Peace for the World

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

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Melbourne student guilty of disrupting flight over Tamil deportation

Jasmine Pilbrow openly admitted to disrupting the flight. Picture: Steve Tanner

Wayne Flower, Herald Sun-

A QANTAS-hating troublemaker has been asked to repay the national carrier thousands of dollars after disrupting an interstate flight in part of a futile protest.

Do-gooder Jasmine Pilbrow, 22, was charged with interfering with a crew member of an aircraft following her protest on-board a Darwin-bound plane in February last year.

While Magistrate Meagan Keogh had hoped to order the university student to repay $3429 to Qantas to compensate for the delays, she was unable to under Commonwealth law because she chose to defer her sentence.

Instead, Pilbrow was asked to volunteer the cash before being sentenced on November 11.

In April, a defiant Pilbrow called on Qantas to stop participating in the forced domestic transfer of asylum seekers.

“I’d like to encourage Qantas as a company to take a stand and announce they will no longer participate in forcing people with transfers and being deported overseas and encourage them as one of the biggest airline companies in Australia to do that,” she said.

The remorseless time burglar, who is banned from boarding Qantas flights, was today found guilty of interfering with a cabin crew.

Pilbrow delayed the flight after she refused to sit down until a Tamil man, who was being deported to Sri Lanka, was allowed to leave the plane.

In a prosecution headed by Commonwealth prosecutor Holly Baxter, the court heard the charge carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison, but Pilbrow is unlikely to be convicted and placed on a bond if she coughs up Qantas’s cash.

About 30 protesters gathered outside the court to support Pilbrow before her contested hearing.

The group held signs reading: “Stop sending people to danger”; and “Refoulement is the real crime”.
Pilbrow had argued her on-board protest was in response to a “sudden or extraordinary emergency”.

Taking the stand, Pilbrow tried to convince the court her actions were necessary to halt the man being taken back to Sri Lanka where she claimed he faced torture.

In a long winded rant, Pilbrow attempted to educate the magistrate on the plight of the Tamils, complaining Australia was violating its international obligations against torture.

She told the court cabin crew at no stage told her that her non-violent protest was against the law.
Pilbrow openly admitted to disrupting the flight, waiting until everyone was seated before standing up and demanding the man be removed.

Two other passengers, unknown to Pilbrow, spontaneously joined in on the protest, but were not charged.
All three left the plane when Federal Police arrived and escorted the Tamil man off.
He was later deported to Sri Lanka.

Ms Keogh said she accepted Pilbrow had not been aggressive and had conducted herself in a way that did not cause distress to other passengers or harm people.

POLICE ASSAULTS A JOURNALIST TO MARK 150TH ANNIVERSARY!

1446189408_6529254_hirunews_HNDA

( File photo: Sri Lanka police in action)

Sri Lanka BriefBy Ruwan Nelugolla.-05/09/2016

Following a book launch yesterday (03), I returned home at Kalalgoda Road after 11.00 pm. As I was having a chat with some of my friends at home, policemen in uniform and civics stormed in, dragging behind them a friend of ours by the name of Sanjaya, who is staying with us. As he was on his way to a boutique nearby, a police jeep stopped him, asked if he was a drug user, removed his clothes on the road and searched him. He was beaten up and dragged into the house.

The police searched the house for drugs and finding nothing, tried to take all of us to the police station. Continuing my protestations, I asked them as to how they could do so. A man in civics, uttering raw filth and wielding a pistol, assaulted me and said I would be sent to prison by fabricating a heroin and ganja case against me. They dragged Sanjaya and me to the jeep. When they showed us the pistol, I asked if they were going to shoot us. Since I did nothing wrong and there was nothing to fear the police, and it was the police that had been abusing the law, I went to the jeep.

After getting in, I took my mobile phone out, and the same person in civics asked as to whom I was going to call and again assaulted me. Then, I told them that I am a journalist working for Lanka News Web, and that the police had no right to assault people like that. Saying, “Your mother *** media”, that person continued beating me up all they way until the jeep reached Thalangama police station.

That is how the police marked its 150th anniversary yesterday. By the time Sanjaya and I were taken to the police station, our lawyer was already there. The police settled the matter and freed us. After being beaten by the police, I was not in a mental condition to get hospitalized, and returned home.

On the previous day, there was an exchange of words with the police during a protest near Galle Face Green. Police did not allow us the peaceful protestors to go to the Presidential Secretariat to seek justice for Madhushka de Silva of Anuradhapura who was made to disappear three years ago.

It ended with top police officials hiding behind a group of police women and warning of arrest on a charge of harassing the women if we tried to proceed forward. Madhushka’s wife too, was with us and we did not want to inconvenience a group of women in police uniform who were being used against us.

As we dispersed, two men from the police traffic division asked us for our identity cards. When we opposed their asking us for our identifications without a purpose, they called the Colombo Fort police and brought in two more policemen. We showed them our identity cards with an advice that they should not terrify us in the same manner they had terrified the average citizens of the north and elsewhere.

Only the police that came yesterday know if these two incidents were related. Anyway, I am the aggrieved party and in both incidents, the culprit was the Sri Lanka Police Department.

I work as a journalist of Lanka News Web website, and also an activist of the national movement for freedom for political prisoners. I know the law to a certain extent. Had an average citizen faced what I had to face yesterday, he would be behind bars by now. This is how Sri Lanka’s police enforce the law. The person who assaulted me wielded his pistol and threatened me inside the jeep saying, “I first killed a man when I was at Year 11.” Which institution is responsible for finding out if those in the police are murderers? The only reason for wielding a pistol and attacking me was my question of as to how they could take people like the way they did. I do not know how the police can be so conceited that a citizen could not ask them a question. That is clearly the lawlessness.

– Ruwan Nelugolla – Lanka News Web political editor / LNW
Maj Gen. Palitha Fernando and Nissanka Senadipathi arrested

Maj Gen. Palitha Fernando and Nissanka Senadipathi arrested

logoSeptember 6, 2016

Maj Gen. Palitha Fernando and Nissanka Senadipathi has been arrested by the Bribery Commission this afternoon. They were released on bail after being produced before the Colombo Magistrate

 The Commission to Investigate into Allegations of Bribery or Corruption earlier filed action against former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and 7 others for unlawfully authorizing the establishing of a floating armoury.  

 The other seven persons include former Additional Secretary of the State Ministry of Defence Damayanthi Jayaratne, Major General Palitha Fernando, Major General K.B. Egodawela, former Navy Commanders Admiral Somathilake Dissanayake, Admiral Jayanath Colombage, Admiral Jayantha Perera and Avant Garde Chairman retired Major General Nissanka Senadhipathi. 

  The case of the “floating armoury” had come to light after the Sri Lankan Navy boarded the vessel on October 6, 2015 to discover a massive stash of weapons on board.  There have been allegations that the Avant Garde Maritime Services was unduly favoured by the government of Mahinda Rajapaksa and as a result caused losses to the Sri Lankan Navy.


Rishard educates with a technique to consume an enhanced meal from rice!

Rishard educates with a technique to consume an enhanced meal from rice!

 Sep 05, 2016
After raw rice is cooked it it termed 'bath'.Hence we eat 'bath'.We know most of the time that we eat 'bath' from rice.However one of our Ministers have thought us that we could eat more than 'bath' from rice.He is Rishard Badiurdeen our Minster of Trade and Industries.

It is not a simple type of food.It is a super super food millions in value.He had consumed this super food selling out hunger.We were who were known to consume rice he has taught us to eat the hunger of others.He had shown the manner of eating rice while importation of rice,when purchasing from the inland market,when storing and transporting.

The Minister has shown us how to consume the rice imported, when distributed to the market,,while stored in warehouses,when selling rotten rice to animal farms.To find to what extent  is the value of  food ,a  person who cannot gauge the start and the end of the process of the preparation of rice.He is the  person who is now been questioned at the Presidential commission for hours regarding the acts of frauds committed to find the sequence of rice meal consumed.

The requirement of rice and related approval
 A cabinet paper had been prepared on 31st July 2014 as during the Maha season of 2013/14 the anticipated the paddy harvest would not be received.Hence to cope with the deficiency of paddy in the market and in order to maintain optimum  buffer stocks in the market  so that the Sathosa outlets could meet the demand for rice among the consumers and also that there would be inflation in the prices this measure was taken. However the authorities of the Sathosa did not have an estimate to what extent the import of rice should be made.However an order for 50,000 metric tonnes of 'sudu kekulu' rice was made from India and an order for 25,000 metric tonnes of 'nadu' rice was made from Bangladesh and in addition another order for 60,000 metric tonnes of rice had been made from India..In addition the deputy secretary of the treasury had written by his letter of the 15th October 2014 to the Chairaman Sathosa to import another 100,000 metric tonnes of rice from APC Industries Ltd India.

However according to the deputy secretary's letter to order for 100,000 metric tonnes of rice,only two letters of credit opened for 9887 metric tonnes of rice had been imported.On the 31st December 2014 the rest of the letters of credit had been stopped.Hence the total amount of rice imported had been 145,926 metric tonnes..By December 2014 all imports of rice had been stopped.But those already ordered were coming in.By the time the cabinet decision was taken the stocks of different varieties of rice of 29,262 metric tonnes ordered by the Sathosa under easy payment terms had been coming in. Through a letter of credit metric tonnes 1040 altogether metric tonnes 30,302 had been imported.

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SriLankan Airlines’ Breathalyzer Tests: Pilots Threaten Union Action In 48 Hours, If Victimised Pilot Is Not Re-Instated


Colombo Telegraph
September 6, 2016 
The Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka has served noticed to the management of Sri Lankan Airlines that they would take appropriate action to protect their membership within 48 hours if their innocent member pilot Capt. Sujith Jayasekara who was falsely accused of refusing to comply with a breathalyzer test by the management prior to his flight departure on the 28th of August 2016 to Bangkok is not re-instated.
Chairman Ajit Dias
Chairman Ajit Dias
The ALPGSL sent in two letters one addressed to CEO Capt. Suren Ratwatte informing him to abandon the flawed breathalyzer test procedure with immediate effect that is currently being practiced until the Civil Aviation Authority, the company and the pilots agree on a procedure that is acceptable to all stake holders concerned. The letter also went to state that Capt, Jayasekara should be re-instated with immediate effect, as all evidence points out to the fact that he never refused to comply with the breathalyzer test.
SriLankan Airlines' Breathalyzer TestsIn another letter addressed to the Director General H.M.C. Nimalasiri of the Civil Aviation Authority, the ALPGSL also wrote in requesting him to intervene and stop the flawed breathalyzer test process immediately.
Majority of the pilots now believe that this is a witch hunt instigated by the Chairman Ajith Dias and CEO Capt.Suren Ratwatte as Capt. Jayasekara is one of the most vociferous of pilots that SriLankan Airlines has ever had. On numerous occasions at management and pilot meetings Capt.Jayasekara has challenged the management’s decisions, incompetence and reasons as to why the lawyer J.C.Weliamuna led Board of Investigations into the national carrier and their subsequent findings have not been implemented to date.
A senior pilot speaking on condition of anonymity as he is not permitted to speak to the media said ” Now we feel the Director General H.M.C.Nimalasiri of CAA is back pedaling this case too as he has always done in the past. It is understood that there is enormous pressure exerted on him by Chairman Dias and CEO Capt. Ratwatte as they are frequently selling the name of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and threatening the Director General to do what they desire”.

Vitol the blacklisted “Dirty” Fuel Supplier is cleaned and re-instated by Ceylon Petroleum Corporation for the third time : Await.., the next dirty fuel consignment shortly.!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -05.Sep.2016, 7.20PM) Supply of petroleum to Sri Lanka, is a thriving business for a few oil trading companies and for their local agents in Sri Lanka.   Of course the majority of these oil trading companies are engaged in a fair business with Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, while there are very few companies who have made CPC suffer losses in multi millions giving immense suffering to the general public by way of repeatedly supplying contaminated or substandard fuel or simply “dirty Fuel”.
Dirty fuel supplied to CPC and distributed by CPC in the past have played havoc from paralyzing the electrical power generation to bringing running vehicles to a grinding halt paralyzing public and private transportation causing millions of damage to the state as well as private assets. Below is the dirty game of the even dirtier business of the Minister in charge of the Ministry in Charge in collusion with whoever Chairman /Managing Director of the CPC followed by a shipment of dirty fuel supplied to CPC.
With a supply of a batch of dirty fuel leading to a critical public uproar the first thing the minister in charge of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation does is blaming the supplier in order to give eyewash to the unassuming public. Susil Premajayantha brilliantly performed this when he brought that infamous consignment of dirty petrol in 2011.
After a while, like everything else, people forget the episode of dirty fuel. Then the Minister starts the business with the supplier of the dirty fuel. For the information of the general public, Vitol the notorious dirty fuel supplier has been reinstated successfully for the third time as a “clean oil” supplier by CPC after a shameless deal by the Minister/Ministry officials and the higher-ups in CPC. 
First episode of Dirty Fuel Supply by Vitol in 2009.
Vitol delivered a shipment of 20,000 metric tons of substandard Fuel Oil in Aug 2009. This fuel which was imported by CPC for the use of Independent Power Plants caused machinery breakdown resulting in the closure of the power plants which lead to the level of a national crisis.   The Minister tried to defend the supplier for about three weeks and was ultimately forced to blacklist Vitol only in late August 2009. The estimated loss to the country was above USD 10 million.
Vitol and the Minister were silent for some time. After the deal was clinched between the Minister and Vitol, Supplier was reinstated in December 2011.
Over and above the private deal between the Minister and Vitol, supplier  was fined USD 150,000. Once again supplier was in business as usual.
Second Episode of Dirty Fuel Supply by Vitol in 2011
Vitol delivered the second batch of dirty fuel, this time it was 20,000 metric tons of diesel, in August 2011. Cars, Lorries, trains and over 1000 busses were brought to a halt. Public uproar and media pressure was unavoidable;   Minister this time was forced to say Vitol was “permanently blacklisted”.
Loss to CPC and the public was in millions this time too. However, as usual supplier waited in silence till the next Minister took over the Ministry of Petroleum. 
The Minister cleaned up the ‘so called’ permanently blacklisted Vitol, and re-listed as a supplier with CPC after his deal was successfully struck.  However, to impress the public, CPC arranged to publish that Vitol paid a fine for the losses suffered.
Third Episode of Dirty Fuel Supply by Vitol in 2014
Vitol, who had been blacklisted twice and re-listed twice, supplied the third shipment of dirty fuel, this time, Low Sulphur Fuel Oil for the use of Kerawalapitiya Power Plant of Ceylon Electricity Board. Power generation came to a standstill as the Fuel was contaminated with water and used lubricating oil. 
Vitol was adamant when they were asked to take the cargo back by the CPC. But when Vitol blatantly refused CPC’s request,   the Minister humbled himself and CPC higher-ups meekly shut up.
This shipment was subsequently sold by CPC at a colossal loss.
The first re-instating business opened for the incumbent minister is re-instating the infamous Vitol who supplied three shipments of dirty fuel in the recent past. Supplier’s representative met the Minister and CPC Chairman and discussed the “modalities” of the business. After an agreement was reached to the satisfaction of all parties, the deal was clinched and instructions were given by the Minister to reinstate notorious Vitol for the third time.
Vitol will be back in the business as usual!
The next shipment of “dirty fuel” will arrive shortly!
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by     (2016-09-05 14:02:51)

Over 9.5 Kg Gold Missing From Kataragama shrine

by Kasun Pussewala-Tuesday, September 06, 2016
Sashendra and D P Kumarage and Nilanga
Over 9.5 Kg of gold is said to have gone missing from the Ruhunu Maha Kataragama Temple, sources revealed to The Sunday Leader.
Sources said that the gold had gone missing when the shrine was handed over to Shasheendra Rajapaksa in 2006 by the then Basnayake Nilame, Pradeep Nilanga Dela Bandara.
The exact amount of gold gifted to the Temple was not taken note of at the time, sources further added.
When contacted, the current Basnayake Nilame, K. G. Kumarage told The Sunday Leader that he has already made a statement to the police over the missing gold. He said that the Criminal Investigations Department has recorded a statement from him over the incident and that the missing gold is estimated to be nearly 9.5 kg.
The Basnayake Nilame said that since he took office in April last year he has made it a point to record the gold gifted to the Temple.
He said that devotees who gift gold are given receipts for the gold they hand over in order to keep a record of the gold.
K. G. Kumarage said that since investigations into the missing gold are underway, he did not wish to comment further.
When contacted by The Sunday Leader, Pradeep Nilanga Dela Bandara said that he had handed over all the gold in the Temple to Shasheendra Rajapaksa in 2006.
Bandara said that he was not aware of so much gold going missing after he ended his term at the Temple.
Former Basnayake Nilame Shasheendra Rajapaksa said that he had handed over all the gold to the Bank of Ceylon branch in Tissamaharama.
Rajapaksa said that officials of the Office of the Commissioner of Buddhist Affairs were present when the gold was placed in the bank safe.

Israeli captain: “I will make you all disabled”

Youth in Dheisheh refugee camp say threat of permanent injury will not stop protests during Israeli army raids.-Wisam HashlamounAPA images

Nora Barrows-Friedman-1 September 2016

The Israeli army invaded the Dheisheh refugee camp near the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem early Friday morning last week.

Soldiers shot the legs of two youths among those confronting the raiding army.

Israeli forces also raided the home of a political prisoner from the camp, locking his mother and sister inside the house to pressure the prisoner’s younger brother to turn himself in, the Ma’an News Agency reported.

Soldiers blew off the door to the Ibdaa Cultural Center, adjacent to one of the entrances to the camp, “and occupied the rooftop of the building, from where Israeli snipers fired live ammunition and tear gas canisters at local youth,” according to Ma’an.

Such raids are nothing new, nor is the camp’s resistance against them. The army has shot approximately 30 residents of Dheisheh, which has a population of approximately 15,000 Palestinians, with live ammunition since January. Most have been shot in the legs and knees.

In several testimonies gathered by The Electronic Intifada, youth in the camp say that an Arabic-speaking officer with Israel’s domestic intelligence agency known as the Shin Bet has been provoking youths during clashes and threatening them with physical harm. The officer goes by the alias Captain Nidal.

“They choose [to shoot at] the leg to disable and torture you,” 20-year-old Muhammad, not his real name, told The Electronic Intifada.

During raids, snipers shoot protesters under Captain Nidal’s directives, youth say.
Youth told the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz that they believe the Shin Bet officer is exacting revenge after someone took his photograph during a raid and posted it on Facebook.

Threats

According to Badil, a human rights group based in Bethlehem, Captain Nidal has threatened youth “before, during and after the raids, and during interrogations and arrests.”

The Israeli army raided Dheisheh three times between the end of July and mid-August, the group says.
During the recent incursions, at least 18 youths – between 14 and 27 years old – were shot in their legs. Eight were shot directly in the knee and several more in both legs, Badil reports.
Badil’s study was published just days before the Israeli army raided the camp on Friday last week and shot two more youths.

Youth have testified to Badil that Captain Nidal has made statements such as “I will make all the youth of the camp disabled,” “I will have all of you walking with crutches and in wheelchairs,” “I will make half of you disabled, and let the other half push the wheelchairs” and “I will make all of you stand in line at the ATM waiting for your disability subsidies and assistance.”

“The explicit threats by the Israeli army leadership show the willingness to commit criminal acts,” Badil states.

Impact on families

In the last two years in Dheisheh, “at least 81 youths have been injured by bullets in the limbs, about 60 of whom have suffered permanent disabilities,” Al-Quds newspaper reported on 13 August.

All of those injured over the last two months have been previously imprisoned by Israel, according to Al-Quds.

Some youth were recently released from Israeli detention but were re-arrested during these violent raids.

“In the camp, when the soldiers come, you will find 200, 300 kids and also older people throwing stones or even just standing in the streets, trying to show the enemy, the Israeli occupation, that they are not welcome in our camp,” explained an activist and resident of Dheisheh.

The activist told The Electronic Intifada that during these raids, Israeli soldiers swarm the camp in the middle of the night, and hidden snipers shoot at youth from the rooftops of residents’ homes.
During a recent invasion, the activist said that the Israeli soldiers were shooting “continuously for two hours – at whom, we don’t know.”

At least 10 residents, including teenagers, have been arrested during these overnight raids over the past month, he said.

When youth are shot in the legs and knees, the impact on them and their families can be devastating.
The recovery period, along with long-term physical therapy and medication, puts the young people, their families and the larger community under economic and psychological pressure in an area where poverty and unemployment are already high.

“This is what Captain Nidal and the Israeli army want,” the activist said. “They want the families to stop the youth from going out [and resisting], creating a fragmentation within the community.”

“Intentional”

Khaled, not his real name, another 20-year-old resident of Dheisheh, says he was shot defending the camp during a pre-dawn army raid on 1 August.

“A soldier made me come out from behind a tree where I was hiding and told me to come out man to man,” Khaled told The Electronic Intifada.

As the soldier approached him, Khaled said a hidden sniper shot him in the leg, five centimeters below the knee.

He has received two operations and will need physical therapy, he added.

“It was definitely intentional that the shooting was in the leg because it can disable you and give a lesson to the youth not to go out and throw stones,” Khaled said.

Muhammad told The Electronic Intifada that he was injured in the same raid.

The youth says he was coming home from working a night shift when he heard that the army was inside the camp. He joined other youth to find and repel the invading soldiers.

“I was injured in the knee area, [which produced] a hole in the bone – nothing was broken, just a hole. And in my other leg I was hit in the flesh. A bullet in one leg and two bullets in the other,” Muhammad said.
“During the confrontations one young man was injured, so I went to carry him and as I was carrying him I was shot in my right leg,” he added.

“I kept walking and he shot me in my other leg, but I still kept going. Then he shot me again and I fell down. The youths came and carried us both away. We were very close to the army and if I had not pulled the other guy away they would have taken him. They [the army] would have taken both of us if the guys hadn’t come and taken us,” Muhammad explained.

Badil says the pattern of “intentional wounding” of demonstrators “amount[s] to a systematic policy and an implementation of Captain Nidal’s threats.”

“We’ve grown up with this”

Inside a camp with such a strong history of political organizing and resistance, Israel has long implemented policies of “collective punishment … to create a new generation of disabled people,” the activist in Dheisheh said.

“We’ve grown up with this,” he added.

Since the first intifada of the late 1980s, Israel has employed various tactics to repress popular uprisings and community defense of Palestinian cities, towns, villages and refugee camps.

Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin imposed what became known as the “breaking bones” doctrine of brutal force during the first intifada.

In the first few days of second intifada, in the fall of 2000, as the Israeli army’s then-chief of staff Shaul Mofazsought to “vanquish” the resistance, soldiers fired more than 1.3 million bullets on Palestinians.

As Benjamin Netanyahu’s administration unleashed 51 days of attacks against the Gaza Strip in July and August 2014, killing more than 2,250 Palestinians, including over 550 children, Israeli forces inside the West Bank used live ammunition against demonstrators, causing permanent injuries – perhaps by design.

And just two weeks ago, Israeli soldiers fatally wounded an unarmed Palestinian teenager with live ammunition during a massive raid on al-Fawwar refugee camp in the West Bank city of Hebron. Twenty-three people were wounded during the raid.

The Israeli military told Haaretz that during the raid on al-Fawwar camp, Palestinians were shot “in their lower extremities by rounds from the Ruger rifle, considered to have less force than live fire.”

An army spokesperson told Haaretz that soldiers use the Ruger – a US-made weapon – in the kinds of raids seen in Dheisheh.

Fertile ground for abuse

The “culture of impunity which now characterizes Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory has proven fertile ground for severe human rights abuses and international crimes,” explained Simon Reynolds, a researcher with Badil.

“It is a culture which has come to be institutionalized through the introduction of live-fire directives which fail to comply with international law, and the abject failure of Israeli military authorities to adequately investigate and prosecute accusations of criminal acts committed by members of its own forces,” he said.

More than 70 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces so far this year in the West Bank, according to United Nations data.

Israeli forces have carried out a weekly average of 71 “search and arrest” operations across the West Bank in 2016.

The military carried out 86 raids during the first week of August alone, the UN monitoring group OCHA reports.

“West Bank refugee camps and the decades-long structural hardships and deprivations suffered by residents have long engendered Palestinian popular resistance, political engagement and protest,” said Reynolds.

“It is difficult to view the ramping up of Israeli raids and the shoot-to-disable policy as anything other than brutal attempts to suppress the Palestinian voice; to demonstrate the ‘cost’ of challenging the status quo,” he told The Electronic Intifada.

In Dheisheh, Muhammad explained that even though they face routine threats of physical and psychological harm from the Israeli army, the youth of the camp won’t be deterred from resisting the Israeli army’s routine acts of violence.

“They do this to stop the youths [from] going out and resisting,” he said, “but despite this we’re waiting for them, even if we’re disabled.”

According to Khaled, “The determination of the youths is increasing and the struggle is continuing. They are not going to destroy the determination of the youth with these injuries.”

Nora Barrows-Friedman is an associate editor of The Electronic Intifada.

Abbas warns Arab Quartet against interference in Palestine: Reports

In a short video clip, Abbas says, 'No one tells us what to do'
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas (File photo/AFP)

Monday 5 September 2016
Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has warned the newly formed Arab Quartet against interfering in Palestinian affairs, according to news reports.
The Middle East Monitor, citing a Safa news agency report, described an angry Abbas saying on Sunday: “No one tells us what to do.”
In a televised speech broadcasted on the PA’s official TV channel, Abbas said: “Let’s speak as Palestinians and it is enough of the [hidden] links here or there.”
According to Safa, Abbas referred to the newly formed Arab Quartet, which aims to unify the Fatah movement and return its dismissed former leader Mohamed Dahlan to his position.
“Anyone who has links to outside powers,” Abbas said, “he has to cut them himself; otherwise, we will cut them. This is our homeland. Our relations with the entire world should be good and pleasant. But no one dictates a stance to us. No one dictates an opinion to us.
“We are the decision makers and the executives, too,” he said. “No one has any power over us.”
Abbas said it is time to think only of Palestine.
“We want to work as Palestinians. Can we do this?” he asked. “This is what is required of us.”

Espionage: Will the KGB Kill Edward Snowden?


by Cliff Kincaid 
( September 2, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) In a story headlined, “The New Snowden Movie is the Best PR He’ll Ever Get,” a young writer with no knowledge of Russian espionage operations quotes an ACLU lawyer as saying that the upcoming movie “Snowden” will paint the former NSA analyst living in Russia as “a hero who exposed the great injustices and overreach of the global surveillance state.” The film will therefore “have a huge effect on how the public sees Snowden,” he says.

But the film, scheduled for release on September 16, may be an attempt to salvage the reputations of both Edward Snowden and the filmmaker, Oliver Stone.

Edward Snowden is charged with espionage, and has been described by presidential candidate Donald J. Trump as a traitor who should be executed.

His disclosures of NSA surveillance techniques have assisted America’s enemies and adversaries, including the Islamic State and Vladimir Putin’s Russia. I wrote a book about the case, Blood on His Hands: The True Story of Edward Snowden, examining the setbacks for American foreign policy in the wake of Snowden’s theft of classified documents, and the U.S. being caught blind regarding Russian aggression and Islamic State expansion into Europe and America.

Two days before the film’s release, some theaters will feature a live question-and-answer period between Snowden and Stone following a special screening, with Snowden appearing live from Moscow.

Stone is apparently hoping the film will restore his reputation as an avant-garde filmmaker whose previous release, “South of the Border,” was an embarrassing apology for a series of Latin American communists. It depicted Venezuela as heaven on earth and featured interviews with such despots as Hugo Chavez, Lula da Silva of Brazil and Raul Castro.

snowden-poster-868x1355Chavez has since expired and met his maker, while Venezuela is a hell-hole example of how socialism works in practice, with shortages, massive inflation and violations of human rights on a constant basis.

Lula da Silva’s successor, Dilma Rousseff, has just been impeached in Brazil. Castro is still in power because Barack Obama and Pope Francis engineered U.S. recognition of the Communist regime in Cuba, and thereby a lifeline of new money.

Trying to make himself newsworthy again, Stone has made the movie, “Snowden,” after a trip to Russia where he met with former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev. Upon his return, he delivered the commencement speech at the University of Connecticut, where he described Edward Snowden as “an avatar” for the next generation.

Previous avatars have included Aldrich Ames, the CIA traitor, and Robert Hanssen, the FBI traitor. Both were spies for the Soviets and are serving life sentences in prison.

“I think Snowden is a terrible threat, I think he’s a terrible traitor, and you know what we used to do in the good old days when we were a strong country—you know what we used to do to traitors, right?” Trump said to host Eric Bolling on Fox News. “Well, you killed them, Donald,” Bolling replied.

He was apparently referring to Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were American citizens executed for espionage on behalf of the Soviet Union back in 1953.

Yet, President Obama’s then-Attorney General Eric Holder actually wrote to the Russians, promising them that Snowden would be spared the death penalty if he returned to the United States.

In a story about how Snowden is pulling in tens of thousands of capitalist dollars for digital speaking appearances from Russia at American colleges and other events like concerts and Comic-Con, Michael Isikoff and Michael B. Kelley of Yahoo! News reported that advance work in the media for the new Snowden movie is being handled by “veteran liberal public relations executive David Fenton.”

That seems appropriate. In the past, Fenton has represented George Soros, the communist Sandinistas in Nicaragua, the Salvadoran communist guerrillas and CIA defector Philip Agee.

Snowden seems to be the NSA equivalent of Agee, who defected from the CIA and became a Cuban and Soviet agent. Benjamin S. Civiletti, attorney general in the Carter administration, provided Agee with immunity from prosecution. At the time, the FBI wasarguing for prosecution of Agee on the grounds that he was engaging in espionage activity against the U.S.

Snowden may be seeking to return to the U.S. because of what happened to another defector from the NSA to Russia. Victor Norris Hamilton, a former code analyst with the NSA who defected to Russia, was discovered in the 1990s at a Moscow psychiatric prison hospital. After the Soviets milked him, they put him in a rubber room.

Former Reagan National Security Council staffer Oliver North says that Snowden will be killed by the Russians when they have finished using him for propaganda purposes. Then, he suggests, the Russians will blame his death on the CIA.

 Cliff Kincaid works for the Accuracy in Media where this piece first appeared) 

Monday, September 5, 2016


President Obama spoke about the "colorful" comments made by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Sept. 5, at the close of the G20 summit in the Chinese city of Hangzhou. (Reuters)

 

HANGZHOU, China — After being called an obscenity by the president of the Philippines, President Obama canceled a meeting with the leader that had been scheduled for Tuesday.

President Rodrigo Duterte had threatened to curse out Obama if he raised the issue of extrajudicial killings by Philippine authorities in a sweeping crackdown on drug trafficking. Speaking to reporters, Duterte, who took office in June, said the Philippines is a "sovereign state and we have long ceased to be a colony," according to the Associated Press.

He added: "I do not have any master except the Filipino people, nobody but nobody. You must be respectful. Do not just throw questions. 'Putang ina,' I will swear at you in that forum." That is the Tagalog phrase for "son of a bitch" or "son of a whore."

Asked to respond during a news conference after the Group of 20 summit in China, Obama said earlier Monday that he had been told of Duterte's comment, but he shrugged it off as another in a line of "colorful statements" from Duterte.

"Clearly, he's a colorful guy," Obama said. The president added that he had asked his staffers to speak with their Philippine counterparts to "make sure if I'm having a meeting, it's productive and we're getting something done." Obama called the Philippines a close "friend and ally" of the United States.

Hours later, Ned Price, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said that the meeting with Duterte on Tuesday afternoon had been canceled and that Obama would instead meet with South Korean President Park Geun-hye.

More than 2,000 suspected drug dealers have been killed since Duterte took office, and Obama earlier said that when speaking with Duterte, he would not shy away from the topic of "international norms" when it comes to due-process rights.

"We recognize the significant burden the drug trade plays in the Philippines and around the world," 

Obama said. But "we will always assert the need to have due process and engage the fight against drugs in a way that is consistent with basic international norms. Undoubtedly, if and when we have a meeting, 
this is going to be something that’s brought up. My expectation, my hope, is that it could be dealt with constructively."

Before the meeting was canceled, Obama suggested that the talk was predicated on whether Duterte was willing to have a serious conversation.

"I’m just going to make an assessment," Obama said at the time. A few hours later, he canceled the meeting.

Other notables Duterte has insulted in the past include the United Nations, theU.S. ambassador to Manila and Pope Francis.

Nakamura reported from Washington. Kristine Guerra contributed to this report.

Ukraine’s Best-Known Reformer Succumbs to the Lure of Populism

In his inflammatory response to a brutal crime, Mikheil Saakashvili reveals his dark side.
Ukraine’s Best-Known Reformer Succumbs to the Lure of Populism

BY VLADISLAV DAVIDZON-SEPTEMBER 5, 2016 

Last Saturday, in the final week of what is usually a sedate period of summer vacation for almost everybody in Ukraine, the country’s bucolic southern Odessa region experienced an ominous and unusual bout of ethnic violence.

The episode had nothing to do with the simmering war between Ukrainians and pro-Russian separatists.
It had the air of something more ancient, and perhaps even more sinister: a pogrom against a small community of Roma.

The violence was triggered by the discovery on August 27 of the body of a young girl, variously described as 8 or 9 years old, who police said had been raped before her murder. A day later, a 21-year-old Roma man from Loshchynivka, a village of ethnic Russians and Bulgarians that also has a tiny Roma community, was taken into custody and charged with the horrendous crime. In response, on last Saturday evening, an enraged mob of young men went on an anti-Roma rampage, throwing stones, smashing windows, burning down a house, and desecrating property. Thankfully, there were no injuries, as the Roma had already fled — but the widely shared videos of the episode led multiple Ukrainian observers to describe the situation as a pogrom, implying violence motivated by ethnic hatred.

The authorities responded quickly. After locals demanded the permanent removal of the Roma — about six families comprising about 50 individuals — the village council provided buses to take them away. Immediately after the violence, the governor of the Odessa region, former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili, dispatched special police units and paramilitaries to the village under the personal command of his police chief.

But it was another element of the governor’s reaction that most troubled domestic and international observers. In comments directly after the incident and again after the girl’s funeral on Wednesday, Saakashvili made public statements which, in a tense situation, are hard to see as anything but inflammatory. “I fully share the outrage of the residents of Loshchynivka,” hesaid, adding that in the village there was “a real den of iniquity, there is massive drug-dealing in which the anti-social elements that live there are engaged. We should have fundamentally dealt with this problem earlier — and now it’s simply obligatory.”

Saakashvili’s appointment to the governorship of the Odessa region just over a year ago was met with great excitement and engendered hopes that he could emulate his earlier success as a democratic reformer in his native Georgia.

The governor is often viewed as modern, progressive, and even hip. Prior to his return to the Post-Soviet world in May of 2015, the New York Timespublished an amusing portrayal of his hipster-like exile in Brooklyn. He is almost universally characterized as a principled anti-corruption crusader who is attempting to make Ukraine’s Euromaidan revolution produce results in the south of the country. But, in the face of stonewalling by local and national authorities, his results have been mixed. And after wasting time and political capital this spring crisscrossing the country and forging a movement for reform in misplaced expectations of early elections (these did not happen), he has now refocused his energies on creating local infrastructure. His projects include championing a new highway to Romania and finalizing construction of a long-stalled second terminal for the local airport.

Yet Saakashvili’s ungracious and even dangerous response to last weekend’s tragic incident in a region with fresh historical memory of ethnic strife highlights a different side of his character. His inflammatory rhetoric in a delicate moment was not befitting of a Westernizing reformer.

Comments offered by Saakashvili’s officials were no less revealing. “We must respect the presumption of innocence,” said Zurab Hvistani, a spokesman for the Odessa region’s interior ministry, “but it is merely the constitution of a fact that every Ukrainian and Odessan on the level of ordinary life understands that members of the Roma community are involved in the drug trade.” Local villagers have indeed been quoted complaining about a rise in crime since the arrival of the Roma families — which, of course, can offer no justification for vigilante violence.

Hvistani was insistent that the Roma were not being forced to leave the village against their will. He described their voluntary departure as an implicit admission of the reality that further peaceful coexistence with their Ukrainian neighbors would be impossible. He also declined to provide the location where the Roma families would be moving.

Meanwhile, Roma organizations have filed direct appeals to interior minister Arsen Avakova staunch Saakashvilli opponent, decrying the violence and noting that the state’s failure to protect the Roma stands in direct contradiction with its stated goals of building the rule of law in Ukraine.

The episode couldn’t come at a worse moment for the city and regional government. Odessa is widely viewed as the favorite candidate city to host the 2017 Eurovision song contest, for which it is competing with Kiev and Dnipro. The winner is expected to be announced in the coming weeks, and the prospect is seen as so important to the city’s future that, just a day after the killing, Saakashvilli and his sworn local enemy, Odessa mayor Gennady Trukhanov (whom he has repeatedly referred to as a separatist, bandit, and thief) hosted a joint press conference in support of the bid. It was the first time that the two had appeared together in public in almost 15 months, though Odessa’s elites have since become accustomed to seeing the two men milling about at opposite sides of banquet halls and official gatherings.

The two men’s unlikely truce is evidence that this episode of sectarian violence might endanger the city’s bid for Eurovision glory. And that, in combination with his frustration by the slow pace of his attempted reforms, is what may have prompted Saakashvili to adopt a strikingly populist tone in response. Though the incident may be viewed as a random, it is, in fact, a demonstration of the relative fragility of the social compact in the ethnically diverse region. Saakashvili’s response offers an unflattering picture of a governor many had hoped would help Odessa — and is particularly troubling since he remains the only force likely to offer the region any meaningful reforms for years to come.

Photo credit: ALEXEY KRAVTSOV/AFP/Getty Images