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

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Year of atrocities in Palestine

Mourners carry the body of Abd al-Rahman al-Dabbagh during his funeral in the central Gaza Strip on 10 September. The 16-year-old was killed by Israeli forces during a protest.Ashraf AmraAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy-30 September 2016

Sixteen-year-old Abd al-Rahman Ahmad al-Dabbagh had asked one of his friends to take his photo during a protest near the boundary between Gaza and Israel earlier this month.

A few minutes later, there was an explosion. The teenager was directly hit by a flare bomb fired by an Israeli soldier, killing him instantly, an investigation by the human rights group Al-Haq has found.

“Abd al-Rahman was then seen lying on the ground, with his head on fire,” Al-Haq’s report on the incident states. “His shocked friends ran to help him, but the Israeli soldiers pointed their weapons at them, and stated, ‘whoever will dare and try to approach will suffer the same fate as him.’”

The youth is one of 21 Palestinians who have been killed while demonstrating near the so-called buffer zone inside Gaza during the past year.

The demonstrations have occurred on a weekly basis since October, which witnessed the beginning of a new phase of confrontation – often deadly – between Palestinians and Israeli forces.

Uprising and repression

The ongoing wave of protest and violence first came to the fore after Israel’s unchecked assaults and incursions in occupied East Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque compound last September. The epicenter of confrontation soonmoved to Hebron, another West Bank city where Israel expands its settlements in the heart of Palestinian neighborhoods.

Deadly incidents have since occurred at checkpoints and settlements throughout the West Bank, where for decades Israel has imposed a belligerent military occupation to expand its settler-colonial enterprise and brutally stamp out Palestinian resistance to it.

In response, Israel has swelled the number of Palestinians in its prisons over the past year, including child detainees and those held without charge or trial. It has imposed sweeping closure of areas of the West Bank and other collective punishment measures such as revenge home demolitions targeting the families of Palestinians accused of attacking Israelis.

This is on top of the profound repression that is a daily reality for Palestinians living under Israel’s suffocating rule.

Israel has also withheld the bodies of dozens of alleged Palestinian attackers, preventing families from giving their loved ones a dignified burial or carrying out autopsies which would yield information that could be used in court.

When they have transferred bodies for burial, in some cases Israeli authorities imposed severe restrictions on when and where funerals can be held, and the number of people allowed to attend.

250 Palestinians killed

More than 250 Palestinians and a Jordanian national have been killed by Israeli uniformed forces, private security guards and armed civilians since October 2015, according to Al-Haq’s count.

Thirty-five Israelis and two other foreign nationals were slain during the same period, according to Amnesty International. They include a girl stabbed to death in her settlement home, and four Israelis who were shot dead allegedly by two cousins from Hebron who opened fire on an upscale square in Tel Aviv.
Some Israelis also died by friendly fire.

Additionally, an Eritrean refugee died after he was shot and beaten by a mob of Israelis, some of themuniformed, who mistook him for an attacker following the fatal shooting of a soldier at a bus station.
A Sudanese man was shot and fatally wounded after allegedly stabbing a soldier.

Many of those Palestinians killed were slain during demonstrations or army raids on West Bank refugee camps,towns and cities. But the majority – more than 150, according to Amnesty – were killed during the course of “alleged, attempted, or actual attacks … against Israeli soldiers, police and civilians.”

Those Palestinians slain in the course of alleged attacks, in addition to those killed during protests or army raids and airstrikes, have been overwhelmingly young. Defense for Children International – Palestine says that more than 50 boys and girls are among those killed in the West Bank alone, meaning that at least one in every five Palestinians killed since October was a child.

New phase of resistance

The events of the past year represent a new phase of resistance to the occupation, without leadership or party organization.

Youth protesters, born after the signing of the moribund Oslo agreement between Israel and the Palestinian leadership in the 1990s, have rejected the status quo of the Palestinian Authority and its tactical collaborationwith Israel to arrest those who defy the occupation. Student leaders loyal to the party of Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas have been among those killed during demonstrations.

Meanwhile, Palestinian attackers acted alone, or in small groups, and independent of command from armed factions. Their weapons were mainly kitchen knives and cars; in only a small fraction of the incidents did Palestinians open fire on Israelis.

Some of those who were armed with guns were members of the Palestinian Authority security forces.
In one case, an explosive was planted on a bus in Jerusalem, injuring 20. The suspected bomber, a 19-year-old from a Bethlehem refugee camp, died of injuries he sustained in the blast.

However, many of those slain during what Israel claims were attacks were not attempting any attack at all when they were killed, in some cases even by Israel’s own admission.

Amnesty points to a “pattern of unlawful killings carried out by Israeli forces” beginning with the 22 September 2015 slaying of Hadil Hashlamoun, 18, at a checkpoint in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron.

“These unlawful killings included cases … where Israeli forces used intentional lethal force against Palestinians who were not, or were no longer, posing an imminent threat to the lives of Israeli soldiers, police or civilians,” Amnesty states.

Extrajudicial executions

The human rights group has raised with the Israeli government 20 cases “of evidently unlawful killings of Palestinians, including 15 possible extrajudicial executions, carried out by Israeli forces” over the past year.

The cases include that of Hashlamoun, whose death Amnesty says “should be investigated as a possible extrajudicial execution.”

Other cases that Amnesty says should be investigated as such include the 26 October 2015 killing of Saad Muhammad Yousif al-Atrash, 20, who Israeli police said had attempted a stabbing. An eyewitness contradicted this claim, telling Amnesty that the youth was stopped by a soldier and asked to produce his ID. As he was reaching into his pocket to remove his card, he was shot by another soldier behind him.
Witnesses said that the youth was denied medical treatment for 40 minutes.

“It is a basic duty under international law to provide medical aid to the wounded, and failure to do so – especially intentional failure – violates the prohibition on torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment,” according to Amnesty. “As such, failure to provide medical aid should be investigated as a criminal offense.”

Medical care of wounded Palestinians has been denied or actively prevented in numerous deadly incidents over the past year. Video of one incident shows two badly injured Palestinians bleeding to death as a wounded Israeli soldier receives treatment.

In another incident, eyewitnesses told Amnesty International that Maram Salih Hassan Abu Ismail, 23, appeared to have been alive for half an hour after she and her 16-year-old brother were shot while attempting to cross the Qalandiya military checkpoint in April.

“Israeli forces did not provide any medical help and prevented a Palestinian ambulance from accessing the scene,” Amnesty states.

Abu Ismail and her brother, Ibrahim Taha, 16, both died from their wounds.

US citizen possibly executed

Though it has closed a probe into their slayings, Israel has repeatedly renewed a gag order on security camera footage showing the killing of Abu Ismail and Taha, just as it refuses to release footage from the scene of the fatal shooting of 16-year-old Mahmoud Shaalan, a dual Palestinian-American citizen.

As it did in the case of the brother and sister slain at Qalandiya checkpoint, Israel claimed that Shaalan had tried to stab soldiers when he was killed in a Ramallah-area village in February.

But an eyewitness testified to the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem that Shaalan had attempted to cross a checkpoint and was turned away by soldiers.

“As he was walking away from the soldiers, one soldier shot Mahmoud Muhammad Ali Shaalan from some distance away with around three bullets. He immediately fell to the ground, and the soldier then approached and shot him twice more, according to the witness,” Amnesty states.

An autopsy found that no bullets had been fired from close range, throwing into question Israel’s claim that the boy was attempting to stab soldiers when he was killed.

Amnesty says that the case should be investigated as a potential extrajudicial execution.

Fifteen human rights, civil liberties, Palestine solidarity and church groups are calling on the Obama administration investigate the incident.

Only one indictment

Video has surfaced showing several other incidents of what Amnesty describes as apparent unlawful killing, including:
  • The fatal shooting of 72-year-old Tharwat al-Sharawi as she was driving a car at a slow enough speed for soldiers to jump out of the way before they sprayed bullets at it;
  • The slaying of 19-year-old Fadi Alloun as he was chased by a mob of Israelis calling for his death;
  • The close-range shooting of Mahdi al-Muhtasib, 23, as he was lying on the ground, writhing in pain;
  • The shooting death of Bashar Masalha, 22, shot by a volunteer policeman at the urging of bystanders after he killed an American tourist in Jaffa.
Yet, as Amnesty notes, only one Israeli soldier has been indicted in relation to the killings of dozens of Palestinians in the past year.

Elor Azarya was charged with manslaughter after he was shown on video shooting at Abd al-Fattah Yusri al-Sharif, 21, as he lay on the ground after being wounded by another soldier.

Following the indictment, Israel’s political class rallied around Azarya, and he has become a national hero.
While Israel has refused to publish its open fire regulations in full, witness testimony given during the Azarya trial suggests that soldiers routinely shoot at the heads of injured Palestinians.

Since the year 2000, in only a handful of cases were soldiers prosecuted for manslaughter in relation to the slaying of Palestinians, according to the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz.

Al-Haq notes that “Since 1987, no Israeli soldier or commander has been convicted of willfully causing the death of a Palestinian in the [occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip].”

So long as the weapons and dollars keep flowing to the military, and the Israeli government enjoys the impunity afforded by its powerful allies, human rights groups will continue their grim work of recording the names of Palestinian victims and the circumstances of their violent and unjustified deaths.

Author’s note: this post was updated after initial publication to include mention of the coalition calling on the Obama administration to investigate the killing of Mahmoud Shaalan

Biggest hospital in rebel-held Aleppo out of action after barrel bombing: Reports

Rebels say water supplies are cut off from whole city as Russia is warned against becoming 'international pariah' by backing offensive
Volunteers carry wounded person on stretcher after air strike on rebel-held area of Aleppo on Friday (AFP)

Saturday 1 October 2016

The biggest hospital in rebel-held Aleppo was hit by barrel bombs on Saturday morning, activists reported, as Russian-backed Syrian forces pressed an advance on the partly besieged city.

The M10, or Sakhour clinic, the largest medical facility still operating in the besieged rebel-held east of the city, was pounded by four barrel bombs and a so-called “bunker-buster” bomb on Saturday morning, the opposition SMART news agency reported. The bombing knocked the hospital out of service, the agency said.

SAMS radiologist and hospital administrator Mohammad Abu Rajab made an urgent call for help on Saturday morning from inside M10. "The hospital is being destroyed! SOS, everyone!" he said in an audio message distributed to journalists.

The UN has warned that a humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Aleppo unlike any witnessed so far in Syria's brutal five-year war, which has claimed more than 300,000 lives.

The fighting came as the World Health Organisation said 338 civilians, including 106 children, had been killed and 846 wounded in the past few weeks in the city, which has suffered intense bombardment by the Syrian and Russian air forces since the collapse of a ceasefire.

Air strikes on Saturday morning also cut off water supplies from the whole city, the local rebel coordination office told Sky News Arabia. 

Bunker-buster bombs, known in Arabic as “earthquake bombs,” are designed to penetrate targets buried deep underground.

The hospitals attack was confirmed by Adham Sahloul of the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS), which supports medical facilities inside Aleppo. 

Sahloul said a small group of patients and doctors "were inside the hospital for basic triage, bandaging, and cleaning services for emergency cases" when the bombardment began and remain trapped there.

Both M10 and the second-largest hospital in the area, M2, were previously hit by heavy bombardment on Wednesday in strikes that UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon denounced as "war crimes".

A separate strike on Saturday morning destroyed a historic Armenian church in the Bustan al-Bashr distrct of east Aleppo. 

The French foreign minister on Saturday condemned what he called the "systematic targeting" of health workers, calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities in the city.

"In the flood of violence that has overwhelmed Aleppo for several days, the systematic targeting of structures and health workers is particularly unjustifiable," Jean-Marc Ayrault said. 

"This new attack only confirms the absolute urgency of a cessation of hostilities in Aleppo and access for civilian populations to the humanitarian assistance they desperately need," he said.

The city, once the second-largest in Syria, was rocked by artillery exchanges throughout the night and into Saturday morning as government forces pressed a two-pronged assault on rebel-held districts in the east.

There have been mounting civilian casualties on both sides of the divided city, with local news sites reporting that at least 31 people were killed in the 24 hours to Saturday morning.

About 250,000 residents are living under a government siege in the rebel-held east, and around 1.2 million face daily rocket fire by the rebels on the government-held west.

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders has described the impact of Syrian and Russian bombardment of the east as a "bloodbath".

In the north of the city, meanwhile, residents of government-held areas said they were relieved that the rebels were being pushed back, but feared retaliation.

"We were happy when we heard about the army's advance," said Majed Abboud, a 32-year-old car dealer.
"But I'm afraid that with these ferocious clashes, there will be some kind of reaction from the armed groups," he said.

On both sides, at least 220 people have been killed since 22 September, when the government began a ground offensive backed up by Russian and Syrian air strikes, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The offensive, which may become the most decisive of the years-long conflict, has seen the army win back territory in the north of Aleppo that it had not held since 2013.

Troops have also pushed back the front line in the city centre, one which had remained largely static since the rebels seized eastern districts in 2012.

The civilian death toll has triggered mounting outrage against both the Syrian government and its Russian ally.

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told Saturday's Sun newspaper that Moscow risked becoming an international pariah by continuing to back the offensive.

India, Pakistan soldiers exchange fire across frontier, no casualties

An Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldier patrols near the fenced border with Pakistan in Suchetgarh, southwest of Jammu January 11, 2013. REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta/FilesAn Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldier patrols near the fenced border with Pakistan in Suchetgarh, southwest of Jammu January 11, 2013.REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta/Files

Sat Oct 1, 2016

India and Pakistan exchanged fire across their de facto border in the Kashmir region on Saturday, in minor skirmishes that come at a time of heightened tension between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
Army officers from both countries blamed each other for starting the firing, which took place in the morning along the so-called "Line of Control" dividing them in the disputed Himalayan region. No casualties were reported.

The exchange came two days after New Delhi said Indian troops had crossed into Pakistan's side of Kashmir and killed suspected militants in a "surgical strike", an operation Pakistan says never took place.
That was in response to an attack last month on an army base in India-controlled Kashmir that killed 19 soldiers and which New Delhi blamed on militants who crossed from Pakistan. Islamabad denied any involvement.

"Pakistani troops today violated (the) ceasefire along Pallanwala sector of Akhnoor area of Jammu," a senior Indian army officer said on Saturday.

"They targeted five of our posts (with) small arms and we also responded and fired back. However, there was no damage."

An official from the Pakistani army said its troops had "befittingly responded to Indian unprovoked firing."

The two countries have fought two of their three wars since independence from Britain in 1947 over Kashmir. Both claim the former princely state in full.

(Reporting by Drazen Jorgic in ISLAMABAD and Fayaz Bukhari in SRINAGAR; Writing by Rafael Nam; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

US and South Korea will 'pay the price' for missile system, China paper says

China concerned terminal high altitude area defense anti-missile system will compromise its security
Buddhist monks rally to oppose the terminal high altitude area defense system, which China’s top newspaper says the US and South Korea will ‘pay the price’ for. Photograph: Ahn Young-joon/AP

Saturday 1 October 2016 

The US and South Korea are destined to “pay the price” for their decision to deploy an advanced missile defence system which will inevitably prompt a “counter attack”, China’s top newspaper said on Saturday.

Tension on the Korean peninsula has been high this year, beginning with North Korea’s fourth nuclear test in January, which was followed by a satellite launch, a string of tests of various missiles, and its fifth and largest nuclear test last month.

In July, South Korea agreed with the US to deploy the US terminal high altitude area defense (Thaad) anti-missile system to protect against any North Korean threats.

South Korea aims to deploy the system on a golf course, a defence ministry official said on Friday.
But the plan has angered China, which worries that Thaad’s powerful radar would compromise its security and do nothing to lower temperatures on the Korean peninsula.

In a commentary, the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily said China’s opposition to Thaad would never change as it was a serious threat to the regional strategic security balance.

“Like any other country, China can neither be vague nor indifferent on security matters that affect its core interests,” the newspaper said in the commentary, published under the pen name Zhong Sheng, meaning Voice of China, often used to give views on foreign policy.

The US and South Korea have to wake up to the fact that the Korean peninsula is no place to take risks, it added.

“If the United States and South Korea harm the strategic security interests of countries in the region including China, then they are destined to pay the price for this and receive a proper counter attack,” the paper added, without elaborating.

China has repeatedly promised to take specific steps to respond since the Thaad decision was announced, but has given no details about what it may do.

On Thursday, the Defence Ministry said China “means what it says” on considering countermeasures against Thaad.

The US and South Korea have said Thaad does not threaten China’s security or target any country other than North Korea.

China is North Korea’s most important diplomatic and economic partner, but Beijing has been infuriated by its nuclear and missile tests and has signed up for strong United Nations sanctions against North Korea.

However, China has continued to call for talks to resolve the North Korean issue and said sanctions are not the ultimate solution.

Should the role of the Gurkhas be widened?

If the Gurkhas really want equality then their usefulness should be subjected to the same objective scrutiny lavished on other regiments and corps, writes former soldier Doug Beattie.

News
Doug Beattie MC served in the Army for thirty-four years in Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. He is now a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly. This account is a personal opinion from him. 

TUESDAY 27 SEPTEMBER 2016

The manpower of the British Army is now at its lowest level for more than 200 years. At around 82,000 soldiers this is fewer than during the Napoleonic Wars. Yet the Ministry of Defence hopes to retain its capabilities and its tempo of operations. That is a questionable and ambitious goal given the volatile nature of the world today.

In recent times, some 21,000 British soldiers have been cut from the order of battle: men and women from Scottish regiments, historic English regiments -- some of the oldest infantry units in the army.

The strength of the Brigade of Gurkhas has remained virtually undiminished since those recent cuts. However their numbers were drastically cut in the 1990s when the army as a whole was restructured from the Cold War footing of the years before.

These men (there are no women, though this is set to change) have served the Crown for 201 years. Native (Nepalese-born) Gurkhas have won 13 Victoria Crosses and are rightly viewed as a model of loyalty; an institution within an institution. And it is another British institution -- the actress Joanna Lumley -- who long fought to secure rights for the Gurkhas that were commensurate with other soldiers who serve the UK. Chief amongst those rights were pension entitlements.

Ms Lumley secured her victory. In 2007 the government said that it would put Gurkhas on an equal pension footing and backdate this allowance to 1997, the point at which the Gurkhas' home base moved to the UK. Some ex Gurkhas have complained that the equitable provision should pre-date 1997 but their claim was dismissed this September by the European Court of Human Rights.

Ms Lumley's efforts were clearly in tune with the Great British public. But have her achievements actually weakened rather than strengthened the long-term future of the Brigade of Gurkhas as a core part of the UK's military offering?

For while the cost of employing a Gurkha has risen, his flexibility has not.

Each man who joins the Gurkhas goes through a rigorous selection process in Nepal (paid for by the MOD). The successful candidates are then transported to the UK (paid for by the MOD) undergo military training which includes English lessons (paid for by the MOD). After five years they are entitled to what is known as long leave, six months at home in Nepal, during which time they are again supported by the MOD (though this too is set to change). Of course the MOD is not spending its own money. It is spending taxpayer cash. Our money.

So what do we get in return? Obedience and bravery, unquestionably. The fighting record of the Gurkhas is second to none. And yet in modern times soldiering has not been limited to warfare in far-flung places. And this is where the Gurkhas limitations are revealed, for what they don't possess is utility.

The Northern Ireland conflict dragged on for 30 years yet not one Gurkha unit served on what was known as Op Banner. Nor did they turn out to help with the fire strike in 2002 that drew in 18,000 military personnel. And they were also absent from the Foot and Mouth disease frontline. In fact they have not and never will help with any task that supports the UK civil power. Why? Because the memorandum of understanding with Nepal prohibits it. Simply put, if the Gurkhas were the last troops on the island when civil order broke down they would not deploy to restore it. To that end they have less flexibility than your average soldier.

What the Gurkhas do possess is the ability to recruit and recruit quickly. Having reduced the size of the military to an all-time low, by keeping the Brigade of Gurkhas the British Army can be rapidly enlarged should the need arise. But retaining these men of honour has meant that other men of honour, men from the UK, have found themselves out of a job.

I am Northern Irish. I served in an Irish regiment. That regiment was once the largest in the British Army. Now it is the smallest. There are more Gurkhas currently serving in the British Army than there are Irishmen. In total, Irish-born service personnel have won 188 VCs (of 1,355 awarded) yet that illustrious history counted for nothing as we were decimated in similar style to all those other units that have their roots in the UK.

If the Gurkhas really want equality then their usefulness should be subjected to the same objective scrutiny lavished on other regiments and corps. In the interests of fairness, surely no one -- Ms Lumley included - could disagree with that?

Doug Beattie MC joined the Army as a sixteen year old junior soldier. He served for thirty-four years rising through the ranks from Ranger to Captain while serving in Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. He was awarded the Queens Commendation for Bravery during the invasion of Iraq and the Military Cross for his first of three tours of duty in Afghanistan. He is now a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly.

Indonesian court sentences gang leader to death over rape and murder of girl

Pic: AP.
 
THE leader of a gang of men and boys who raped and murdered a school girl in a case that caused public outrage in Indonesia has been sentenced to death amid the government’s move to introduce heavier penalties for sex crimes committed against children.
An Indonesian court in Sumatra Island on Thursday (Sept 29) sent the leader, who was only identified as Zainal, to the gallows while his four accomplices were jailed 20 years for the attack on the 14-year-old girl.
Local reports said a group of 14 men, including eight boys, were involved in the gang rape on the remote Island. The youngest attacker was only 13-year-old.
According to Reuters, sexual crime against women in the fourth-most-populous country is common but cases of gang rape are rare.
In reading out the sentencing, presiding judge Henny Faridha was quoted by Reuters as saying that: “Because of the sadistic nature of the crime … the court sentences Zainal to death.”
Langsung Tembak »"@SINDOnews: Zainal Pemerkosa dan Pembunuh Yuyun Dijatuhi Hukuman Mati http://sin.do/1gm0 
On April 2, the victim, Yuyun, was gang-raped and murdered while she was on her way home from school. Her body was discovered dumped in a river at a rubber plantation in a small village of the Bengkulu Province, Sumatra, two days after the incident.
The case had prompted President Joko Widodo to introduce new regulation that would see harsher punishment being meted out against child sex offenders, including chemical castration and the death penalty. This came following demands by women’s groups for the government to pass an Elimination of Sexual Violence Bill.
On May 21, another teenager’s body was found dumped in a river in Pamelang, Central Java, after she and a friend were raped by a group of 12 drunken men a week before.
In the wake of these cases, Jokowi pledged to “arrest and punish the perpetrators as severely as possible”, adding that “women and children have to be protected from violence”.
The new regulation has yet to be approved by Parliament. The proposed heavier punishments have triggered a divisive debate between the Jokowi administration and opposition lawmakers, including human rights, civil society groups, who have questioned the efficacy of the sentences.
The remaining gang members in Yuyun’s case were earlier sentenced to 10 years in prison while another was ordered to undergo a year-long rehabilitation programme. Police said another suspect is still on the run.
Yuyun parents, who attended court for the sentencing, said it was inadequate given the severity of the crime.

Breaking down into tears, the victim’s mother, Yana told reporters: “They should all get the death penalty.”