Peace for the World

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

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Hillary Clinton-Pandora Redux

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Hillary, our very own version of Pandora, has loosed so much suffering in the course of her unwavering support for the hegemonic pursuits of the Empire. Her approval of Israel’s aggression against Gaza during Operation Protective Edge in the summer of 2014 is further evidence that she is unworthy of our support.

by George Capaccio

( October 4, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian)  During the first presidential debate, on Monday evening, September 26, Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton boasted of her support for tough sanctions on Iran:

I spent a year and a half putting together a coalition that included Russia and China to impose the toughest sanctions on Iran . . . And we did drive them to the negotiating table and my successor, John Kerry, and President Obama got a deal that put a lid on Iran’s nuclear program. Without firing a single shot. That’s diplomacy.

How many of her supporters, upon hearing this nod to the diplomatic track, thought Hillary’s anti-Iran zeal was another compelling reason to vote for her and one more shining example of her leadership panache? After all, she knows a thing or two about how to get things done, and standing up to those tricky mullahs in Tehran is what any president worth her salt has to do. Wasn’t Iran “weeks away from having enough nuclear material to form a bomb” with which to decimate Europe along with Iran’s historical rival — Israel?

Well, if you listen to Hillary tell it, you might very well believe she’s got her proverbial finger on the truth and is prepared to stand tall in the face of the Iranian menace. And what better way to keep this citadel of evil firmly in place than by slapping ironclad sanctions on its unctuous rulers. It bears repeating: Hillary has experience. She knows how to get things done whether as the First Lady with our “first black president” Bill Clinton, then as a New York senator, and, under Obama, as Secretary of State. It was her husband who maintained sanctions on Iraq for the entire duration of his presidency. So she knows how effective they can be in achieving foreign policy goals, like keeping Saddam in a box or preventing the doomsday weapon from falling into Iran’s hands.

What she failed to mention during the recent debate is the catastrophic effect sanctions had on Iran’s economy and its civilian population. Sanctions were only lifted in July 2015 when the United States and various world powers finalized an agreement with Iran to “limit Tehran’s nuclear ability for more than a decade in return for lifting international oil and financial sanctions.” On the very same day the deal took effect, Hillary called for even more sanctions. Hard to beat that for chutzpah.

I may not have her experience as a Capital Hill bigwig, but I know a thing or two about sanctions and how they impact, not just the government of the targeted country but the people as well. Having spent the better part of a decade traveling to and from Iraq during the sanctions years as a humanitarian activist and seeing up front and personal the deadly toll they were taking on the most vulnerable members of Iraqi society, I am distressed that one of our so-called leaders and this season’s leading presidential contender (if the soothsayers are correct) would take credit for imposing tough sanctions on Iran. If we take Hillary at her word, then one can understand why she would take credit for a policy that brought Iran to the negotiating table and, from her standpoint, prevented it from building a nuclear weapon. However, notwithstanding her claims, the evidence simply doesn’t back her up. In 2007 a National Intelligence Estimate concluded, based on intelligence findings available at that time, that “in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program . . . . ” Hillary Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state lasted from 2009 to 2013. In 2010 she began her work to have sanctions imposed on Iran.

According to various sources, including Global Research, sanctions were crippling Iran’s economy and having their deadliest impact on civilians just as they did in Iraq where over half-a-million children died from the medical consequences of malnutrition and easily preventable water-borne diseases, among other causes related to sanctions. The United States first imposed sanctions in 1979 when the Iranian Revolution brought Ayatollah Khomeini, a Shia Muslim religious figure, into power as the supreme leader of the world’s first Islamic republic. Over the following decades, sanctions “increased in scope and severity.” Thanks to Hillary’s dedicated nurturing of the sanctions regime, and in particular the set of draconian sanctions she spearheaded in 2012, Iran’s major source of income — oil exports — was severely blocked. In a speech she gave in 2012, Hillary had this to say about her handiwork:

We convinced all 27 nations of the European Union to stop importing Iranian oil and all 20 major global importers of Iranian oil – including Japan, India, China, and Turkey – to make significant cuts . . . Iran today exports more than one million fewer barrels of crude each day than it did just last year. Iran’s currency is worth less than half of what it was last November.

As a “long-time advocate for crippling sanctions against Iran,” Hillary voted in favor of every sanctions bill that came before the Senate during her two terms there. Like her husband, she remains either blind or merely indifferent to the suffering that sanctions are capable of inflicting, especially among the most vulnerable, who are least able to influence the decisions of their leaders, especially in a non-democracy like Iran. Restricting a country’s access to its most essential source of foreign revenue is the equivalent of driving a stake into the heart of that country’s economy. But it’s not the political leadership who will do the bleeding and dying. The severe cutback in oil exports that Hillary is apparently proud of orchestrating had a deadly impact on the lives of ordinary Iranian citizens, since the government could scarcely finance “infrastructural work, social and welfare services, hospitals, schools, universities, state employees’ salaries and pensions.” By 2012, under sanctions, the value of Iran’s currency had declined by 80 percent. At the same time, the prices of raw materials, spare parts, foodstuffs, machinery, and medicine rose precipitously. Unemployment likewise rose as many businesses and factories had to shut down.

Possibly the most painful effect of the sanctions against Iran occurred in relation to healthcare and the availability of drugs to treat life-threatening illnesses, such as heart, lung, and kidney disease, multiple sclerosis, and cancer, particularly leukemia, which had become rampant in Iran. A devalued currency coupled with the high cost of raw materials necessary for the production of pharmaceuticals resulted in severe shortages of essential medicines. For example, the effective treatment of patients diagnosed with hemophilia requires anticoagulant drugs. But under sanctions, these drugs became unavailable, and thousands of surgeries had to be cancelled. One physician, the head of Iran’s Hemophilia Society, had this to say about how sanctions were affecting the practice of medicine in his country:

This is a blatant hostage-taking of the most vulnerable people by countries which claim they care about human rights. Even a few days of delay can have serious consequences, like hemorrhage and disability.
Hillary’s touting of her role in bringing Iran to the bargaining table through the application of stringent economic sanctions is, to my mind, an endorsement of collective punishment. A closer look at the reality of sanctions, beyond its somewhat sterile connotations as an effective tool against recalcitrant governments, reveals a world of pain for innocent people. There is no single payer health insurance; therefore, the most important way for people to obtain coverage is through their place of work. In April 2016, Iran’s deputy interior minister stated that, even with the lifting of many economic sanctions, unemployment currently stands at between 40 and 60 percent in approximately 420 entire counties. This contributes to a situation in which 15 million of Iran’s 78 million people are reportedly deprived of even the most basic social services.

The same official added that “10 million people are currently living in what could be described as slums . . . .”
In the West, officials argued that sanctions “are aimed at punishing the Iranian regime in the hope of forcing it to comply with international rules over its disputed nuclear [program], but many Iranians see things differently.” Having witnessed how economic sanctions devastated Iraqi society, I would agree with the viewpoint of ordinary Iranians: The sanctions were a form of economic warfare whose ultimate purpose, in Iran as well as Iraq, was to make life miserable for the greatest number of people in the futile and morally repugnant expectation that their suffering would prompt them to rise up against the government and accomplish what Washington’s neoconservative warriors have wanted all along — regime change.

Hillary is no stranger to regime change. During her much-ballyhooed career, she’s been instrumental in the demise of governments unacceptable to the US and their replacement by regimes more amenable to our trade policies and/or geopolitical interests. And in each case, the results have been abysmal: violence, repression, and chaos. And yet, with Election Day fast approaching, the heat is on to take a deep breath, hold our collective nose, and cast our ballot for the Queen of Chaos, the honorific title bestowed upon Lady Hillary by progressive writer Diana Johnstone. Some highly reputable and influential lefties argue with a great deal of brio that defeating Donald Trump must be our foremost goal, even if it means voting for someone like Hillary. As president, she is likely to do much less harm than a President Trump. Besides, what really matters is growing and sustaining a grassroots movement to challenge “business as usual,” and the wrecking ball ideology and nefarious schemes of Deep State hobgoblins.

Okay, I get it. But come Election Day, I doubt I will be able to summon whatever it takes to cast my vote for Hillary. The Clinton name, whether preceded by “Hillary” or “Bill,” never fails to conjure up images of the many seriously ill children I saw in Iraqi hospitals where the sanctions regime maintained by Bill and endorsed by Hillary was a death sentence for these children. The drugs they needed to stay alive were simply not available thanks in large measure to the UN’s 661 Committee, which determined what Iraq was allowed to import, and to the concerted efforts of Bill Clinton and his junior partner in the UK to continue the sanctions until Saddam was gone, regardless of how many innocent Iraqis died in the process.

How many children in Iran suffered a similar fate as a consequence of the sanctions Hillary brags about?
In Greek mythology, Pandora — not Eve — was the first woman on Earth. Her creation was ordered by Zeus as a way to punish that upstart Prometheus for stealing fire from the gods and handing it over to the humans. In addition to her intoxicating, irresistible beauty, she was given a jar filled with evils of all sorts and warned never to open it. But that’s exactly what she did when her innate curiosity got the better of her. From the one act of disobedience has come all the miseries and afflictions that continue to beset humanity.

Hillary, our very own version of Pandora, has loosed so much suffering in the course of her unwavering support for the hegemonic pursuits of the Empire. Her approval of Israel’s aggression against Gaza during Operation Protective Edge in the summer of 2014 is further evidence that she is unworthy of our support. Hundreds of Palestinian children died during 51 days of aerial bombardment by the Israeli Defense Forces. The United Nations Human Rights Council convened a commission of inquiry, which concluded that “Israel, and to a lesser extent Palestinian armed groups, had likely committed violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law, some constituting war crimes.” But by the light shining ever so brightly from Hillary’s moral compass, Israel “did what it had to do to respond to the [Hamas] rockets.” One looks in vain for even a smidgeon of compassion for the victims of Israel’s crimes to say nothing of those who have been crushed under the boots of US imperialism.

Come Election Day, when I enter the curtained booth at my polling location, I will be thinking of those victims — from Palestine, Iran, and Iraq to Honduras, Yugoslavia, and Ukraine — and mark my ballot accordingly.

George Capaccio is a writer and activist living in Arlington, MA. During the years of US- and UK-enforced sanctions against Iraq, he traveled there numerous times, bringing in banned items, befriending families in Baghdad, and deepening his understanding of how the sanctions were impacting civilians. His email is Georgecapaccio@verizon.net. He welcomes comments and invites readers to visit his website: www.georgecapaccio.com

U.S. Planes in the Sights of Newly Deployed Russian Missiles, Moscow Warns

U.S. Planes in the Sights of Newly Deployed Russian Missiles, Moscow Warns

BY PAUL MCLEARY-OCTOBER 6, 2016

Russia is warning the United States that any attacks on Syrian-government held territory would be tantamount to an attack on Russian servicemen, heightening tensions between Washington and Moscow that have already reached post-Cold war highs, and coming just a week after the collapse of a ceasefire in the Syrian carnage.

Responding to press reports that the Obama administration was again considering striking Syrian military targets in reprisal for the indiscriminate bombing of hospitals and civilian apartment blocks in Aleppo, Russian Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov warned about the consequences of any attacks on Syrian forces.
“Any missile or air strikes on the territory controlled by the Syrian government will create a clear threat to Russian servicemen,” he said, adding that his troops might use freshly-deployed, advanced air-defense systems to strike out at objects in the sky that they can’t identify.

Russian air defense crews manning the S-300 and S-400 systems are “unlikely to have time to determine…the exact flight paths of missiles and then who the warheads belong to,” he warned. “And all the illusions of amateurs about the existence of ‘invisible’ jets will face a disappointing reality,” he said, in apparent reference to the stealthy characteristics of U.S. aircraft.

He also grimly advised U.S. generals and what he called “hotheads” in Washington to make a “thorough calculation of the possible consequences of such plans” to fly near Syrian or Russian forces.

The Russians and Syrian government have insisted that a Sept. 17 airstrike near Deir Ezzor that killed dozens of Syrian troops is proof that Washington supported the Islamic State and Islamist rebels, despite American claims that they had simply hit the wrong target on a crowded battlefield, and that the Syrians may not have been wearing uniforms.

Konashenkov referenced the strike, saying “we took all necessary measures to exclude any similar accidents happening to Russian forces in Syria.”

U.S. Central Command spokesman Col. John J. Thomas told FP Thursday that he wouldn’t comment specifically on the latest statements from Moscow, but “we look at actions, we’re interested in why they’re moving some of these system in, there’s not really an air force there to defend against” other than aircraft from the U.S.-led coalition.

Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook told reporters Thursday that the hotline between U.S. and Russian officials to ensure their aircraft don’t run into one another over Syria remains open, and Thomas added that the coalition and the Russians are “looking into what the possibilities are” for expanding how the two communicate.

Earlier this week, Russian officials confirmed the deployment of the S-300 anti-aircraft system to protect its naval base at Tartus. The system has a range of about 150 miles, which gives the battery good coverage of government-held territory well inland.

Moscow has also recently bolstered the number attack planes and bombers at its air base in Latakia, and this week sent three missile corvettes from its Black Sea Fleet to join other Russian warships in the Mediterranean off the Syrian coast. All three ships — The Serpukhov, The Zelyony Dol, and The Mirazh, are equipped with Kalibr and Malakhit cruise missiles which can be launched to hit targets on land well within Syria’s borders. The ships are expected to be joined next month by Moscow’s sole aircraft carrier.

Photo credit: PAUL GYPTEAU/AFP/Getty Images

Accused of faking Pakistan strikes, Indian army surrenders footage to govt

Indian army soldiers take positions during their patrol near the Line of Control in Nowshera sector, about 90 kilometers from Jammu, India, Sunday, Oct. 2, 2016. Pic: AP
Indian army soldiers take positions during their patrol near the Line of Control in Nowshera sector, about 90 kilometers from Jammu, India, Sunday, Oct. 2, 2016. Pic: AP

6th October 2016

THE Indian army has handed to the government video clips of the “surgical strikes” it said it carried out across the Line of Control (LoC) in Pakistan’s side of Kashmir last week, following claims from across the border that the attack had been exaggerated.

Local media reports quoting army sources said the footage is now with the Modi administration, which is facing increasing pressure both from Pakistan and detractors in India to prove the strikes had taken place.

The Economic Times in its report Thursday said the Indian armed forces gave the green light to the government to use the video footage in any manner it sees fit.

The final decision, however, rests with the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), it said.


The Times of India quoted Union Minister Hansraj Ahir as confirming Wednesday that the footage was handed over in accordance with procedure.

The daily also quoted Kiran Rijiju, a state minister for home, as urging the public to have faith in the government.

“The laid down procedure has been followed. The DGMO (director general of military operations) briefed (about the surgical strikes). It was not the Defence Minister nor the Prime Minister and not the Home Minister.

“It was the DGMO who briefed (the media). That was the right thing to do and they (army) did it.
“Have faith in the government and leave it to the army,” he was quoted telling reporters when pressed for proof of the strikes.

The issue reportedly flared up Tuesday when Mumbai Congress chief Sanjay Nirupam called the strikes “fake”, inviting criticism from the Bharatiya Janata Party, and his own political colleagues who distanced the party from his remarks.

On Sept 29, the Indian army claimed it carried out “surgical strikes” in the across the highly-militarized LoC in the disputed Kashmir region and destroyed “terrorist launching pads” used by the Pakistani militants.

It claimed its elite troops crossed into Pakistan territory in Kashmir and killed suspected militants who were allegedly planning strikes in major cities in India. The attack allegedly incapacitated more than 30 terrorists and destroyed five terror launch pads in the region.

Pakistan, however, said no such strike occurred.

The strikes were presumably carried out in retaliation for the clashes in Uri, in India-controlled Kashmir earlier on Sept 18.

In that attack, unidentified gunmen infiltrated a key Indian army base in Uri, triggering a standoff that killed 19 soldiers. The rebels were also killed in the dawn skirmish.

Earlier this week, officials in Islamabad said Pakistan and India were trying to de-escalate border tensions. The officials said that Pakistani adviser Nasser Khan Janjua spoke with India’s security adviser Ajit Doval by phone briefly on Monday, discussing ways to restore calm.

Despite this, however, reports early Thursday said more cross-border clashes were reported in Kashmir.
According to Indian army spokesman Col. Rajesh Kalia, soldiers foiled an attack on an army camp and killed three suspected rebels in India’s side of the restive Kashmir valley.

He said the militants fired at sentry posts and tried to enter an army camp in the forested Langate area early Thursday but Indian soldiers retaliated and killed all the three attackers.

Families of victims killed during US-led invasion of Iraq demand compensation

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Saudi Arabia and Iraq believe the conventional law of sovereign immunity has been compromised by the US Getty Images
Families of victims of the US-led invasion of Iraq should be allowed to seek compensation for damages suffered during the conflict, a group of activists has told their country’s parliament.

The ‘Arab Project in Iraq’ lobby group has asked the Iraqi government to prepare a lawsuit seeking full compensation from the United States over "violations by the US forces following the US invasion that saw the toppling of late President Saddam Hussein in 2003”.

It follows the recent passing of a law by US Congress allowing the families of 9/11 victims to sue the government of Saudi Arabia, overruling the traditional principle of sovereign immunity.

President Obama made attempts to block the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act (JASTA), as it is believed the law will leave the United States vulnerable to lawsuits over its past foreign policy activities.

The lobby group will seek compensation based on reports of alleged war crimes committed by US military forces during the eight-year occupation of Iraq, state network Al-Arabiya reported.

The law of sovereign immunity was introduced by the US Congress in 1976, but will be overridden by the new act by creating exceptions to the rule.

The Saudi foreign ministry reportedly said JASTA will “contribute to the erosion” of the principle of sovereign immunity, considered to be one of the cornerstones of conduct in international relations.

The Saudi government has repeatedly denied supporting or harbouring the terrorists involved in the 9/11 attacks of 2001, 15 of whom came from Saudi Arabia.

The first complaint under JASTA was filed by Stephanie Ross DeSimone who was widowed when her husband, a Navy Commander, was killed during the attack on the Pentagon.

The 9/11 Commission found no evidence that Riyadh or senior Saudi officials were involved in the planning or execution of the attacks.

Brazil lawmakers approve spending cap in victory for Temer

Brazil's President Michel Temer reacts during launch ceremony of the ''New School'' (Novo Ensino Medio) at the Presidential Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, September 22, 2016. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Brazil's President Michel Temer reacts during launch ceremony of the ''New School'' (Novo Ensino Medio) at the Presidential Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, September 22, 2016. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino

By Maria Carolina Marcello-Fri Oct 7, 2016

A congressional committee in Brazil approved a constitutional amendment on Thursday that would limit public spending increases for 20 years, handing President Michel Temer an initial victory in his plan to plug a widening deficit.

The lower house committee voted 23-7 to pass the proposal, which will be put to a vote in the full chamber early next week. Its approval requires two votes in the plenary of the lower house and two more in the Senate, needing a three-fifths majority in each.

The unprecedented amendment, which limits the growth of federal spending to the rate of inflation, is aimed at gradually closing a yawning budget gap that topped 10 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) last year.

It is the first of a series of austerity measures to assuage market concerns that the once-booming economy, which was stripped of its investment grade rating last year, could be hurtling towards a debt crisis.

The cap would mark a sea change for public finances in a country where governments have long spent more than they earned.

In an interview with Reuters before the vote, Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles said approval of the ceiling by the committee would be a "important step to implement the fiscal adjustment."

In an address to the country broadcast over radio and television, Meirelles later said that bringing spending under control was vital if Brazil was to restore credibility and attract investment to grow again. He pledged that health and education spending would not be cut.

Analysts have said that further reform to slash the cost of an overburdened pension system is crucial to bring the deficit under control, in addition to measures to curb spending and increase revenues.

Temer, who took over the presidency on an interim basis in May when president Dilma Rousseff was impeached, has vowed to balance Brazil's overdrawn accounts. His government has stepped up its reform efforts since Rousseff was formally dismissed in August, launching a campaign this week to convince Brazilians of the need to tighten belts.

Temer has warned that pension system's deficit will hit 100 billion real ($31 billion) this year and could reach 150 billion by end-2017.

"At some point a retired person will knock on the government's door and there won't be money to pay their pension," he said in a TV interview on Wednesday. He said the government would not tax its way out of the fiscal crunch.

The spending cap is expected to win approval in Congress, but the measure has fanned a heated debate about austerity in a country battered by a two-year recession, high inflation and rising unemployment.
"The government says this will help the war on unemployment, but this is war on the unemployed because their health services will decline and there will be less money for education," said Alessandro Molon of the left-of-center Rede party.

Thursday's committee meeting was disrupted by teachers who protested that the amendment would reduce spending for education. They were removed by security guards.

Temer's government and allies are confident the amendment has enough support to clear a first vote in the lower house on Monday or Tuesday and win full approval by Congress before year-end.

(Additional reporting by Anthony Boadle and Alonso Soto; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Grant McCool)
 The original Tibetan village here was bulldozed five years ago. What has replaced it is Lulang Folk Village, a postcard-ready replica, a Disney-esque version of an age-old settlement in the high ­forest.

Grand, ornate buildings in ­Tibetan style, built by Chinese real estate developers but still vacant, are here, and an empty primary school, and a brand-new luxury hotel offering rooms for $150 to $1,000 a night. Soon Chinese restaurant owners will move in, and Chinese tour groups will follow.

“Lulang is paradise on earth, located on the roof of the world,” said community volunteer He Yilin. This is Tibet sanitized for tourists from the rest of China, complete with Mandarin-speaking guides, Chinese food and a whitewashed view of Chinese rule.

While foreign tourists still face restrictions on travel to Tibet, ­domestic tourists are arriving in extraordinary numbers. The government is investing heavily and eagerly promoting tourism as a pillar of the economy.

“Tourism is the new engine for development in Tibet,” Penpa Tashi, vice chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, told reporters shortly before the glitzy opening ceremony of the Third China Tibet Tourism and Culture Expo in the capital city, Lhasa, this September.

The aim, he said, is to create the tourism infrastructure and services that will turn Tibet into a “world-class tourism destination.”

Yet critics say domestic tourism is being used in another way, as part of a grand economic and strategic plan to bind Tibet ever more tightly into China’s embrace — in the process trivializing its culture, marginalizing its people and polluting its pristine environment.

“It is very similar to how the United States treated its developing West 100 years ago,” said P. Christiaan Klieger, a cultural anthropologist, historian and author. “They are commodifying the native people and bringing them out as an ethnic display for the consumption of people back east.”

Elliot Sperling, an Indiana University professor, says China has a narrow, materialist view of development as the solution to all ­Tibet’s problems, and warned that tourism risks turning parts of ­Tibet into a “Lama Disneyland” where locals are outnumbered by Han Chinese.

Chinese troops moved into ­Tibet in 1951, two years after the Communist Party rose to power in Beijing. 

Many Tibetans, who say their land was largely independent from China, still fiercely resent that takeover and complain of ­religious, cultural and linguistic repression, as well as economic and social discrimination. Others, including Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, have fled into exile abroad.

These days, large parts of Lhasa feel increasingly like any modern Chinese city, with hundreds of old buildings knocked down to make way for shopping malls and apartment houses for immigrants, drawn from China’s ethnic Han majority.

Now Tibetans have to adjust to a new flood of arrivals, after China opened a train route across the high-altitude Tibetan plateau, from Xining to Lhasa, in 2006.
Chinese tourism statistics on ­Tibet are opaque and confusing, but one count suggests that around 8 million tourists will come this year. That’s a roughly 12-fold rise since the first train arrived. Officials predict a further rise, of 50 percent, by 2020.

That will dwarf the permanent population of just over 3 million people, and attract even more immigrants from elsewhere in China to build infrastructure and support the tourism industry, experts say.

The government has already started to build another major train route, from the major western city of Chengdu to Lhasa, an ambitious project traversing 1,000 miles across some of the world’s most mountainous terrain.

Multinational companies are arriving fast, too: Lhasa already boasts an imposing Intercontinental Hotel, as well as a Sheraton, a St. Regis and a Shangri-La. Officials predict 10 more luxury hotels there by 2020.
Foreign visitors are less welcome: They have to obtain special permits and visit on organized tours, and currently make up just over 1  percent of arrivals.

Penpa Tashi said the central government had ordered that ­Tibet should be “open to the world,” and promised that restrictions on foreign visitors would be eased as soon as the region had upgraded its tourist infrastructure.

What he didn’t say: Backpackers have been blamed by China for supporting the cause of Tibetan nationalism, and for informing the world about Tibetan uprisings in the late 1980s. Foreign journalists are completely barred, except on rare government tours.

The real reason for the restrictions, says the Tibetan government-in-exile in the Indian town of Dharamsala, is “to hide the actual reality in Tibet.”

By contrast, domestic visitors are a much safer bet.

Some are inspired by a sense of patriotic duty, others by a renewed interest in Buddhism or increasingly by a growing fascination with an “exotic” people living in a timeless “Shangri-La.”

“I am not Buddhist, but we have Buddha in our heart,” said Zhu Chunhua, a young Chinese woman from the eastern province of Jiangsu, photographing a friend after turning prayer wheels outside a small temple in Lhasa. “The local people are very simple and pure.”

Already, Tibetan Buddhism’s holiest site, the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa, is bursting at the seams with Han tourists, who flock through its darkened shrine in droves before emerging onto the roof and into the light in a flurry of selfies. In the process, some of the temple’s magic seems to dissipate.

Some are respectful of what they are seeing, but Tibetans on social media complain of cameras thrust in pilgrims’ faces and of sacred prayer flags trampled underfoot.

On a recent visit, one tour guide committed a grave breach of religious etiquette by walking the wrong way around a statue of Buddha.

At the landmark Potala Palace, a tourist stood beside a sign banning photographs, taking a photo, while a Tibetan tour guide expressed exasperation at how little Han tourists knew or understood.

“Lhasa has been turned from a holy place of pilgrimage into a tourist site,” said Tibetan writer Woeser, who last visited the city three years ago. Most tourist shops in the Tibetan old town are owned by Han Chinese, she said, and many supposedly Tibetan artifacts are manufactured in other parts of China.
So is Tibetan culture being swamped?

Wang Songping, deputy director of the Tibet Tourism Development Commission, says tourism has both positive and negative effects everywhere in the world. But the influx of money will encourage people to protect “their intangible cultural heritage,” he argues, and help transform the economy in places like Lulang “from cutting down trees to watching trees.”

Tourism accounts for a fifth of the local economy and provides 320,000 jobs in Tibet, Wang said, with some 97,000 herders and farmers now involved in the industry. Hundreds of residents have been given government grants to convert their houses for tourist homestays.

Some Tibetans do benefit from tourism, and there is a growing number of small tour agencies offering “responsible,” eco-friendly travel for foreigners and better-educated domestic tourists.

But mostly, critics say, Tibetans are neither consulted nor empowered as their land is transformed. The top jobs and most of the profits are being cornered by companies and people from elsewhere in China — fueling the kind of inequality and resentment that contributed to riots in Tibet in 2008.

One young man, who looked over his shoulder to check he was not being watched before speaking to a small group of reporters in Lhasa, said tourism was good for the economy — but then complained that Han Chinese visitors did not always respect sacred mountains and holy sites. “Many tourists move rocks and run anywhere inside temples,” he said. “It’s not good.”

Lulang Folk Village sits at 12,000 feet above sea level in what officials have designated the “Switzerland of the East,” a region of forested mountains in southeastern Tibet near the Indian border.

It has been built by some of China’s biggest real estate companies, with help from the southern provincial government of Guangdong, ostensibly as part of efforts to spread the nation’s wealth to its poorer hinterlands.

Yet Han Chinese construction workers have done most of the building. Local Tibetans, one worker claimed, simply do not have the skills.

Tibetans who lost their homes in the original village of Zhaxigang will be given new accommodation here, officials said, but their opportunities to make money may be limited. Restaurants in a nearby site are overwhelmingly run by Han Chinese.

“Some shops will be run by people from inland, but some will be run by local people,” said Tu Hang, a Foreign Ministry official from Nyingchi prefecture, told reporters on a guided tour, adding,
with unconscious condescension about Tibetans: “They will have shops to sell small things like biscuits and sweet tea.”

But those modest opportunities may be scant consolation for many Tibetans, who worry that their land is drowning in the influx from the east.

There are two problems with the Han Chinese, one Tibetan said. “The first one is they’re always brainwashing us. Always,” he said. “And the second problem is they just keep coming here, more and more.”

Congcong Zhang, Gu Jinglu and Jin Xin contributed to this report.

Hurricane Matthew: at least 136 people killed in Haiti, officials say

Efforts to access worst-affected areas have been hampered by flooding and damage after storm devastated parts of island

Hurricane Matthew leaves trail of destruction through Haiti


 More than 130 people have been killed after Hurricane Matthew hit Haiti with 145mph winds.
Photograph: Orlando Barria/EPA---Residents repair their homes destroyed by Hurricane Matthew in Les Cayes. Photograph: Dieu Nalio Chery/AP
 Children stand next to a flooded area in Cité-Soleil, Port-au-Prince. Photograph: Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters-- People walk down the street next to destroyed houses in Jérémie. Photograph: Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters

 and Thursday 6 October 2016

The number of people killed in Haiti by the devastating effects of Hurricane Matthew has risen to 136, local officials said on Thursday, as rescue workers and aid agencies hoped to begin reaching remote areas of the country to assess the damage.

The hurricane, which hit Haiti on Tuesday, brought 145mph winds and torrential rains that have destroyed more than 3,200 homes, displaced 15,000 people, ruined plantations and drowned animals.
Efforts to access the worst-affected areas – including the Grand’Anse and Sud departments – have been hampered by flooding, the collapse of communications networks and the destruction of a key bridge.

But as the weather clears, Haitian authorities, the UN and national and international non-governmental organisations are starting to get a better idea of the scale of the destruction. The airport in the capital, Port-au-Prince, has reopened for humanitarian flights and two portable satellites are being used to restore communications with cut-off areas.

Officials in Haiti on Thursday raised the death toll to 98. At least four other people elsewhere are known to have died as a result of the hurricane.

Marie Alta Jean-Baptiste, the head of the country’s civil protection directorate, warned the death toll was likely to rise as emergency workers reached the stricken regions.

“We do know there’s a lot of damage in the Grand’Anse, and we also know human life has been lost there,” she told the Associated Press.

The port city of Les Cayes in Sud is also feared to have suffered badly in the storm.
“The situation in Les Cayes is catastrophic, the city is flooded, you have trees lying in different places and you can barely move around,” its deputy mayor, Claudette Regis Delerme, told Reuters.

Yvonne Helle, the UN Development Programme’s Haiti director, said while the lack of access made getting precise numbers impossible at this stage, the scale of the damage was clearly enormous. She said the UNDP had received reports that up to 98% of the city of Jérémie, in Grand’Anse department, had been destroyed.

“It has an old historical centre and the old houses have been completely destroyed, ripped to shreds,” she said. “There are aerial pictures of the level destruction and it’s mind-boggling.”

Aid groups have struggled to communicate with people in Grand’Anse since Tuesday morning, though the aid group Catholic Relief Services (CRS) said agricultural fields in Jérémie had been “decimated”.

“Houses in some areas like Jeremie and Dame Marie, which are difficult to access in normal times, are almost entirely destroyed and there are other areas where we don’t know how bad the damage was yet,” said CRS’s senior regional information officer for Latin America and the Caribbean, Robyn Fieser. “Shelter is a huge concern”.

Fieser said there was also an immediate need for food and water in the southern port town of Les Cayes as there are “scores” of people in shelters without access to them.

Enzo di Taranto, the head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Haiti, said the agency was also waiting for a report on the northwest, where it was impossible for aircraft to fly until Thursday. “There has also been some damage in the northwest, but we have no information whatsoever at this stage,” Taranto said.

The UN has described the hurricane as Haiti’s worst humanitarian crisis since thedevastating earthquake six years ago. The rains and flooding have prompted fears of a surge in the cholera epidemic that has killed almost 10,000 people since the disease was accidentally introduced to Haiti by UN peacekeepers.

Helle said the 50-60cm of rain that had fallen in some areas had caused graves to open and flooded pit latrines.

“I think there are going to be serious, serious health concerns that will lead to communicable diseases related to water and sanitation,” she said. “I’m very worried about that and obviously we still have cholera and this will have an effect on our ability to control that.”

Action Aid issued a similar warning. Its country director, Yolette Etienne, said that more than 500,000 men, women and children urgently needed food, clean drinking water and safe shelter.

“Cholera is now a real danger as the already extremely poor sanitation system has been totally overwhelmed by flooding and heavy rainfall meaning the disease could spread quickly,” she said. “The situation is even worse in the shelters which often don’t even have enough toilet and are short of clean drinking water.”

According to the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 15,263 people displaced by the hurricane have been placed in 152 shelters.

World Vision, which managed to get staff out to remote areas by helicopter on Wednesday, said sanitation, food and looking after children were its main concerns.

“Our teams are seeing a lot of damage, a lot of destruction and a lot of distress,” said Julie Lee, the charity’s spokeswoman in Haiti.

“Our biggest worry is children, who are most vulnerable in these times of disasters. We’re also worried about the crop damage … right now, this hurricane is wiping out the Congo bean crop, the sorghum crop – basically staples of the Haitian diet.”

The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) and its children’s agency, Unicef, have begun mobilising resources to help. WFP has arranged enough food supplies to feed 300,000 people for a month, and has a further 34 tonnes of food on standby in Miami.

Unicef is preparing life-saving aid for 10,000 people in Haiti, while World Vision is to provide water and sanitation help to 50,000 families.

The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation is also poised to deliver seeds to affected areas to help farmers rebuild their livelihoods.

A deployment of US military personnel and nine helicopters are expected to arrive in Port-au-Prince over the next few days to help the relief effort.

In Aquin, a town outside Les Cayes, people have been braving the mud to see what Matthew has done to their clapboard houses and tiny shops.

Like many Haitians who were reluctant to leave their homes for fear of losing their personal belongings, Cenita Leconte had initially ignored official calls to evacuate as the hurricane hit. Eventually, however, she gave in – and in doing so probably saved her life.

“We’ve lost everything we own,” Leconte, 75, told AP. “But it would have been our fault if we stayed here and died.”

Breast cancer risk 'not increased' by night shifts

Woman working late
Working night shifts has "little or no effect" on a woman's risk of developing breast cancer, new research suggests.
BBC6 October 2016
In 2007, a World Health Organization committee said shift work "probably" had a link to breast cancer, based on studies of animals and people.
But this new work by leading UK cancer experts looked at data on 1.4m women and found there was no association with night shift work.
Cancer Research UK (CRUK) said it hoped the findings would reassure women.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) made its ruling in 2007 because of shift work's disruption to the body clock.
At that time there was limited evidence about breast cancer risk in humans, so the classification was mainly based on a combination of animal and lab studies.
The new research is published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Funded by the UK Health and Safety Executive, Cancer Research UK and the UK Medical Research Council, it looked at data from 10 different studies from the UK, USA, China, Sweden and the Netherlands.
Compared with women who had never worked night shifts, those who had done some overnight work - even for 20 to 30 years - had no increased risk of breast cancer.
The researchers found that the incidence of breast cancer was essentially the same whether someone did no night shift work at all or did night shift work for several decades.
On average, 14% of women in the UK have ever worked nights and 2% have worked nights for 20 or more years.
Each year in the UK around 53,300 women are diagnosed with breast cancer, and around 11,500 die from the disease.

Headlines

CRUK-funded scientist Dr Ruth Travis, who led the research and is based at the University of Oxford, said: "We found that women who had worked night shifts, including long-term night shifts, were not more likely to develop breast cancer, either in the three new UK studies or when we combined results from all 10 studies that had published relevant data."
Sarah Williams, CRUK's health information manager, said: "This study is the largest of its kind and has found no link between breast cancer and working night shifts.
"Research over the past years suggesting there was a link has made big headlines and we hope that today's news reassures women who work night shifts.
"Breast cancer is the most common cancer in the UK and research to fully understand the different risk factors is vital so that we can give women clear health advice.
"Women can reduce their risk of breast cancer by keeping a healthy weight, drinking less alcohol and being active."

DO NOT PROCEED WITH THE AMENDMENT TO THE CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CODE -CPA

punjab-police
( The proposed amendment could increase the risk of suspects being subject to torture, cruel and inhuman treatment as well as illegal arrest and detention)

Sri Lanka Brief05/10/2016

10th October 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka: The Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA) is deeply concerned by a statement made by the Minister of Justice reported in the print media on 2 October 2016 on the Government’s intention to proceed with amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code. CPA has challenged similar arbitrary procedures and administrative directives on detention in the past and has continuously advocated for the rights of detainees, particularly those relating to due process. The present amendment is of concern as it deviates from existing constitutional, legal and administrative safeguards and Sri Lanka’s international obligations. CPA calls on the Government to desist from proceeding with the Bill in its present form.

The Bill proposing the amendment was issued on the 15 of August 2016 as a supplement to the Gazette of 12 August 2016 and has been criticized by the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL), the BAR Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) and several civil society organisations. CPA welcomes the timely intervention by the HRCSL and BASL. The HRCSL’s letter detailed several serious shortcomings of the proposed Bill, including concerns that -if enacted into law- the proposed amendment could increase the risk of suspects being subject to torture, cruel and inhuman treatment as well as illegal arrest and detention. It was also reported that the BASL wrote to the President expressing similar concerns.

The Government’s continued insistence to move ahead with this Bill is particularly problematic in light of its commitments to prevent the torture of persons detained by the State and the ongoing efforts to secure the GSP (Plus) preferential tariff system from the European Union.

Furthermore, the process by which this Bill was gazetted and the Justice Minister’s statement are indicative of larger problems in the law making process in Sri Lanka. CPA has repeatedly called on successive governments to ensure that there is greater transparency and public participation in the law-making process. At a very minimum this would require consultations with stakeholders prior to drafting legislation and ensure that draft legislation is more accessible to the public. In light of the ongoing constitutional reform process, CPA urges the Government to urgently address these systemic problems in the law making process.

Geneva, You, Me And Sri Lanka Incorporated


Colombo Telegraph
By Sarath de Alwis –October 6, 2016
Sarath de Alwis
Sarath de Alwis
In his fascinating book ‘Sapiens: A Brief History of Human Kind Israeli Historian Yuval Noah Harari remarks “You could never convince a monkey to give you a banana by promising him limitless bananas after death in monkey heaven.”
Obviously the celebrated historian is not well informed of the island republic of Sri Lanka.
Mahinda Rajapaksa is probably the least highbrow or cerebral leader to have led independent Sri Lanka. He was also the beneficiary of a cruel twist of fate. Under his watch, the armed forces of the nation, militarily defeated and physically eliminated a ferociously fascist monster- Velupillai Prabhakaran. So, very probably, he would not have known that he himself was a fascist. Eliminating a fascist is no license to be a fascist. Let us be practical.
What constitutes a Fascist state? A Fascist state has some distinctly obvious features. A Fascist regime constantly and consistently relies on nationalism and patriotism interchangeably with slogans and symbols.

Dayan March 17 Hyde park
It has a pronounced disdain for human rights. It is constantly engaged in persuading the citizenry that human rights can be ignored in order to ensure national security. It considers torture, abduction and disappearances as legitimate tools of governance.
It usually perfects the art of creating patriotic frenzy over the need to eliminate a perceived common threat that usually comes from ethnic or religious minorities and liberal intellectuals.
It accords an ill-disguised supremacy to the military. The Miltarry is given a disproportionate amount of state funding. Soldiers and military service are glamorized.
The mass media are intimidated by the state in to a state of Pavlovian submission. It is obsessed with national security and fear is the oft used tool to tame the masses. The ‘Apey Hamuduruwane’ appeal to a corrupt clergy helps it to manipulate public opinion. Religious rhetoric is a convenient instrument even to justify actions that are clearly in contradiction to religious teachings.