Peace for the World

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

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Observations on the Trump triumph


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by Izeth Hussain- 

Sometimes the great writers get it right when all or most of the others fail to do so. They are not systematic thinkers and may be idiosyncratic in their views but they show an intuitive faculty that is uncommon. A famous example is that of D.H.Lawrence who went on a walking tour of Germany in the ‘twenties and was stunningly prescient about the eruption of the Nazis many years later. According to Harry T. Moore’s scholarly and scrupulously researched biography Lawrence, after a period of residence in the US, had declared that the Americans are "a dangerous people". At that time, in the inter-war years, the US was isolationist and the Europeans seemed infinitely more dangerous than the Americans. But after the Second World War, with US intervention here there and everywhere leaving a trail of death and destruction, it was shown that Lawrence was spectacularly right. Now we have Donald Trump, an unguided missile equipped with a nuclear bomb.

According to a book by a member of the Monty Python Show, Hemingway – a lesser writer than Lawrence but assured of classic status – told a Cuban fisherman shortly before he left Cuba after the Revolution that the time would come when the whole world would turn against America. That was in the late ‘fifties and today the US is certainly a widely detested country. Trump may see to the consummation of Hemingway’s prophecy. Another American writer who was far above average, James Thurber, wrote in the ‘forties a great story satirizing the savagery underlying American civilization, The Greatest Man in the World. He was an aviator who accomplishes a stupendous feat, but the committee that was organizing a program to exhibit him all over America thought that would be impossible because he was so obviously a Neanderthal. At the end of the story he was pushed out of a high storey window in a pretended accident. Trump is a modern as a realtor of stupendous ability but he too is obviously a Neanderthal. Could his Presidency come to an abrupt, though not necessarily gory, end?

The truth, as the preceding paragraphs suggest, is that Trump is as American as apple pie. That can be seen very clearly in his nostrums for the ills facing the US. There have been a vast number of analyses appearing all over the world about what Trump’s triumph signifies. Apparently there is a very broad consensus that those ills are due to the failure or shortcomings of neo-liberalism. Trump’s nostrums emphasize nationalism, racism, populism, and semi-isolationism, all of which can be seen as embedded in American political culture. For example, the populist Governor Huey Long inspired Robert Pen Warren’s best novel All the King’s Men, which in turn inspired two Hollywood films, one in the ‘fifties and the other more recently with Sean Penn in the lead role. As for American racism, I need not expatiate on it. There is a great deal to be said about American nationalism and semi-isolationism. Suffice it here to merely mention that American semi-isolationism lasted until the Second World War, except for a brief spell of a few years during the First World War.

However, populism and all that goes with it is not the only strand in American political culture. There is also far more importantly liberal democracy, animating which is a culture that was capable of producing two waves of great literature, the first in the nineteenth century and the second in the first half of the twentieth. Not every society under the sun is capable of that kind of cultural achievement. We have to bear in mind the duality to which I am pointing, between the populist and the liberal in American political culture, in trying to make out what political developments might ensue from Trump’s triumph. We must also bear in mind the fact that in American philosophy the trend regarded as the most characteristic has been pragmatism, shown in the writings of John Dewey, William James, and others. That pragmatism has been so important in America that it can be expected to pervade to a significant extent the whole of American politics regardless of the duality to which I have pointed. Consequently, although Trump’s populism looks neo-Fascist and parallels have been drawn with the neo-Fascism of Marie le Pen and others in Europe, it is doubtful that Trump will be able to take make the US neo-Fascist to the extent that might be possible in some European countries. The tradition of liberal democracy in the US is probably far too strong for that. Besides, Trump’s own pragmatism, which must have weighed in his spectacular success as a realtor, could count in moderating his extremism.

But we know that power tends to corrupt, and it could turn out that Trump starts behaving like an unguided missile. I believe that it is that possibility, not the inability to accept defeat as is popularly thought in Sri Lanka and elsewhere, which makes the pro-Hilary protest crowds surge in the American cities. Those crowds, I hold, attest to the maturity of American democracy. That should be clear if we bear in mind the contrast with what happened in Egypt after Morsi was elected President. He could not have succeeded without the support of the pro-democracy groups but he assumed that his Moslem Brotherhood support represented a national consensus entitling him to introduce a Constitution shaped by the Moslem Brotherhood ideology. As Egypt did not have an entrenched democracy the pro-democracy groups turned to the army with fateful consequences. In the US which has a well-entrenched democracy those who want to ensure that Trump does not go in a neo-Fascist direction have taken to the streets. Those surging crowds have behind them the consciousness that Clinton won the popular vote. The chances therefore are that if Trump behaves like an unguided missile he will be making his exit from politics – speaking figuratively of course – through a high storey window.

In conclusion I must declare that I approve of Trump in some ways. In particular, I find exhilarating his strong disapproval of the US’ excessive intervention in the external world, which promises a semi-isolationism, and – most exhilarating – the decline and fall of the American Empire. His position was clear when at the time of the abortive coup in Turkey some months ago he declared that Americans should not pontificate on human rights abuses elsewhere when their own record in that regard was so dismal, and he was admirably outspoken against the massive death and destruction wrought by American intervention in the Middle East. The message was clear that Americans should first and foremost mind their own business, and – as his own spectacular career exemplifies – America’s business is business. That amounts to a retreat into semi-isolationism.

I call it a semi-isolationism because America’s isolationism was always, right from the inception, imbricate with American imperialism. The Monroe Doctrine was explicit that the US would not interfere in the affairs of Europe and Europe should reciprocate by not interfering in the affairs of the US. That was the text, but there was implicit in it a sub-text, which was this: the US would not interfere in the affairs of Europe and its empires and Europe should reciprocate by not interfering in the affairs of the US and its empire in Latin America. That empire was the consummation of the US’ first imperialist drive. It began with genocide against the Red Indians and thereafter into the annexation of more than half the original territory of Mexico. It’s a pity that the Mexicans did not have the means to build a wall to exclude the racist American imperialists. Thereafter the US went into semi-isolationism, with its neo-colonialism over the whole of Latin America, until after the Second World War when it began its second imperialist drive. It has raged over a great part of the third world, with terrible consequences for its peoples.

I therefore find the prospect of the decline and fall of the American Empire exhilarating. But our Tamil brethren will find it depressing. The reason is that if Trump is true to his word the US will stop playing the lead role in pushing Tamil interests through the UNHRC. The time is opportune for our Government to present the case for a solution to the ethnic problem to the Government in Washington. There can be no solution through ethno-based devolution. We therefore want to apply the American model of giving fair and equal treatment to the Tamils through a fully functioning democracy.

Israel’s new attack on Palestinian culture

Israeli lawmakers propose to ban mosques from broadcasting the call to prayer.Oren ZivActiveStills

Jalal Abukhater-19 November 2016

A bill being put forward to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, will, if passed, ban mosques from using loudspeakers to broadcast the call to prayer five times a day.

The bill has government backing and support from a significant number of legislators. And though it is currently being appealed, it is likely to pass should the vote take place.

The backers of the bill, which was originally intended to stop the broadcasting of nationalist messages, now claim that the goal is to curb “noise pollution.”

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, has stated that “Israel is committed to freedom for all religions,” and the proposed ban serves to “protect [Israel’s] citizens from noise.”

Assault on Palestinian identity

Whatever Netanyahu says, the move to ban the call to prayer should be understood first and foremost as an assault on Palestinian identity.

The Israeli European settler colony project has relentlessly manipulated and wholly changed the cultural features of Palestine in its imposition of supremacy over the land and the people who dwell there.

The Muslim call to prayer is a staple feature of our lands, and its significance extends well beyond its religious purpose. One cannot violently force a settler presence and then express annoyance at a defining feature of the indigenous people’s culture.

As for the “noise” pretext presented by the backers of the bill, Israel is hardly concerned about the noise pollution it systematically inflicts on millions of Palestinians living under occupation.

Israel’s militarized drones hover over the Gaza Strip, often nonstop for weeks, causing alarm and distress and preventing Palestinians living there from sleeping at night. In Gaza, they call it “zannana,” an onomatopoeia describing the obnoxious buzzing noise it creates.

The West Bank gets its share of drone noise as well, though perhaps not to the extent of Gaza. During the Jewish holidays in October, the drone loomed in the skies over Jerusalem and Ramallah, and at workplaces each day, Palestinians compared how they were awoken or kept awake by its buzzing.

And what about the noise pollution caused by the hundreds of Israeli military checkpoints throughout the West Bank, which profoundly disrupt Palestinians’ lives?

A short while ago, I was leaving Bethlehem and heading back to Jerusalem at a late hour. The Bethlehem checkpoint had a long queue of cars waiting to pass, the drivers sitting 45 minutes without moving an inch.

The checkpoint abuts a neighborhood and a refugee camp, the residents of which are subjected to the horns of frustrated drivers and their running engines, all because a lone Israeli soldier on the other side of the queue might feel like searching each car very slowly.

Night raids

And then there’s the nightly raids conducted by Israeli occupation forces in cities, towns and villages in the predawn hours across the West Bank.

Soldiers throw sound bombs, waking up whole neighborhoods, often for absolutely no reason other than terrifying the sleeping population. During these raids, children in their beds are woken up by heavily armed soldiers who photograph, interrogate or even arrest them.

The Hebron-area community of Dura was subjected to a month of night raids as a form of collective punishment earlier this year. Soldiers broke down doors and even brought large dogs to harass Palestinian families in their homes in the middle of the night.

The government proposal to ban the call to prayer drops a barely concealing mask by which Israel presents itself as a vibrant, diverse democracy. This was never the case, and the charade is further exposed each day.

The true aim of the bill is to catalyze the complete erasure of Palestinian identity from the land.

I’m reminded of a summer night in Ramadan, sitting on a rooftop with friends, hearing “Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar” in the distance, everyone becoming quiet for a moment, listening, feeling the breeze on our faces, and preparing our souls for the approach of dawn.

It is beautiful, and it is our culture.

Egypt sentences journalist union head to two years' jail


The European Union has said the indictment of the Journalists Syndicate members was 'a worrying development'
Head of the Egyptian journalists union, Yahiya Kallash, demonstrating with journalists outside the Journalists Syndicate headquarters in Cairo on 4 May 2016 (AFP)

Saturday 19 November 2016
An Egyptian court on Saturday sentenced the head of the journalists' union and two members to two years in prison for "harbouring fugitives". They were allowed to pay bail pending an appeal.
Journalists Syndicate president Yahiya Kallash, Gamal Abd el-Rahim and Khaled Elbalshy were charged in May with sheltering two journalists wanted over protests against the transfer of two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia.
The court set bail at 10,000 Egyptian pounds ($615), a court official said.
Their arrest, following a 1 May police raid on the union building to detain two reporters from an opposition website, drew condemnation from rights groups.
The European Union said the indictment of the Journalists Syndicate members was "a worrying development".
"It reflects broader limitations on freedom of expression and press freedom in Egypt," an EU spokesperson said at the time.
Rights activists accuse President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi of running an ultra-authoritarian regime that has violently suppressed all opposition since toppling president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.
Kallash had denounced the police raid on union headquarters to arrest reporters Amr Badr and Mahmud al-Sakka, saying the government was "escalating the war against journalism and journalists".
Activists had organised two protests in April against handing the islands to Saudi Arabia.
A court later ruled that the transfer could not go through.

Aleppo’s last hospital destroyed by airstrikes

Russia-led attacks on rebel area in Syria’s second city leave up to 250,000 people without access to surgery or specialist care

People carry a body through the neighbourhood of Seif al-Dawleh in Aleppo, Syria. Photograph: Uncredited/AP

 and -Saturday 19 November 2016 


The last operating hospital in east Aleppo has been destroyed by airstrikes, leaving up to 250,000 residents without access to surgery or specialist care and rebel-held districts at the point of collapse.

Another four hospitals were hit and forced to close on Friday before the Omar bin Abdul Aziz facility was struck just after 8.30pm, capping the most deadly day yet for the medical system in Syria’s second city, which has been systematically targeted by Russian and regime jets over the past year.

“They have all been repeatedly attacked over the last few days,” said David Nott, a surgeon with decades of experience working in war zones and who has been supporting the Aleppo doctors.

“I don’t think in all my years of doing this I’ve seen such dreadful pictures of injuries, of people lying on the floor in an emergency room, the dead mixed with the living,” he said. At least two doctors were among the dead, he added, and he feared hospitals that had kept operating under attack and with dwindling supplies might now have been shut down permanently.

“The Aleppo hospitals have been reopened so many times, underground or in new locations, but between the bombing and the siege I don’t know if it will be possible to resurrect them this time,” he said.
The destruction comes during a blitz of opposition areas spearheaded by Russiaover the past three days, which has whittled away what remains of the opposition-held east in preparation for a ground invasion led by Iranian-backed militias allied to Syrian forces.

Médecins Sans Frontières said east Aleppo’s hospitals had been hit by bombs in more than 30 separate attacks since the siege began in July and that there was no possibility of sending help or more supplies.
Schools, roads and homes have also been bombed repeatedly as the Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad’s allies attempt to drive opposition communities out of the city and, by doing so, change the face of the near six-year war. Doctors and residents inside Aleppo said there were no more than two weeks’ supplies of food and medicines left inside the city.

In the lead-up to the US election, Russia had pledged to obliterate what remained of anti-regime forces and the communities that support them, and as president-elect Donald Trump prepares to take over the White House, Moscow is acting on its threats.

Condemnation of the latest attacks was swift in part, with medical organisations and aid agencies that support the city’s healthcare system labelling them as war crimes. Governments were slower to react, with Turkey, the opposition’s most important backer, remaining silent as the attacks intensified. Turkish forces continue to back a rebel push against the Isis stronghold of al-Bab, 25 miles to the north-east of Aleppo.

There was no immediate response from Washington, which has supplied light arms to some opposition groups for the past three years, but has refused requests to introduce battle-changing weaponry such as anti-aircraft missiles. Trump has indicated he will withdraw US support from anti-Assad rebels soon after his inauguration in January.



Britain’s international development secretary, Priti Patel, condemned the attack. “The bombing of the last functioning hospital in Aleppo is part of a systematic campaign to remove even the most basic of services left in the city,” she said.

“This sickening act is part of a humanitarian catastrophe that will leave hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians already desperate for food without access to medical care.

“The inhumanity shown by the Russian and Syrian regime has created a systemic and deliberate humanitarian crisis that cannot be ignored … Russia has the power to allow the aid so desperately needed into the city, if it does not the world will hold it to account for the barbarous result.”

Russia has said its latest campaign is directed at Isis, along with Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, a prescribed terror organisation with links to al-Qaida. It said it was focusing its efforts on Homs and Idlib, closer to the Mediterranean coast.

On Friday, Russia’s ambassador to the UK, Alexander Yakovenko, said Moscow’s bombing aimed to ensure that Isis members did not enter the area from Mosul in Iraq, where the organisation is besieged by the Iraqi military, militias fighting in support of it and Kurds. In response, the UK’s special representative for Syria, Gareth Bayley, tweeted: “How is that geographically sensible … that’s 400km from border with Iraq?”

Farida, a doctor living in south-eastern Aleppo, said: “It’s unnatural, we’ve seen so much bombardment but nothing like this ever. It is hell. We wanted to try to set up a maternity ward somewhere else because ours was damaged in the bombing of the hospitals but we couldn’t leave the house. They want life to end in Aleppo.

“They cannot take it from the ground, so they’re trying to take it from the air. They bombed all the hospitals and schools, so there is no life and people give up. If it stays like this, people cannot wait it out.
“Medicines, vaccines, will finish. At this rate I cannot see us continuing for more than two weeks … I cannot predict the scenario, that is if there is still anyone living in Aleppo by that time.

“Nobody cares about us. We’re just Sunni Arabs living in Aleppo. If we had one Frenchman in Aleppo the whole world would have risen up. There is no longer any humanity. The wounded are dying, a patient whose stomach is open in the operations room has to be abandoned, women are leaving delivery rooms still bleeding because the hospitals are getting attacked, babies are dying because oxygen tanks are empty and generators aren’t working.”

The Russian Navy Is Back

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America’s legions of pro-war neocons are now screaming that the Red Navy’s deployment to Syrian waters is somehow a grave threat to the West. It is not.

cropped-guardian_english_logo-1.pngby Eric S. Margolis-Nov 20, 2016

( November 20, 2016 , New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) Russia’s dispatch of a ten-ship flotilla to the Syrian Coast has raised some outrage and sneers aplenty in the West. Particularly when one of its embarked MiG-29K fighters crashed on takeoff from Russia’s sole carrier, the obsolescent Admiral Kuznetsov which lacks catapults.

Joining Kuznetsov are believed to be two ‘Akula’ class nuclear-powered attack submarines that are much feared by Western navies. On the surface will be the powerful, missile-armed battle-cruiser, ‘Peter the Great.’ Unlike Western warships, which are essentially fragile tin cans packed with electronics, `Peter the Great’ is armored and built to withstand punishment.

Other Russian missile frigates and supply ships are also off Syria.

Washington just hates it when the Russians dare do what the US has been doing since World War II: conduct gunboat diplomacy, however limited.

As a student of Russian naval affairs, I’m watching the current deployment of warships from the Red Banner Northern Fleet with much interest.

Russia has wanted to be a major naval power since the days of Peter the Great in the early 1700’s, but it has always faced the curse of Russian geography. In spite of limited access to the world’s seas, Russia is largely a landlocked nation spread over vast distances. Russia faces geographic barriers every way that it turns.

Most important, Russia’s major fleets – Northern, Baltic, Black Sea, and Pacific – are unable to concentrate to support one another due to geographical constraints. Compare this to the mighty US Navy that can move all but the largest warships from the Pacific to Atlantic or vice versa. All major US naval bases give easy access to the high seas. The only Russian ports that do are remote Vladivostok and even remoter Petropavlovsk on Kamchatka – that has no land link to the rest of Russia.

No Russian can forget the calamity of the 1903-1904 Russo-Japanese War. Russia’s Pacific Squadron was largely bottled up in the naval fortress at Port Arthur by a surprise Japanese attack, 38 years before the Pearl Harbor attack.

As a result, Russia has to send its Baltic Fleet more than half way around the globe to the North Pacific on a 33,000km (18,000 miles) journey of the damned that took nearly half a year. An accidental encounter in the fog with the British herring fleet nearly provoked war with Great Britain – which reacted with similar alarm as Vladimir Putin’s fleet sailed by Britain on the way to Syria.

On 27 May, 1905, the combined Russian fleet was ambushed off Korea at Tsushima by Japan’s brilliant admiral, Hideki Togo. After a fierce battle (I’ve sailed over the exact spot) the Russian fleet was sunk or captured, the first time a Western power had been defeated. Tsushima lit the fuse of the 1917 Russian revolution.

Russia’s inability to unite its fleets threatened their defeat in detail in a major war. World War II saw the Russian fleets more engaged in naval infantry land battles than maritime operations.

During the Cold War, the US and its allies were able to bottle up Russia’s fleets by sealing off the Greenland-Iceland-UK gap, then Baltic exits at the Skaggerak Strait, and the Black Sea exit at the Turkish Straits. The US Navy planned to directly attack Russia’s Pacific Ports and cut the Tran Siberian railroad that supplied them. As a final impediment, the US SOSUS underwater hydrophone system was able to spot Soviet submarines from the time they left their home ports.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia’s neglected navy atrophied and rusted. The current mission to Syrian waters is an important sign that the Kremlin intends to restore some of its former naval power and assert Russian interests in Syria, where it had maintained a modest supply and repair depot at Tartus since 1971.

Moscow’s use of naval forces to fire missiles and launch air strikes at jihadist rebels in Syria is its biggest naval venture since 1990. Interestingly, Moscow used its almost forgotten Caspian Sea squadron to launch missiles at the same jihadists. Such strikes could have been done solely from land. The Kremlin was signaling that its strategic reach had lengthened.

America’s legions of pro-war neocons are now screaming that the Red Navy’s deployment to Syrian waters is somehow a grave threat to the West. It is not.

The US Navy and land-based NATO airpower could easily deal with the Russians. What really worries the neocons is that the Russian flotilla might deter or impede an Israeli attack on Syria and Lebanon.

And besides, is Russia not allowed to have a navy? Syria’s coast is as close to Russia as Mazatlan, Mexico is to Texas.
 The man who will soon occupy the Oval Office calls himself Mr. Brexit

He was perhaps the biggest foreign cheerleader for Britain’s departure from the European Union before the country voted, and he celebrated on Scottish soil when it opted to get out.

He says he wants to do a trade deal with Britain, and he invited a British politician to be his first international visitor upon winning the White House. 

In many ways, Donald Trump’s astonishing victory in the U.S. presidential election would seem to be a boon for Britain as it prepares to file its divorce papers with the E.U. 

Boris Johnson, Britain’s voluble foreign secretary, said as much, calling it “a moment of opportunity.” 
But rather than grease Britain’s exit path, Trump’s stunning elevation to the peak of U.S. power could make this country’s already tortuous road to Brexiteven rougher.

Reactions such as Johnson’s, said Queen Mary University of London politics professor Tim Bale, are merely “a front” that masks a deep anxiety among British officials over whether Trump can be trusted. 
“I think there’s an awful lot of nervousness in government and more generally, mostly down to the unpredictability of the guy,” Bale said. 

That worry is being felt worldwide, given the president-elect’s propensity for impulsive decisions and erratic behavior.

But in London, it is especially acute. 

Since World War II, Britain has positioned itself as the bridge linking the United States to Europe, with sturdy ties on either side. But now both ends of that connection are looking creaky. 
Britain’s shocking June 23 decision to exit the E.U. has set the stage for years of complex — and potentially acrimonious — breakup negotiations in which most of the leverage lies with Europe. The continent’s leaders have taken a hard line in the months since the vote, insisting that Britain will not get the sweetheart deal it has sought.

Brexit advocates have played down any concerns over strained relations with Europe, insisting that Britain outside the E.U. has the chance to reassert itself in the wider world — particularly in the Anglosphere with countries such as Canada, Australia and, most importantly, the United States.

President Obama delivered a blow to that theory in the spring when he urged Britons to vote against an exit and said the country would need to go “to the back of the queue” in negotiating a free-trade deal with the United States. Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton took a similar tack.

Trump has adopted a very different approach, insisting that Britain will be prioritized. Johnson noted Monday that Trump is “a dealmaker, and I think that could be a good thing for Britain.”
But Britain may not like the deal that Trump has to offer. 

The billionaire real estate tycoon railed against trade deals during the presidential campaign, insisting that the exchanges are zero-sum and always favor the other side at the expense of the United States. “We have to stop these countries from stealing our companies and our jobs,” he said repeatedly.

Trump has pledged to reverse that dynamic as president and to reduce the U.S. trade deficit. Britain now has a trade surplus with the United States, making it vulnerable to protectionist efforts by Trump to limit British imports at precisely the moment when Britain needs to start selling more to the world beyond Europe.

Eric Kaufman, professor of politics at Birkbeck College, said there is likely to be “an affinity” between Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May because both leaders’ countries have experienced populist revolts against the global order.

But while May on Monday said she wants Britain to be “the true global champion of free trade in this new modern world,” Trump’s threats to tear up existing trade agreements probably would complicate that task.

“The worry would be if the rules-based international trading order is weakened by Trump, that’s not great for Britain trying to champion a free trading order outside of the E.U.,” Kaufman said.

There is also the question of timing: Even if Trump wants to do a quick trade deal with Britain, the latter is not well-positioned because the negotiations to come with the E.U. are already more than it can bear. 

A recent memo by a government contractor assessing Britain’s progress in developing its Brexit strategy concluded that the government still lacks an overall plan five months after the vote and that it may need another six months to devise one. The memo, dated Nov. 7 and leaked to the Times of London, also said the government may need another 30,000 civil servants to make Brexit a reality.

Indeed, Britain’s response to Trump — which has been notably warmer than that of other European powers — may be less about any realistic hopes of a deal and more about attempting to gain leverage with Europe. 

The response, Bale said, is “consistent with a game we have played for decades where the U.K. suggests to the Europeans we have a unique insight into the American mind, and we suggest to the Americans we are a useful bridge to Europe.”

In at least one sense, that may continue to be true in the Trump era. Trump, whose mother was Scottish and who owns Scottish golf courses, appears to have a genuine affection Britain. 

“The traditional white Anglo world,” said London School of Economics Professor Tony Travers, is one that Trump and his backers “see as broadly their kind of world.” 

And at least with certain British politicians, the affinity is apparent. Longtime Brexit champion Nigel Farage campaigned for Trump in the United States and was the first foreign politician invited to meet with the president-elect at Trump Tower. When the two emerged after an hour-long meeting, both were grinning broadly. 

Britain’s actual leader, May, has not received as favorable a reception. She was the 10th foreign leader Trump spoke with after the U.S. vote. According to a Times of London account of their 10-minute call, he was not exactly insistent in his invitation for her to follow Farage up the elevator to his Trump Tower suite. 

“If you travel to the U.S.,” he reportedly said, “you should let me know.”

Zimbabwe Kidnaps and Tortures Activists Amid Protests Over Currency Reforms

Zimbabwe Kidnaps and Tortures Activists Amid Protests Over Currency Reforms

BY ROBBIE GRAMER-NOVEMBER 18, 2016

Zimbabwe’s security forces are violently cracking down on activists ahead of a major protest against the government’s plan to introduce a new pseudo-currency to the country’s fragile economy. The plan has sparked fears of a return to ruinous hyperinflation.

One Zimbabwean protest organizer who spoke with Foreign Policy said armed men — some in police uniforms — ambushed six other organizers as they drove toward Zimbabwe’s capital Harare for the demonstration in the early hours of Friday morning.

“Six activist leaders were abducted and their cars were torched. We only found three of them this morning, about 100 miles from where they were supposed to be,” the protest organizer, still in Harare with other demonstrators, told FP. Three were still unaccounted for at press time. One is feared dead, Zimbabwean human rights lawyer Doug Coltart, who is in contact with the protest organizers, told FP.
One of the ambushed organizers, Patson Dzamara, was beaten unconscious and left naked in bushes by the armed combatants. “They beat me all over again and I overheard them talking to someone on the phone. They officers wanted me dead and told the person on the phone they had petrol, iron bars, cotton wool, and the only thing missing was a catalyst,” he later recounted. He was eventually taken to a hospital, where he told local journalists what happened.

“This is a standard modus operandi for Zimbabwean police or militia,” Coltart said. “People are abducted, beaten up, then turn up at a hospital hours or days later,” he added.

After Friday’s kidnappings, Harare was “crawling with police,” the organizer, who asked to remain anonymous citing safety concerns, said. Forty individuals, some affiliated with Zimbabwe’s prominent #ThisFlag protest movement, were arrested Friday afternoon. The organizer said they were “were all sitting peacefully in a park” when the police took them.

The protests addressed Zimbabwe’s recent announcement that the central bank, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, would try to address a national cash shortage by introducing a pseudo-currency of “bond notes.” The notes “are essentially fake money,” government IOUs nominally pegged to the U.S. dollar, said Chloe McGrath, visiting fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Africa Center.

Zimbabwe switched to the U.S. dollar after a disastrous hyperinflation episode in 2007-2008 that saw inflation hit 500 billion percent and $100 trillion bills in circulation.

Introducing dollars is “one of the only astute economic decisions made in the country,” said McGrath. Greenbacks give desperate Zimbabweans some assurance their liquid assets don’t dribble away.

But with hard currency drying up thanks to a continued trade deficit and low commodity prices, that security blanket is disappearing — and few trust Zimbabwe’s national bankers to fix it, since they’re the ones that sparked the inflation nightmare in the first place. “No one wants to give printing power back to the bank,” Coltart said.

Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe is facing new waves of civil unrest. It began in in April this year when Harare pastor Evan Mawarire started a social media movement coined #ThisFlag to express discontent with the government. The movement quickly coalesced into organized demonstrations against Mugabe, who has been ruling the country since 1980. With the specter of inflation again on the horizon, the protests may continue — despite the threat of beatings, burnings, and death.

“The government took away everything from me last time,” the organizer told FP, recounting the hyperinflation crisis that wiped out many Zimbabweans’ savings.

“I started again from nothing with three children in 2009 after the crisis. I will not start from nothing again.”

Photo credit: MARCO LONGARI/AFP/Getty Images

Thousands protest South Korean president as older conservatives grumble

Protesters hold candles during an anti-government rally in central Seoul on November 19, 2016, aimed at forcing South Korean President Park Geun-Hye to resign over a corruption scandal. REUTERS/Jung Yeon-Je/Pool--Protesters hold candles during an anti-government rally in central Seoul on November 19, 2016, aimed at forcing South Korean President Park Geun-Hye to resign over a corruption scandal. REUTERS/Jung Yeon-Je/Pool
Protesters hold candles during an anti-government rally in central Seoul on November 19, 2016, aimed at forcing South Korean President Park Geun-Hye to resign over a corruption scandal. REUTERS/Jung Yeon-Je/Pool--Protesters hold candles during an anti-government rally in central Seoul on November 19, 2016, aimed at forcing South Korean President Park Geun-Hye to resign over a corruption scandal. REUTERS/Jung Yeon-Je/Pool

By Yun Hwan Chae and James Pearson | SEOUL-Sat Nov 19, 2016

Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Seoul on Saturday in the fourth straight weekend of protest against embattled President Park Geun-hye.

Park is resisting calls to step down amid an ongoing political crisis in which she is alleged to have let an old friend meddle in state affairs.

The scandal has rocked Park's presidency and united Koreans in disapproval, culminating in a protest last weekend that saw a million people march on Seoul by some estimates.

Saturday's protest was smaller as protest groups also organised demonstrations in regional capitals. Police said at least 155,000 people had packed into a central Seoul square early on Saturday evening for a candle-lit rally. Organisers said the number was 500,000.

Park has pledged to cooperate in an investigation into the scandal. Prosecutors are expected to bring indictments against Choi Soon-sil, Park's friend at the centre of the crisis, and two former presidential aides tomorrow.

Not all Koreans are calling for the president to resign, however. A short drive away from the main protest, a group of conservative protesters gathered outside Seoul station in defence of the president.

"Sixteen million people elected this president to office. It does not make sense to simply ask for her withdrawal," said Geum Sang-chul, a 78-year-old pensioner and member of the Korean Veterans Association. Geum had joined a group of counter-protesters that police estimated at about 11,000-strong, while organisers said the number was higher.

"We can not give into the pro-North Korea supporters," said Geum, using a derogatory term that Korean conservatives have for the more progressive wing of Korean politics.

Park's approval ratings have been at a record-low 5 percent for the last three weeks because of the scandal over her friend.

Many of her remaining supporters, some of whom refer to themselves as "the five percent", are loyal to Park's father, Park Chung-hee, a military strongman who ruled South Korea for 18 years until he was assassinated by his spy chief in 1979.

Park Geun-hye's popularity and election as president stemmed in part from the symbolic connection to her father, who is still revered by older generations.

"If they really care about the country, they should consider the country's image," said Lee Sang-soon, a 66-year-old pensioner. "I am troubled by how the country is portrayed abroad by these protests."

But Park remains highly unpopular across the country. Tens of thousands of people also gathered for dozens of demonstrations in regional cities on Saturday night, Yonhap news reported.

High school students also joined the crowds in Seoul on Saturday, free to protest after finishing important national exams this week.

(Reporting by Yun Hwan Chae and James Pearson; Editing by Tom Hogue)

Philippines: Marcos family hold vigil at dictator’s tomb amid protests

In this photo provided by the Office of the Army Chief Public Affairs Headquarters Philippine Army (OACPA HPA), soldiers prepare to fold the flag-draped casket of the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos during his burial at the Heroes' Cemetery in Taguig City, Philippines, on Friday, Nov 18. Pic: AP.
In this photo provided by the Office of the Army Chief Public Affairs Headquarters Philippine Army (OACPA HPA), soldiers prepare to fold the flag-draped casket of the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos during his burial at the Heroes' Cemetery in Taguig City, Philippines, on Friday, Nov 18. Pic: AP.

 

FAMILY members and followers of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos have gathered for a vigil at his tomb a day after his secrecy-shrouded burial at the country’s Heroes’ Cemetery triggered protests.

Marcos’ widow Imelda, clad in black, thanked supporters and local officials of Marcos’ northern home province who traveled by bus to pay their respects.

She said they had given her family strength as they kept the hope for nearly 30 years to have him buried at the national cemetery.

According to Rappler in the Philippines, the crowd at the vigil was at least 2,000-strong, with many supporters arriving as early as 7.30am for the event.

The report quoted the pro-Marcos groups as saying that they even rented vehicles and organized the trip to Manila, all on their own.


Tensions in the Southeast Asian nation’s capital were running high Friday after it was made known that Marcos’ burial at the heroes’ cemetery would proceed at noon.
Some accused the Marcos family of hiding the information, saying the burial was being carried out, “like a thief in the night”.

The enraged pro-democracy activists also said the decades-long debate over the ex-president’s final resting place was far from over and protested across the metropolis on Friday.

President Rodrigo Duterte, who gave the go-ahead for the burial, appealed for calm, however.


A report by CNN Philippines Friday quoted the leader as saying he hoped Filipinos would be able to accept the burial decision.

Duterte, who was speaking from Peru, also urged those who had been hurt in some way by the Marcos regime to file a case instead.

“I would like to pray that everybody will find a space in his heart for forgiveness, and for those who have been somehow hurt or injured that they can take some other option to file a case,” he was quoted as saying.

Marcos had headed a dictatorship that became infamous for corruption and brutality, as well as extreme luxury on his and his family’s part.

His 21-year term, which started in 1965, saw the Philippine national debt grow exponentially from US$2 billion to nearly US$30 billion. He also placed the country under martial law.

He fled the Philippines after a revolution in 1986, died in exile in 1989 and his body has been preserved and on display in his family stronghold of Ilocos Norte in northwest Philippines since last year.

Additional reporting by the Associated Press

Is Society or Psychiatry to Blame for the 'Seriously Mentally Ill' Dying 25 Years Prematurely?

Photo Credit: shutterstock.com

HomeBy Bruce E. Levine / AlterNet-November 15, 2016

“Adults in the U.S. living with serious mental illness die on average 25 years earlier than others, largely due to treatable medical conditions,” according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. This is not controversial, as establishment psychiatry and its critics agree.