Peace for the World

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

Friday, September 2, 2016

UN ‘made big mistakes’ in Sri Lanka

By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan -2016-09-03
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon yesterday acknowledged that the UN could have saved many lives during the last seven months of the war, and the UN 'made big mistakes and learned very hard lessons'. He said he held an internal probe as to what happened during those months.
During his speech on 'Sri Lanka on SDG16: Sustaining Peace – Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals' held in Colombo, the SG while blaming Sri Lanka too for causing serious problems to its own people, added that even the UN during the last seven decades, particularly, in the last seven months 'made big mistakes' in Sri Lanka. "We learned very hard lessons on the part of the UN. I established an internal investigation into what happened, what did our UN staff stationed in Sri Lanka had been doing at the time and we found serious mistakes in our activities. Had we been more actively engaged," he said, "we could have saved many more human lives."
In the conflict's decisive final stages, tens of thousands of civilians perished, he said adding that the 'war was ended – an unquestionable good for Sri Lanka, the region and the world. But, we also know that even in its ending, the price was high'.
"Sri Lankans are deeply engaged in a process of reckoning and reconciliation. The UN has also engaged in self-scrutiny. Reports by expert, independent panels that I appointed found serious systemic problems on the part of Member States and Secretariat alike. It seemed clear that the fog of war had obscured the centrality of human rights.
"Sri Lanka has taught us many important lessons. Building on these, the UN has taken wide-ranging steps to strengthen our focus on human rights, particularly during times of political and humanitarian crises. In particular, I launched the Human Rights up Front initiative, which aims to focus early attention on violations, before they escalate to reach a point of no return. This work often faces opposition, from repressive governments to individual hatreds. But, we are determined to ensure that human rights are where they belong: at the centre of our decision-making."
The UN was criticized during the last few months of the war for their 'grave failure' in protecting the trapped civilians in the North. The report criticized that senior UN staff in Colombo "did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility – and agency and department heads at UNHQ were not instructing them otherwise".
Ban in Colombo, remarked that is why he launched the Human Rights Upfront Initiative in 2013.
Ban also admitted that Sri Lanka has made a landmark progress and said still more to be done.
Ban also urged to speed up the return of land to the civilians so that the remaining communities of displaced people can return home. "In parallel, the size of the military force in the North and East could be reduced, helping to build trust and reduce tensions," he urged.
"To recover from the cataclysms of the past, Sri Lankans will need all four elements of post-conflict resolution: truth-telling, accountability, reparations and institutional reform. There is no fast route to achieving this. It will take many years of political courage and determination." Cautioning that the world has around 65 million people being displaced, a worst scenario since the WWII and such displaced only took place during the WWII he said, Sri Lanka is striving and even struggling to overcome all tragic legacies that took place in the last 30 years.
He also commended the new government under the leadership of President Sirisena in its ambitious attempt in setting up the reformation and has made significant progress. People voted for good governance, reforms and to end impunity and abuse of power, he recalled.
He said the President in his speech at last year's UN General Assembly said his government's approach was founded on pluralism, reconciliation, and supports sustainable peace.
"There is still much work to be done in order to redress the wrongs of the past and to restore the legitimacy and accountability of key institutions, particularly the Judiciary and the security services.
In the same way that Sri Lankans called for a more accountable government, people the world over have called for good governance and the rule of law, inclusivity and equality, justice and human rights, through the 2030 Agenda. They asked for transparency and accountability in how governments plan and deliver development and ensure security," he added. 
Ban dodges query on presumption of War 

Crimes

2016-09-03

Visiting United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon while evading the issue of a presumption of ‘War Crimes’ being committed in Sri Lanka, instead said the United Nations failed in its duty “particularly during the last stages of the conflict”. 

questions posed to him by the Daily Mirror at the concluding media briefing held at the Galle Face Hotel last evening, Moon evaded specifics and instead couched his answers with diplomatic jargon. 

“Its true that there was a lack in the level of achievement or lack of involvement by the United Nations and that I admitted to in my statement. That’s what we have admitted to a long time ago. We really wanted to see why it had happened to that level and how. The United Nations could have done better in Sri Lanka particularly during the last stages of the war” he said instead. 

Speaking further he also asserted to “terrible events of the time”.

 “The UN has to address the legacy of its actions in Sri Lanka which did not meet the expectations of the people and the world. We reviewed our involvement of the terrible events of the time and continue to take steps to ensure that human rights are at the center of our decision making” 

Speaking further Moon denied the assertion that the United Nations exerted “double standards” with regard to global superpowers and Sri Lanka. 

“With due respect to all of you, I would not agree that there has been a double standard with regard to the actions of the United Nations. There has been one standard, one value and one vision with which we work with” he said. 

Moon arrived at the podium in which he stood alone for close to half an hour just past 7 pm and immediately commenced the reading of a detailed statement. In it he addressed issues of accountability and commended the “ Unity Government headed by President Sirisena and Premier Wickremesinghe” in the steps taken towards “reconciliation”. 

When questioned as to why the UN did not agree to a ‘ homegrown solution’ with regard to the ethnic conflict, Moon said that although a ‘gap’ did exist between the present government and the International Community, it had improved from his previous visit in 2009. 

“It has been rather difficult sometimes, even for me to talk with the government and the leadership. There was a gap between the expectations of the international community and the level of government help. Even though I think we are not fully there the level of gap can be reduced as soon as possible,” he said. 

He further commended the progress in the North since his previous visit. 

“Since my last visit in 2009, there has been great progress. I welcome the initiative that the president and premier has taken to undertaken to promote good governance. I visited Jaffna and saw an enormous contrast with my experience back in 2009. Great progress has been made in elevating the problems associated with mass displacement” he said.

 He however asserted the need of expediting the process of reconciliation stating that the “ victims cant wait for ever”.

 “Reconciliation will not be accomplished overnight. It is a complex process which needs continuous nurturing. I welcome the establishment of the office of missing persons and the process of constitutional amendment. These are positive steps but more needs to be done. The victims cant wait forever. They deserve credible transparent and solid transitional justice mechanism” he said. 

The Secretary General also remained non committal on the issue of the participation of foreign judges in the proposed transitional justice mechanism. 

“I think both the UN and the government is involved in this process. There may be some level of difference in the level of involvement, difference of advancement and progress in major issues” he said. (Hafeel Farisz and Nabeela Hussain)


U.N. chief urges Sri Lanka to redress wrongs of war

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon gestures during his speech at the 'Sustaining Peace - Achieving Sustainable Development Goals' forum during an official visit in Colombo, Sri Lanka September 2, 2016. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon (L) shakes hands with Sri Lanka's President Maithripala Sirisena at their meeting during Ban's three-day official visit, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, September 1, 2016. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte

By Shihar Aneez-Fri Sep 2, 2016

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday urged Sri Lanka to do more to redress wrongs committed during 26 years of war with Tamil rebels, including returning land and restoring the accountability of the judiciary and security services.

Ban, on a three-day official visit, praised the efforts of President Maithripala Sirisena's administration since coming to power last year to address some rights abuses committed during the war.

"But more can and should be done to address the legacy of the past and acknowledge the voices of the victims," he told a gathering in Colombo, without mentioning the army or the rebels. "Sri Lanka is still in the early stages of regaining its rightful position in the region and the international community."

Dozens of Sri Lankan nationalists, who back ousted president Mahinda Rajapaksa, on Thursday protested against Ban's visit, demanding he leave the island and stop an investigation into alleged abuses at the end of the civil war.

Rajapaksa's administration crushed the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in 2009. The United Nations and rights groups have accused the military of killing thousands of civilians, mostly Tamils, during the final weeks of the conflict.

The Tamil Tigers were also accused of widespread abuses during the conflict, such as using child soldiers and targeting civilians with suicide bombers, including an attack on the central bank in 1996 which killed nearly 100 people and wounded more than 1,000.

Sirisena's administration has established offices to look into reconciliation and missing persons while it also has returned some military-occupied lands in the north.

However, Sirisena, also the defence minister, has yet to withdraw the military from the former war zones.
Ban said there was still much work to be done "in order to redress the wrongs of the past and to restore the legitimacy and accountability of key institutions, particularly the judiciary and the security services".

"I also urge you to speed up the return of land so that the remaining communities of displaced people can return home. In parallel, the size of the military force in the North and East could be reduced, helping to build trust and reduce tensions."

Ban also visited northern Jaffna, centre of the wouldbe homeland of the rebels, where he said the United Nations would help Tamils in the resettlement process.

Around 500 Tamils gathered in front of Jaffna library, the symbol of Tamil learning and one of biggest libraries in Asia before it was burnt by a mob in 1981, and urged Ban to help find relatives who disappeared in the war and ensure the release of political prisoners.

(Reporting by Shihar Aneez; Additional reporting by N.Parameswaran from Jaffna; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Tamils voice their plight as UN chief visits Jaffna

Home03 Sep  2016
Tamils in the North-East gathered outside the public library in Jaffna on Friday as the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon visited to raise awareness of their plight. 

Reiterating their central demands of international justice for mass atrocities, end to the military occupation of their lands, release of Tamil political prisoners, repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and to find out the whereabouts of their missing loved ones, Tamils gathered carrying banners and placards, and called on the UN to make the Sri Lankan government to act.

Where on earth is a government servant allowed to ‘rot’ in one post and place for 24 years ? president asks

-Gets rid of a most corrupt environmental director Saman Senanayake

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 02.Sep.2016, 7.20PM) About a year ago , president Maithripala Siirisena declared , if he is to use his executive powers , it will only be against the enemies  of environment . Yesterday , in confirmation of this firm stand , the president claimed that the Wayambe environment authority which had become a most corrupt entity over the decades  has no exclusive limitless powers , and casting aside his ‘maithri’ (compassion) put   his foot down to decide that it  must  compulsorily be   under the purview of the Central environmental authority. The president thereby resolved an issue that was long drawn out.
The president held a meeting yesterday (01) after summoning the Environment ministry , Central  environment authority ,  Wayambe environment authority and Wayambe Provincial Council (PC) high rung officers. The president after requesting  the media that had arrived to cover the event to stay out  for a while, unleashed his fury, and  breathed fire and brimstone .
The president who pointed an accusing finger at Saman Senanayake , asked what is the qualification or eligibility he has to hold that post . Saman is a rascal who  calls himself as the Environment  Director , but considered as an ace corrupt scoundrel   of the Wayambe environment Authority against whom a spate of complaints have been received for decades from the media , environment organizations and the people of the area for many years. 
 ( Saman Senanyake was just a forest ranger who has been propelled as Environment Director by the corrupt groups).  Thereafter when the president inquired from this corrupt scoundrel again , how long he had been in that position , this corrupt villain  said , he has been holding that post for the last 24 years ! The president who was rudely shocked and dismayed then turning towards the chief minister , went on to ask where on earth has a public servant served for 24 years in the same post and place  in public service ? By permitting him to be in that post for 24 years ,corruption has reached monumental proportions  , the president asserted. While saying this officer has been the prime and primary  cause of all the environmental issues of Wayambe environment , he asked the chief minister whether he is listening with his ears and eyes open?
When it was pointed out that there is a separate ‘charter’ for Wayambe , the president replied he is fully aware of that and clarified  , the parliament has not passed such an  environment charter . “The ‘games’ that were played hitherto taking refuge under a verdict delivered by an ex corrupt chief justice , cannot be played hereafter from today ‘ the president emphatically stated  .  In future , nobody can take decisions overriding the Central Environmental Authority the president sternly warned in the exercise of his  Executive powers. 
 (In the fundamental rights case SC /FR/2006/226 , when the notorious ex CJ Sarath N DE Silva who by now is best known for committing the  worst treacheries and villainies  using his then lofty judicial position asked from  Saman Senanayake , Director , Wayambe environmental Authority whether the latter has been created  under a  parliamentary enactment ,Saman  said ,it is, thereby misleading the court., whereupon infamous Sarath Silva declared , then that can be carried on as before. 
Taking advantage of  that court decision, Saman without caring two hoots for the Central Environment Authority , collected many millions of rupees illicitly by granting permission to  establish  corruption ridden  Industries  within the  Wayambe Province )
However, truly speaking such an enactment had not been passed by Parliament. All what took  place  was,  the Cabinet gave  only an  approval to a document tabled by the then Wayambe chief minister Gamini Jayawickrema Perera during  the initial period when  the Wayambe PC was established. That lapse occurred  because the Cabinet secretary did not have adequate knowledge concerning  the tasks pertaining to the PCs at that time.
Consequent upon that lapse, such an   Environmental authority came into existence at Wayambe and since there was no suitable officer at that time , Saman Senanayake , a technical officer -a draughtsman, became the Environmental Director . This scoundrel thereafter ,instead of purifying the environment for which he was appointed polluted the environment . After  opening the gateway wide for corruption , he made all the chief ministers who were appointed to wallow and flourish  in corruption activities .He  too while making  hay when  the  sun was shining transformed  Wayambe into a paradise  for all the  corrupt  activities of Industrialists. Whenever  the Wayambe  Environmental Authority officers went  to inspect the Industries , they were  put out , and told to come with Saman Senanayake . In other words , to such  monumental proportions Wayambe’s   corrupt environment escalated because of this abominable scoundrel and villain Saman, the self seeking  traitorous rascal who fattened even on death and despair of the people.

In any event devolution of powers to the provincial councils is in the offing, and preparations are under way to introduce a new constitution . At this juncture those responsible must take note of the odious situations that can be created  by notorious individuals like Saman Senanayake . Based on that obnoxious experience , the devolution should be designed so as not to spread and distribute corruption .
Even from the owners of Jiffy Factory that was releasing toxic wastes (calcium nitrate) and contaminating the environment on a large scale , against which Lanka e news , other media and environmental organizations raised a hue and cry , this ruthless traitor had been collecting a bribe of Rs. 500,000.00 monthly , in order to safeguard and shield the Jiffy owners  to the detriment of the residents and the country.
According to the latest reports reaching us , due to tremendous pressures exerted by the president and the stern order issued by him today , Susil Gunaratne the corrupt chief of Jiffy factory had tendered his resignation , while saying  ’ if I am to still continue in this post , even my family will be struck by lightning’
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by     (2016-09-02 13:49:44)

Untitled-1

logoFriday, 2 September 2016

AFP: Dozens of Sri Lankan nationalists rallied outside the United Nations compound in Colombo Thursday as Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited the island, protesting against the UN’s actions during a prolonged civil war.

Police held back the demonstrators led by Buddhist monks as they tried to march on the compound just before Ban arrived on the first full day of his two-day visit to Sri Lanka.

“UN, where were you?” said one placard, which carried a photograph of a victim of a bombing blamed on Tamil Tiger rebels who were crushed by security forces in May 2009.

The protesting ultra-nationalists accuse the UN of siding with Tamil rebels while hardliners in the Tamil community also criticise it for failing to protect civilians during Sri Lanka’s 37-year ethnic war.

“The UN was silent when Tiger terrorists were bombing and massacring our people,” Buddhist monk Akmeemana Dayaratne said as protesters handed over a petition to the UN office to be given to Ban.

“Now the UN is asking for investigations to punish us for defeating terrorism,” he said, referring to the UN’s call for the island to probe war crimes committed during the conflict.

A police official outside the UN offices, located in a tightly guarded area of the capital, said officers had obtained a court order preventing protests to avoid breaches of the peace.

“We did that because we feared that any protest could lead to unrest,” he said, requesting anonymity.

Ban’s convoy arrived at the compound shortly after the protesters had been peacefully dispersed.

The UN leader held talks with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe on Wednesday evening after arriving in Sri Lanka from Myanmar, and is due to meet with President Maithripala Sirisena later Thursday.

He is also due to deliver a public lecture on peace and development and travel to the war-battered northern Tamil heartland of Jaffna, before leaving on Friday.

Sri Lankan diplomats said they were keen to discuss the new government’s reconciliation efforts following the civil war that claimed at least 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009.

The UN has been pushing for a special court to investigate allegations that up to 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed by Government forces in the final months of fighting.

President Sirisena, a member of the majority Sinhalese community who came to power in January last year, has pledged to punish those responsible for war crimes during the conflict.

-pix by Pradeep Pathirna

Ever A Stranger: Shiva Naipaul In Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia & Sri Lanka


Colombo Telegraph

By Charles Ponnuthurai Sarvan –September 2, 2016 
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Prof. Charles Sarvan
PREFACE: “Whether the description of marriage as a double solitude is applicable in all instances, it indicates that each individual carries a consciousness of himself as a solitary being, a consciousness of which he cannot completely and permanently rid himself. We all feel un-comprehended and uncomprehending, though to varying degrees and at various times. This awareness of separateness and consequent loneliness, an awareness which is part of our human condition, is sometimes heightened by a negative group-identity. In such instances, the individual suffers not only from the loneliness common to all but also from the added consciousness that the group with which he is identified is looked at askance, perhaps with suspicion, even with contempt and hostility.” (Charles Sarvan,’Ethnicity and Alienation: the African Asian and His Response to Africa’, The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Vol 20, No. 1, 1985.) End of Preface.
There are some who are unable, or are not allowed, to feel fully at home in their home-country: see Sarvan,Sri Lanka: Literary Essays & Sketches, pp. 194-200, and also the Sinhala expression Para Dhemmala. Shiva Naipaul never fully belonged anywhere. He was born in Trinidad (1945) where, admittedly generalising, the Africans and the Asians lived separate lives. With slavery abolished, Britain turned to British-ruled India, and sent out hundreds of thousands of workers as indentured labourers: see my ‘Indian Plantation Experiences Overseas’, Kunapipi, Australia, Vol X11, No 2, 2000. In Sri Lanka, indentured Tamil workers were confined to the estate and kept separate from the local Sinhalese population. In Trinidad, the Asians were kept apart from the earlier black slave-population. In this way, ethnic animosity was deliberately (and in Sri Lanka’s case, successfully) fostered, to the advantage of the imperial capitalist owners. Group consciousness and feeling, not class solidarity, came to be dominant. Of the two main political parties in Trinidad; one is supported by Africans, and the other by Asians.
England today, particularly London and the big cities, has changed significantly but the England to which Naipaul came as a very young man was quite a different country. The term of abuse for Asians was “Paki” or, less often, “Wog”, an acronym from ‘Wily Oriental Gentleman’. This may be met with incredulity by some readers but when I came to London in 1963, it was not against the law to display signs which read: “No coloureds. No dogs.” With the IRA setting off bombs, sometimes “No Irish” was added to the list. An Irish friend told me he was glad I’d come to England. When I asked why, he answered: “Now when talking with me, sometimes the English say, we!” It had become a case of “we” whites in contrast to those of colour, African or Asian. Difference and exclusion may lead to a new inclusion; to a recognition of commonality (though not, it seems, in the case of some Sri Lankans living outside the blessed ‘Paradise Isle’).

EPDP leader to IGP - even though Ponniah was chased out from our party , please investigate his accusations


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -01.Sep.2016, 6.45PM)  EPDP party leader Douglas Devananda in a letter addressed to the  IGP  had requested to conduct an investigation into a statement made by Ponniah , even though  he was  expelled from  the party because of his  anti socialactivities , frauds and corruption.  
Ponniah when addressing a media briefing recently at Jaffna said, he knows  of many crimes committed by EPDP organization and the army .  The full text of the letter sent by Devananda is hereunder 
2016-08-31
The IGP
Police Headquarters
Colombo 01.
Inspector General of Police ,
Regarding charges mounted against EPDP members
I hereby request you to  give your  expeditious attention to the matters mentioned hereunder as I am desirous that an investigation is launched into those without delay.
The Eelam People’s Democratic party (EPDP)  under my leadership for many years had been engaged in Democratic politics continuously with the support of the party members and supporters in the North and the East of Sri Lanka. Our party is represented in Parliament , provincial Councils and provincial administration through members of the party elected by the people.
S. Ponniah who was an erstwhile member of our party , but later withdrawn from party activities and expelled from the party because of anti social activities, corruption and frauds , we are made to understand is now employed at ‘ Udayan Rest’ Jaffna,.  On 2016-08-29 , Ponniah convening a media briefing at Jaffna  Press Club , told before the media that he  is aware that the EPDP members and the army committed grave crimes.
In the  interests of the public , the statement of Ponniah and those referred to shall  be duly  probed ,and the allegations made shall be proved , as well as  those  referred to  in his announcements who indulged in grave crimes shall be punished . It is hereby urged that prompt measures shall be taken in regard to the  revelations made by Ponniah during the media discussion,  in keeping with the prevailing laws and the right to information relating to his disclosures.
I also wish to inform that my EPDP party shall extend the fullest co operation towards the investigations instituted in this connection.
Thanks
Douglas Devananda 
General secretary  EPDP
Jaffna electoral district.
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by     (2016-09-01 13:24:08)

AG’s Dept. in snail pace!

AG’s Dept. in snail pace!
 Sep 02, 2016

Nearly 19,500 court cases remain piled up in the Attorney General’s Department that had been referred by the police in the past 20 years for advice, say sources at the department.

Added to the pile are the cases that had been sent by the FCID and the CID in the 18 months since the ‘Yahapaalana’ government took office, the sources say.
Due to this delay, many suspects in these cases have fled the country. For instance, the Navy officers accused of having abducted Tamil students are planning to go overseas, say Navy sources.
The cases pertaining to the Vidya murder case at Pungudutivu in Jaffna, cases of Wimal and Shashi Weerawansa have been added to the cases piled up at the AG’s department.

Israeli army accused of West Bank 'shoot to cripple' campaign

Increase in number of young Palestinians suffering disabling leg injuries, with many victims blaming commander known as 'Captain Nidal'
Mahmoud was shot in December but says he is yet to receive proper treatment in the West Bank (MEE)

Sheren Khalel-Lily Leach--Friday 2 September 2016 

DHEISHA REFUGEE CAMP, Occupied West Bank - Mahmoud limps into his family living room, bandages wrapped around his left leg from knee to ankle. He sits down, puts aside his crutches and lays out his phone, a pack of cigarettes, two rolls of bandages and some painkillers on the table.

Although Mahmoud was shot in December, doctors in the occupied West Bank have not been able to properly treat the open wound beneath the bandages.

“The pain never stopped,” Mahmoud said from his home in Dheisha refugee camp. “For the past nine months I have barely left the house, just for doctors appointments. But now the doctors here say they can’t help me.”

Is the Israeli army deliberately crippling teens?

Mahmoud’s story has been repeated across the Bethlehem district, where at least 83 Palestinian youths have been shot by Israeli forces since the start of the year. At least 30 of the 83 were shot in Dheisha during Israeli raids: most were shot in the legs or knees, according to a new report released by BADIL Resource Center.

In the report, BADIL said that the occupied West Bank, particularly Bethlehem, had seen an increase in the “systematic targeting of Palestinians” with regard to injuries since the start of the year.

The Israeli army’s rules of engagement are vague, although it is frequently reported that minimum use of force is required to “neutralise” a situation - which could refer to wounding or lethal force.

However, what that means in the field has become a topic of heated debate, as Israeli forces continue to be the target of international condemnation for their unwarranted use of live-fire, which often causes permanent injuries and death.
Israeli forces fire tear gas at protesters in Dheisheh camp in December 2015 (Musa al-Shaer/AFP)
In response to a request for comment regarding when use of force is warranted with intention to injure, an Israeli army spokesperson said Israeli forces have “clear rules of engagement as to when the use of force can be applied. The value of human life is a core guiding value to the IDF and is implemented in both planning and operational activities.” It did not expand on what exactly its rules are.
Dheisha refugee camp, home to more than 15,000 Palestinian refugees, is raided by Israeli forces on a near-weekly basis. Violent clashes break out, regularly putting Israel’s rules of engagement to the test.
Lately, Dheisha’s youth say that the practice of Israeli forces targeting youths in the leg has risen, and that it is a purposeful attempt to cripple those clashing with Israeli forces in the camp.
According to BADIL’s report, on the three occasions that Israeli forces raided the camp between the end of July and mid-August, “18 youth aged between 14 and 27 were shot in their legs” - eight directly in the knee and several more in both legs.

‘Captain Nidal’ becomes focus of anger

Mahmoud and several other youth told Middle East Eye that they believe the increase in injuries was the result of a deliberate campaign being led by an Israeli military commander known only as “Captain Nidal” - a pseudonym for a man of Jewish Israeli descent, reportedly in charge of Israel’s military activities within Bethlehem’s three refugee camps.

''Captain Nidal' is the worst of them all. Everyone in Bethlehem knows about him'
- Mahmoud
"'Captain Nidal' is the worst of them all,” Mahmoud said. “Everyone in Bethlehem knows about him, and anyone who has been to prison from Bethlehem has met with him.”

Last month, youths in the camp managed to take a grainy photo of “Captain Nidal” during an Israeli raid of the camp. They printed it on a banner that they hung in the camp, which read: “Welcome to hell, Captain Nidal. Your soldiers will be in the cemetery.”

Residents said that the poster was taken down by Israeli forces the very next day, sparking a crackdown on the camp by the “Captain,” who, they said, made several verbal threats against local youth.
Youths in the camp told BADIL that "Captain Nidal" said to them: “I will make half of you disabled, and let the other half push the wheelchairs.”

Soon after, group photos of smiling Dheisha youth lined up in crutches, wheelchairs, and knee bandages started appearing on Dheisha social media pages. Some were shared with the slogan: “Campaign Crutches.”
A social media image of young men who say they were crippled by Israeli forces (Facebook)
MEE asked the Israel Securities Agency for a comment on the alleged threats made by “Captain Nidal.” It did not return our calls. It did, however, state in a reply to an article by Haaretz on the issue that: “Within the framework of the activities of security services officers to preserve the security of the region and protect residents from terrorist threats, they maintain ongoing daily dialogue with local residents. The claims raised in your article have been examined and found to be baseless.”

One young man, who asked to go by only his first name - which also happens to be Nidal - told MEE that he was shot in the leg during "Captain Nidal’s" first week of taking over military activities in Bethlehem's camps almost two years ago.

Despite undergoing surgery on nine occasions, Nidal has still not completely recovered from being shot. He still walks with crutches
“It was clear from the beginning that 'Captain Nidal' wanted to be the first captain to ‘win’ in the camp," the young Palestinian said. "He wanted to be the first one to break us down, so that they could enter the camp easily." He explained that, even now, Israeli forces are unable to enter Dheisha refugee camp without Palestinian youth throwing rocks at soldiers in protest.

Despite undergoing surgery on nine occasions, Nidal has still not completely recovered from being shot. He still walks with crutches.

How red tape hampers medical recovery

Due to the high number of injured during the past several months, Nidal, Mahmoud and several of their friends decided to start a new programme. The plan is it will support those who have been injured to cope with the daily trauma that has started to become the new normal.

While the campaign’s emergence is first and foremost a reflection of Israel’s escalation of live fire on the youth of the camp, it also shines a spotlight on the Palestinian Authority's inability to cope with the effects of "Captain Nidal’s" alleged policy, both at fending off attacks and providing adequate medical support.

'The doctors are not well trained and they don’t have the right equipment and medicines to treat the kids who get shot'
- Nidal
“The doctors are not well trained and they don’t have the right equipment and medicines to treat the kids who get shot," said Nidal. "It becomes so complicated to figure out what office to go to for medical bills or to be approved for certain surgeries.
"The bureaucracy is so complicated that a lot of time is devoted to just receiving crutches from the hospitals because there aren’t enough to go around.”
Nidal said that his past two years of recovery had been marked by the pain of his injury and the frustration of fighting for appropriate medical care.
“Lately there have been a lot more gunshot injuries and my friends and I who have already been through this process got to talking about what we could do to help them, so we decided to start a solidarity group for logistical and psychological support to help other get through the healing process,” he said.

While the group was only started around three weeks ago, it has already made a world of difference to Moyad, a 19-year-old shot on 9 August in Dheisha. He was hit in the femoral artery of his left thigh during an Israeli night raid in the camp.

“The blood was squirting up out of my leg like this,” Moyad said, motioning a large arc through the air. “I remember I just kept thinking: 'If I die, okay, but I don’t want to lose my leg'.”

Moyad was rushed to the hospital in a taxi, and fell into a coma for seven days. Ten days after he awoke, the hospital still hadn’t received payment from his family or the Palestinian Authority (PA)  - which is responsible for 50 percent of private hospital bills for those injured by Israeli forces.
'These efforts to shoot all of us in our legs won’t work because we are dedicated to our community'
- Moyad

The hospital ordered him to leave, but Moyad, who was due to undergo another surgery the next day, refused. When PA police arrived at the hospital to force him from his hospital bed, Moyad called Nidal, the head of the burgeoning solidarity campaign. He ultimately managed to convince the hospital to perform the surgery and allow Moyad to stay through to the rest of his treatment.

“The guys really saved me,” Moyad said. “It felt really good to know that the other guys in the camp were supporting me, that I didn’t just get injured and that was it. We stick together, no matter what.

“I don't regret coming outside that night. If I could do it again I would. It’s normal for us - we are protecting our home. These efforts to shoot all of us in our legs won’t work because we are dedicated to our community.” 

Palestinians urge Turkish people to reject Israel ties

A Palestinian woman holds a portrait of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a protest against the July military coup attempt against his government, in the West Bank city of Hebron, 20 July.Wisam HashlamounAPA images


2 September 2016

While strongly supporting the aspirations of the people of Turkey to restore and enhance democracy and respect for human rights and international law, the Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) denounces therapprochement agreement signed in June by the Turkish government with Israel and ratified by Turkey last month.

This agreement undermines internationally sanctioned Palestinian rights and aspirations.
The Turkish government recently submitted the agreement to parliament, which, in turn, approved to normalize relations between Turkey and Israel.

At a time when Turkey is facing substantial challenges, Palestinians are calling on the people of Turkey to reject the strengthening of ties with Israel, a regime of occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid, with its brutal model of militarization, war-mongering and deeply seated racism.

The BNC, the broadest coalition in Palestinian civil society that leads the global boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, calls upon the Turkish government to refrain from collaborating with the Israeli regime of oppression in its violations of Palestinian human rights.

The BNC also calls upon Turkish oil and gas companies not to be complicit in the Israeli energy sector’s pillage of Palestinian and Syrian natural resources and its illegal denial of the right of Palestinians and Syrians to access these resources.

While deeply grateful for the widespread solidarity with Palestinian rights among the people of Turkey, the BNC condemns the Turkish government’s decision to deepen relations with Israel, rather than seek to hold it accountable for its war crimes against the Palestinian people.

Two years after Israel’s summer of 2014 massacre of Palestinians in Gaza, Turkey abandoned a range of measures against Israel it had imposed following the bloody attack on the Freedom Flotilla in 2010 in which nine humanitarian activists were killed by Israeli commandos and a 10th fatally wounded.
These measures included a suspension in military relations with Israel.

Now Turkey has moved to normalize diplomatic relations with Israel without achieving the main condition that it had set for normalizing relations, namely an end to Israel’s criminal siege on nearly 1.9 million Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s disputed natural gas reserves

The discovery of large gas reserves in the Eastern Mediterranean could allow Israel to expand its influence in the region by becoming a major energy exporter.

Israel is now seeking partners to which it can export its gas and through which its gas can reach European markets, despite regional disputes on Israel’s claims to some gas fields and the potential legal quagmires that may result from them.

There is an ongoing maritime border dispute between Israel and Lebanon over some of the discovered oil fields in the Mediterranean. Israel is seeking to prevent Lebanon from extracting gas sitting within Lebanon’s territorial waters.

In the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, Israel has begun extracting oil in direct violation of international law and a 2006 UN resolution affirming the inalienable rights of the Syrian-Arab population in the Golan over its natural resources.

The Turkish-Israeli rapprochement agreement opens up the possibility of Israel exporting natural gas to Turkey. This has been a primary objective for the Israeli regime for several years and is manifest in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s joint remarks with US Secretary of State John Kerry that the rapprochement has “immense [positive] implications for the Israeli economy.”

Netanyahu has emphasized that the rapprochement deal is of strategic importance to Israel as it would feed Israel’s coffers “with a huge fortune.” Israel had sought to export its natural gas finds to Jordan and Egypt against strong popular opposition.

Any energy collaboration with Israel also serves to strengthen Israel’s deliberate attempts to prevent Palestinians from utilizing Gaza’s gas reserves, which were discovered in 1999 less than 20 nautical miles off its coast. The Israeli siege imposes a six-mile limit on Palestinian territorial water, thus illegally prohibiting Palestinians from accessing and developing their natural gas resources for domestic supply and much needed domestic revenues.

Israeli government ministers have been caught on record saying that Israel’s siege and war on Gaza are partially linked to its plans for the gas reserves off the shores of Gaza.

In the 2014 assault on Gaza, Israel murdered more than 2,200 Palestinians and bombed the only power plant, leaving the besieged Strip under inhumane conditions with electricity cuts of more than 20 hours per day.

report by the Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq notes that “The determined efforts of Israel to impede development in the [occupied Palestinian territories], by leasing rights over natural resources to corporations, violates the right to development as outlined in the Declaration on the Right to Development.”

Al-Haq adds: “Israel’s unlawful appropriation, exploitation and prevented development of oil and gas resources constitute plunder and further breach Palestine’s right to self-determination.”

The report makes clear that “By their actions, international corporations and states … concluding pipeline agreements to export gas from Israel’s Tamar and Leviathan fields … will effectively support and profit from Israel’s continued illegal closure of Palestinian maritime waters.”

Any energy collaboration with Israel by Turkey or by Turkish oil and gas companies would aid, abet and fund Israel’s occupation and expansion of illegal settlements and other human rights violations through the payment of royalties to the Israeli government.

The BNC calls upon the people of Turkey, with their long history of supporting the struggle for Palestinian rights, to escalate BDS campaigns against Israel’s regime and corporations that enable its violations of international law and to oppose any public or private involvement by Turkey in Israel’s illegal plunder of Palestinian natural resources.

The Israel-Turkey rapprochement agreement undermines efforts for achieving freedom, justice and dignity for the Palestinian people.

The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) is the broadest Palestinian civil society coalition that works to lead and support the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement.