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

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Sri Lanka: Report reveals shocking truth on HSBC Scandal

hsbc_file

( October 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Business Timesa supplement of the Sunday Times, Colombo,  reported on Sunday October 2,  that the 5.2 billion rupee profit recorded by Perpetual Treasuries in the year ending March 2016, was higher than the year end profit after tax of five major commercial banks in the country.

The report further highlights that the unusual profits earned by the rookie primary dealer implicated in the Central Bank bond scams, is almost 100 times more than the profit earned by their nearest and more experienced competitor.

The paper says that the company – owned by the son-in-law of former Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran – made a killing compared to a low post-tax profit of Rs. 57 million by Capital Alliance, one of Perpetual Treasuries’ competitors.

Perpetual Treasuries’ 5.2 billion rupee post tax profit, is higher than the post tax profits reported for the same time of DFCC bank with Rs.4.3 billion, Seylan Bank with Rs. 3.8 billion, NDB with Rs.3.5 billion, NTB with Rs.2.6 billion, PABC with Rs.1 billion and Union Bank with Rs.192.6 million.

Incidentally, Perpetual Treasuries, only received its license as a primary dealer in 2013.

According to the newspaper, certain primary dealers are frustrated by the fact that authorities are not looking into the matter.

The matter was raised at a press briefing held at the Central Bank Last week.

Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy on September 28 said that its is a publicly quoted company and presumably they have an auditor who will audit  -and their people as a matter of course they supervise and examine the primary dealers.

The governor added that if they see something untoward, obviously they will take action. But as part of their normal supervision and normal examination of primary dealers, if something is found, clearly, they would take action.

Over to you – For denial or action…..

Arjun's son in law shatters all income records

Arjun's son in law shatters all income records

Oct 02, 2016

Arjuna Aloysius, son in law of  Arjun Mahendran former Governor of Central Bank of Sri Lanka who is the owner of Perpetual Treasuries after payment of taxes for the year 2015 had earned a net profit of rupees 5.1 billion.Thereby  it is reported that Perpetual Treasuries Company had surpassed the  other  22 super Companies in terms of profits.earned.

According to market reports Perpetual Treasuries is a primary dealer who provides funds to the government  through the channels of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.It is reported  that making this controversial profit through their  huge primary business profit earned through marketing the treasury bonds of the central Bank. If not for this they would not be able to achieve such huge profits even before the Perpetual Treasuries Company was five years in existence.Reliable sources had revealed that this amount of profits had not been recorded by any Company in the preceding years.
 
It is reported that the reputed Companies in the island are making comparative statistics of their profits with the Perpetual Treasuries Company.
 
Accordingly among the reputed Companies  Perpetual Treasuries have recorded a net profit of rupees billion 520 ( million 5200) Dialog Company rupees  billion 520 ( million 5200),Leasing Company rupees 470 billion ( million 4700), Nestle's rupees billion 410 ( million 4100) Central Finance rupees billion 390 ( million 3900).
 
In addition it has revealed that in the year 2015 there had been 6 Companies who had recorded higher profits.than Perpetual  Treasuries.They are in order John Keells is on top with rupees billion 1410,Commercial Bank Ltd rupees billion 1180,Hatton National PlC rupees billion 1050, LOLC rupees billion 850,Sampath Bank PlC rupees billion  660,Distilleries Company rupees billion 630.
 
The business  market analysts have predicted that if the Perpetual Treasuries could amass such profits in the year 2016 it would supersede the the six Companies which have earned  highest profits.during the year 2015..
 
However during the recent era there was a huge uproar in the country about the issue of treasury bonds by the Central bank of Sri Lanka.The report of the Auditor General has already been issued and the report of the COPE committee is to be issued.
dhp_3826Bribery Commission Director General Dilrukshi Wickremasinghe (centre) speaks at the Forum. Others from left are good governance activist Chandra Jayaratne, Transparency International Board member J.C. Weliamuna, JVP MP and COPE Chairman Sunil Handunnetti, Daily FT Editor Nisthar Cassim, Governance consultant Harsha Fernando, Foreign Affairs Deputy Minister Dr. Harsha de Silva and Colombo University MBA Alumni Association President Sarma Mahalingam - Pic by Daminda Harsha Perera

By Uditha Jayasinghe-Monday, 3 October 2016

logoFighting corruption can only be successful with the involvement of all Sri Lankans, concurred an eminent panel of experts recently, calling on Sri Lankans to consolidate the change made last year and expand it to all segments of their lives.

The public needs to put aside bribing for convenience and step forward to eradicate the menace of corruption, believes Sri Lanka’s straight talking champion of good governance Bribery and Corruption Director Generation Dilrukshi Wickremasinghe, who also gave rare praise to parliamentarians, saying only 90 of them have complaints against them.

With customary gusto, she delivered the keynote address ahead of a panel of experts deliberating on where Sri Lanka is on the path to good governance. The seminar was jointly organised by the Colombo MBA Alumni Association and the Daily FT last week.

“Do you really believe that this can be eradicated? I do not wish to stand here alone and say this can be stopped. First you must believe corruption can be stopped. The reason I say it can be eradicated is because it has been done around the world. In countries where corruption was rampant there have been successful efforts to end it. Hong Kong was one country that had the most corrupt police force three decades ago. Ironically they looked for solutions in Sri Lanka.”



She stressed that the main reason for corruption and bribery to be rampant in Sri Lanka is because Sri Lankans do not act to stamp it out. “We are collectively responsible. Will you from tomorrow do something different? To stand for integrity? To stand for honesty? Most people don’t want to go through the harassment of public servants. We pay for convenience. To eradicate a problem we must first understand the truth. Now that is where we need a paradigm shift. A change in the way we conduct ourselves.”  

Prominent lawyer J.C. Weliamuna was insistent that the legal and accounting manipulation of the system made corruption worse in Sri Lanka and sought to direct the debate towards legal chances that can be implemented to empower public officials who could fearlessly come forward to identify wrongdoers and be State witnesses.

“I hope the Government responds positively to reforms that we have suggested that would depoliticise the public system and allow civil servants the independence to move forward and joint us in the fight against corruption,” he said.

Strengthening institutions was focused on by Attorney-at-law Harsha Fernando, who recalled that Sri Lanka had survived nearly three decades of war because of five core institutions, such as the Central Bank, Finance Ministry, judiciary, key public servants and the media.

“Sadly just as the war ended the crumbling of these institutions began. Let us start with them. Let us make sure that they are put in order because then most of the major issues that stand in the way of development and governance would be removed too.”

Deputy Foreign Minister Dr. Harsha de Silva, who has long been a anti-corruption activist, put the bar very high saying that Sri Lankans could only feel they have achieved good governance when they are empowered enough to put a sitting parliamentarian or minister behind bars for wrongdoing.

“The day you can get one of us, then that is the day you win,” he said noting that the Government was working on implementing the Open Government Partnership Agreement that would include an international monitoring component that would severely test internal systems against global best practices. “That would be the litmus test for Sri Lanka.”

Committee on Public Enterprises Chairman and MP Sunil Handunetti gave a hard headed analysis of the challenges to stamp out corruption terming the current time a “transitional phase” which would decide whether Sri Lanka would move forward towards prosperity or disintegrate into corruption compounded by minority issues.

“We must build the confidence of the people. We must show them that this system is capable of overhaul and positive change because if you tell the people that they can do nothing then they will do worse than nothing. They will lose hope.”

Unless politicians understand the weight of public expectations on them, they run the risk of having the situation escalate. He pointed out that public corporations are increasing subsidiary companies that are reducing Government oversight without increasing accountability. “We have to adapt fast to these changes or we will find that key institutions are obsolete.”

Good governance activist Chandra Jayaratne made the most serious condemnation of professionals, rolling out multiple examples and arguments as to how lawyers, bankers and accountants have let standards fall to allow corruption to flourish.

“Recently the bankers have said that when they give loans they know 60% of the audits reports and accounts are misrepresentations, falsifications and are incorrect. If the bankers believe in that and they give loans can we have a firm banking system? Best example you can have is the bank reports of the Central Bank itself where Rs.3.3 billion worth of investments were quoted where the report says “uncollateralised repos”. This is what the auditors themselves say of the Central Bank report. If a repo is uncollateralised then it cannot be a repo by the very definition of a repo. A repo is when it is repossessed by you and allocated to a designated account. Ladies and gentlemen the auditors who did this are in our midst.”

Calling on professionals to “wake up”, the good governance activist went on to emphasise the need to train younger professionals entering the profession even if it meant operating costs increasing. Jayaratne went onto detail how average people have to jump through multiple hoops and fill in endless documentation to open an account but how black money was collected and filed into accounts by bank managers. He alleged that drug money was often collected and filtered into the legitimate financial system in this manner and often banks deliberately target such clients to improve their revenue on paper.

 The change demanded by voters in 2015 remains strong, opined Jayaratne, warning that the message is yet to reach Sri Lanka’s professionals.

“What all this means is that professionals have failed,” he noted, recalling a similar address at the Inland Revenue Department where even senior commissioners were unaware of the latest Financial Intelligence Unit Gazette that binds key financial institutions including charity organisations but few people are aware of it.

“We are talking about Mossack Fonseca as a big issue. In this country today you can buy what is known as ‘investments in orbit’, which means it is in a cloud somewhere and registered in a tax haven. One can sign a document saying it is not owned by you. The amount you have to pay is $ 150 for that trust document. Do you know that to the best of my knowledge there are four international fund managers who have representatives in this country with offices and each of them costs well over Rs. 10 million every month to maintain. Surely if you are spending that kind of money you are making several times that by doing business in Sri Lanka.”

“Naming and shaming is not enough. I of course think the day has come when we need to put a few people behind bars. They have to be professional; the bankers, lawyers and accountants.”

People’s Bank tender scam to COPE


SATURDAY, 01 OCTOBER 2016
A complaint has been received by the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) that US$ 7,600,000 (Rs. 1,117,200,000) has been spent by People’s Bank to provide internet facilities for .47% of its total number of customers. The complaint has been made by All Ceylon Bank Employees Union.
A massive controversy has emerged as a Malaysian company known as ‘Silverlake’ has been awarded the ‘Digital Banking’ project of People’s Bank without calling for tenders. It is complained that through this transaction a large amount of Bank’s money has been misappropriated.
All Ceylon Bank Employees Union points out that out of the more than 17 million customers only about 600,000 customers make use of SMS facilities and US$7,600,000 is spent for this small number of customers.
Meanwhile, the authorities of People’s Bank has spent money to publish advertisements stating they are to protect ‘People’s Bank’. This was questioned by the JVP Leader Anura Dissanayaka in Parliament. He found fault with the authorities for publishing advertisements when there are allegations of fraud against it. Mr. Dissanayaka had said when allegations are aimed against a state enterprise an accepted procedure should be followed to investigate such allegations.
All Ceylon Bank Employees Union has also revealed that the contract for 100 ATM machines, 100 cash depositing machines and 100 ‘KOISK’ machines has been given to  ‘Just in time’, the local agent for the controversial ‘Silverlake’ company from Malaysia. This transaction is being carried out outside the ‘Digital Banking’ project.

Sri Lanka: 40kg of gold seized by Navy defrauded

sandahiru_seya

( October 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Information has come to light with regard to a defrauding of gold meant for the ‘Sanda Hiru Seya’ Stupa that was constructed at massive costs during the previous regime.

The gold in question was seized when Admiral Jayantha Perera was the Navy commander, by a Navy boat from gold smugglers.

First the Navy and then the Customs was given charge of the seized gold.

On an order by the defence ministry that the gold was needed for depositing at the Stupa, the gold was taken to the Welisara Navy camp.

Thereafter, the Navy handed over eight kilos of gold to be deposited in the Stupa, but the remaining amount, of around 40 kilos, had gone missing.

During an investigation, the FCID recorded a statement from the ex-Navy commander.

Reliable sources say a powerful political hand was behind this fraud.

A Glimmer Of Hope?


Colombo Telegraph
By Emil van der Poorten –October 2, 2016
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
A plethora of reports on politically prominent individuals who are in the process of being investigated or even (God forbid!) prosecuted for robbing from the public purse could not but gladden the hearts of those hoping that Sri Lanka might yet be returned to the model democracy it gave promise of becoming in this old codger’s dim, distant youth! To say that some other pieces of positive news had this writer’s heart overflowing with gratitude would be overstating the case, given the fact that all the events we were witnessing or being promised were long overdue, to put it mildly.
What seems like the first positive step in the application of the internationally-acclaimed “Senaka Bibile Plan” in the pricing and distribution of pharmaceuticals was the most recent step in that direction that I see in the media as I write this. The only thing that gives me pause in that regard is the source of the announcement – Rajitha Senaratne – who has a justified reputation for shooting his mouth off and then having to eat humble pie (even if he chooses not to notice the fact!) Even there, perhaps, the pressure of public opinion, assuming that such is forthcoming from a justifiably jaded populace, might help keep the scales tipped appropriately!
In the year “dot” I wrote a piece titled “The Talibanization of Trinity” about the dress-code that the Principal at the time, with the support of his Board of Governors and several old boys, it seemed, sought to impose on visiting parents and even those invited to the school for reasons other than being parents or guardians. That appeared to raise quite a few conservative hackles not only among the general readership of the publication but in the ranks of some old boys of that school. I certainly find the pronouncement by Akila Viraj Kariyawasam with regard to the matter of “dress codes” for parents visiting their children’s schools for whatever reason welcome news. I hope that an old friend who took issue with my sentiments and his blue-stockinged friends have the good grace to re-think their ultra-conservative opinions (accompanied, perhaps, by an appropriate serving of the afore-mentioned pie). Often and with good reason, these dress-code fanatics have been referred to the Sigiriya frescoes and the fact that the torsos of the females depicted in them are totally devoid of clothing or cover of any description. The fact that the “conservatism” practiced, not only in the matter of dress but in other areas of our day-to-day lives comes from Victorian (Colonial) England is something that our zealots for “purity of race and culture” very conveniently ignore. These are, more often than not, colonial constructs that have nothing to do with “2500 Years of Sinhala Buddhist Civilization.” And the sooner that that fact is rammed down the throats of intemperate bigots, the better, because such action would truly be in the national interest in circumstances where the constant repetition of this nonsense has led to some members of the public, at least, being brain-washed into according it some credibility.
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Israelis seek to uncover government’s secret war against BDS

Israel is trying to stop the growing boycott movement with covert operations targeting activists around the world.Ryan Rodrick BeilerActiveStills

Ali Abunimah-30 September 2016

A group of Israeli citizens is seeking information on their government’s covert activities against the Palestinian-led boycott, divestment and sanctions movement.

Meanwhile, the Israeli embassy in London has warned in a leaked cable that some of Israel’s tactics against the BDS movement may violate UK law.

Attorney Eitay Mack and human rights activists Sahar Vardi, Ofer Neiman, Rachel Giora and Kobi Snitz have filed requests under Israel’s freedom of information law, to both the foreign ministry and the strategic affairs ministry.

They are asking the government to reveal its financial support to foreign organizations, individuals, journalists or bloggers assisting Israel in its battle against what it calls “delegitimization.”

The strategic affairs ministry, led by Likud minister Gilad Erdan, has taken the lead, gearing up to fight the nonviolent BDS movement as if it were a military challenge.

Armed with a $45 million budget for this year, the ministry is engaging in what a veteran Israeli analyst iscalling “black ops.”

This may include defamation campaigns, harassment and threats to the lives of activists as well as infringing on and violating their privacy, according to the analyst.

“We want most of the [strategic affairs] ministry’s work to be classified,” its director general Sima Vaknin-Gil recently told the transparency committee of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset.

Earlier this month, Erdan’s ministry and the Association of University Heads of Israel were linked to a “secret” effort to push for the cancellation of a course on Palestine at the University of California, Berkeley.

The course was suspended, but later reinstated after an outcry from students, faculty and defenders of academic freedom.

“The sweeping secrecy exercised by both ministries is inappropriate, especially in view of the Israeli government’s position regarding human rights organizations supported financially by foreign countries,” the Israeli citizens said in a press release.

Earlier this year Israel adopted a so-called transparency law forcing human rights groups to reveal foreign government funding. Critics say the law is meant to brand human rights groups as illegitimate and chill criticism of Israel’s record.

Under the freedom of information law, the Israeli ministries have 120 days to respond. If they reject the requests, the citizens seeking the information can file an appeal in court.

Using Jewish groups

The information request comes as a cable, leaked to the newspaper Haaretz, has cast more light on the covert efforts against BDS.

The cable from the Israeli embassy in London to the Israeli foreign ministry complains about the activities of Erdan’s strategic affairs ministry.

It accuses the ministry of “operating” British Jewish organizations behind the embassy’s back in a way that could put them in violation of UK law.

The context is a turf war between the two ministries over who should get more money and authority to lead the fight against BDS.

The foreign ministry has so far been on the losing end of that bureaucratic battle.

As Haaretz reports, the cable reveals that the embassy met with Erdan’s officials during his visit to London two weeks ago “to coordinate activities against the local boycott, divestment and sanctions movement.”

The embassy officials emphasized that while they would coordinate with Erdan’s operation, only the foreign ministry would work directly with people or organizations overseas.

Haaretz says Erdan’s officials agreed “not to pose as the embassy.”

“Behind our backs”

But just days later, according to Haaretz, Asher Friedman, a senior strategic affairs ministry official, “asked a senior official in Britain’s Jewish community to use his connections to thwart an anti-Israel campaign by the Palestinians.”

“Attempts to act behind our back have happened before and will again, but ‘operating’ Jewish organizations directly from Jerusalem, with no coordination and no consultation, is liable to be dangerous,” the embassy cable said.

“Operating like this could encounter opposition from the organizations themselves, given their legal status; Britain isn’t the US,” the cable added.

It also warned that such behavior “could be considered political activity, or even activity on behalf of a foreign government on British soil,” Haaretz states.

The leak would seem to confirm that the Israeli government increasingly views Jewish organizations and communities abroad as mere extensions of its state propaganda apparatus.

This is unlikely to do much to tamp down criticism of Israel’s human rights abuses against Palestinians, but it does pose a danger to Jews who do not wish to be identified with a foreign government that is increasingly seen as a pariah.

Notably, as Haaretz reports, it was the British Jewish official himself who “immediately voiced his objections to the embassy, both orally and in writing, as well as to the heads of other British Jewish organizations.”

President Obama: ‘Patron’ of the Israeli Occupation

benjamin_obama

Hundreds of Israeli officials, intellectuals and artists signed an open letter to Jews worldwide to oppose the occupation. The 470 signatories, including high-ranking officers of the Israel Defense Forces, ambassadors, ministers, high government officials and members of the Knesset, wrote: “The prolonged occupation is inherently oppressive for Palestinians and fuels mutual bloodshed. It undermines the moral and democratic fabric of the state of Israel and hurts its standing in the community of nations.”

by Marjorie Cohn

( October 1, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) President Barack Obama has agreed to give Israel a record $38 billion in military aid over the next 10 years, cementing his legacy as the strongest financial supporter of Israel ever to occupy the White House. Obama, whom Israeli journalist Gideon Levy calls “the patron of the occupation,” increased the amount of money the U.S. provides Israel each year from $3.1 to $3.8 billion.
Although the corporate media portray the relationship between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as chilly, Obama put his money where his heart apparently is with the unprecedented allocation of military assistance to Israel.
Netanyahu, who described the increase in U.S. monetary aid as “unprecedented” and “historic,” 
characterized it as “the greatest accomplishment since sliced bread,” according to Aaron David Miller, vice president of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. “The bond between the United States and Israel is unbreakable,” Obama declared on Sept. 21 as he shook hands on the deal with Netanyahu.
The annual $3.8 billion, more money than the U.S. gives to any other country, will fund the continuing Israeli military occupation of Palestinian lands, now in its fifth decade.
Israel exercises complete control over every aspect of Palestinian life in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza. That includes borders, airspace, ingress and egress of people and goods, and the seashore and waters off the coast of Gaza. The occupation violates fundamental human rights of the Palestinians.
Two years ago, 60 Israeli youths signed an open letter to Netanyahu announcing their refusal to serve in the Israeli military because of the dehumanization of Palestinians living under occupation. In the occupied Palestinian territories, they wrote, “human rights are violated, and acts defined under international law as war-crimes are perpetuated on a daily basis.” The signatories cited “assassinations (extrajudicial killings), the construction of settlements on occupied lands, administrative detentions, torture, collective punishment and the unequal allocation of resources such as electricity and water.”
Flavia Pansieri, former United Nations deputy high commissioner for human rights,said last yearthat human rights violations “fuel and shape the conflict” in the occupied Palestinian territories, adding, “[h]uman rights violations in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are both cause and consequence of the military occupation and ongoing violence, in a bitter cyclical process with wider implications for peace and security in the region.”
Israel took over the West Bank and East Jerusalem by military force in 1967 and has held it under military occupation ever since. U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, passed in 1967, refers to “the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war” and calls for “withdrawal of Israel armed forces from territories occupied in the recent conflict.” Yet Israel continues to occupy the Palestinian territories it acquired in the Six-Day War between Israel and nearby Arab countries that year.
Since 1967, Israel has transferred more than half a million of its own citizens into the Palestinian territories. It persists in building Jewish settlements in the West Bank, which is occupied Palestinian territory.
But a state that is occupying territory that is not its own cannot build settlements on that territory and transfer its own citizens into them. Under Article 8.2(b)(viii) of the International Criminal Court’s Rome Statute, such action constitutes a war crime.
In criticizing Israel’s building of Jewish settlements on Palestinian lands, Secretary of State John Kerry said that since Obama was inaugurated in 2009, the number of Israelis in the West Bank and East Jerusalem has grown by 95,000, including 15,000 during the past year alone. Israel plans to build 2,400 new housing units in the settlements as it demolishes more and more Palestinian homes.
Kerry’s criticism rings hollow as the Obama administration consistently uses its veto in the Security Council to block the Palestinians’ campaign to block illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Obama is reportedly considering a council resolution to set the parameters for an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, although the powerful pro-Israel lobby opposes such a move.
As this article is being written, the Women’s Boat to Gaza, with 13 women aboard, is sailing to Gaza to protest Israel’s blockade of what is often called the world’s largest “open-air prison.” In Gaza, 1.8 million people live on a 140-square-mile strip of land. It is one of the most densely populated areas in the world. Gazans cannot enter or leave without Israeli permission. They cannot import or export goods without Israeli permission. They cannot fish in their own waters without Israeli permission.
In July 2014, Israel invaded Gaza and killed 2,251 Palestinians, the majority of them civilians. The number of Palestinians wounded was 11,231, including 3,540 women and 3,436 children. On the Israeli side, six civilians and 67 soldiers were killed and 1,600 were injured. Tens of thousands of Palestinians lost their homes, and the infrastructure was severely damaged. Numerous schools, U.N.-sanctioned places of refuge, hospitals, ambulances and mosques were intentionally targeted by Israel.
Israel used the “Dahiya doctrine” to apply “disproportionate force” and cause “great damage and destruction to civilian property and infrastructure, and suffering to civilian populations,” as defined in the 2009 U.N. Human Rights Council (Goldstone) report. These acts constitute evidence of war crimes under Article 8 (2)(a) of the Rome Statute.
U.S. political leaders and the corporate media portray a false equivalence of firepower between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza. But Israel’s use of force greatly exceeds that of the Palestinians.
The White House and Congress condemn the rocket fire into Israel by Hamas and the “deliberate targeting of civilians.” But Washington says Israel has a right to defend itself, justifying Israel’s bombing campaign in Gaza and blaming Hamas, while minimizing Israel’s role in creating and escalating the violence.
Israel’s overwhelming use of military force constitutes collective punishment, which is a war crime. The laws of war, also known as international humanitarian law, are primarily found in the Geneva Conventions. Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Israel is a party, specifically forbids collective punishment. It says, “No protected person [civilian] may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed. … Reprisals against protected persons and their property are prohibited.”
The U.N. secretary-general characterized Israel’s blockade of Gaza as “a continuing collective penalty against the population of Gaza.”
“Israel is able to act with utter impunity because of the military, economic and political support it receives from governments around the world,” according to Zaid Shuaibi, a spokesman for the Palestinian BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) National Committee. Israel would be unable to carry out its policies of aggression in Gaza without the support of the United States.
Actress Lisa Gay Hamilton, who is on the Women’s Boat to Gaza, wrote, “I’m here because I’m concerned about the effects of war and blockade on the women, as schools, hospitals, and homes have been periodically destroyed and sources of power and water compromised. … I’m here because my president just increased U.S. military aid to Israel from $3.1 to $3.8 billion per year over the next 10 years, with … no mention of the situation in Gaza.”
Fifty-seven percent of Democrats and 40 percent of Republicans think the increase in military aid to Israel is too high.
Hundreds of Israeli officials, intellectuals and artists signed an open letter to Jews worldwide to oppose the occupation. The 470 signatories, including high-ranking officers of the Israel Defense Forces, ambassadors, ministers, high government officials and members of the Knesset, wrote: “The prolonged occupation is inherently oppressive for Palestinians and fuels mutual bloodshed. It undermines the moral and democratic fabric of the state of Israel and hurts its standing in the community of nations.”
In his Sept. 20 farewell speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Obama appeared to oppose Israel’s permanent occupation and settlements, saying, “Surely Israelis and Palestinians will be better off if Palestinians reject incitement and recognize the legitimacy of Israel … (and if) Israel recognizes that it cannot permanently occupy and settle Palestinian land.”
But Obama’s actions speak louder than his words. Although he has the power to condition U.S. aid to Israel on ending the occupation and ceasing construction of Jewish settlements on Palestinian land, Obama has chosen instead to serve as “patron of the occupation.”
Marjorie Cohn is professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law where she taught from 1991-2016, and a former president of the National Lawyers Guild. She lectures, writes, and provides commentary for local, regional, national and international media outlets. http://marjoriecohn.com

First IS, then Iran: Kurdish-Iranian leader trains sights on ultimate goal

The PAK group has helped roll back IS in Iraq. Flush with Western training, the group's leader has his eyes on the future - a homeland in Iran

Hussein Yazdanpana, the leader of the PAK Kurdish militia (MEE/Kim Deen)

Kim Deen's pictureKim Deen-Sunday 2 October 2016 

Erbil, Iraq - A small range of hills outside of Kirkuk has been the frontline with the Islamic State since the group fled the city last year. From a military base on top of those hills flies a Kurdish flag. But the base does not house Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga (fighters). These hills are under the control of a leftist Iranian Kurdish group, the Kurdistan Freedom Party, also known as the PAK.

Their commander-in-chief, Hussein Yazdanpana, cuts a colourful figure, his looks and thick moustache often drawing comparison with the Russian dictator Stalin. His uniform is emblazoned with the Iraqi Kurdish region's flag, and the orange-and-white insignia of his own group. He sports a battlefield radio, and a chest rig filled with ammunition clips.

Yazdanpana’s force of hundreds of fighters has managed to help turn the tide against IS in northern Iraq, gaining valuable military experience in the process and, they proudly boast, training from members of the US-led coalition in Iraq.

Once IS is defeated, Yazdanpana plans to use that experience and training against the PAK's more established enemy - Tehran. It is part of the same battle against Islamic extremism, as he sees it, and also highly personal.

"The way Daesh [IS] has been killing Yazidis [a Kurdish religious community], it was like what Iran did to the Kurds after the [1979] Iranian revolution," he said. "I was young when it happened. The regime’s forces were killing entire villages with knives and machetes.

''In Iran we will fulfill our duty. It is always Tehran that has been fighting us, killing, executing, but the world never reports on this. We now have very active, strong forces. The world can count on these forces to oppose barbaric forces in the world.''

Many Iranian Kurdish groups retreated across the border after the revolution, and up until two years ago the PAK's influence was limited to a few mountain villages near the border. Its fighters were poorly trained and their equipment outdated. That has all changed with the rise of IS.

The resurgence of Yazdanpana's group also highlights the complicated alliances that characterise the war against IS.

The US, Iran, Turkey and other regional powers are fighting the common enemy, but each uses piecemeal tactics and proxies, all with their own agendas, to gain results.

And while the US and Iran have eased longstanding tensions after forging a deal on Tehran’s nuclear programme, Washington’s support - and training for Yazdanpana's forces - opens up the prospect of longterm policy blowback.

A PAK soldier trains sights on IS positions in northern Syria (MEE/Kim Deen)

“We took advantage of every opportunity to get training, by the Americans, French, Brits - but we are always in need of more training,” he said.

Since the beginning of the counter-attacks against IS in August 2014, the PAK has fought alongside the Iraqi Kurdish government's forces and the Iraqi army.

Fighting on the frontlines has drastically changed the group's abilities. Months of operations have sharpened their skills, giving them valuable experience in direct combat, urban warfare and the use of complex weapons systems.

Yet their ultimate goal remains the same. Zohra Ramishti, a female peshmerga, puts it simply: "When we finish here, we will continue our fight for Rojhelat" - the Kurdish term for an Iranian Kurdish homeland.

As reported in MEE, the PAK has clashed at least six times with Iranian Revolutionary Guard and other forces in Iran since the spring, and a full-blown resumption of hostilities could make the already simmering war with Iran boil over. 

'Sometimes we can't control them'

Falah Mustafa Bakir, the de facto foreign minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq, praised the Iranian Kurdish forces in his territory.

"The Iranian Kurdish peshmerga have been very loyal to us, faithful," he told Middle East Eye. "And a great fighting force."

Bakir said his government had leaned on the PAK to avoid carrying out cross-border operations, but he also conceded he did not fully control them.

"Would we have dialogue with them to prevent their cross-border activities?" said Bakir. "Well, that’s their decision."

One analyst said Iraqi Kurds' use the Iranian Kurdish militias as a way to gain leverage in their disputes with the central Iraqi government in Baghdad, which is closely allied with Tehran.

"The KRG is in dispute with Baghdad, and it needs a rhetoric against Iranian dominance in the region. The PAK helps in providing that," said Kamal Chomani of the Kurdish Policy Foundation.

"The PAK’s commander, Yazdanpana, is in close contact with the governing party, the KDP [Kurdistan Democratic Party]. Before Daesh, no one knew him, but now he is all over the media.

"He is proving to be a great media strategy for the KDP: speaking out against Daesh, Iraq and Iran at the same time."

Hussein Yazdanpana sits with officers of PAK (MEE/Kim Deen)

At his base among his peshmerga, Yazdanpana repeats  KDP lines on the future of territories claimed by both Iraq’s Kurds and Arabs. Discussing the future of recaptured Kirkuk and Mosul regions, he said he feared that the Iraq government was looking at the issue "from a sectarian perspective".

"We peshmerga can’t liberate these areas and then lose them," he said. "Minorities want to be protected by peshmerga, they don’t want Shia militias or the Iraqi army."

Meanwhile in Iran, media outlets have condemned the Kurdish Iraqi authorities, and the US and European advisers for providing training to the PAK.

The Associated Press news agency quoted Italian Army Captain Giulio Macari, a spokesman for the US-led coalition in Erbil, that the PAK had indeed received training “since Western advisers offered help all to Kurdish militias under the [Iraqi Kurd peshmerga] ministry's control”.

Macari said the coalition "did not choose the groups that it was training".

What happens after IS is kicked out of northern Iraq remains to be seen. 

As Adnan Mufti, a former speaker of the Iraqi Kurd parliament for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan opposition party, commented on the PAK's recent incursions into Iran: "They respected our demands well over the last decades, but sometimes we just can’t control them."

Ethiopia: many dead in anti-government protest at religious festival

Opposition party says stampede kills at least 50 people in chaotic scenes in restive Oromiya region

 Protesters run from teargas during the Irreecha festival of thanksgiving in Bishoftu. Photograph: Tiksa Negeri/Reuters


 Africa correspondent-Sunday 2 October 2016

Scores of people are feared dead after police in Ethiopia fired teargas and warning shots to disperse anti-government protesters at a religious festival, triggering a stampede.

Opposition parties said at least 50 people had died at the festival on Sunday in the restive Oromiya region, and other witnesses put the toll higher.

The government said “lives were lost”, without giving a number, and said several people had been injured. A spokesman blamed “people that prepared to cause trouble”.

There have been sporadic protests in Oromiya over the last two years. Last year plans to allocate land surrounding Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, for development prompted fierce demonstrations from members of Oromo minority, the country’s largest ethnic group. Many of those who would have been displaced by the new scheme were Oromo. The scheme was scrapped in January but protests continued.

Several rights groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have reported that up to 400 people have been killed in clashes between security forces and protesters, the country’s worst unrest in more than a decade.

The deaths on Sunday occurred in the town of Bishoftu, about 25 miles (40km) south of Addis Ababa. Hundreds of thousands of people had gathered at a sacred lake for the annual Irreecha festival of thanksgiving. Crowds chanting “we need freedom” and “we need justice” prevented community elders, seen as close to the government, from delivering speeches.

Some protesters reportedly waved the red, green and yellow flag of the Oromo Liberation Front, a rebel group branded a terrorist organisation by the government. According to witnesses, protesters threw stones and bottles and security forces responded with baton charges and then teargas grenades.

The teargas caused panic and at least 50 people fell on top of each other into a deep ditch. Images from the scene showed dozens of men trying to climb out of a trench that appeared to be at least 6 metres (20ft) deep.

Witnesses said they saw people dragging out a dozen or more victims showing no obvious sign of life. Half a dozen people were seen being taken by pickup truck to a hospital, one witness said.

“As a result of the chaos, lives were lost and several of the injured were taken to hospital,” the government’s communications office said in a statement. “Those responsible will face justice.”

Merera Gudina, chairman of the opposition Oromo Federalist Congress, told Reuters his group had been talking to families of the victims and it was thought at least 50 people were dead. He said the government had tried to use the event to show Oromiya was calm. “But residents still protested,” he said.

The government blames rebel groups and dissidents abroad for stirring up the protests and provoking violence. It dismisses charges that it clamps down on free speech or its opponents.

Oromos and Amharas, another ethnic group, together make up 60% of Ethiopia’s population of 100 million and have become increasingly vocal in rejecting what they see as the disproportionate power wielded by the northern Tigrean minority in government and the security forces.

In parliamentary elections in 2015, opposition parties failed to win a single seat – down from just one in the previous parliament. Opponents accused the government of rigging the vote, a charge government officials dismissed.

Ethiopia, a close ally of the west, has long been one of the world’s poorest nations but has experienced rapid economic growth in the past decade.

In one of the most public recent protests, Olympic athlete Feyisa Lilesa crossed his arms as he finished the marathon at the Rio Games in August, a sign of solidarity with fellow Oromo meant to symbolise being handcuffed by security forces.

The 26-year-old has since sought political asylum in the US, saying he is afraid to go back to his homeland.
In an interview with the Guardian this year, Ethiopia’s prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, described his country as an island of stability in the troubled Horn of Africa region.

“We have clearly identified why this protest has come about: unemployment and lack of good governance. Building democratic culture will take some time. But we are on the right track. It’s improving,” Desalegn said.

Any sign of unrest is closely watched in Ethiopia, with frequent detentions of alleged dissidents and pressure on the media. Ethiopia is 142nd of 180 in the press freedom index compiled by Reporters Without Borders.

China Eyes Ending Western Grip on Top U.N. Jobs With Greater Control Over Blue Helmets

As China steps up its commitment to U.N. peacekeeping, Beijing is said to be eyeing a leadership role — with potentially troubling human rights implications.
China Eyes Ending Western Grip on Top U.N. Jobs With Greater Control Over Blue Helmets

BY COLUM LYNCH-OCTOBER 2, 2016

China is believed to have its sights on the United Nations’ top peacekeeping job, a position that would place a country with an abysmal human rights record in charge of the world’s second-largest expeditionary force of more than 100,000 peacekeepers deployed in hot spots around the world.

While the race for a new U.N. secretary-general has for months grabbed most of the attention at Turtle Bay, behind the scenes a fierce political competition is underway to land top posts under the world body’s next chief. The outcome could shatter the monopoly that Western powers have held for decades inside the inner sanctum of U.N. leadership — and push peacekeeping operations in a direction human rights advocates may find worrisome.

According to multiple U.N.-based officials, Beijing is angling to run the Department of Peacekeeping Operations, or DPKO, which has been headed by French nationals for nearly 20 years. Moscow, for its part, is said to be hankering after the Department of Political Affairs, or DPA, which former U.S. State Department officials have headed for the past decade.

“China is making a play for DPKO, and Russia is making a play for DPA,” one senior U.N. official said. “Are these just opening positions? Who knows.”

Beijing’s apparent interest in running global peacekeeping operations dovetails with its increasing evolution toward a more interventionist approach in international affairs. But it could also herald a troubling shift in how U.N. peacekeeping operations are conducted, with a lesser emphasis on human rights and discipline, at a time when the U.N. blue helmets face accusations of sexual abuse in the Central African Republic and of failing to protect persecuted civilians and aid workers in South Sudan.

“The Chinese are laying down a marker,” said Richard Gowan, a peacekeeping expert at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

“We’re seeing the first phase of a Chinese bid to, firstly, assert itself over U.N. peacekeeping and, secondly, to rewrite the rules of U.N. peacekeeping.”

China certainly has skin in the game. Operating under U.N. auspices, China has deployed 2,639 peacekeepers on 11 missions — more than all the other permanent members of the Security Council combined. And China just became the second-largest funder of U.N. peacekeeping operations after the United States, chipping in more than 10 percent of the nearly $8 billion annual budget.

At a September 2015 peacekeeping summit hosted by President Barack Obama, Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged to place 8,000 troops at the disposal of a U.N. standby force. China also promised to train 2,000 foreign peacekeepers and committed to spending $100 million for African Union stability forces.

“Considering that China contributes more troops to the United Nations than the other permanent four members put together, that they are No. 2 after the United States in terms of contributions to the peacekeeping budget, one wonders, ‘Why wouldn’t they want DPKO?'” a second senior U.N. official said.
But with that financial muscle comes influence: Chinese diplomats have recently tried to scale back the budget for promoting human rights in peacekeeping duty stations, nominally to save money, U.N. diplomats say.

Like China, Russia’s interest in snagging a top U.N. post reflects its own return to great-power ambitions — and chafing at what both countries see as a rigged appointment system that favors the Western powers.

The United States, Britain, and France have held a lock on the most influential positions in the U.N. Secretariat since the end of the Cold War. Hervé Ladsous, a former diplomat, is the fourth French national to run the U.N. peacekeeping department. Stephen O’Brien, once a member of parliament for the Conservative Party, is the third British national to run the U.N. principal emergency relief agency.

Jeffrey Feltman, a former U.S. assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, is the second American in more than nine years to serve as the U.N.’s top political advisor. Before that, the United States ran the U.N. Department of Management since the end of the Cold War. That post is now held by a former diplomat from Japan, a close American ally.

The near-monopoly on top jobs has rankled U.N. reformers who say such posts should be selected primarily on the basis of merit and not on nationality. The current system — in which big powers pressure the U.N. chief to fill his cabinet with their political appointees — undermines the U.N. leader’s independence, they say. It also flies in the face of the U.N. Charter, which expressly forbids U.N. civil servants from seeking or receiving “instructions from any government or from any other authority external to the Organization.”

In 1992, the U.N. General Assembly went further, explicitly stating that there should be “no monopoly on senior posts by nationals of any State or group of States.”

But U.N. secretary-generals have found the big-power appeals hard to resist. During his first run for secretary-general in 1996, Kofi Annan faced the repeated threat of a French veto, which was lifted after Paris secured a commitment to place a French national in the top peacekeeping job. The five veto-wielding powers will expect top jobs in any new secretary-general’s cabinet.

The informal practice of the U.N. Security Council’s permanent five members “conditioning their support for a candidate for secretary-general on the candidate’s willingness to secretly agree to appoint their nationals to key positions is a scandalous violation of the U.N. Charter,” said Bill Pace, the head of the World Federalist Movement-Institute for Global Policy, which has championed efforts to reform the selection process for U.N. secretary-general.

And China and Russia are increasingly speaking out against what they see as blackballing. At a luncheon last month for Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the permanent five, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov protested that his government was the only one of the five that didn’t have an undersecretary-general posting at U.N. headquarters, according to a senior U.N.-based diplomat.

The United States, Lavrov added, shouldn’t hold a monopoly over the DPA, the U.N.’s top political job. Another official said Russia has pressed for a rotation that would give it a shot at that job.

Russia hasn’t been entirely stiffed. Russian diplomats ran the U.N. headquarters in Geneva for nearly 20 years, from 1993 through 2011, a post that carries the rank of undersecretary-general. Yuri Fedotov, a former Russian diplomat, currently heads the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, based in Vienna. But neither of those posts wield the same kind of influence over world affairs as the senior political, security, or humanitarian relief jobs in New York.

But perhaps no permanent member of the Security Council has felt more aggrieved than China, a major world power that believes it has gotten short shrift. Its most senior post is the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, considered a second-tier U.N. agency.

Now, having gradually expanded its presence in peacekeeping missions over the past decade, China believes it deserves an upgrade, some diplomats say.

Most of China’s blue helmets are posted in Africa, where Beijing maintains extensive commercial, political, and security interests. It has troops in Mali, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and South Sudan.

Three Chinese peacekeepers have died on duty this year. Islamists killed one Chinese soldier and injured four others in an ambush in Gao, Mali, in May. Two Chinese soldiers were killed in South Sudan in July, when their armored vehicle was hit with a rocket-propelled grenade.

China has also spent eight years running counterpiracy naval patrols off the coast of Somalia, helping end what for many years was a costly scourge to global trade. And it has more recently established a naval base in Djibouti, alongside the United States and other world powers.

Not everyone is convinced that China is keen to take on a high-profile role, saying all this talk of Chinese aspirations has been fueled by backroom gossip. The Chinese Mission to the United Nations did not respond to a request for comment; nor did several secretary general candidates.

One candidate who did respond acknowledged being told China was angling for the top peacekeeping job by “various sources, including fellow UN secretary general candidates.” But the candidate, who spoke on condition of anonymity, added: “I must admit that the Chinese themselves have not raised that with me.”

“This rumor about China seeking  [an undersecretary general] position for peacekeeping? Personally, I don’t buy it,” said one Security Council diplomat, noting that he believes China recognizes it is not ready for prime time.

Peacekeeping mandates historically have been fashioned by the Security Council’s Western powers, placing any Chinese peacekeeping chief in the awkward position of carrying out instructions that may conflict with Beijing’s objectives. And any new scandal that erupts under China’s watch could reflect badly on Beijing.

Already, Chinese troops, along with their Nepalese and Ethiopian counterparts, have faced criticism for failing to come to the aid of relief workers beaten and raped in a horrifying attack by South Sudanese government troops in July at the Terrain hotel facility in Juba. One senior European diplomat said it’s more likely that Beijing is after a lower-profile post within the U.N. Secretariat, such as senior military advisor, which would give it greater influence within the U.N.’s internal debates over peacekeeping doctrine.

Still, China’s embrace of peacekeeping operations has been a watershed for a country with a deeply entrenched resistance to foreign intervention. Even today, China remains wary of U.S.-backed efforts to push U.N. blue helmets to act more aggressively to protect civilians in conflict areas.

China’s trepidation about U.N. peacekeeping dates to the very beginnings of the People’s Republic. In the Korean War, from 1950 to 1953, a U.N.-mandated force led by the United States marched almost to the Yalu River before clashing with Chinese troops. The U.S. commander, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, even considered a nuclear strike to deter Mao Zedong’s Red Army from pouring down into North Korea.

Twenty years later, the scars remained. When China joined the United Nations in 1971, it refused to fund U.N. peacekeeping operations for a decade and remained wary of engaging in council discussions on the topic.

By the 1990s, as China’s more open approach to the world paid economic dividends, it has become less ambivalent. In recent years, it has stationed force commanders in Western Sahara and Cyprus. Currently, two Chinese officers serve as military advisors in the U.N. peacekeeping department at the headquarters in New York. The second-highest-ranking military officer in the U.N. mission in South Sudan, Maj. Gen. Yang Chaoying, is Chinese.

There is cause for concern China could alter the way U.N. peacekeeping operations work. In the past, China typically sided with the U.N.’s developing countries, which were thrilled with fat budgets that employed thousands of their citizens. But as China’s share of the peacekeeping budget has grown, Beijing suddenly started promoting greater fiscal restraint.

In June, Chinese diplomats fought hard to keep costs down by trying to cut funding to human rights offices embedded in most peacekeeping missions. They also proposed defunding the department’s “conduct and discipline” unit, which monitors reports on abuses by U.N. soldiers.

They also tried to scale back funding for the surveillance drones the U.N. uses in peacekeeping missions from Congo to Mali, which track the movements of potential enemies in the field.

The United States and its Western allies beat back most of China’s proposals. But diplomats expect this may be the beginning of a long-term effort by Beijing to flex its growing fiscal muscles and constrain U.N. blue helmets from scrutinizing countries’ human rights abuses.

“They seem to be in favor of streamlining the budget,” the council member said.

“But that’s more of a talking point to hide what they really had in mind: scrapping all the different expenses proposed for human rights,” the diplomat said.

Photo credit: PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images