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

Monday, October 24, 2016

Puttalam woman given 100 lashes under Sharia law

Four men from Nallandaluwa, Puttalam were arrested for beating a woman 100 times with a coconut frond.
The twenty-five-year-old woman said she had been asked to come to the mosque in Nallandaluwa and beaten by the men, who said she was being punished under Sharia law for infidelity.
The men had accused her of having an affair with a man.
Puttalam Police arrested the four men and produced them before court.
Puttalam District Judge and Magistrate Bandula Abeyratne remanded them today, until November 2.

SYU goes to Bribery Commission against Sajith

syu-i
A complaint has been filed by Socialist Youth Union (SYU) against Deputy Leader of UNP and Minister of Housing and Construction Sajith Premadasa.

October 24, 2016

The complaint filed by SYU today (24th) has forwarded a video leaked to social media. The video showing how Minister Premadasa gives employment to certain youths in Hambantota District has gone viral and many have expressed views regarding the manner the Deputy Leader of the UNP gives jobs to selected individuals.
syu-ii
Mr. Eranga Gunasekera, the National Organizer of SYU who filed the complaint talking to the media said, “Minister Sajith Premadasa is using the suffering of more than 3.5 million people who are unemployed for his petty politics. Also, he has started giving jobs for youths as bribes under the tamarind tree to fulfil his political objectives. The serious issue here is that the Minister says the vacancies in his Ministry would be filled with persons he wants. He also says other ministers too do what he does. Using his political power to give jobs only for his party members is a serious issue.

Those who voted for ‘good governance’ never expected this type of situation. The Minister asks, in the video, whether money has been already given. This indicates jobs are given for money. Hence, we ask the Commission to Investigate Allegation of Bribery or Corruption to conduct an inquiry against Minister Sajith Premadasa so that such wrong moves would not continue,” said the National Organizer of SYU.

Guneratne remanded over a killing in 2001


article_image

  

Former UPFA Deputy Minister Sarath Kumara Gunaratne was yesterday remanded till November 01 by Negombo Additional Magistrate Kapila Dushmantha Epitawela for allegedly running over a UNP supporter at Thillanduwa Junction during the general election campaign in 2001.

UNP supporter Somachandra Royel, a resident of Opatha, Kotugoda was killed in that incident on November 17, 2001.

A clash had occurred between UNP and SLFP supporters when Sarath Guneratne came in a motorcade with his supporters to the venue of a meeting organised by former UNP parliamentarian Olitha Premathiratne at

Thillanduwa Junction in Negombo. It is alleged that Guneratne’s supporters fled the scene running over rival supporters.

Somachandra, who suffered critical injuries in the incident died after admission to hospital, while three other who received serious injuries were also admitted to the Negombo hospital.

Negombo police, who investigated the incident, sought Attorney General’s instructions to arrest Deputy Minister Gunaratne. When the AG advised the police to arrest him and produce him in court in 2005 they failed to carry out the instructions at the time.

Police once again sought Attorney General’s advice on the matter this year, following which the AG on September 19 ordered that Guneratne be charged and to issue warrants for his arrest.

Sarath Guneratne surrendered to Negombo Headquarters Chief Inspector Samanthilaka Weliwita through senior attorney at law Nelson P. Kumararatne and a team of lawyers yesterday morning after which he was produced before Additional Magistrate Epitawela.

Former Foreign Secretary Wagiswara involved in human smuggling

Former Foreign Secretary Wagiswara involved in human smuggling

Oct 24, 2016

Human smuggling has become a big headache to many countries in the world. The so called international community is focusing on this problem and is taking steps to stop it. Sometimes even their foreign relations policy is based on this. A good example is how Australia refrained from going against Sri Lanka on the ‘war crimes’ issues and was supportive of Sri Lanka. This was to get Sri Lanka’s support to stop smuggling of people to Australia from Sri Lanka. Australia went against the anti Sri Lanka chorus at the CHOGM with the Prime Minister taking part in a show of solidarity. Australia also donated two ships to Sri Lanka to stop smuggling of people.

In recent time US and the EU has been emphasizing on taking tough action against mass migration and human smuggling and there is pressure on Sri Lanka to take action as the country has become a transit hub for human smugglers. The Government under pressure has set up a human smuggling task force with the Foreign Ministry playing a leading role under the supervision of foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera. Though the foreign minister is keen to put a stop to human smuggling and support the action of the US and the EU countries what he does not know is that even his Ministry’s senior staff have been guilty of human smuggling using the cover of office.
The Government facilitate the getting of visas, pay for the tickets and the salaries for two domestic helpers when it comes to Ambassadors and for one domestic helper when it is a diplomat of a lesser rank. Some of these diplomats, whether career officers or political appointees when going to western countries use the cover of office to take their relations and friends as domestic helpers and help them stay back or disappear in those countries. The shame is that even very senior career officers with decades of experience and showing a face of high integrity and honesty are guilty of stooping to this illegal and unscrupulous practice.
Lanka News Web is in possessions of details how former Foreign Secretary and newly appointed High Commissioner to India Chitrangani Wagiswara smuggled two distantly connected young men to Canada. When Wagiswara was appointed as High Commissioner to Canada she informed the Ministry she will be taking two domestic helpers with her. With the Ministry help she got Official Passports numbering OL 3638290 and OL 3638291 and also the Canadian visas for Podigedara Janaka Wickramasinghe and Mudiyanselage Janaka Dinusha Bandara who are distantly connected to Wagiswara and her husband Dulip. They left to Canada on 08/12/2009.
When Wagiswara was supposed to return to Sri Lanka after she finished her term in February 2014 she put in motion a well orchestrated plan to keep the two domestics back in Canada. The day she was supposed to leave she informed the office staff that one of the domestics has ‘disappeared’. But she refrained from informing the Canadian authorities of the ‘disappearance’. If a domestic helper ‘disappeared’ without her knowledge she should have been a bit more careful about the second one and make sure he comes back with her to Sri Lanka. But on the way to the airport to return to Sri Lanka Wagiswara claimed that the second domestic had not got into the vehicle and has also ‘disappeared’. According to community sources the Wagiswara made sure that all personal belongings of the two domestic helpers were kept back in Canada and returned to them. Community sources also claim that the two domestics have been saying that a large amount of money has been paid by them to be brought to Canada. To be fair to Wagiswara Lanka News Web has not been able to confirm this allegation. 

Lanka News Web has unearthed lot of interesting things done by Wagiswara to deceive the Foreign Ministry and the Department of Immigration. At no point did she inform the Ministry that her two domestics disappeared in Canada. An officer has to inform the Ministry of a ‘disappearance’ of a domestic as it is the Ministry that issues an official note to get the visas and also official letters get them official passports. It is on the strength of these Ministry documents that the official passports and visas are issues to domestics. If a domestic ‘disappears’ in a country it might be difficult for another officer to take a domestic to that country in the future.
Being very selfish and thinking only of herself Wagiswara pretended that the two domestics returned back with her and submitted the passport of Domestic Bandara (OL 3638291) to be cancelled. The passport was cancelled on 30/04/2014. But Bandara has never returned to Sri Lanka since he left to Canada on 08/12/2009. So Wagiswara has carried the passport of Bandara without the permission of Controller Immigration all the way to Sri Lanka which is an offence and misleading the Ministry got it cancelled using all the wily deceptions which is a common trait in her behavior. Domestic Janaka only returned to Sri Lanka on 26/02/2016 by flight QR 668, good two years after Wagiswara returned to Sri Lanka. Janaka applied and got a new passport N 6714138 on 09/06/2016 with his occupation stated as cook. According to Sri Lankan community sources Janaka has got caught to Canadian authorities for overstaying the visa and was sent back to Sri Lanka.
At a time when many accuse political appointees of doing nefarious activities senior career officers like Wagiswara has brought shame and disgrace not only to the Foreign Service but to the whole country by flagrantly violating the rules of the Ministry and Laws of the country. Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera should commence investigations into this disgusting conduct of Wagiswara and take action against her. Otherwise the whole ‘Yahapalana’ chorus is nothing but empty talk.

Despite crackdown, BDS makes gains in France

French activists thank town of Ivry-sur-Seine for passing resolution backing movement for Palestinian rights. (viaBDS France)

Ali Abunimah-24 October 2016

Despite a harsh government crackdown, the boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign inFrance continues to make gains in its quest to hold Israel accountable for its abuses of Palestinian rights.

On 20 October, the town council of Ivry-sur-Seine, a Paris suburb with 60,000 residents,voted by a large majority to call on the French government to end its criminalization of BDS and Palestine solidarity activism.

The resolution, put forward by the Ivry Citizens Convergence group, recognizes the Palestinian call for BDS and urges France to ban the importation of goods from Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and Syria’s Golan Heights.

The resolution states that the BDS movement, “inspired by the victorious struggle against the apartheid regime in South Africa,” has been the subject of “expanding and unacceptable criminalization, harming the rights of citizens and aiming, above all, to silence all criticism of Israel’s illegal policies and actions.”

The Ivry-sur-Seine town council calls on the French government to end this repression and to do all in its power “so that Israel complies with international law and applies UN resolutions.”

The resolution also commits the municipality to examining its legal options to refuse contracts with firms that violate international human rights standards by being involved in Israel’s settlements.

The campaign group BDS France has welcomed the resolution, noting that Ivry-sur-Seine has become at least the second French city to pass a measure on Palestinian rights and that a number of municipalities in Spain have declared themselves to be “Israeli-apartheid-free” zones.

In June, the council in Bondy, a city of 50,000 northeast of Paris, adopted a resolution by 39-5 affirming that it is a basic right of citizens to refuse to buy goods from Israeli settlements.
The town also vowed not to procure such goods itself.

End repression

BDS France has also welcomed the vote by the congress of the CGT-Inra scientific researchers’ trade union earlier this month to endorse the Palestinian call for BDS.

Also, earlier this month, Cimade, a major nongovernmental organization working with refugees and asylum-seekers, added its voice to the growing clamor against the French government’s repressive policies.

“Cimade condemns the proliferation of police and judicial procedures against activists in the Palestine solidarity movement … and once again calls on the government to stop criminalizing the BDS movement,” the group said.

Founded during the Second World War as an ecumenical Protestant organization, Cimade worked to protect Jews and help them escape Nazi-occupied France.

Portugal pulls out

In another recent success for the campaign in Europe, Portugal announced in August that it has withdrawn from an EU-funded project with Israel’s public security ministry and police.

The so-called LAW TRAIN project was aimed at “unifying police interrogation methodologies,” according to apress release from the Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC).

“This decision by Portugal gives hope to our people and sends a strong message to Israel that there is no business as usual for as long as it continues military aggression against Gaza and repression in the West Bank,” Jamal Juma’, coordinator of Stop the Wall, a member organization of the BNC, said.

Juma’ noted Israel’s routine use of torture in interrogations. Campaigners are urging other EU governments and companies, including Belgium and Spain, to follow Portugal’s lead.

The Syrian Tragedy: Western Foreign Policy and its ‘Useful Idiots’

death_in_syria

by Adeyinka Makinde

Recent media focus on the humanitarian crisis in the Syrian city of Aleppo has revealed the government promoted propagandistic methods of the Western mainstream media, which shorn of context and rich in bias uncritically accepts the narrative presented by politicians and attempts to shape public opinion to suit the needs of a war agenda. An opinion piece in the UK Daily Mail by the historian Dominic Sandbrook which accused the leader of the British opposition Labour Party of ideological Left-inspired anti-American sentiment and lack of patriotism is part and parcel of the attempt to pathologize and demonize those who are critical of the West’s role in fomenting and sustaining the Syrian conflict. The disingenuous media blitzkrieg on Aleppo is designed to justify military intervention on the part of the United States starting with a ‘No Fly Zone’, which as the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has plainly stated “will lead to war with Russia.” If such a catastrophic event were to ensue, it would have be the fault not of the supposedly Putin-worshipping Left, but of the hubris of American post-Cold War foreign policy and the ‘useful idiots’ in the Western press who have promoted American militarism. 

( October 24, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) It was Vladimir Lenin who is claimed to have coined the phrase ‘useful idiot’. By useful idiot, Lenin is supposed to have been referring to those who did the bidding for the cause of Bolshevism in its propaganda war with the western capitalist nations. The term continued to be used as one to label those in the West who acted as mouthpieces for the Soviet Union by representing it as democratic when it was in fact repressive and as reasonable where its critics found it to be an inflexible monolith.

Elizabeth Warren: 'nasty women' will defeat Donald Trump on election day

Massachusetts senator and Trump tormenter-in-chief turns insult into rallying cry in support of Hillary Clinton, as partnership hints at progressive agenda

 and  in Washington-Monday 24 October 2016

Liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren launched the most stinging attack yet on Donald Trump’s sexism on Monday during a rally alongside Hillary Clinton.

Turning an insult Trump hurled at Clinton during the last presidential debate into a rallying cry for Democratic voters, the Massachusetts senator told supporters in Manchester, New Hampshire, it was time to hang the epithet “nasty woman” around his neck.

“Women have had it with guys like you, and nasty women have really had it with guys like you,” Warren said. “Get this, Donald. Nasty women are tough, nasty women are smart, and nasty women vote, and on November 8, we nasty women are going to march our nasty feet to cast our nasty votes to get you out of our lives forever.”

Coming days after Michelle Obama’s steely attack on Trump’s record with women, Warren opted for a blunter approach still.

“He thinks that because he has money he can call women fat pigs and bimbos,” Warren said. “He thinks because he is a celebrity that he can rate women’s bodies from one to 10. He thinks that because he has a mouthful of Tic Tacs he can force himself on any woman within groping distance.”

Warren’s comments referred to the publication earlier this month of an Access Hollywood recording from 2005 that captured Trump bragging that he could kiss and grope women without their consent because he is a “star”. “I better use some Tic Tacs just in case I start kissing her,” Trump says on the tape. “You know, I’m automatically attracted to beautiful – I just start kissing them. It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything ... Grab ’em by the pussy.”

The Republican candidate has denied claims from nearly a dozen alleged victims who have come forward since the emergence of the recording of him boasting of groping women.

Though once tipped as a leftwing alternative to Clinton, Warren has become a loyal stalwart for the campaign after her early attacks on Trump seemed to provoke him.

“She gets under his thin skin like nobody else,” Clinton said of Warren as she began her speech. “I expect if Donald heard what she said he’s tweeting like mad.”

On the campaign trail, Warren, the so-called scourge of Wall Street, has furiously attacked Trump, who has nicknamed her “Pocahontas”, a reference to her claim of Native American ancestry, and “Goofy Liz Warren”. During a speech in Cincinnati, she fired back: “You want to see ‘goofy’? Look at him in that hat.”
Warren, a progressive power player who the Clinton campaign fretted might cast her support behind Bernie Sanders in the primary, has become one of her sharpest attack dogs on the trail. She withheld her endorsement until after Clinton was the clear victor in the Democratic primary.

Facing a rising populist tide led by Sanders on the left, Clinton’s staff and allies carefully plotted how to “survive” what they called the “Warren primary”, ie one dominated by the issues pushed by Warren and Sanders such as regulating Wall Street, according to hacked campaign emails published by WikiLeaks.

The campaign has not verified the authenticity of the emails and has called the hack a partisan attack intended to sway the election. The Obama administration has stated that Russia is behind the hack.

Hillary Clinton has ‘nothing to say about WikiLeaks’

A separate email exchange from January shows Warren already flexing her muscles behind the scenes to keep the influence of corporations and Wall Street out of the White House.

In one email, Clinton speechwriter Dan Schwerin relays a conversation with Dan Geldon, a longtime aide to the Massachusetts senator, following an earlier meeting between their bosses.

“They seem wary – and pretty convinced that the [former treasury secretary Robert] Rubin folks have the inside track with us whether we realize it yet or not – but open to engagement and to be proven wrong,” Schwerin purportedly wrote to campaign staff.

He mentions that Clinton received a list of potential personnel hires from Warren, which campaign staff had already begun reaching out to as of January 2015, months before Clinton launched her campaign.
After Clinton won the election, Warren’s name was circulated as a potential vice-presidential pick. 

Some Democrats believed she would energize the ticket and heal a divided party after an acrimonious primary. But pragmatists doubted her appointment.

Could Warren join Clinton’s cabinet? Democrats have their eye on taking back the Senate, and losing Warren would have hurt their chances. In Massachusetts, the governor appoints the temporary replacement if a senator steps down, and he is currently a Republican, Charlie Baker.

Instead, Warren and her deep bench of allies are working to push the progressive agenda both publicly and privately, said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.

“Elizabeth Warren is an agenda-setter and she’s shown during the election that she’s a very powerful ally to have on your side,” Green said. “But she’s also a powerful person to have against you and therefore all the incentives point towards partnering with Elizabeth Warren on key appointments and setting the policy agenda so that everybody’s fighting in the same direction.”

There was no initial response to Clinton and Warren’s remarks from Trump, who spoke later in Florida, but there are increasing signs of panic within his campaign, which is now up to 12 points behind in some polls since the Access Hollywood tape emerged.

Instead, the Republican nominee added opinion pollsters to the long line of people to blame for his ailing presidential campaign, accusing Democrats of “making up phony polls” and the press of refusing to highlight the handful of less reputable pollsters still showing a tighter race.

‘Phony polls’ to blame for sliding popularity, says Trump

“We are winning and the press is refusing to report it. Don’t let them fool you – get out and vote!” he tweeted on Monday. “Major story that the Dems are making up phony polls in order to suppress the the Trump [sic]. We are going to WIN!”

Even the Republican’s campaign manager has acknowledged he is “behind” and facing a number of structural disadvantages against the well-organised and well-financed Clinton campaign.

But Trump himself has struck a defiant tone, refusing to say whether he would accept the result on 8 November if it shows him losing and claiming – without evidence – that voter fraud is widespread.
With just two weeks to go until polling day, campaigning hit a new intensity on Monday. As well as Clinton and Warren appearing in New Hampshire, Trump was due to speak at two rallies in Florida, and both vice-presidential candidates Tim Kaine and Mike Pence are on tours of their own.

But Clinton’s ability to bring a wide variety of big-name politicians to support her cause is increasingly emerging as a significant advantage. Michelle Obama is due to return to the stage later this week, appearing alongside Clinton for the first time, in Winston Salem, North Carolina.

Barack Obama attacked Trump’s fellow Republicans on Sunday during a speech in Las Vegas in which he questioned why they were only now choosing to distance themselves from his campaign.

“They just stood by and said nothing. And their base began to actually believe this crazy stuff,” said the president. “Now when suddenly it’s not working, and people are saying, wow, this guy is kind of out of line, all of a sudden, these Republican politicians who were OK with all this crazy stuff up to a point, suddenly they’re all walking away.

“Well, what took you so long? What the heck? What took you so long?”

I ‘Went Back to China’ — and Felt More American Than Ever

Six years in Hong Kong showed me how deep racism runs in Asia’s world city.

I ‘Went Back to China’ — and Felt More American Than Ever

BY CRYSTAL CHEN-OCTOBER 21, 2016

On Oct. 9, New York Times metro reporter Michael Luo revealed that he and his family had been subject to a racist outburst on the streets of New York City’s posh Upper East Side. Readers, especially of Asian descent, were quick to volunteer their own stories in the aftermath, showing that while racism against Asians is not always in the U.S. public eye, it is widespread. I’d like to address this article to the woman who told the U.S.-born Luo — and to all those who may have harbored similar sentiments at one point or another — to “go back to China.”

My parents left China in the wake of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution to seek refuge in American higher education in the 1970s, eventually becoming entrepreneurs. I was born in Ohio, raised in Nebraska and California, and attended Yale University in Connecticut. Six years before that woman on the streets of New York told Luo to go back to China, I had already done so. After graduating college, I moved to Hong Kong, a port city that has been the West’s gateway to China since the mid-1800s.

I believed the city, a place brutalized and molded by colonial forces before its return to China in 1997, was somehow like me: an East-meets-West pastiche. I also believed that Hong Kong, more multicultural, global, and outward-looking than any mainland city, was likely to be the most racially enlightened. But after more than six years of living and working there, I would learn just how racially progressive the United States was by comparison. It’s not just because anyone can speak up and defend themselves, but because doing so is embedded in our culture.

Growing up in Nebraska, I was “ching-chong’d” in school and asked why my eyes were so small. Later on, popular kids would compel me to do their homework with overtures of friendship, only to ignore me at recess. Even in relatively liberal California, I was bullied and shut out by the girls in my all-white Girl Scout troop. My early life in white, Christian America impressed upon me the notion that my real home, my real friends, was where my parents had left it — back in China.

In college, I devoted myself to the notion. I holed myself up exclusively in Asian cultural clubs and worked to beef up my half-hearted, lisping Mandarin Chinese. I took classes in Chinese philosophy, sociology, and politics. Internships in Beijing and Shanghai and travels around the mainland gave me a glimpse of what my new home would be like. After graduation, I secured a job in Hong Kong.

My mother, who had moved from Shanghai to Hong Kong to the United States, was distraught: “Why do you want to go back there?”

But much, I insisted, had changed. The mainland wasn’t the Mao-era hot mess she’d left behind; the 2008 Beijing Olympics painted a glorious image of a new Middle Kingdom, and Lehman Brothers’ collapse that same summer foretold an ominous future for the United States. Out in the dizzying economic rise of the Wild Wild East, opportunities abounded for those willing to work in a globalizing China, particularly in Hong Kong, which billed itself as “Asia’s world city” and was also deepening ties with the mainland.
What I didn’t tell my mother was that my desire to leave was primarily motivated by the possibility of escaping the unfriendly U.S. racial climate. In Asia, I wouldn’t have to deal with being “Asian.” I wouldn’t be a minority, much less a model one. For once, I was certain, my race wouldn’t matter.

I moved to Hong Kong in 2010 to work for a multinational education company and cast myself with a privileged lot of expatriates, or huayi — ethnic Chinese who have grown up abroad. It was deeply comforting to be surrounded by people who looked like me. And because I spoke perfect English and had attended an Ivy League university, my social currency in status-conscious Hong Kong went further than most. I was not just able to “blend in” — I was privileged. I was heard, respected, and invited to glittering parties. Those first years in Hong Kong were beautiful and easy.

But eventually my conscience began to gnaw at me. At work, invisible walls divided colleagues by skin color. White managers who had worked all their lives in Asia sometimes looked surprised when I spoke up in perfect English to volunteer my opinion — a small thing, but revealing. A few seats away from my desk sat Filipino colleagues, often ignored or greeted with terse, awkward smiles when they tried to make conversation. I saw a Pakistani colleague of mine held at arm’s length during team happy hours, lonesome with his glass of wine while his colleagues buzzed around him. A Sri Lankan friend of mine working in investment banking cried when she was passed over for a raise once again.

The city’s thorny relationship with race was even more obvious outside of work. I remember dining with an Indian companion and being thoroughly ignored by the waitstaff, even beyond the standards of usually brusque Hong Kong service. Locals regularly complained to me about being paid less than their expat counterparts. And on the streets, images of hapa women, men, and babies — half white, half Asian — were featured prominently on billboard ads, the city’s aspiration to whiteness hiding in plain sight.

Hong Kong is also home to hundreds of thousands of Filipino and Indonesian domestic workers — 320,000, as of 2013. On Sundays, their day off, Hong Kong’s otherwise mostly hidden domestic helpers swarm public parks, much to the chagrin of locals who I’d hear complain of what they saw as their parks being “overrun.” Workers who have served Hong Kong families loyally for decades cannot become permanent residents, dependent instead on a work visa that could be stripped from them at any moment.

The 2016 Global Slavery Index — compiled by the Australia-based nonprofit Walk Free Foundation, which tracks government action on forced labor, human trafficking, and other conditions of modern slavery — ranked Hong Kong’s government in the bottom 5 percent worldwide. Reports surface regularlyabout domestic workers being beaten or sexually abused by their employers. These people served me cocktails, cooked the food I ate, bussed my plates without a sound, painted my nails, massaged me, and cleaned my apartment. “That’s just capitalism,” my erudite friends would say, but I couldn’t shake the truth that my privilege floated on cheap Southeast Asian labor and the diminished social position they occupied.

With each year that passed, I became increasingly aware of the morally fragile foundations of the lifestyle I enjoyed. I had believed that spiriting myself to Hong Kong would mean that I wouldn’t have to face racial discrimination anymore. Bewitched by the possibility of transcending the racial totem pole, I only later realized that I had merely relocated to the top, and the view wasn’t what I expected. Being brought up in the United States meant my standards for racial equality were forged in a culture built around the dissent, dialogue, and disruption that the First Amendment vouchsafes.

It was only after six years in Hong Kong that I began to understand why people leave their countries to come to the United States and why it’s so difficult to repatriate. You can’t unlearn what you’ve learned or unsee what you’ve seen. Neither could I unlearn the promises of equality that I’d repeated every time I took the Pledge of Allegiance.

I had been running away for a long time. I had run away from being a “victim” of American racism to become part of the perpetrating class in Hong Kong. I had hid from the yellow face in the mirror and pretended, with my perfect English and my elite education, that I was someone else. I had tried to “go back to China,” only to find myself more American than I’d realized. But I’m not running away anymore. I’ve found that my “home” isn’t limited to a physical place. It’s not in Hong Kong, China, or the United States. It’s in the people I love and the work that needs doing. It’s in the values I hold that grow and change over time.

So, to all those who have ever wanted people like me to “go back” to China: My home is on a bridge as short as a hyphen and as wide as the Pacific Ocean. My home is an in-between place, as it is for all Americans who remember their roots, their history, and the journey that got them here. My home is a compromise, a discussion, a negotiation.

With you.

Photo credit: MIKE CLARKE/Getty Images
 Venezuela’s opposition-led National Assembly in a rowdy session on Sunday vowed to put Nicolás Maduro on trial for violating democracy, days after authorities nixed a referendum to recall the unpopular leftist president.

The measure is unlikely to get any traction given that the government and a compliant Supreme Court have systematically undermined the legislature, but it marked a further escalation of political tensions in the crisis-hit nation, a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

“It is a political and legal trial against President Nicolás Maduro to see what responsibility he has in the constitutional rupture that has broken democracy, human rights, and the future of the country,” opposition majority leader Julio Borges said during a special congressional meeting.

The session was briefly interrupted when about 100 apparently pro-government protesters stormed in, brandishing Socialist Party signs and shouting slogans before officials herded them out.
 
The opposition coalition, seeking to end 17 years of socialism in the South American nation, says Thursday’s suspension of its drive for a plebiscite against Maduro shows that Venezuela has abandoned democracy.

Ruling-party officials accuse the opposition of fraud in their signature drive and say the coalition is seeking a coup to gain control of Venezuela’s vast crude reserves, the world’s largest.

Despite that oil wealth, Venezuela has plunged into an unprecedented economic crisis, with many people skipping meals because of shortages and soaring prices.

Many Venezuelans fear preventing the referendum increases chances of social unrest in the already volatile and violent country.

The opposition coalition has called for a major peaceful protest on Wednesday, dubbed “The takeover of Venezuela.”

In Sunday’s raucous session, lawmakers also traded barbs, with ruling-party politicians showing photos of late leader Hugo Chávez while opposition congressmen chanted “The people are hungry and want a recall!”

Likening Maduro to former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and Peru’s authoritarian ex-president Alberto Fujimori, opposition lawmakers also vowed to replace deans at the electoral council and judges on the Supreme Court, though that, too, is unlikely to see the light of day.

Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader, is on a four-day foreign trip to seek consensus on supporting oil prices. He has seen his popularity tumble as the recession has worsened three years after the death of his mentor Chávez.

Even former ‘Chavista’ strongholds in the slums have turned against Maduro, and the opposition frequently claims discontent runs deep among some in the top brass.

India's cotton exports to slump as Pakistan trims purchases

A worker harvests cotton in a field on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India, October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Amit Dave
A worker harvests cotton in a field on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, India, October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Amit Dave

By Rajendra Jadhav -Mon Oct 24, 2016

India's cotton exports in 2016/17 are likely to fall 28 percent from a year ago to 5 million bales as its top buyer Pakistan is set to halve purchases due to rising hostilities and improvement in its own production, industry and government officials said.

The lower shipments to Pakistan from the world's biggest cotton producer will help other suppliers such as Brazil, the United States and some African countries in raising exports.

Pakistan is likely to import 1 million to 1.5 million bales in the 2016/17 year that started on Oct. 1, down sharply from 2.7 million bales a year earlier, India's Textile Commissioner Kavita Gupta told reporters on Monday.

Gupta attributed the reduction to an improvement in Pakistan's cotton production, but industry officials said exports are down due to rising tensions between the two countries.

"Pakistan still needs to import, but Pakistani buyers are turning to Brazil and the U.S.," said Pradeep Jain, a ginner based in Jalgaon in the western state of Maharashtra.

The nuclear-armed rivals have seen tensions ratchet up in the past few months over the disputed territory of Kashmir. Last month, militants that New Delhi says came from across the border attacked an army base in Uri in the state, killing 19 soldiers.

In response, Indian officials said elite troops crossed into Pakistan-held territory to kill suspected militants.

Pakistan, the world's third-largest cotton consumer, usually starts importing from September, but exporters said the number of inquiries had slowed to a trickle in the last few weeks.

In 2015/16, Pakistan surpassed Bangladesh to become India's biggest cotton buyer and accounted for 40 percent of exports.

India has so far in the season contracted 500,000 bales for export as demand was weak from overseas buyers, Dhiren Sheth, president of the Cotton Association of India, said.

By this time last year, Indian traders had signed contracts to export 1 million bales, dealers said.
India's cotton output in 2016/17 could rise 3.8 percent from a year earlier to 35.1 million bales as yields are expected to increase due to good monsoon rains, Gupta said.

"This year, area under cotton was lower but due to good monsoon rains and less impact from pests, we are estimating higher per-hectare yields," she said.

(1 Indian bale = 170 kg)

(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav)

ANALYSIS: Turkey's press freedom, and the hypocrisy of Gulen supporters

Many of the same Gulen journalists who targeted investigative reporters are now presenting themselves as staunch defenders of press freedom

A montage of various Turkish newspapers (MEE)

Suraj Sharma's pictureSuraj Sharma-Monday 24 October 2016
ISTANBUL, Turkey – At the age of 28, Baris Pehlivan was an idealist. He believed in the ideals upon which modern Turkey was founded, and chose to become an investigative journalist to help safeguard those same ideals.
He was made to pay dearly by a group that he says despised the values he stood for.
Nineteen long and lonely months of imprisonment meant his eyesight suffered badly, and his hair suddenly had more gray than black - and these were just the physically visible effects.  
He was not surprised when they came for him. In fact, he was expecting it. When Pehlivan refers to "they," he is talking about Fethullah Gulen and his followers.
They have been accused of infiltrating various state mechanisms for the past four decades with the aim of delivering a fatal blow from the inside to the very foundations that the modern Turkish republic was built upon, and replace it with a theocracy under the reign of the Turkish cleric who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999.
Turkish authorities accuse him and his followers of being behind a failed coup attempt on 15 July.
Gulen has denied the accusation, and his followers say they have become victims of a state-led purge ever since their cooperation with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government ended in late 2013.
According to Pehlivan and other political observers, the Gulenists organised under the guise of Hizmet ('service'). On the surface Hizmet ostensibly engaged in charity work, built schools worldwide offering quality education, by handing out scholarships to the poor, while simultaneously promoting Turkish culture and interfaith dialogue.
But, they say, it was all a front to allow them to gain enough strength – numerically, financially and diplomatically – to eliminate their enemies: the Kemalists, secularists and leftists.
Pehlivan was among a small group of journalists who dared to investigate Gulen’s movement and his followers in the previous decade when others were too scared to do so.
Gulen’s movement had its own media wing, which was completely dismantled by the government after it fell out with Gulen in late 2013.
Many of its journalists were jailed and hundreds of rank-and-file employees are now out of work.
Yet some of those in Gulen’s media empire managed to flee the country - and now use every platform to defend and promote press freedom.
What rankles with Pehlivan is that it is many of the same Gulen journalists who targeted him and his colleagues for their journalism who are now presenting themselves as staunch defenders of freedom of the press.  
"Protecting democracy more important than professional solidarity" (Adem Yavuz Arslan)
“Their hypocrisy, acting like nothing happened, and attempting to rewrite history makes one wonder how someone can be so evil,” said Pehlivan. “I don’t care about their lobbying. I only feel enraged because they made Turkey experience years of injustice. We are still suffering the pain and repercussions of those injustices.”
In those years Gulen media outlets raced to outdo each other in their attacks on journalists like Pehlivan. Headlines screamed: “They haven’t been arrested for their journalism,” “Is this journalism?” and “Defending democracy is more important than solidarity with colleagues.” And these were some of the lighter allegations levelled against those who dared to stand in their way.
Gulenist writers filled inch after inch of column space with material that was almost identical to the words of Zaman’s editor-in-chief Ekrem Dumanli: “It is not the job of us journalists to identify the guilty and innocent. But we have concrete knowledge of one thing: The junta and putschists have a media extension...”
They accused Pehlivan and his colleagues of being the media extension of a shadowy ultranationalist, secularist organisation called Ergenekon, which was determined to topple the ruling conservative government.
Many Turks, liberal and conservative, readily bought into this narrative that was being pedalled, given the country’s infamous record of carrying out military coups and actions more reminiscent of police states.
In 2014, a higher court threw out the entire Ergenekon case and issued the immediate release of all those incarcerated for supposedly being part of it.

A pact to get rid of common enemies

There is plenty of debate in Turkey at the moment over who had knowledge of the attempted coup, the role of the ruling AK Party in nurturing the Gulenists, and the continuing failure to capture major political figures involved in the coup.
But on one issue there is no debate: That the Gulen movement orchestrated the coup.
The lobbying efforts of Gulenist journalists are, however, proving effective internationally because AKP attempts to absolve itself of any role in abetting the rise of the Gulenists sound implausible.
When the AKP came to power in 2002 it felt threatened by the same groups that the Gulenists viewed as enemies. Turkey’s self-appointed guardians of its secular values in the military and judiciary had a record of intervening whenever they felt governments in power were becoming too Islamist or were straying from the path they protected.
"It is not the duty of us journalists to call a person guilty or innocent. We know one solid fact: One leg of being a junta and plotting coups is the media." (Zaman)
The AKP and Gulen forged a pact.
Turkey has never enjoyed a good ranking in the Press Freedom Index run by Reporters Without Borders but its record has been particularly abysmal since 2009.
The year matters because the AKP and Gulen movement became arch foes only at the end of 2013 although rifts were beginning to appear earlier. It was on 17 and 25 December 2013 that Gulen’s followers in the police and judiciary brought major corruption charges against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his close circle. 
Ragip Duran, a Turkish journalist who specialises in media ethics, told MEE that the concept of press freedom in Turkey has always been used as a political and ideological instrument by those engaged in power struggles.
“Look back at when they jailed the journalist Ahmet Sik for writing a book on Gulen called the Imam’s Army. He was jailed by Gulenists for a book that was banned even before it was published,” said Duran. “But the Gulenists also had Erdogan’s full backing who said ‘sometimes books can be more dangerous than bombs’.”
According to Duran, a large part of the problem is the media itself, which constantly publishes false stories to promote whoever is in power. He says that is why media has consistently ranked as the least reliable institution in Turkey for the last 25 to 30 years.
“Take the imprisonment of author Asli Erdogan now. There is not a shred of evidence to link her to terrorism but she is languishing in prison,” he said. “The problem is there are no standards and it is all arbitrary. This state of arbitrariness will have a boomerang effect and will come back to hurt the AKP too one day.”
Now 33, Pehlivan is editor-in-chief at the OdaTv news website. The same publication from where he was dragged off to prison on 18 February 2011.
“My imprisonment made the value of freedom even clearer to me,” he said. “It made me more determined to expose the organisation that jailed me.”
Pehlivan is no apologist for the AKP despite backing the crackdown against the Gulenists. He says that the persecution he and his colleagues faced would not have been possible without a political green light from the AKP.
"Oda TV is an Ergenekon terminal" (Taraf)
He is also worried that on many occasions the AKP claims to be fighting the Gulenists but ends up emulating them, such as the government's treatment of the Zaman media group, the flagship of Gulen’s media empire. 
He says the erasing of the Zaman media group’s digital archives and the closure of the paper’s website after government administrators took over was a mistake that played into Gulen’s hands.
“The digital archives should have been left accessible to everyone and should have served as a museum of shame for Turkish media. The Gulen movement probably loved seeing those websites get shut down. Clear evidence of how they used the media to support their unjust actions were lost,” Pehlivan said. “Such actions only end up making the Gulenists look good while preventing us from attaining justice,” he said.
Yusuf Kanli, a journalist and coordinator of the Press Freedoms Project, told MEE the problem lies in the targeting of journalists instead of media ownership structures, which are the real source of the problem.
“I was opposed to the Gulenist journalists when they persecuted the Kemalist journalists. Now I am opposed to whoever is persecuting the Gulenist journalists who are now victims,” said Kanli.
Kanli said this approach has only meant that many innocent journalists have been deprived of their work and livelihoods.
The real Gulenist journalists who made the editorial calls had planned their escape in advance and were prepared when the time came, fleeing the country.
It is these people that Pehlivan wants to see face justice.
“What saddens me is that some people in Turkey and abroad are still deceived by this mask they wear. They fail to see the crimes committed under those masks,” he said. “My only wish is that they face a fair trial for the crimes they committed in the guise of journalism.”