New York, her eight-year record is remarkably undistinguished. Only three bills she sponsored became law, a bill to rename a highway, a bill to re-name a post office building, and a bill to designate a house as a national historic site. As Secretary of State, she of course ran the Benghazi operation which saw an American Ambassador and others killed, and her handling of the families of the dead afterwards, as the bodies were returned, echoes to this day with insensitivity and even brutality. She is deeply resented by family members and accused of lying.

I do believe it would be a difficult task to come up with a more fitting candidate than Hillary Clinton for carrying on the Obama legacy, a legacy of killing in a half dozen lands on behalf of America’s establishment, lying daily, and leaving your own people, the people who elected you with great hopes more than seven years ago, with nothing

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said that "all immigration laws will be enforced" if he became president. (Victoria Walker/The Washington Post)

 

PHOENIX — Donald Trump’s latest deportation priorities could target more than six million individuals for immediate removal, according to a Washington Post analysis. If elected president, he said Wednesday that his administration would also seek to bolster staffers devoted to immigration enforcement.

After weeks of opaque public statements regarding his stance on mass deportations, Trump spelled out hard-line immigration priorities in a fiery speech here in Phoenix. He not only called for removing all undocumented immigrants who had committed crimes, but also said he would prioritize those who have overstayed their visas for deportation.

The GOP presidential nominee also said he would triple the number of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and create a “new special deportation task force” to track the most serious security threats.

Together, those proposals represented his most specific comments on deportation policy — and they pointed to a massive undertaking.

“The police and law enforcement — they know who these people are. They live with these people. They get mocked by these people,” he said. “They can't do anything about these people, and they want to. They know who these people are. Day one, my first hour in office, those people are gone.”

An estimated 690,000 undocumented immigrants have committed significant crimes that would make them security priorities — felonies or serious misdemeanors — according to a study by the Migration Policy Institute. That number is closer to 2 million according to some, including Jessica Vaughan of the Center for Immigration Studies, whom the Trump campaign has consulted on the issue.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump waves as he arrives on stage during a campaign event in Phoenix. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump waves as he arrives on stage during a campaign event in Phoenix. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

If visa overstays are also included in the immediate priorities, as Trump said he would order during his speech, the number would grow by about 4.5 million individuals according to estimates that place overstays at about 40 percent of total undocumented population.

In all, the number of individuals prioritized for removal by ICE agents would range between about 5.0 and 6.5 million, according to available data and estimates.

“And you can call it deported if you want. The press doesn't like that term. You can call it whatever the hell you want. They're gone,” Trump said.

The highly anticipated speech came after Trump struggled to explain how to handle the 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the country, at times appearing as though he would soften his position on mass deportations and potentially even offering undocumented immigrants a pathway to legal status. He had previously called for the immediate removal of all such individuals and pledged to create a “deportation force” to oversee the task.

But as he and his campaign have sought to expand his appeal for the general election, he has found himself caught between appeasing his earlier supporters with more tough immigration rhetoric and softening that position to appeal to moderates.

His speech Wednesday was unequivocal: “We will break the cycle of amnesty and illegal immigration. We will break the cycle. There will be no amnesty,” he said. “Our message to the world will be this. You cannot obtain legal status or become a citizen of the United States by illegally entering our country. Can't do it.”
And his refusal to back legislation that would offer a path to legal status and his proposal to expand the E-Verify program would make it more difficult for such immigrants to remain in the country.

"Anyone who has entered the United States illegally is subject to deportation. That is what it means to have law,” he said in another instance.

Trump has sought in recent days to change his tone somewhat on immigration issues, and in particular with regard to Mexican immigrants. During his remarks in Phoenix, he talked positively about his meeting earlier in the day with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, who he called "a man I like and respect very much. He also spoke about strengthening ties between the two countries, a sharp departure from his incendiary rhetoric on the campaign trail.

“We also discussed the great contributions of Mexican American citizens to our two countries, my love for the people of Mexico, and the leadership and friendship between Mexico and the United States,” he said. 
“It was a thoughtful and substantive conversation and it will go on for a while. And, in the end we're all going to win. Both countries, we're all going to win.”

Brazil's Dilma Rousseff impeached by senate in crushing defeat

Michel Temer confirmed as new president after 61 of 81 senators back Rousseff’s removal from office amid economic decline and bribery scandal

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff impeached

 in Rio de Janeiro and Donna Bowater in Brasília-Thursday 1 September 2016



Brazil’s first female president Dilma Rousseff has been thrown out of office by the country’s corruption-tainted senate after a gruelling impeachment trial that ends 13 years of Workers’ party rule.

Following a crushing 61 to 20 defeat in the upper house, she will be replaced for the remaining two years and four months of her term by Michel Temer, a centre-right patrician who was among the leaders of the campaign against his former running mate.

In a separate vote, the senate voted 42 to 36 not to bar Rousseff from public office for eight years.
In his first address to the nation after being sworn in by Congress last night, Temer said it was time to unite the country, vowing to work to rescue an economy mired in recession and guarantee political stability for foreign investors.

Rousseff was defiant after being ousted. “They think they’ve defeated us, but they’re wrong,” she said from her official residency, her voice cracking and eyes moist with emotion. “I know we will all fight.”

Despite never losing an election, Rousseff – who first won power in 2010 – had seen her support among the public and in congress diminish as a result of a sharp economic decline, government paralysis and a massive bribery scandal that has implicated almost all the major parties.

For more than 10 months, the leftist leader fought efforts to impeach her for frontloading funds for government social programmes and issuing spending budget decrees without congressional approval ahead of her reelection in 2014. The opposition claimed that these constituted a “crime of responsibility”. 
Rousseff denies this and claims the charges – which were never levelled at previous administrations who did the same thing – have been trumped up by opponents who were unable to accept the Workers’ party’s victory.

Speaking to her supporters from the presidential palace after the vote, Rousseff pledged to appeal her impeachment, which she called a parliamentary coup. The ousted president also called on her supporters to fight the conservative agenda now bolstered by her removal from office.

“Right now, I will not say goodbye to you. I am certain I can say, ‘See you soon,’” she told supporters in Brasilia.

In keeping with her pledge to fight until the end for the 54 million voters who put her in office, Rousseff – a former Marxist guerrilla – ended her presidency this week with a gritty 14-hour defence of her government’s achievements and a sharply worded attack on the “usurpers” and “coup-mongers” who ejected her from power without an election.

Her lawyer, José Eduardo Cardozo, said the charges were trumped up to punish the president’s support for a huge corruption investigation that has snared many of Brazil’s elite. This follows secret recordings of Romero Jucá, the majority leader of the senate and a key Temer ally, plotting to remove the president to halt the Lava Jato (car wash) investigation into kickbacks at state oil company Petrobras.

While Rousseff was in the upper chamber, her critics heard her in respectful silence. But in a final session in her absence on Tuesday, they lined up to condemn her. As in an earlier lower house impeachment debate, the senators – many of whom are accused of far greater crimes – clearly revelled in the spotlight of their ten-minute declarations. Reflecting the growing power of rightwing evangelism, many invoked the name of God. One cited Winston Churchill. Another sang. Another appeared to be in tears.
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“I apologise to the president, not for having done what did, because I could not have done anything else, but because I know her situation is not easy,” claimed a sobbing Janaína Paschoal, one of the original co-authors of the impeachment petition. “I think she understands I did all this in consideration of her grandchildren.”

The result was never in doubt, though Workers’ party figurehead and former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva – who also faces a trial of his own – had lobbied hard until the last moment to try to swing enough senators to avoid impeachment.

At the end of the marathon 16-hour session of speeches, the final nail was hammered in by the former Brazilian footballer Romário, who had been rumoured to be among the few senators who might change their minds and save the president. Instead, he wound up the debate by confirming that he would once again vote for impeachment. “It’s a sad moment when you decide to remove a president,” he told the chamber. However he said he was convinced that Rousseff had committed a crime of responsibility.

Ahead of the verdict, senator Vanessa Grazziotin, of the Communist Party of Brazil, arrived with a sense of resignation. “I’ve worn a mixture of red [for the Workers’ party] and black because today is a day of mourning,” she said. “I’m going to cry.” However, she and other Rousseff allies hoped they could minimise Rousseff’s punishment.

Workers’ party senator Lindbergh Farias said the president’s accusers were cowards. “It’s amazing how everyone who didn’t have the gall to look Dilma in the eyes, spoke so bravely today in her absence,” he tweeted.

The final result was comfortably more than the two-thirds (54 seats) needed to finalise the president’s removal from office.

Shortly after 1.30pm, suspense filled the floor as senators watched as the upper house reached a quorum. 
Among the last to vote was the Workers Party’s Jorge Viana as a hush fell across the packed room. There were cheers of “Brazil!” from the pro-impeachment camp as the numbers flashed up on the screen before a group of senators burst into a rendition of the national anthem.

There were modest exchanges of “congratulations” and backslapping between impeachment supporters as Jucá, who was drawn into the Lava Jato corruption scandal, said he was “relieved” by the result.

Edison Lobao, of the PMDB, who voted for Rousseff’s ouster, said: “I couldn’t have voted differently regardless of who was the president. I would have voted for the impeachment of any president who acted outside the law.”

The musician and democracy activist Chico Buarque, who was among Rousseff’s supporters in the gallery, said the debate was rigged against her. “If the game were clean, she would have won,” he told local media.

Others noted that Rousseff’s removal from office less than halfway through her mandate reinforced the impression that the country’s political class remains uncomfortable with democracy although more than 30 years have passed since the end of Brazil’s military dictatorship. Only two of the last eight directly-elected presidents have completed their terms. Two have been impeached, one removed in a military coup, one killed himself, one died before taking power and another resigned.

It also marks a dramatic downfall of a woman who was once one of the world’s most popular politicians with approval ratings of 85%. But she had struggled with a hostile congress and a dire financial climate. 
When Rousseff took office in January 2011, the economy was growing at a quarterly clip of 4.9%. It has been downhill ever since and she leaves the presidency with output shrinking by 4.6% though this is partly because the price of Brazil’s oil exports is now below half of its peak in 2011.

Rousseff’s achievements in office were mainly an expansion of equality policies put in place by her predecessors, particularly the bolsa familia poverty relief program, which now reaches almost 14 million households.

Thanks to affirmative action and wider access to higher education, university enrolments jumped 18% during her first term. Since 2009, 2.6 million homes have been delivered by the government housing program – Minha Casa Minha Vida. But her record in other key areas is mixed. After falling in her first two years in power, deforestation of the Amazon has started to rise again. Her replacement has a lot to do.
Temer – who was widely criticised for appointing an all-male, all-white cabinet when he took power on an interim basis in May – was sworn in again on Wednesday afternoon and is set to continue until the next presidential election in 2018, when he has promised he will not stand.

After being sworn in, Temer promised a “new era” for Brazil during a televised cabinet meeting.

“From today on, the expectations are much higher for the government. I hope that in these two years and four months, we do what we have declared – put Brazil back on track,” he said. Regarding his upcoming trip to China, he said it was important to show that stability had returned. “We are traveling precisely to reveal to the world that we have political and legal stability,” he said. “We have to show that there is hope in the country.”

Temer received support from the United States, which implicitly rejected claims that Rousseff had been removed in a coup. US State Department spokesman, John Kirby said, “We are confident we will continue our strong bilateral relationship. This was a decision made by the Brazilian people and obviously we respect that ... Brazilian democratic institutions have acted within its constitutional framework.”

Shortly after the ceremony, he is due to fly to China to attend the G20 summit in Hangzhou, where he will hope to restore some of the credibility of an administration that has been battered by accusations of treachery and three ministerial resignations due to corruption scandals.

He has promised to introduce austerity measures that will restore Brazil’s credit ratings, which under Rousseff fell to junk levels. This is popular with investors, but not with the public. His approval ratings are only a fraction above those of his predecessor and he was roundly booed during the Olympic opening ceremony.

During the final stages of the senate trial, there was no repeat of the mass rallies in Brasilia that marked earlier stages of the process. However, a small group of Rousseff supporters staged a candlelit vigil in the main esplanade. Bigger protests have been seen in other cities this week. In São Paulo anti-impeachment protesters and riot police clashed on Monday night. Demonstrators claim the security forces made excessive use of tear gas and percussion grenades in what they fear will be a precursor of more clampdowns on opposition. Police claimed the protesters – many from the Landless Workers’ Movement – blocked roads and detonated a home-made bomb.

Additional reporting by Shanna Hanbury