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

Friday, November 25, 2016

Is Hammond right on the Conservatives’ record?

LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 23:  Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond leaves 11 Downing Street on November 23, 2016 in London, England.The Autumn Statement is one of two budget statements the Treasury makes to Parliament each year.  Britain's public finances improved this October from the same month last year, although the Chancellor will still miss his deficit target of £55.5bn by the end of the year  (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

  • 23 NOV 2016
The chancellor, Philip Hammond, defended six years of Conservative economic policy in this year’s autumn statement.

He said the Conservatives had “demonstrated beyond doubt that controlling public spending is compatible with world-class public services and social improvement”.

Mr Hammond reeled off a list of apparent successes that have taken place since the Conservatives came to power as part of the coalition government in May 2010.

Let’s take them one by one and see if they pass the FactCheck test.

“During those six years we’ve seen crime fall by more than a quarter.”

It depends on which of the two main sets of crime statistics you prefer to use.

The Crime Survey for England and Wales shows the total number of incidents falling from 9,344 incidents in the 2009/10 financial year to 6,398 in the 12 months to June 2016.

That’s a fall of 31 per cent, so yes, “more than a quarter”.

If you use police recorded crime data instead, the picture is less rosy, showing a slight rise between 09/10 and 15/16.

In fairness to Mr Hammond, police data may well not be as reliable as the crime survey. It was stripped of its status an official national statistic in 2014 due to evidence of unreliability.

The Office for National Statistics reports both measures side-by-side and warns: “Neither of these sources can provide a picture of total crime.”

“The highest proportion ever of good or outstanding schools.”

This is true – but may not be as good as it sounds.

Last year the government announced with much fanfare that 84 per cent of schools were rated either “good” or “outstanding” – the top two categories.

But this may have more to do with the way the school inspection system is set up than with actual improvement on the ground.

The inspection agency Ofsted no longer carries out routine “section 5” inspections of schools once they have been designated “outstanding”.

And “good” schools usually get a short one-day visit every three years.

So once a school is in one of the top two categories, it can stay there for some years without the risk of losing the rating.

But a school judged to be “inadequate” or one that “requires improvement” will be inspected more frequently.

So there are more opportunities for problem schools to move up the rankings, and fewer chances for a top school to slip down.

The figure the government uses is cumulative, not annual, and we would expect the proportion of “good” or “outstanding” schools to go up over time.

“The number of doctors has increased by 10,000 in our NHS.”

About right, depending on when you start counting.

If we start counting at the 2010 general election, there are now around 12,000 more doctors working for the NHS.

But given that it takes five years to begin working as Foundation-level trainee doctor, and 10 to 15 years before you become a fully qualified GP or specialist, it’s hard to see how the Conservatives can take the credit for funding the training of all these doctors.

“Pensioner poverty at its lowest level ever.”

True, according to most measures. Pensioner poverty decreased sharply from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s.
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Most measures suggest it has continued to fall slightly under the Conservatives.

Analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, among others, has shown how George Osborne generally protected pensioners from austerity, with older people’s incomes rising the most since 2010:
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“The lowest ever number of children being raised in workless households.”

True – the proportion of children living in UK households where no adult works has fallen from 19.8 per cent 1996 to 10.9 per cent.

There are other many other measures of child poverty, and not all of them flatter the government.

The Institute of Fiscal Studies predicts a significant rise in child poverty over the next few years.

“And the highest ever number of young people going on to study full-time at university.”

Numbers and application rates for 18-year-olds who want to go to university are indeed at record levels, according to the admissions service UCAS.

Helicopters drop warning leaflets as Indonesia braces for new protests

Muslim protesters march during a demonstration in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 4, 2016. Pic: AP
Muslim protesters march during a demonstration in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 4, 2016. Pic: AP

25th November 2016

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has called for calm amid simmering religious tension after helicopters dropped police leaflets over the capital on Thursday, warning residents of the risk of harsh penalties if new rallies led by Islamists turn violent.

This comes after the Nov. 4 rally to call for the ouster of Jakarta’s Christian governor, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, turned violent. Purnama, the first Christian and ethnic Chinese in the job, is accused of insulting the Koran. Police last week named Purnama a suspect in the blasphemy probe and if found guilty, he faces up to five years in prison.


Indonesian police plan to deploy 18,000 officers for any new protests and have used helicopters to drop about 50,000 leaflets in parts of the capital warning residents not to disrupt public order or undertake “subversive” activities, which carry punishments including death or life in prison.

“These are extra security measures and preemptive moves to remind the public not to violate the law,” 

Jakarta police spokesman Awi Setiyono said.

President Widodo has sought to reassure investors and show his political coalition is united after over 100,000 Muslims, led by hardline groups, took to the streets. One person was killed and more than 100 were wounded when the protest, the biggest in the city in recent years, briefly turned violent, and police fired tear gas and water cannon.

“I just want to convey one word and that is optimism. Let us not forget that word…even though the political situation is a little heated,” Widodo told an investors’ forum.

Widodo has met with top political, security and religious figures since the Nov. 4 rally, after accusing unidentified “political actors” of inflaming the tension.

Indonesia’s police chief believes that some demonstrators may use rallies on Friday to destabilize the government, despite calls from moderate Muslim groups for restraint,

One hardline group, the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), said its members planned to march again on Friday week, though it pledged it would be peaceful.

Purnama, who is running for reelection in February, is up against two Muslim rivals. A poll published Thursday showed he has slipped to second place as his popularity declines amid the blasphemy allegations.

Rival Agus Yudhoyono, son of previous president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, had taken the lead, the poll showed. – Reuters

Japan: Victim to Nuclear Atrocities

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It is the first time that Japan agreed to such a deal with a country that is not a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Critics are of the opinion that by providing civil nuclear technology to India, Japan will promote an imbalance of power in the region.

cropped-guardian_english_logo-1.pngby Ali Sukhanver- Nov 25, 2016

( November 25, 2016, Islamabad, Sri Lanka Guardian) A meeting of the NSG countries was arranged in Vienna on 11th of this November. In this meeting China once again maintained its tough stand on the issue of new membership of the NSG and called for a two-step, non-discriminatory solution to admit non-NPT members into the 48-member elite grouping. Analysts on this issue are of the opinion that China’s stern stand on the issue is simply an effort to keep India out of the NSG as India has yet not signed the NPT. The role of China for maintaining a balance of power particularly in the South-Asian region has ever been very positive. China is doing all its best to crush the hegemonic designs of the stubborn countries like India. In other words China is playing the role of a moderator in the region. Some international forces might be afraid of China’s positive and balanced role in world politics but for those who desire to see the world a house of peace and prosperity; China is a ray of hope, trust and confidence. China’s effort of stopping India from becoming the member of NSG is the best example in this regard.

Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is a group of nuclear supplier countries that seek to prevent nuclear proliferation by controlling the export of materials, equipment and technology that can be used to manufacture nuclear weapons. At present there are 48 member countries of the NSG. Pakistan and India are not among the list. With a very strong backing of the US, India has been striving hard to become the member of this group since long. It was first time in November 2010 when U.S. President Obama announced U.S. support for India’s participation in the Nuclear Suppliers Group during his state visit to India. Since then India and US are struggling hard to materialize the dream of making India the member of NSG but because of very strong opposition from the member countries, dreams are still the dreams. In the last week of June 2016 in Seoul, a meeting was held in which representatives of the 48-member NSG once again opposed India’s bid to become the 49th member. They cited the fact that New Delhi has yet to commit to the non-proliferation regime.

The Indian Express reported that among those who opposed Indian bid the main six countries were China, Brazil, Austria, New Zealand, Ireland and Turkey. As far as China is concerned, it has always maintained its stand that India’s bid will only be considered if rules for entry of non-NPT countries are finalized by the elite group. Mr.Lu Kang, spokesman of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said talking to media, “Our position is subject to no change as of date.” According to various media reports, China’s harsh reaction came just a few days after India’s National Security Advisor Ajit Doval and his Chinese counterpart, Yang Jiechi, failed to reach a consensus on the issue. China has also made a case for Pakistan’s inclusion in the group if the NSG decides to grant an exception to India for its non-NPT status. As far as Pakistan is concerned, it fulfills all criteria for the NSG membership except for the NPT requirement, which India, too, does not meet. Pakistan wants simultaneous entry into the group with other non-NPT states that aspire to participate in the group. Pakistan is of the opinion that there must be no specific exemption or relaxation of rules for any country; all applications submitted by the non-NPT states for the membership of NSG must be measured up with the same yard-stick. A non-discriminatory approach towards the NSG expansion would not only ensure strategic stability in South Asia, but would also serve the cause of international non-proliferation efforts.

One thing more is very important that the rules and regulations for joining the NSG are devised for keeping this world safe from every type of nuclear terrorism. Special favours to India in this particular context would simply damage the international efforts against terrorism as India has ever been involved in all type of terrorist activities in the region. From the Indian Held Kashmir to Pakistan and from Sri Lanka to China, the stories of Indian involvement in terrorist activities are not hidden from anyone. By blessing India with the membership of NSG would be an injustice to all those who have been facing the brunt of Indian terrorism since long. Unfortunately in the second week of November, Japan signed a controversial deal with India to sell civil nuclear power equipment and technology to India.

It is the first time that Japan agreed to such a deal with a country that is not a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Critics are of the opinion that by providing civil nuclear technology to India, Japan will promote an imbalance of power in the region. Japan’s kindness would have been a true blessing for the region if Pakistan were also among the beneficiaries of this civil nuclear technology. Even in Japan, critics are raising concerns about a risk of their country’s technology being diverted to India’s nuclear weapons programme. The people of Japan had been the ever worst victim to the nuclear violence and they are not in favour of diverting this technology to an irresponsible country like India.

According to Aljazeera anti-nuclear groups in Japan have denounced the agreement, citing threats to safety and regional peace and increased risk of proliferation.  A senior nuclear specialist at Greenpeace Japan said in a statement, “There is no effective separation between India’s nuclear energy programme and its weapons programme, and the Japanese government’s agreement conditions are meaningless. Approving nuclear trade with India is a geo-strategic decision to support further nuclear weapons proliferation in Asia.”

High Court orders release of prominent Kashmiri human rights activist

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By Fayaz Bukhari- Fri Nov 25, 2016

SRINAGAR (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A court in India's restive state of Kashmir on Friday ordered police to release a prominent Kashmiri human rights activist arrested two months ago on charges of involvement in activities against the public order, saying authorities had no evidence.
Khurram Parvez, 39, coordinator of the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) has long campaigned against human rights violations committed by state forces in the volatile Himalayan region of Jammu and Kashmir.

His arrest in September was condemned by human rights groups, as well as the United Nations, who said Parvez's detention was a deliberate attempt by Indian authorities to obstruct his work.

The Jammu and Kashmir High Court quashed the detention order against Parvez saying police had exploited their position and did not have enough evidence to detain the activist.

"What emerges is that the detention of (Parvez) is not only illegal but the detaining authority has abused its powers in ordering his detention," said an order by Justice M.H. Attar.

Police officials declined to comment on the court order and were unwilling to confirm if they would release Parvez.

The JKCCS has published research into the role of Indian security forces in containing a separatist insurgency in India's Kashmir state that first flared a quarter of a century ago.

Parvez was stopped by authorities at New Delhi airport on Sept. 14 when he was on his way to Geneva to attend the U.N. Human Rights Council.

He is currently being held in preventive detention under the highly controversial Jammu and Kashmir Public Safety Act, which allows for people to held for up to two years without judicial intervention.
But the court said that allegations such as that he was inciting people who were coming out of a mosque to shout slogans were not backed up with any proof.

Dozens of civilians have been killed and thousands wounded in months of clashes between protesters and security forces in Kashmir state, sparked by the killing of a leading separatist militant in a joint army and police operation in July.

The unrest is the worst in the Muslim-majority region for six years, and critics have accused Indian forces of heavy-handedness as they struggle to contain the protests.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir since independence in 1947. Both claim the territory in full but rule it in part.

(Reporting by Fayaz Bukhari in Srinagar. Writing by Nita Bhalla, Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)

Russia’s Silent HIV Epidemic

Apathy and political expedience have shaped the Kremlin’s frozen-in-time views on the virus. Will officials finally act to prevent a national health crisis?
Russia’s Silent HIV Epidemic

BY RYAN HOSKINS-NOVEMBER 22, 2016

MOSCOW — Max Malyshev first started using drugs as a teenager in Tver, an industrial city north of Moscow, mostly because it “was just fun,” the 39-year-old said. He grew up in what he called a “typical Russian family,” one where the “father drinks too much” and everyone suffered in the face of an uncertain future in post-Soviet Russia. He was looking for an escape. So, at age 16, he began injecting amphetamines and heroin. Eventually, he moved on to “krokodil,” a locally produced, opioid-based drug nicknamed after the reptile for the skin ulcers it frequently produces that resemble scales. Malyshev spoke of the freewheeling parties he attended, where no one worried about drawing drugs from the same vial.

In 1997, after Malyshev was arrested for dealing drugs, the police forced him to take an HIV test, a standard government policy. His results were positive. But when he was released, he found no reason to change his lifestyle. “What option was there?” he asked. After all, as he put it, “there were barely any services available” to treat his addiction. Antiretrovirals to treat the disease funded by the government were offered to him in theory. But with a chaotic lifestyle of daily drug use, cold indifference from health-care providers who viewed him as a “junkie,” and a near total absence of addiction services, access to care for Malyshev was effectively nonexistent.

Today, there are an estimated 1.5 million people who have been diagnosed with HIV or AIDS in Russia, which has a population of 140 million. Although the spread of HIV has been stemmed in sub-Saharan Africa, in Russia the rate of HIV infection is rising 10 to 15 percent each year — a pace comparableto the infection rate in the United States in the 1980s, when the basic biology of HIV was poorly understood and the antiretroviral drugs used to treat the disease were years away from discovery. And the uncontrolled rise of the disease is unlikely to abate in the foreseeable future, as the Russian government firmly rejects scientifically tested policies out of apathy and political expedience.

The Soviet Union didn’t even begin to officially report HIV infections until 1987. After the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, heroin and other injectable drugs became easily accessible to Russians. In the late 1990s and onward, as trafficking routes from Afghanistan through the porous borders of former Soviet Central Asia and into Russia further developed, infection rates across the region steadily rose. The drug trade from Afghanistan to Russia has since morphed into a multibillion-dollar illegal economy for traffickers, accounting for about 25 percent of all Afghan heroin — and leaving a wake of corruption and infection in its trail. Russia, the top market, has been hit the hardest. In 2014, the most recent year of data available, the Russian Federal AIDS Center found in that intravenous drug use accounted for 58 percent of HIV infections and the rest from sexual transmission.

Despite the startling statistics, the Kremlin refuses to embrace the globally accepted, evidence-based strategies that reduce the spread of the epidemic among drug users. And the government’s defiance in its policy, according to health experts, is almost certain to result in increased cases of HIV infections. As Michel Kazatchkine, the U.N. secretary-general’s special envoy on HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, said in an interview: “On the drug side [of its HIV response], Russia has not changed.… [If anything,] it is toughening.”

Central to an evidence-based response to intravenous-fueled HIV is the use of opioid substitution therapy (OST), which replaces intravenous drug usage with an opioid-based oral medication like methadone or buprenorphine. These medications are prescribed by a physician and do not induce a high. By reducing the use of needles and allowing drug addicts to have a more stable life, it has been shown to substantially decrease the transmission of HIV — for which the Joint U.N. Program on HIV/AIDS and the World Health Organization (WHO) declared it an “essential” tool in 2004. The use of OST reflects an increasingly popular philosophy among global public health leaders of “harm reduction” — where the focus is centered on preventing the negative effects of drug use rather than trying to prevent drug use itself. But the Russian government views OST as merely replacing one addiction with another. In 1997, it made its use illegal, punishable with up to 20 years in prison.

Needle exchange programs in Russia — another pillar of harm reduction that has been proved to decrease HIV transmission and save lives in programs across the world — currently receive almost no funding. Until 2009, needle exchange programs had been widely available, mostly with financing from the Global Fund, a public-private consortium that is the world’s largest financier of HIV projects. But when that agency’s money was withdrawn in 2010 — largely because Russia had achieved the status of a high-income country — Moscow did not replace funding, and the number of needle exchanges in the country dropped from 80 to 10.

In lieu of these kinds of programs that have worked in other countries, the Russian government offers drug addicts who are trying to quit options that are ineffective and difficult to access, said Anya Sarang, the president of the Andrey Rylkov Foundation, a Russian nongovernmental organization (NGO) focused on harm reduction. “Most government-funded services are only in detoxification, allowing people to briefly withdraw from their addiction and then to return to their life situation,” Sarang said. “Private rehabilitation services have grown, where people can go after detoxification, but mostly you can only use them if you have money. If you don’t have money, there are still basically no options.”

Many Russian health providers and bureaucrats disagree with the government’s position. But because speaking out could jeopardize their jobs, few do so. A lung disease specialist in Moscow who asked to remain anonymous said Russia knows how to rein in its HIV epidemic. “Intravenous drug users make up most of my patients. To treat them — and for their HIV, for the tuberculosis that usually comes with it — they need to take pills every day,” the specialist said. “The only reliable way to bring them in is with OST. Without it, patients only come when they are feeling deathly ill and leave as soon as they can get their next fix.”

Even compared to authoritarian countries, Russia stands out for its refusal to implement harm reduction in drug use. China and Iran — countries that traditionally focus on the enforcement aspect of drug control — have established methadone maintenance programs. China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported that since its program began in 2003, it has grown to support 170,000 injection drug users and estimates that at least 13,000 HIV drug infections have been averted.

Among the former Soviet countries — most of which also face high rates of HIV and drug addiction — only Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have not made OST available. In neighboring Ukraine, where methadone has been legalized, the rate of HIV transmission growth decreased, particularly among young people who inject drugs, for whom infection rates decreased more than fivefold between 2007 and 2013, according to the most recent statisticsfrom the International HIV/AIDS Alliance in Ukraine. Official figures for the entire country have not been available since the annexation of Crimea and the outbreak of war in eastern Ukraine, but the turbulent two years are believed to have sent infections rates back up.

Russia’s zero tolerance drug policy reflects, in part, a strain of social conservatism running through the country that views drug use as a personal moral failing. “Methadone is considered in the same category as tolerance to gays — rotten Western practices,” said Sergey Lukashevsky, the director of the Sakharov Center, a Moscow-based facility for discussion on Russian culture and history.

This perspective — which paints the problem as a foreign-imported plot — is inflamed to build support for the government. Victor Ivanov, the former director of the Russian Federal Drug Control Service (FSKN), explained his organization’s position on OST in a 2015 statement. “Customers of this murderous therapy are prisoners chained by their own chemical handcuffs,” Ivanov said. “Attempts to impose its legalization in Russia are not associated with therapeutic objectives … [but] with the political ambitions of the global drug lobby and the economic interests of pharmaceutical companies.”

But the FSKN itself may have been a big part of the problem. Lukashevsky said the FSKN has long made policies “with an official aim of fighting drug dealing but with an unofficial aim of self-preservation.” The drug control service has jockeyed against other agencies attempting to win favor and resources from the government, taking actions that gain headlines but are in fact highly ineffective. The agency has arrested bakers for suspicion that their poppy seeds are used in drug production, has restricted opioid-based pain control in palliative care facilities, and has removed from bookstores literature perceived to promote drug use, such as the writing of American novelist William Burroughs.

In April, the FSKN was absorbed into the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and Ivanov, a former KGB colleague of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was removed from his post. The new leader of the drug agency, career cop Maj. Gen. Andrey Khrapov, has a history of being more pragmatic than his predecessor, who followed a hard line on drugs.But with health-care budgets slashed across Russia as the country has slumped into economic crisis, Moscow’s strict stance on methadone looks set to continue.

With the number of those infected continuing to rise, the government has finally decided to respond. Russia has expressed its aim to implement the newest strategy recommended by the WHO in 2015 to limit the spread of HIV: “treatment as prevention.” This policy would provide all HIV/AIDS patients with antiretroviral drugs — not only for those who show progression in their disease. In March, Russia tentatively announced plans to increase its coverage from 17 to 60 percent of HIV/AIDS patients, and Veronika Skvortsova, the health minister, promised an extra $315 million in funding.

But without the use of both OST and the widespread needle exchange programs to support the expanded coverage, Russia will have difficulty curbing its epidemic, predicts David Wilson, the director of the World Bank’s global HIV/AIDS program. “Russia’s AIDS investments will not be optimal unless they focus on all three core interventions,” Wilson said.

And Russia faces more hurdles in containing its HIV/AIDS growth. Russia is an outlier among the BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — in the high cost of antiretroviral medications. The prices of the standard first-line regiment medications are 3.2 times the average of prices for middle-income countries, according to the World Bank, in part because many of these medications are imported and the Russian ruble has been falling sharply in the past year. And the Russian ban on “propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations among minors,” or the so-called LGBT propaganda law, enacted in 2013, has also been linked to a rise in HIV among men who have sex with men. Information about the prevention of HIV directed toward this group is forbidden, and individuals increasingly avoid seeking testing and treatment owing to severe discrimination. One survey from St. Petersburg, conducted between 2012 and 2015 by the Russian human rights NGO Phoenix Plus, found that the prevalence of HIV among men who have sex with men had increased from 10 percent in the year before the law was enacted to 22 percent in 2015.

Max Malyshev, for his part, managed to find help for his addiction a few years after his diagnosis. An initial experience with the state-funded detoxification system did not go well, but friends brought him to private counseling and 12-step programs that eventually stuck, and he subsequently pursued care for his HIV. Now, at age 39, he works with the Andrey Rylkov Foundation in the needle exchange program in Moscow, the only one left in the capital. But even the foundation has come under further pressure of late; it was labeled a foreign agent this year under Russia’s restrictive laws that seek to stigmatize NGOs that rely on foreign contributions.

After decades of experiencing Russia’s frozen-in-time drug policy, Malyshev said he has “stopped thinking about hoping” that harm reduction will arrive anytime soon. But he laughs a lot as he works, clearly enjoying what he does. He knows that even if it is only a dent in the massive and growing crisis, he, at least, is making a difference.

Photo Credit: BRENDAN HOFFMAN/Getty Images

Bumper load of new viruses identified

Virosphere
Viruses have been infecting invertebrates for possibly billions of years-UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEYImage caption

BBCBy Jonathan Ball-24 November 2016

An international research team led from Australia and China has discovered nearly 1,500 new viruses.
The scientists looked for evidence of virus infection in a group of animals called invertebrates, which includes insects and spiders.

Not only does the study expand the catalogue of known viruses, it also indicates they have existed for billions of years.

The findings were published in the journal Nature.
Few would argue that all living species on Earth are susceptible to viruses – these microscopic parasites are ubiquitous.

But virologists have long suspected that our current view of the diversity of viruses is blinkered – all too often constrained to those causing disease in humans, animals and plants, or to those that we can grow in the laboratory.

A trip to a tropical rainforest or the African savannah gives a snapshot into the incredible diversity of visible life on Earth, but understanding the potentially mind-boggling myriad of minuscule viruses has not been so easy.

Capturing new viruses is not like netting a new species of butterfly – viruses are invisible.

Undeterred by this practical problem an international team was keen to survey invertebrates for new viral species.

Invertebrates are spineless creatures and the group includes many familiar animals, such as insects, spiders, worms and snails. They represent the vast majority of animal species in the world today.
Scientists wanting to work out the totality of viral "life" – although many virologists would argue that viruses are not truly alive – are starting to adopt techniques that reveal their genetic calling cards, revealed in the things they infect.

MosquitoesSome invertebrates do carry viruses that can infect humans, but the newly identified ones probably pose very little risk

Just like powerful new telescopes are peering deeper into space, revealing a wealth of hitherto unknown stars, next-generation sequencing techniques are providing new insight into the magnitude of the invisible world of viruses; a world we call the virosphere.

We are familiar with DNA, the "stuff of life" that makes up the blueprint of our genomes. But many viruses use a different chemical to construct their genomes – a substance known as RNA.

Just like DNA, this consists of strings of individual building blocks, or bases; each designated by a different letter: A, C, G and U.

Next generation sequencing allows researchers to quickly determine the sequence of these letters. And if you work out the order of the letters on any chain of RNA, you can determine if it belongs to a virus and whether or not the virus is new.

Its potential for virus discovery is huge.

Dengue virus particlesA minuscule universe: A highly magnified view of dengue virus particles

The research team collected around 220 species of land- and water-dwelling invertebrates living in China, extracted their RNA and, using next-generation sequencing, deciphered the sequence of a staggering 6 trillion letters present in the invertebrate RNA "libraries".

When the researchers analysed this mass of data they realised that they had discovered almost 1,500 new virus species – a whopping number by any measure. Many of these were so distinct that they did not easily fit into our existing virus family tree.

Prof Elodie Ghedin from New York University, who was not directly involved with the study, told the BBC: "This is an extraordinary study providing the largest virus discovery to date.
"It will no doubt remodel our view of the virus world and redraw virus phylogeny.
"This is what happens when you combine a bold and brute force approach with the right technology and the right set of eyes."

Even though some invertebrates carry viruses that can infect humans - like zika and dengue - the study authors do not think that these newly discovered viruses pose a significant risk.
However, this cannot be ruled out entirely, and Prof Ghedin thinks that this is an important issue to address.

"If we have learned anything from these types of true discovery projects is that when we start looking into places we haven’t looked at before, we find an incredible richness that goes beyond what was suspected.
"It also makes a strong case for expanding virus surveillance to invertebrates in our quest to better understand (and predict) emerging viruses," she said.

'Looking back'

The research also showed that throughout time viruses have been trading genetic material to create new species – an incredible feat according to Prof Eric Delwart from the University of California, San Francisco, who told the BBC: "It shows a lego-like ability of different viral functional units to be recombined to create new viruses even when they originate from highly divergent viruses. The plasticity of viral genomes continues to amaze."

Not only have these studies expanded our view of the diversity of viruses, they have also provided a more complete picture of virus history, as Prof Edward Holmes from the University of Sydney, who was involved in the study explained: "We have discovered that most groups of viruses that infect vertebrates – including humans, such as those that cause well-known diseases like influenza – are in fact derived from those present in invertebrates."

He also believes that his group's data shows that viruses have been infecting invertebrates for possibly billions of years, raising the prospect that invertebrates are the true hosts for many types of virus.

The researchers hope that next-generation sequencing can pave the way for virus discovery in a variety of other species. And it does not stop there.

Prof Delwart thinks that further analyses of existing next-generation datasets may yield additional virus species unlike any that we have seen before.

If future studies reveal anywhere near this number of new viruses, then we’ve only just scratched the surface. It seems that the virosphere is set to explode.

Jonathan Ball is a professor of virology at Nottingham University. This coming Saturday, he will be taking part in CrowdScience, the new BBC World Service science weekly, which starts with a question from listener Ian in Jordan which is "where did viruses come from?"

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Sri Lanka: When justice system reached the supreme level of absurdity

broken_justice

Undermining of a moral norm is thus considered uncivilized behavior. If there develops a view that there is no importance to be given to moral and immoral behavior, then such a society has reached its lowest depths

by Basil Fernando-Nov 24, 2016

cropped-guardian_english_logo-1.png( November 24, 2016, Hong Kong SAR, Sri Lanka Guardian) When the high level delegation of Sri Lanka met the UN Committee against Torture (CAT Committee) last week on the 5th Periodic Review, one of the Committee members raised an important issue. The Member asked whether the dysfunctionality of the justice system in Sri Lanka has virtually created a situation of a de facto emergency.

It is worth taking a little time to grasp the meaning of a de facto emergency.

Normally, an emergency would mean the de jure state of emergency, or in other words a legally declared emergency. This is when creating safeguards on people’s rights are being suspended for a specific period due to an extraordinary situation facing a nation. The relevant Article in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), is Article 4 which states the following:
“Article 4

1 . In time of public emergency which threatens the life of the nation and the existence of which is officially proclaimed, the States Parties to the present Covenant may take measures derogating from their obligations under the present Covenant to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation, provided that such measures are not inconsistent with their other obligations under international law and do not involve discrimination solely on the ground of race, colour, sex, language, religion or social origin.

2. No derogation from articles 6, 7, 8 (paragraphs I and 2), 11, 15, 16 and 18 may be made under this provision.”

A de facto emergency situation is when there is no such official declaration of emergency but the very crisis in the justice system itself has virtually created a situation where, in effect, there is a suspension of the rights of the people. A simple example from normal day-to-day life would be when a machine is stopped by the order of an authority and all the work carried out by the machinery is stopped. This would be de jure.

On the other hand, we could say there is a de facto breakdown of services when the machinery is not stopped by anybody but it is so broken that it does not produce the desired result or it in fact creates opposite results. The same can be said of a justice system if the state or the system is so far below the required standards that it does not provide safeguards of people’s rights that a justice system is expected to safeguard, or, in fact, the system itself is as a result creating drastic forms of injustices.

Has the Sri Lankan justice system reached this state of “de facto emergency” or a default state of denial of safeguards of people’s rights due to its malfunctioning? Let us take some familiar examples from actual cases to examine this situation.

Let us take the case that we reported upon recently, wherein inside a Magistrate’s Court a rape victim is asked to ‘settle’ her case for a payment of Rs. 15,000. First of all, rape is a very serious crime and the prescribed punishment, if a person is proven guilty, is 20 years of rigorous imprisonment. Further, being a serious crime, it can only be tried in a High Court. The Criminal Procedure Code clearly states that this is not a compoundable offence. The Magistrate who settled the case in the above-mentioned terms has violated all the basic rules of criminal procedure as well as the fundamental notions of criminal justice. [Please see; “Ministry of Justice has failed to protect the victims of crime” article by Basil Fernando, Ceylon Independent Newspaper, 12th November 2016]

One of the most important principles of criminal justice is proportional punishment, which means that the punishment meted out by the Courts must be proportionate to the gravity of the crime. The plain meaning is that a petty crime should not lead to a punishment of sending a person to imprisonment on the one hand and a serious crime should not be dispensed with a lighter punishment.

This kind of punishment is meant to safeguard the rights of the people not to be subjected to such crimes. The law expects that the punishment should have a deterrent effect. This means it should discourage other persons from committing similar offences. The implication is that if a serious crime is dealt with in a lenient way it would lead to other criminals committing the same crime and thus creating insecurity to the people living in that society.

By allowing the settlement of a rape case for a mere payment of Rs. 15,000 amounts to serious undermining of the people’s moral norms. Moral norms are those which human beings develop as most essential guidelines for their behavior. When moral norms are ignored or undermined, moral behavior of the people in that society are also thus undervalued and undermined. Thus, in the moral codes of all societies, rape is considered a heinous crime and a part of the most despicable moral behavior. The very security of the female population, which is half or more than half in most societies, depends on the appreciation and adherence to avoiding such behavior as rape and other forms of sexual violence.

Undermining of such a moral norm is thus considered uncivilized behavior. If there develops a view that there is no importance to be given to moral and immoral behavior, then such a society has reached its lowest depths. A Court that arrives at a decision such as the settlement mentioned above is thus a contributor to the degeneration of the morals of a society to the lowest possible depths.

Here we see the role of a court turned on its head. The role of the judge and the court and the entire paraphernalia of the exercise of the justice function is turned upside down when a grave offence like rape is treated in this manner.

We could see these same reflections when we consider another instance of a rape – that of a 14 year old girl. This case came up before the Sri Lankan justice system and the system took 17 years to come to a final conclusion that the accused in the case were guilty. Again, the court system has treated such a grave crime in such a trivial manner by delivering is conclusion so late. In doing so, it achieved the same result as the allowing of a settlement as mentioned above. All deterrent effects are lost by such undue delay and moral norms are undermined and immoral behavior is encouraged.

As we well know, prolonged delays are in no way exceptional in Sri Lanka but it consists of the routine. The average time for final adjudication of a case in a High Court is 10 years or more. Thus, it can be asserted that our courts, by prolonged delays, have become agents of encouragement of immoral and criminal behavior.

Close examination would show that the settlement of a rape case for a small sum of money may be a short cut for avoiding prolonged delays in final adjudication of a case. That conclusion is virtual abandonment of the court’s responsibility to exercise its jurisdiction in order to curtail crime by way of a regular and just system of punishments. The logic of replacement of adjudication through “unprincipled settlements” is thus an extremely dangerous policy.

If you take these linkages between unprincipled settlements as a way of getting over adjudication, we see other factors that contribute to this rather dangerous logic. These arguments are based on the excessive workloads of courts. It is said that prosecutors are so overburdened with long accumulated files that they are not in any position to do a proper job regarding any of the cases because their time needs to be shared over a large list of cases.

This means that if time is calculated on the basis of accumulated files there is no time available for the prosecutors to discharge their duties in the manner that their position as prosecutors requires them to do. Thus, the requirements of prosecutor-ship, and the time available to carry out those requirements, are so out of proportion that neglect of the required standards is an inevitable result. The same logic could be brought to the judges who have also to deal with cases on the one hand on the basis of legal and moral norms that should guide a judge, and, on the other, without any kind of a reasonable time within which such norms can be carried out faithfully.

Here we have a supreme absurdity: the logic demanded by adherence to required norms and the available time for doing so is so disproportionate that there could be any kind of reasonable discharge of duties.

The basics of this supreme absurdity could be illustrated from virtually any case that comes before our courts and also by so many cases that never reach our courts, because people who become aware of this supreme absurdity, prefer to suffer their crimes in silence rather than come for “pooja” before an absurd deity.

Thus, the observation made by the particular member of the CAT Committee is truer than perhaps she would have realised. Would she have had the kind of familiarity an average Sri Lankan has, the entire course of that CAT Committee Session may have taken a different turn.

A simple question needed to be asked of the high level panel: why has your justice system reached this supreme level of absurdity? And another question could have been used for follow-up: in these circumstances do you not realise that the comic play that you have put up before us merely exposes how slavish you have become to a supreme absurdity?

Basil Fernando, Director of both Asian Human Rights Commission and Asian Legal Resource Centre based in Hong Kong SAR, where this piece was originally appeared. 

United they rule the land!

Saturday, November 19, 2016
Both the President and the Prime Minister spoke well in the people’s assembly. Hence they have an obligation to provide strong and principled leadership against the invidious forces, to restate again and again their commitment to the democratic values of pluralism and self autonomy, on which they were elected, and ensure that police and civil servants are given the confidence to enforce the law in the face of intimidation and threats of violence
The meeting held at the BMICH to mark 30th anniversary of the Ravaya newspaper with the participation of President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Opposition Leader R Sampanthan, SLMC leader Rauff Hakeem and JVP leadr Anura Kumara Dissanayake became a people’s intellectual assembly, a new addition to the democratic revolution, still spreading in the country.
Both leaders, answering the opposition criticism explained that changes are taking place steadily and continuously against the reactionary opposition. May be the process is slow compared to the aspirations of the people. It is necessary to defeat racist chauvinist conspiracies and appealed all to join the struggle. This public mass assembly is accepted by all, as a new feature where activist faced the leaders of the country. After the meeting both leaders were available during the refreshments to continue the discussions in small groups.
Protest groups
The exploitation by others of the disabled soldiers’ protest outside the Presidential Secretariat, the increasing use of hate speech against minorities by some members of the Buddhist clergy and by other protest groups, and by widespread anti-minority hate speech in social media are parts of the conspiracy spreading throughout the country.
Everybody in the Democratic movement: trade unions, civil society organisations, left parties and liberals are extremely concerned at the appearance of signs that, yet again, legal reforms aimed at improving democracy and good governance are being undermined by the forces of chauvinism and intolerance. The deplorable language used by some Buddhist monks in the presence of police officers against responsible state officials, raised the question whether the rule of law has been suspended. In particular – violent and un-Buddhist sentiments – that have been widely circulating on social media to be especially disturbing and shocking.
This very small minority of violence-prone and foulmouthed monks are not spontaneous happenings but organised entities of a conspiracy to create a bloody racial conflict throughout the country. Liberals are shocked to see monks disgracing the memory of such champions of civility and reconciliation as the late Maduluwave Sobitha Thera, an architect and inspirer of the reforms now taking place. Moreover, many monks are actively involved in peace and reconciliation efforts at the community level, which work, due to its un-sensational nature, does not attract mainstream or social media attention.
Peace, reconciliation and power sharing
In many if not all of these incidents, there appears to be an element of organisation of deeper political agenda aimed at reversing the current path towards peace, reconciliation and power sharing. The tragedy that should be stopped is the inaction when the offender is a person in yellow robes. Especially, where members of the clergy have been involved, police and civil servants have succumbed to the culture of deference rather than restore order. A poisonous atmosphere of racial and religious hatred is compounded many fold by suspicion and rumours spread by political machinations. Most regrettably, conspirators have achieved by the appearance of indifference or at least a lack of capacity on the part of state institutions to enforce the rule of law without fear or favour.
A certain confidence is given to continue their activity. Recent action taken against fascistic extremist is admirable and it should move boldly and rapidly. The allowance of any space for a perception of government impotence, indifference, or weakness to take root would only embolden those who wish to propagate hatred and division. Without the will or capacity to implement strengthened powers and institutional independence, there will be no value to the reforms, especially in relation to law enforcement.
Mahinda group
The fascistic organisers of racial and religious hatred and clashes are close associates of Mahinda group. As such they are happy about the victory of Donald Trump in US. This affinity could be understood by looking into the reasons that led to elect in US, a person with so much authoritarian tendencies. We notice the revolutionary change taking place in rural parts of America. We should admit the rural native upsurge against modernism in the cosmopolitan cities.
One media intellectual said that seeing the country’s back highways thick with blue Trump signs; should have tipped them off to the fact that something was afoot. The real reason is; as opposed to rational democratic masses that dominated the urban society, the rural elements who were disturbed about their plight selected Donald as a champion. Thus, it is necessary to understand how tens of millions of Americans could see him as their champion in the first place.
This is the similarity we could see in Donald and Mahinda; both address to the unconscious fears instead of explaining the real problems to the people. Instead of logic and sensible reasoning they introduced wild fears and suspicion. Both are champions of rural pre modernist masses. That so many Americans who are struggling with money picked Trump must mean that modern version of capitalism could not satisfy them. Nor do they want to use some further adjustments. Instead they believe in a great society that they have lost.
Arya Sinhala society
Mahinda promised the Arya Sinhala society in mythical past. Similarly Donald promised the resurrection of Anglo-Saxon white society. Hence we should expect Mahinda to turn to politics of racial and religious agitations.
These disturbing events arrive in Lanka at a time when masses are still less than halfway through the democratic revolution for witch they gave a popular mandate. Fascistic forces imperil the establishment of the necessary foundations of reconciliation, justice, and good governance – which are the bedrock of future peace, prosperity, and happiness – and threaten to take the country back to a dark era from which we were at last emerging.
Both the President and the Prime Minister spoke well in the people’s assembly. Hence they have an obligation to provide strong and principled leadership against these invidious forces, to restate again and again their commitment to the democratic values of pluralism and self autonomy, on which they were elected, and ensure that police and civil servants are given the confidence to enforce the law in the face of intimidation and threats of violence. 

Sri Lankan military seeks to acquire 617 acres in Mullaitivu

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24 Nov  2016
A notice has been published in a Tamil local newspaper announcing the intention to acquire 617 acres of land in Vattuvahal, Mullaitivu for the Sri Lankan armed forces. 
The notice, under Section 38a of the Land Acquisition Act, comes despite repeated public annoucement by the present Sri Lankan government that it was looking to release all land currently occupied by the military. 
Photograph @rkguruparan